Thread Rating:
03-25-2012, 06:41 PM
Itâs probably one of the most sickening play-by-play calls in history:
Billy Packer: âOh he walked! He walked and the referee missed it!â
Jim Nantz: âWebber brings it into the frontcourt. They have no time-outs remainiââ
Packer: âOH HE CALLED TOO MANY TIMEOUTS THATâS A TECHNICAL FOUL!!!!â
Nantz: âHe called a timeout and Michigan doesnât have any!â
Packer: âYES! HE GOT BY WITH A WALK, AND JIM, HE CALLS A TECHNIâ¦HE CALLS A TIMEOUT HE DOESNâT REALIZE THATâS MICHIGANâSâ¦TOO MANY. And so it will be a technical foul, North Carolina shooting, AND the ball. A HUGE mental mistake.â
As Jim Nantz would put it⦠the Fab Five came up short again.
As entertaining as some of the previous âWhat Ifsâ have been, this is the first one that really could have impacted college basketball as we know it today.
What ifâ¦
Chris Webber hadnât called timeout?
ââ
For argumentâs sake, letâs just pretend that Webber didnât call timeout and the Wolverines went on to win the game. (Remember, they were trailing at the timeâ¦itâs not like a win was a foregone conclusion.)
The great C-Webbâs career may have played out much differently.
Itâs not like Webber had a bad career or anything. 5 All-Star appearances. 5 All-NBA teams (1 first, 3 seconds, and 1 third). Career averages of 21, 10, and 4. But I think even he would tell you that it was a little bit of a disappointment.
If you compare him to his three other peers â Duncan, KG, and Dirk â he was more physically gifted than anyof them. If he had been better than Dirk, KG, and Duncan, he may have become the greatest power forward of all time.
He was powerfully built, with some of the best hands a big man has ever had. He could shoot the midrange jumper. He could post up.
But his most special quality? His passing. Not many big men in history have had the court vision or passing ability of Chris Webber. When he teamed up with Vlade Divac, it was poetry in motion.
But then came crunch time, and for whatever reason, perhaps because of the timeout, Webber would literally run away from the spotlight.
We can all remember him running to the high post, getting the ball, and then turning around with his back to the basket as he waited for Bibby or Peja or anyone to come get the ball out of his hands.
He was even afraid to pass! Only a handoff would do.
As it turns out, maybe he was just the unluckiest player of all time. If you watch the UNC-replay closely, you can see someone on the Michigan bench motioning for him to call a timeout. If you watched any of those Lakers/Kings series over the years, you know that the Kings caught some of the worst officiating in NBA history. Maybe all of the cards were always going to be stacked against Webber.
But thereâs always that idea that âyou make your own luck.â Apparently poor C-Webb just never learned how to make his own, and he always seemed to be scared of the ball when the game was close.
The Fab Five might be more Famous than Infamous.
So letâs say that C-Webb didnât choke in that spot and the Wolverines did pull out the close victory. Doesnât the entire world remember them differently?
Oh sure, we would still probably have a bad taste in our mouths after all of the banners came down a few years ago, but they still would have been champions.
If they had beaten North Carolina â college basketball royalty led by the great Dean Smith â then the Fab Five would have been looked upon as a resounding basketball success. The way it is now, they are simply looked upon as a cultural phenomenon. They brought âhip-hopâ into basketball.
I donât need to tell you how most white people look at the previous two statements. A win would have made all of that secondary. They would be more famous than infamous.
College basketball may have fundamentally changed.
The saddest part of the previous point to me is that because of all of the âculturalâ stuff, people failed to see the beautiful basketball that the Fab Five created.
In the rush to label them âthugsâ and âgangstersâ people missed the breathtaking passing, the swarming defense, and the overall unselfish basketball that they were playing.
One of my least favorite parts of the replay of the timeout is the seemingly indescribable joy that is just oozing out of Billy Packer as heâs screaming, âHE CALLED A TIMEOUT!â Listen again. Maybe itâs just me, but he seems to be begging the ref to call a travel. When itâs not called, he basically scolds the youngster and then bursts into joy when he realizes that Michigan is going to lose.
Say what you want about the Fab Five, but this much is true: at the time, most college basketball fans wanted them to lose.
UNLV had freaked out the blue-blooded college basketball world a few years before, but Duke had eventually restored order. The clean-cut âteam playersâ will beat the talented but selfish showboaters every time!
But here came Michigan, ready to change basketball again. Fortunately, for those who loathed the Fab Five, Michiganâs best player called a timeout when they didnât have one. Nobody needed to worry. The establishment had been upheld.
Unfortunately, we may have been robbed of a different brand of basketball that was just as beautiful as anything you will see on Hoosiers.
What if�
But heyâ¦at least they still gave us the baggy shorts!
Billy Packer: âOh he walked! He walked and the referee missed it!â
Jim Nantz: âWebber brings it into the frontcourt. They have no time-outs remainiââ
Packer: âOH HE CALLED TOO MANY TIMEOUTS THATâS A TECHNICAL FOUL!!!!â
Nantz: âHe called a timeout and Michigan doesnât have any!â
Packer: âYES! HE GOT BY WITH A WALK, AND JIM, HE CALLS A TECHNIâ¦HE CALLS A TIMEOUT HE DOESNâT REALIZE THATâS MICHIGANâSâ¦TOO MANY. And so it will be a technical foul, North Carolina shooting, AND the ball. A HUGE mental mistake.â
As Jim Nantz would put it⦠the Fab Five came up short again.
As entertaining as some of the previous âWhat Ifsâ have been, this is the first one that really could have impacted college basketball as we know it today.
What ifâ¦
Chris Webber hadnât called timeout?
ââ
For argumentâs sake, letâs just pretend that Webber didnât call timeout and the Wolverines went on to win the game. (Remember, they were trailing at the timeâ¦itâs not like a win was a foregone conclusion.)
The great C-Webbâs career may have played out much differently.
Itâs not like Webber had a bad career or anything. 5 All-Star appearances. 5 All-NBA teams (1 first, 3 seconds, and 1 third). Career averages of 21, 10, and 4. But I think even he would tell you that it was a little bit of a disappointment.
If you compare him to his three other peers â Duncan, KG, and Dirk â he was more physically gifted than anyof them. If he had been better than Dirk, KG, and Duncan, he may have become the greatest power forward of all time.
He was powerfully built, with some of the best hands a big man has ever had. He could shoot the midrange jumper. He could post up.
But his most special quality? His passing. Not many big men in history have had the court vision or passing ability of Chris Webber. When he teamed up with Vlade Divac, it was poetry in motion.
But then came crunch time, and for whatever reason, perhaps because of the timeout, Webber would literally run away from the spotlight.
We can all remember him running to the high post, getting the ball, and then turning around with his back to the basket as he waited for Bibby or Peja or anyone to come get the ball out of his hands.
He was even afraid to pass! Only a handoff would do.
As it turns out, maybe he was just the unluckiest player of all time. If you watch the UNC-replay closely, you can see someone on the Michigan bench motioning for him to call a timeout. If you watched any of those Lakers/Kings series over the years, you know that the Kings caught some of the worst officiating in NBA history. Maybe all of the cards were always going to be stacked against Webber.
But thereâs always that idea that âyou make your own luck.â Apparently poor C-Webb just never learned how to make his own, and he always seemed to be scared of the ball when the game was close.
The Fab Five might be more Famous than Infamous.
So letâs say that C-Webb didnât choke in that spot and the Wolverines did pull out the close victory. Doesnât the entire world remember them differently?
Oh sure, we would still probably have a bad taste in our mouths after all of the banners came down a few years ago, but they still would have been champions.
If they had beaten North Carolina â college basketball royalty led by the great Dean Smith â then the Fab Five would have been looked upon as a resounding basketball success. The way it is now, they are simply looked upon as a cultural phenomenon. They brought âhip-hopâ into basketball.
I donât need to tell you how most white people look at the previous two statements. A win would have made all of that secondary. They would be more famous than infamous.
College basketball may have fundamentally changed.
The saddest part of the previous point to me is that because of all of the âculturalâ stuff, people failed to see the beautiful basketball that the Fab Five created.
In the rush to label them âthugsâ and âgangstersâ people missed the breathtaking passing, the swarming defense, and the overall unselfish basketball that they were playing.
One of my least favorite parts of the replay of the timeout is the seemingly indescribable joy that is just oozing out of Billy Packer as heâs screaming, âHE CALLED A TIMEOUT!â Listen again. Maybe itâs just me, but he seems to be begging the ref to call a travel. When itâs not called, he basically scolds the youngster and then bursts into joy when he realizes that Michigan is going to lose.
Say what you want about the Fab Five, but this much is true: at the time, most college basketball fans wanted them to lose.
UNLV had freaked out the blue-blooded college basketball world a few years before, but Duke had eventually restored order. The clean-cut âteam playersâ will beat the talented but selfish showboaters every time!
But here came Michigan, ready to change basketball again. Fortunately, for those who loathed the Fab Five, Michiganâs best player called a timeout when they didnât have one. Nobody needed to worry. The establishment had been upheld.
Unfortunately, we may have been robbed of a different brand of basketball that was just as beautiful as anything you will see on Hoosiers.
What if�
But heyâ¦at least they still gave us the baggy shorts!
03-25-2012, 06:42 PM
03-25-2012, 06:43 PM
[YOUTUBE="Chris Webber TO"]NH1ujxNwrkA&feature=player_embedded[/YOUTUBE]
03-25-2012, 06:47 PM
I wanted them to beat UNC so bad in that game.
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
âThis is a great tradition that we have to live up to. It feels good that we were able to do this for Kentucky.â Brandon Knight
âit was a tough one, but weâre the real blue.â Michael Kidd-Gilchrist
"This is MY state!" Anthony Davis
âThis is a great tradition that we have to live up to. It feels good that we were able to do this for Kentucky.â Brandon Knight
âit was a tough one, but weâre the real blue.â Michael Kidd-Gilchrist
"This is MY state!" Anthony Davis
03-25-2012, 09:24 PM
If Webber didn't call timeout, then he gets trapped in the corner and throws the ball away
Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)