I’ve
been fascinated by Wallace, both the player and the man,
ever since he emerged as a star in college at North Carolina,
where as a sophomore he and teammate Jerry Stackhouse led
the Tar Heels to the 1994 Final Four. I was ecstatic when
the Blazers traded for him from Washington. And while I
was just as frustrated by his behavior as a lot of other
Portlanders while Wallace wore red, white and black, seeing
him succeed elsewhere is bittersweet. Beyond the on and
off-court issues, Rasheed is also such a theatrical personality.
In a movie he'd be described as "the good-looking rebel
who plays by his own rules".
The scars
of Wallace's years in Portland still need many more years
to heal, but I hope there will come a day in the future
when his time as a Blazer is remembered for the good
as much as the bad. Wallace was the star of a Portland
team that made it to the Western Conference Finals two
years in a row, and he routinely stood toe to toe with
the likes of Tim Duncan, Kevin Garnet, and any of the
league’s best power forwards.
I don’t
blame the Trail Blazers one bit for trading him last
year. It was inevitable and desperately needed for both
sides. But in the long run I think Wallace should rank
with Bill Walton, Maurice Lucas, Clyde Drexler, Geoff
Petrie, Jerome Kersey, and Terry Porter as one of the
best to ever wear a Blazer uniform. |
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By
the time Rasheed Wallace was traded to Atlanta midway through
last season, he had more than worn out his welcome here.
Wallace’s off-court behavior was often an embarrassment,
from threatening a referee on the Rose Garden loading dock
to being cited for marijuana possession.
And on-court
he was often worse. Wallace twice set a league-record
for technical fouls in a season. He infamously threw
a towel at one of his teammates, Arvydas Sabonis. And
despite being arguably as talented as any power forward
in the NBA, countless times Wallace refused to lead his
team at the ends of games by acting as the go-to scorer.
But watching
Rasheed Wallace go to the NBA finals for a second straight
year as a member of the Detroit Pistons, one has to admit
that for all his downsides, he remains a very special
player.
Wallace
is a top-notch defender, and I would not be surprised
one bit if he shuts down the Spurs’ Tim Duncan
for large stretches of the Finals (he's done it before).
He also has exceptional shooting range for a 6’10” player.
Wallace routinely hits 3-point shots and his turn-around
jumper from the baseline can be impossible to stop. And
while Blazer fans know all too well that Wallace’s
temper has gotten him into a lot of trouble over the
years, it also means that he plays with a matchless competitive
fire.
-Brian Libby |