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View Full Version : Kareem's Open Letter to Wilt "Chumperlame" in 1990



Stanley Kobrick
03-13-2020, 12:31 PM
An Open Letter to Wilt ChumperlameIt’s been several years now, Wilt, that you have been criticizing my career with your friends in the press. Since this pattern does not seem to have any end in sight, I feel that I might as well have my say about the situation.

It would seem that someone who achieved as much as you did would be satisfied with his career. After all, some of the things you did in your time were quite admirable and have given us an enduring set of records for the books. So why all the jealousy and envy?

In trying to figure this out, I started to look for what you would be jealous of, and that’s when the picture started to become clear. Many remember how frustrated you were when your team couldn’t win the NCAA tournament. Your talent and abilities were so great that everyone assumed the NCAA was all yours. But after a terrific triple-overtime game, Kansas lost. You complained about the officiating, your teammates and other things, and then quit, leaving college early to tour with the Globetrotters. That seemed to set a pattern for you. After any tough test in which you didn’t do well, you blamed those around you and quit.

In professional basketball, Bill Russell and the Boston Celtics gave you a yearly lesson in real competitive competence and teamwork. All you could say was that your teammates stunk and that you had done all you could, and besides, the refs never gave you a break. Poor Wilt.

In 1967, your team finally broke through. That 76er team established records that are still standing today. But the following year, the Sixers lost and, predictable as ever, you quit. You came out to L.A. and got with a dream team. The only lack that team had was leadership at the center position. Bill and the Celts took one from you in ’69, and the Knicks followed suit in ’70. People are still trying to figure out where you disappeared to in that series. True to form, after the Knicks beat the Lakers in the world championship in 1973, you quit and haven’t been seen on the court since.

Of course, you came out every so often to take a cheap shot at me. During the sixth game of the world championship series in 1988, you stated, “Kareem should have retired five years ago.” I can now see why you said that. If I had quit at the time you suggested, it would have been right after a disappointing loss to the 76ers. And it would have been typical of one of your retreats.

But after that loss, I decided that I had more to give. I believed in myself and in the Lakers and stuck with it. We went on to win three out of four world championships between ’85 and ’88. The two teams you played on that won world championships, in ’67 and ’72, never repeated. They never showed the consistency that the Lakers of the ‘80s have shown. And you didn’t want me to be part of that.

Given your jealousy, I can understand that. So , now that I have left, one thing will be part of my legacy: People will remember that I worked with my teammates and helped us win. You will be remembered as a whining crybaby and a quitter, stats and all.

https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1990-03-18-tm-602-story.html

HoopologyPhD
03-13-2020, 01:14 PM
This is one reason why this grade A d-bag will never get a coaching gig.

jlip
03-13-2020, 01:15 PM
Imagine if this letter had been written during the age of social media.

warriorfan
03-13-2020, 03:53 PM
I saw this quite along time ago. It’s a pretty scathing ether. When I re-read it now it seems you can say a lot of the same things about LeBron. LeBron and Wilt are very similar, two of the greatest pure athletes the league has seen, incredible statistics, although tendencies to disappear in key moments, to be pouty and blame teammates and leave teams when things get tough.

tpols
03-13-2020, 04:10 PM
Wilt is the ultimate symbol of an athlete that thought he could win everything on his own in a team game.. physical gifts.. and ended up failing.

Human beings got to the top of the food chain with our communication and collaboration. You dont win anything without it. Many a beast was slayed.

Were not tigers....

deathawaitu
03-13-2020, 05:00 PM
I saw this quite along time ago. It’s a pretty scathing ether. When I re-read it now it seems you can say a lot of the same things about LeBron. LeBron and Wilt are very similar, two of the greatest pure athletes the league has seen, incredible statistics, although tendencies to disappear in key moments, to be pouty and blame teammates and leave teams when things get tough.

I agree with your comment.

The last couple sentences in that letter "People will remember that I worked with my teammates and helped us win. You will be remembered as a whining crybaby and a quitter, stats and all"

This reminds of of Kobe, working with his teammates and won the chips the right way.

Lebron is still often called as a whining crybaby, quitter, stats and all. (similar to his fans)

Kblaze8855
03-13-2020, 05:11 PM
I saw this quite along time ago. It’s a pretty scathing ether. When I re-read it now it seems you can say a lot of the same things about LeBron. LeBron and Wilt are very similar, two of the greatest pure athletes the league has seen, incredible statistics, although tendencies to disappear in key moments, to be pouty and blame teammates and leave teams when things get tough.


Wilt was traded from the warriors for financial reasons. The team couldn’t afford him. The owner had tax problems and lost his case to the nba that he should split road game gates because Wilt was the biggest draw in the league. This is how the local paper described the situation far as his help the last season there:


He is, to be precise, scoring less and having the time of his life.
So are the Warriors, a team that lists on its roster some of the slowest players and worst shooters ever to play in the NBA.


Anyway....he didn’t ask to go to philly to get a better team. It was who offered the most cash. He was almost traded to the Knicks. One of the players traded for him retired instead of reporting to the Warriors for the record.


He left philly when his coach did. His warriors and philly coach who left for the ABA. But it was hardly when things got tough. They had ended the greatest dynasty in American sports history and come back the next year even better only to suffer some late injuries. He didn’t leave a bad team. He left the best team in the nba after setting the all time wins record and having won a ring there.

And on his next team they broke that win record and won that franchise first ring.

Wilt never left anywhere because anything was tough. Nothing was ever tough in his career aside from his last year on the warriors who essentially sold him.

Wilt wanted his money. That’s it. There was no ring chasing. He couldn’t ring chase if he wanted to. He paper chased.

Doranku
03-13-2020, 10:32 PM
Kareem would make a great ISH poster. Wilt Chumperlame is Durthickemz-esque.