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One of the Greatest Days Ever

Every once in a while I like to reminisce, calling to mind great Blazer moments gone by.  The one that came to mind today was the day we made one of the biggest trades in franchise history.

It was the fall of 1999.  We had just come off a great run to the Western Conference Finals in the lockout-shortened season.  That run had ended with a crushing sweep at the hands of the San Antonio Spurs.  "Trader Bob" Whitsitt had already made one definitive move that summer, trading troubled star Isaiah Rider and Jim Jackson to Atlanta for veteran scoring guard Steve Smith.  That was nothing compared to the bombshell that was about to go off in October.

That summer I had moved to a new job in the hinterlands of Iowa.  I lived and worked in a small town of about 300 people.  I had been there three months and folks had just gotten a chance to get to know me...which of course also meant becoming familiar with my passion for the Blazers.  (I have this tendency to wear team shirts everywhere I go.)  One morning I was working with a bunch of kids when one of them came in and said, "Did you hear the news?"  

I said, "What news?"

They said, "The Blazers got Scottie Pippen."

"The Blazers got WHO???"

"Scottie Pippen."

"No way.  You're lying.  Who did they trade for him then?"

"I don't know.  It's in the paper."

"Well GET ME THAT PAPER!  QUICK!"

So the guys ran home full speed and got me a paper and sure enough, there it was...front and center on page one of the sports section.  Portland Trades for Pippen.  I jumped up and down screaming!  Then I skimmed through the article to see who the heck we traded for him.  Rasheed?  Brian Grant?  WHAT?  Walt Williams, Kelvin Cato, and change???????  WAAAAAAAAAAAA-HOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!  I had to blink, like, thirty times and read it again.  That's what it said alright.  That was just...nifty.

And you know, at that moment I KNEW.  We had Arvydas Sabonis, Rasheed Wallace, Brian Grant, and Scottie Pippen in the frontcourt.  We had Steve Smith in the backcourt and we were all still overrating Damon Stoudamire at the time.  We were making a serious run at the finals again.  That team was SET.

This was also exactly the time that Smashmouth came out with the song "All-Star".  The first time I heard that I realized it dovetailed so perfectly with what the Blazers had become.  It became my unofficial theme song for them for the season.  To this day it still brings back memories of what it felt like.

Of course that team didn't quite go as far as I'd hoped it would.  I did have a famous moment with them.  I had a steady e-mail group of friends who all talked Blazers.  (This was well before blogging time.)  As you may recall we went down 3-1 in the Conference Finals series with the Lakers and Game 5 was in L.A.  Well before the game I wrote to the entire group and said flat-out, "We are winning this one."  It wasn't bravado or hope...I really felt like I had this team clocked and my gut told me this was a win.  It turned out exactly that way.  Before Game 6 I said, "This one is a win too."  Again we pulled it off and now we were tied 3-3.  One of the guys wrote before Game 7 and said, "PLEASE tell me we're going to win this one!!!"  I answered honestly that I couldn't because my emotions were screwing everything up.  I didn't know.  I wish I did...or at least would have faked it.

Perhaps the greatest moment with that team came in the fourth quarter of that deciding Game 7 when Rasheed threw down one of his vicious dunks and we went up by teen-type numbers.  I got out of my seat and hollered all over the place.  Nobody had given us any chance to win the series and hang with the L*kers and darned if we weren't going to do it.  For that brief moment it tasted like championship again.  It didn't work out that way but I still remember the feeling.  I also remember that Pippen was the linch-pin for that team even though he was no longer the centerpiece or even the most talented player.  Without him that team wouldn't have won 59 games and come within 10 minutes of the Finals.  It was Bob Whitsitt's finest hour and probably his best trade.

--Dave (blazersub@yahoo.com)

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I remember that
Pippen was one of the guys I fantasized about coming to the Blazers (along with AC Green, Detlaf Schrempf and a couple others).  I couldn't believe it when we actually got him.

Wells, Smith, Pippen, Wallace, Grant, Sabonis, Schrempf, Oneil, Anthony and Stacy Augman (who was part of the Pippen deal that we ended up getting back). If only I could go back in time.

That year we took some guy named Bergersen?? late in the 2nd round.  A few picks later some guy named Ginobelli was selected.  The following draft we took Eric Barkley, when Michael Redd was still available.  

Rather than trade Grant and O'Neil the following year, it would have been nice if we could have swung a deal with SA - Wallace, Wells and O'Neil for Duncan.  Forget about Derek Anderson.  Then draft Tony Parker instead of Zach and shazzam!

Tim Duncan paired with Sabas and Pippen, with Brian Grant backing up the 4 & 5 spots.  Manu and Redd teaming up with Parker and Damon in the backcourt.  Hell, I'd even have signed Ruben Patterson.

by timg56 on Sep 27, 2007 6:52 AM PDT reply actions  

Also one of my top "Memorable Moments"
I was in Bangkok at the time that I read on Yahoo! Sports about the trade.

The closest Blazer fan I knew was thousands of miles away. I just sat all day with a huge, happy smile in the opressive Thai heat - drinking loads and loads of Singha beer. A big, silly, sweaty smile with loads of beer foam moustaches  - it was like a secret that I had to keep to myself.

Ball Don't Lie

by bothteamsplayedhard on Sep 27, 2007 7:23 AM PDT reply actions  

I was wrong
  By shear weight of the talent we were assembling, I knew that team was going to be very good. But I have to admit I wasn't thrilled by the addition of Pippen. I think because The Bulls had beaten US in the finals, and because it was Pippen vs. one of my favorite Blazers Jerome Kersey, I think I had some built in prejudice I had to overcome.

   Plus as I watched Pippen at a few games live, I realized something. Pippens overall game did not translate on television. Seeing Pippen at a game, in person, I learned to really appreciate his over all talent. You could see how great Pippen was, he was the linch pin for that team. Watching The Bulls on T.V., perhaps distracted by Jordans individual play, I under appreciated what Scottie Pippen added. Television has limitations, it wasn't until I watched some games live, and saw how Pippen would control the tempo, and execute the offense, and decide when he should make something happen, or do it himself, that I gained a lot more respect for his game. But I have to admit, when we got him, I thought it was a great addition, and I thought it was a good trade, but I underestimated the Player Scottie Pippen. You live and learn.

"Mother Nature started this fight, I think it's about time we ended it!"

by Krang on Sep 27, 2007 8:15 AM PDT reply actions  

Hardwood Classics...
I don't know if you ever tune into the "Hardwood Classics" games on NBA TV but a couple nights ago, they showed game 3 of the 2000 Blazers versus the Jazz playoff matchup.

It was crazy revisiting our roster... Detlef Schrempf, Scottie Pippen, Rasheed, Brian Grant, Sabas, even Damon. That was probably one of the greatest teams ever assembled (top 20 at least). It sucks we had to run into the NBA-aided L*kers...

by Champs2009 on Sep 27, 2007 8:43 AM PDT reply actions  

SO IT'S YOUR FAULT!!!
I blamed myself for the last 8 years, but it was actually you that failed to follow through on your guarantees! ADMIT IT!

WHAT WERE YOU THINKING?!? ONCE YOU START PREDICTING AND YOU'RE RIGHT, YOU CAN'T STOP! YOU MUST KEEP GOING!

Wielding karma-tic powers is a very dangerous, very delicate endeavor. You got intimidated and let emotion murky your vision. Clearly you didn't know what you were doing and shouldn't have been tinkering with such vast power.

Shame on you for letting Blazermaniacs down. I hope you learned your lesson.

by you'vegottomakeyourfreethrows on Sep 27, 2007 9:36 AM PDT reply actions  

I know
I've been living with this dark secret for many years now.  I used to be a successful business executive with a jaguar, italian suits, and a house on the hill.  My shame spiral has sabotaged my personal growth to the point that I am now living in a cardboard box typing on a seven-year-old laptop that's secretly hooked up into the public library's internet system.  My self-loathing knows no bounds.  My therapist says I keep playing that same script over and over in my head but I haven't found a way to shake it yet.  True Hollywood Story is doing a feature on me next week.

--Dave

by Dave on Sep 27, 2007 9:50 AM PDT up reply actions  

You must have been making serious money.
I hear a jaguar consumes 10 -12 pounds of fresh meat a day.

by timg56 on Sep 27, 2007 3:34 PM PDT up reply actions  

I never was a Pippen fan
I felt like his defense was overrated and his offense nonexistent. But later (after he retired) I did gain a respect for his intangibles and the way he would control the emotions of his team and get the best out of them. It wasn't apparent until after he left.

by jamon51 on Sep 27, 2007 10:03 AM PDT reply actions  

I loved Pippen
Until he pulled that "Coach Pip" crap and all the players lost respect for Dunleavy.  When the Blazers traded for him I thought for sure he was "our savior."

I was bar tending during game 7 and got off in the 3rd quarter.  I waited for a commercial break and then rode my bike to a friends house as fast as I could to watch the end/celebration.  I have hated Shaq ever since that dunk when he turned around and it looked like someone just tasered him or kicked him in the groin.

Bricken fracken, dag nabbit, hootinany, flrarfenal, barfuglesnaps!

by tominhawaii on Sep 27, 2007 11:26 AM PDT reply actions  

Pain
Look Dave, I know that it's becoming fashionable to look at the 2000 team with Rose-Colored Glasses (pardon the pun), but let's face the facts: WE ALL KNEW THAT IT WAS GOING TO HAPPEN. By "it", I'm referring to the Game 7 4th quarter meltdown.

And the most hurtful thing of all is that... you are right. When Rasheed threw down that monster jam with about 10 minutes to go in the 4th and screamed at the top of his lungs at the Staples Center crowd, AT THAT MOMENT is when the cynical, hedging, burned-too-many-times Blazer fan that I am finally let my guard down. Up until that point, I was excited, and optimistic, but I still reserved that little piece of my mind for their eventual defeat, because from 1978 until that day, all I'd ever known was the bitter taste of being good, but not good enough. Rasheed's dunk washed that final bit of common sense that I had held in reserve away, and I FULLY bought into... WE ARE GOING TO THE FINALS, AND WINNING THE TITLE!!!!

Of course, we all know what happened after that. There are days that I pray for selective amnesia, and could block those events from my memory. Damn those Blazers... damn them for bringing me to the brink of being 7 years old again, watching the Walton/Lucas/Hollins team win a title, and then YANKING it away just as I finally let my guard down. What a cruel, cruel day.

by chrispdx on Sep 27, 2007 1:38 PM PDT reply actions  

Ironic
isn't it that if Pippen would have faked an entry pass to Sheed and gone hard to the hole once or twice in the last ten minutes the Blazers would have won that game and he gets the Jordan monkey off his back after they wax Indy. Of course, if Damon could actually make an entry pass, then Pippen or Smitty could have posted to draw a foul and....oh screw it. Thanks for bringing that up again...really...where're my pills?

by Atomic Dog 71 on Sep 27, 2007 1:56 PM PDT reply actions  

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