William Theodore Walton III, better known as Bill Walton (born November 5, 1952 in La Mesa, California), is an American former basketball player and current television sportscaster.
He went on to lead the Blazers to the NBA title in 1977. The following year, the Blazers won 50 of their first 60 games, leading the league, before Walton suffered a broken foot, which turned out to be the first in a horrific string of foot and ankle injuries that cut short his career. He was nonetheless named the league MVP that season (1978).
After several seasons alternating between the court and the disabled list with both Portland and his hometown San Diego Clippers, he spent a considerable amount of money to buy himself out of his Clippers contract in 1985. He then called Jerry West, then general manager (GM) of the Los Angeles Lakers, asking about the prospects of playing for the team; West refused, citing Walton's injury history. Next, he called Boston Celtics GM Red Auerbach. At the urging of Larry Bird, who happened to be in Auerbach's office at the time of Walton's call, Auerbach signed Walton, adding the perfect piece to the Celtics' last championship run to date (1986). Providing a reliable backup to Bird's fellow front-liners Kevin McHale and Robert Parish, Walton would receive the NBA Sixth Man Award that season, becoming the only player to have ever won both the Sixth Man Award and MVP.
However, he was again injured the following season. Walton attempted a comeback in 1990, but injury again intervened and he retired from the game. His ankle problems became so severe years later that he had both his ankles surgically fused. His saga of injury and failed rehabs was connected to the less than ethical dispersal of pain killers by the doctor who was assigned to his case. In effect he was rushed back onto the court before he was totally ready to play, sometimes even playing on ankles that were still broken. Not one to harbor animosity, Walton has said repeatedly in his broadcasts that he is just as much to blame for taking the medication as the doctor was for giving it to him. Yet his experience with injuries and the circumstances surrounding them have come to serve as a warning for professional athletes who undergo major injury as well as being an interesting casestudy for medical ethics.
In 1996, he was named as one of the NBA's 50 Greatest Players of all time.
Walton's trademark catchphrases include "That's a terrible call!", "What is a foul?", "He couldn't even inbound the ball!" and "Throw it down, big man!" Another catchphase of Walton's is "Nice Pass!" on a good pass to a man for an open shot. Walton typically is paired up with Steve "Snapper" Jones for NBA games due to him and Jones having a point-counter point banter during games. Many fans respect Jones for holding his own against the verbose Walton.
Critics cite that Walton maintains a bias against certain NBA teams. Detroit Pistons fans regularly complain that Bill Walton is often too harsh in judging their team because of their lack of a superstar. Walton's most favored team is the Los Angeles Lakers, perhaps not coincidentally also the team his son Luke plays for.
Walton still has a committed relationship with the Celtics, if not professionally, as a fan. He's frequently mentioned that though he "grew up in the heart of Laker country, the Celtics were always MY team". He also keeps a picture of the floor of the old Boston Garden in his kitchen to remind him of what basketball is all about.
American basketball players | UCLA Bruins men's basketball players | James E. Sullivan Award recipients | Boston Celtics players | Los Angeles Clippers players | Portland Trail Blazers players | San Diego Clippers players | The NBA on NBC | National Basketball Association broadcasters | The NBA on ESPN | The NBA on ABC | San Diegans | American vegetarians | 1952 births | Living people
Bill Walton | Bill Walton | Bill Walton | Bill Walton | Bill Walton
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Bill Walton".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world