[TimesPicayune] Great ability to judge tal …
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Great ability to judge talent Bass's legacy
Thursday, May 06, 2004
By Benjamin Hochman and William Kalec
Staff writers
The old eyes, which made him a masterful basketball talent
scout, have become encircled with wrinkles. It's time, Bob
Bass said, to put them to rest.
They're still working, don't get him wrong. But the keen and
meticulous eyes that have analyzed basketball talent for
generations -- finding gems in the rough, turning projects
into promise -- have seen enough after five-plus decades.
Wednesday, the Hornets' 75-year-old executive vice president
of basketball operations and general manager announced he will
retire in June, ending a career in which he found success at
every phase of the game, from coaching high school players to
professionals.
But long after his last day on the job, his legacy will remain,
from the Hall of Famers to the up-and-coming in Hornets teal.
His scouting became legend.
Like the time in the mid-1970s, when a lanky, haughty forward,
recently acquired by Bass' San Antonio Spurs, was getting thrown
around in the paint like a toy. Bass, then the head coach,
examined this kid's game. He noticed his knack for flowing
gracefully through defenders -- when, of course, he wasn't buried
in the post.
Cantankerous and candid, Bass walked up to George Gervin at
practice one day, and as told by the future Hall of Famer, said:
"Take your skinny butt and go play guard."
"That's what I told him," Bass said, chuckling.
"Bob Bass is the first guy who put me at the guard spot," Gervin
said. "What kind of vision did he have? I kept telling Bob I don't
want to play guard. He taught me to take advantage of opportunities
. . . . Bob Bass said, 'Instead of letting these guys beat you up,
I'm gonna make them chase you.' "
And so they chased "The Iceman," who razzled and dazzled defenders
for a decade, laying in innumerable finger rolls en route to a Hall
of Fame career.
Twenty-five years earlier, Bass -- nicknamed "Skillet" -- had
accepted the boys basketball job at an Oklahoma high school where
the average class-size was substantially less then those gathered
in the New Orleans Arena press room to watch Bass say good-bye to
his livelihood.
Asked if he thought his professional career would venture beyond
Cromwell High School, Bass answered, "Never, never."
"I didn't even think I'd get to be a college coach."
But he did become a college coach -- at Oklahoma Baptist.
There, championships eluded him until Corky Ogelsbe, an Oklahoma
Baptist alum, discovered Al Tucker while the 6-foot-8 forward
participated in a local pick-up game. He phoned Bass, informing him
of this possible ticket out of small-college obscurity.
"All of the sudden, we have 2,000 people crammed in our cracker box
gym, standing room only," said Allen Eaker, a guard on Bass' 1966
NAIA championship team. "There were four to five pro scouts at every
game, all for Al. We never had that before."
The start-up ABA afforded Bass the opportunity to finally dabble in
the professional ranks. He served as coach of the Denver Rockets,
Miami Floridians, Memphis Tams and San Antonio Spurs -- posts he
didn't hold for more than three consecutive years. Usually sporting
a red-checkered jacket and big black glasses, Bass didn't shy away
from verbal confrontations with officials, convinced they slighted
his squad on calls because of Bass' short stature.
"He was like a little Chihuahua," said Ira Harge, a member of the
Floridians during Bass' tenure. "I don't remember him swearing, but
he would go 'Wrarararararara' like those dogs."
Despite his miniature fuse, Bass did his best to coddle his talent,
finding ways to bend for behavior that would have made him boil over
in high school and college. While in Miami, Bass and player Wayne
Hightower would often discuss strategy during halftime as the
6-foot-8 standout fed a couple of his bad habits.
"Wayne Hightower grabs a beer, lights up a cigarette and he's talking
to Bob about how they should attack the defense in the second half,"
said Walt Piatkowski, who played for Bass in Miami and Denver. "And
I'm thinking, 'God, pinch me to see if I'm really here.' "
In 1976, Nuggets coach Larry Brown accused Bass' Spurs of unfair
physical play. Bass retaliated, lambasting Brown on the court and
threatening to fight. This prompted Brown to rip Bass' polyester
suits and proclaim the only reason to visit San Antonio was for its
guacamole. During the Nuggets' subsequent trip to San Antonio,
conveniently on dime-beer night, fans doused Brown with the creamy
dip.
"He wouldn't shy away from anyone," said Eaker, who was a graduate
assistant under Bass at Texas Tech, where Bass coached from 1969 to
1971. "There was a time at Tech when he played Texas A&M, and their
coach Shelby Metcalf -- the guy's a legend. The rule, I don't know
if it's still in effect, was that a coach couldn't talk to the
officials unless the other coach was in their presence. So at
halftime, Shelby goes to the officials. Seeing this, (Bass) jumps in
there and says 'What the hell are you doing?'
"Shelby turned around and said, 'You little pipsqueak.' "
Bass' fiery personality -- and his keen eye -- suited his move into
management.
Red McCombs, the former Spurs owner who made Bass general manager in
1979, is boastful of Bass' abilities.
"He can judge talent better than anybody I've been around. I mean
everybody," said McCombs, who owns the NFL's Minnesota Vikings. "Bob
gives everyone around him a great feeling of confidence, because Bob
is very, very, very -- how would I put it -- he has very strong
opinions about talent. . . . Bob turned out to be a great judge of
talent and a great coach."
During his tenure in San Antonio, Bass was responsible for the
drafting of Spurs legend David Robinson and acquisition of Sean
Elliott, John Lucas, Alvin Robertson and New Orleanian Avery Johnson.
Bass was chosen NBA Executive of the Year for the 1989-90 season
after the Spurs posted a franchise-best 56-26 record.
"He was absolutely the key putting us into a very competitive,
stabilized situation," McCombs said. "Bob was the guy who told us we
should acquire Gervin. I saw BB do this time and time again. We'd be
in love with a guy, and he'd tell us that he'll be around the league
10 or 12 years, but he's not going to get much better. We used him as
the go-to guy. I don't know anybody that we came across in basketball
that had any more ability to handle all phases in that personnel area.
"When I hired (former UNLV coach Jerry) Tarkanian, Bob did his best to
try to persuade me not to hire Jerry. He just felt like he wouldn't fit
what we were doing. But I was just infatuated with Jerry, hired him,
and, of course, he was a mistake. I've seen Bob in a lot of difficult
situations find the best way out of it. I just don't see how he wouldn't
be in everyone's Hall of Fame."
Years have passed since Bass was a vociferous ABA presence As he's
gotten older, he's become more reserved. He'll sit stoically at
Hornets practice, his eyes fixated on a shooting form or a defensive
stance. He's often short during interviews. He values his privacy.
"He stays quiet," said P.J. Brown, acquired by Bass for the Hornets in
2000. "He doesn't share a lot of information."
Bass' hair went gray. The players he used to coach and evaluate now
have kids whom he coaches and evaluates. But in a sport that is
synonymous with change and youth, Bob Bass has been an anomaly.
"I've never met a finer guy than Bob Bass," said the NBA's Director of
Scouting Marty Blake, a good friend of Bass.
"I think the guy should be in the Naismith Hall of Fame."
Which, by the way, is a long way from the NAIA.
"How the hell did this guy from this little Baptist school in Oklahoma
that nobody's ever heard of handle all this talent?" McCombs asked.
"But he did. I was just so grateful that I had him."
. . . . . . .
Benjamin Hochman can be reached at bhochman@timespicayune.com or
(504) 826-3405. William Kalec can be reached at wkalec@timespicayune.com
or (504) 826-3405.
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