Sunday, November 21st, 2010 at 9:30 am  |  26 responses

Laughter, Memories and Oden

A powerful reflection from a Blazers fan.

by Casey Michel / @cjcmichel

Last week, I got a text. And I laughed.

At some point, you’ve just got to laugh. Not with your gut — a quick exhale will do — and certainly not at the misfortune. You know that this luck should befall none but the worst of us, none but the ultimate villains. You offer a short shake of your head and a brief downward gaze, and then a resumption of your life. You close the cell phone, and you close the book.

Oden’s done. And you laugh.

You laugh at the memories of yourself, 19 again, hair at your shoulders, clasped in the arms of your friends jumping through their basement as David Stern pulls out the white placard with the Blazers’ logo. Number one. We’ve got it. It’s ours. You laugh as you leap around the basement, spinning into the new era as an entire city screams in delight.

You laugh at all of the drives down Burnside, past potholes and Powell’s, comiGreg Odenng across the billboard on 10th. Emblazoned in red, white and black, the instructions are easy: Honk once for Oden, honk twice for Durant. You lay it on. The passersby jolt upright, then relax with the realization that there’s yet another fan in this basketball-mad town. They wait for the second honk, but none comes. They wait, like there’s a choice. But it’s going to be Oden. It’s got to be Oden.

And why wouldn’t it be? The big man is the key. The big man is the root of the pick-and-rolls, of the hip-checks and the offensive boards, of the rings and the parades and the keys to the indebted city. Plus, it’s not like you’ll overlook Jordan again. In the 60-plus year history of the NBA, there was only one Jordan; the sniper has felled the trees but once. Jordan was God. Jordan was a fluke. Russell. Chamberlain. Kareem. Shaq. Duncan. These are the ones you want. Every dynasty needed that centerpiece. The Bulls got lucky, because there’s no one like Jordan. Right?

You laugh at that summer afternoon, the July perfection Portland always offers, as you crush into Pioneer Square to welcome Oden to his new home. Nate MC’s, not quite barking, not quite beaming, a temperament that would soon become all-too necessary. Kevin Pritchard saddles next to him, all aviators and salt-and-pepper, the Boy Genius who will bring our team back to the promised land. The same man who will be out of a job three years later. You bob up and down as the light-rail pulls into the north side of the square, opens its doors, and unleashes the man-bear-beast into the sunshine. Stepping on to the stage, Oden, feasting on the crowd’s fervor, gleams, dances and promises the championship we’ve thirsted for for 30 years. You shout your agreement. And you wonder, now, if those dance moves played some role in his injuries. Nah.

(Maybe.)

You laugh because of the history. The ’70s had the Championship, yes, the Miracle at Memorial — but they also wrought Walton’s knees, and the subsequent collapse of a nascent dynasty. (For an excellent capture of just how close we were, read David Halberstam’s The Breaks of the Game.) The ’80s brought us Bowie, a man who’s story needs no telling. The ’90s blocked Sabonis when we needed him, needed his size, his force, his grace. And now the Aughts have taken Oden’s career and cast it on layaway. Just when things were looking up — truly, after the success of the past two seasons, we were finally, finally, primed — Oden’s career burrowed itself underneath scalpels and stationary bikes, under petulance and depression, sabotaging itself before anyone knew how the narrative would begin.

So you laugh, because history has repeated itself. Again. To us. To the only team we know. To the only sons we love.

You don’t cry for the lost opportunity. You don’t cry when you remember that we’ve already lost Maurice Lucas — the strongest link to that ‘77 banner, the Greatest Blazer of All Time — earlier this year. You don’t cry when you hear the news that Roy is missing meniscus in both knees, and has endured bone-on-bone for god-knows-how-long, and that, shit, if that’s the case, and the doctors can’t perform surgery, and there’s no sign the knees will stop their grinding till they’re dull, dust, done — if there’s nothing we can do but wait, then his career may be …. No — you won’t say it. Because that might just make you finally cry.

But that day’s not here. So you laugh. You go on, watching the development of Armon and Dante, waiting for LaMarcus to fill the leadership void, wondering if Rudy will ever realize that he’s stuck in town and finally play as such. You don’t bemoan Durant, or besmirch his ever-expanding talents. You sure as hell don’t yet consider him Air Apparent … but you admit the possibility that, perhaps, Jordan’s talents have been reborn in another. And that, as a basketball fan, is what you want. You rationalize, and force a smile.

You hope that the Blazers fans, and the Portland community at large, rally to Oden’s massive side and pull this 22-year-old to his feet. He doesn’t need our pity any more than he needs our condemnation. He needs us, more than ever, to Rise With Him. You hope that one day he can laugh with us, knowing full well that day will never come.

Oden’s season, and probably his career, is done. You read the text, and even though there’s no wind left in your gut, you laugh. Just a small one. And then you lean your head, close your eyes, and want it all back.

Casey Michel was born and raised in Portland, OR, and graduated from Rice University in 2010. He interned at both the Portland Tribune and Sports Illustrated, but will be taking a brief break from sports-writing to serve in Central Asia with the Peace Corps beginning in March. The Oden experiment may be over, but that doesn’t mean he won’t be flying back from Kazakhstan should the Blazers take the championship while he’s away.

  • Add a Comment
  • Share
  • RSS

Tags: , ,

  • youngmuggsy

    He’s only 22, he’ll find somewhere to play in the NBA if the Blazers decide not to resign him. He doesn’t have any chronic injuries just an unfortunate collection of unrelated ones.

  • The Philosopher

    Great write up.
    I admire your passion as a Blazers fan.

  • http://slamonline.com/ Tzvi Twersky

    Excellent.

  • Shem

    Can anyone imagine KD and BRoy as Portland’s wings? Arguably the best SF in the game as well as a top 5 SG. But in Portland’s defence, they made the right pick because the center position was more of a liability then the SF at the time

  • http://www.need4sheed.com Tarzan Cooper

    sucks to be a blazers fan

  • http://slamonline.com Matt Lawyue

    Great stuff Casey.

  • Hammer

    “With the 1st pick in the 2007 nba draft,the portland trail blazers select…Kevin Durant! From the university of texas”. If I only knew then what I know now,I wouldve given that 2nd honk. Dam!

  • don

    i wish that oden sign with the PHX SUNS just to see him healthy. C’mon Oden!

  • ai come back

    i want oden on the heat………….

  • ALEX80

    Please stay away from the Suns.

  • vanillagorilla

    So depressing as a die hard Portland fan and native haha, great article though man.

  • Jose

    ai: I know right?

  • MUBWAR

    the heat should give him a chance cause Anthony Zy Magloire and Pittman are not good enough centers for playoff time.

  • burnt_chicken

    what a fantastically written article! Oden’s career arc to date is a sobering reminder of how very human our bodies are, even those of us blessed with superhuman size/athleticism/speed/etc…here’s hoping Oden heals well, and soon. Yao too.

  • doyouwantmore

    As a human being, I can only say that I wish Greg Oden, Brandon Roy, and the Blazers the best. As a Sacramento Kings fan, I can only say that I don’t feel sorry for Blazers fans at all. At least you got teased with greatness. We just get endlessly reassured with mediocrity.

  • TrailBlazing&SportingLisbon

    great read, really good one..I catched the news here and kinda laughed in disbelief too..time to try again. BLAZERS4EVER

  • http://ohlaglambam.blogspot.com Zabba

    Sam Bowie made a respectable comeback after several years of injuries early in his career too. Could happen here as well.

  • http://www.slamonline.com J

    Great stuff. I love the Blazers too. Especially what the team have shown in the past few years dealing with their misfortunes. I’m so impressed with Roy. Huge fan of his game and his warrior heart. But I’m very much concerned about his knee. Would it require microfracture surgery? Not clear on that.. I hope not. Don’t give up on Oden yet. Dude still young. As long as he’s fighting he could make it.

  • http://www.need4sheed.com Tarzan Cooper

    Greg ‘disabled exception’ oden can still have a good career, if hes lucky, and about that……….

  • ab40

    like almost every blazer big who failed there especialy J. O’neal he’s going to florish in another situation. They need to let him go. I can see it already portland gives him the one year offer and he takes it. the year after he signs with boston and rondo will take his game to another level and they’ll build around those guys.

  • http://mail.google.com Jayo

    Just watch how he ends up playing for the Thunder!!

  • vtrobot

    My condolences to yr city. It could be worse, you could be a Knicks fan. At least you get to go drown your sorrows at Voodoo, Ground Kontrol, and Sassy’s.

  • jakedouglasroberts

    the tracjectory of G.O.’s career is a damn shame thus far. youngmuggsy, you are being FAR too optimistic at this point. it seems to me, barring some sort of medical miracle (hello, Phoenix Suns staff, that the dude’s FAR TOO BRIEF stint in the L is as close to over as it gets. again, a damn shame.

  • jakedouglasroberts

    the tracjectory of G.O.’s career is a damn shame thus far. youngmuggsy, you are being FAR too optimistic at this point. it seems to me, barring some sort of medical miracle (hello, Phoenix Suns staff) that dude’s FAR TOO BRIEF stint in the L is as close to over as it gets. again, a damn shame.

  • http://slamonline.com Ugh

    What a melodramatic article.

  • Pingback: Daily Roundup | Selectism.com

Advertisement