Mike Monroe: Bowen’s No. 12 jersey should be recognized

Just about this time a dozen years ago the reigning champion Los Angeles Lakers were in Denver to play the Nuggets in a regular-season game, but reigning MVP Shaquille O’Neal was avoiding the media after his team’s morning shootaround at the Pepsi Center.

He was changing his size-22s in a courtside seat when a couple of reporters sneaked past his bodyguard and asked if he would answer a few questions.

“I’ll answer all your questions,” he said, “if you’ll answer one for me.”

O’Neal pointed to a banner hanging high in the rafters.

“Who is Beck?” he asked.

There, next to similar banners with names O’Neal recognized — Issel, English and Thompson — was the stumper, the name emblazoned beneath the No. “40.”

Byron Beck was an original Denver Rocket, a hook-shot specialist center who was the first player drafted by the franchise that became the Nuggets. He was the only Denver player to go all the way from the franchise’s first season in the ABA through its first season in the NBA, which would be the final one of his career.

Beck retired with pedestrian career averages of 11.1 points and 7.0 rebounds per game, but for the Nuggets franchise his presence from its inception had been enough. Retiring his number made perfect sense to Nuggets management, so when Beck left the game in 1977, his number went straight to the rafters.

Had the Internet been around in those days, there likely would have been the same sort of catty online comments that accompanied the announcement Monday that Bruce Bowen’s No. 12 will be retired by the Spurs in ceremonies at the ATT Center on March 21.

One reporter who has covered the Heat since Miami joined the NBA as an expansion franchise took to Twitter to suggest, facetiously, that Miami consider a similar honor for Keith Askins, a defensive specialist guard-forward for the Heat for nine seasons. During that period, Askins averaged 3.8 points and 2.9 rebounds.

Bruce Bowen (right) made a career of pestering offensive standouts such as Suns guard Steve Nash. (Edward A. Ornelas / eaornelas@express-news.net)

Retiring a number is the ultimate honor a team can bestow on one of its own and each franchise establishes its own criteria. This is evident when you run through the list of numbers retired by NBA teams and understand the various sentiments that produce such veneration.

The Nets retired Drazen Petrovic’s number and the Timberwolves retired Malik Sealy’s after tragic accidents took them in the prime of their careers. Similarly, the Celtics retired Reggie Lewis’ number after he died at age 27. The Royals (now the Kings) retired Maurice Stokes’ number after the 25-year-old All-Star forward’s career was cut short by paralysis from a brain injury precipitated by a fall during a game in 1958.

Hall of Famer Nate Thurmond played only two seasons for the Cavaliers. But he was from Akron, a basketball hero in Northeast Ohio long before his pro career, and he helped lead the expansion Cavs to their first playoff appearance.

The first number retired by the Blazers was that of Lloyd Neal, a rugged power forward with career averages of 11.1 points and 7.7 rebounds. Like Bowen, Neal was a versatile defensive specialist. His ability to guard the game’s top centers, even though he was 6-foot-7, made him beloved by the team’s players, coaches and fans, who thoroughly endorsed his recognition.

Defense was the hallmark of all four Spurs championship teams and Bowen was the best perimeter defender on three title teams.

Hanging Bowen’s number alongside those of David Robinson, George Gervin, James Silas, Johnny Moore, Sean Elliott and Avery Johnson doesn’t diminish those Spurs standouts. His offensive numbers may not be gaudy, but there is one number that screams for recognition: Eight.

That’s the number of times Bowen was recognized on the NBA’s All-Defensive team, a unit selected annually by the league’s head coaches.

Every coach who ever sent a high-scoring shooting guard or small forward on the court to be tortured by Bowen would endorse the honor the Spurs have chosen to give him.

mikemonroe@express-news.net

Mike Monroe: Tears and some stark reality for Mavs

DALLAS — The Mavericks raised their 2010-11 NBA championship banner to the rafters at American Airlines Center on Christmas Day, and it was a little too much for Dirk Nowitzki.

The Finals MVP admitted he choked up and had to work hard to hold back a tear or two as he took in the emotional ceremony.

“There were a couple waiting to come out,” he said.

Dwyane Wade and Udonis Haslem understood the emotion. They felt the same way on banner night in Miami in 2006.

Then, the Chicago Bulls put a 108-66 humiliation on them that was far worse than the 105-94 blowout this season’s Heat handed the Mavericks in Sunday’s rematch of last seasons Finals.

To be sure, this was a Christmas Day massacre. Miami led by 35 in the third period, a margin big enough for Wade and LeBron James to laugh through serial miscues committed by the end-of-the-bench reserves in the fourth quarter.

The Heat on Sunday were a team with chemistry born of continuity taking maximum advantage of a team adapting to more than emotion. The Mavericks had two new starters, and by halftime, coach Rick Carlisle swapped out one of those for another newcomer.

“The Spurs ought to be feeling pretty good about now,” said Will Perdue, a member of their 1999 title team, who’s now a broadcaster. “There’s no team in the league that the 66-game season helps more than the Spurs. They’ve got all those guys back who have been in their program.”

Carlisle understands his team can’t be what it was last season when defensive standout center Tyson Chandler got most of the court time and backup Brendan Haywood logged just 18 minutes per game.

“I think it’s important to point this out and be very clear about it: Brendan Haywood is not Tyson Chandler,” he said.

Mavs general manager Donnie Nelson cut a smart deal when Chandler made it clear he intended to sign a free-agent contract with the Knicks. By negotiating a sign-and-trade deal, Dallas netted a trade exception that turned into former Laker Lamar Odom.

Odom’s Christmas debut was spotty. He made his first shot, missed his next five and got thrown out of the game in the third period after getting two quick technical fouls.

“This is a different system,” Carlisle said. “There are similarities with what we do with where he came from, but there are enough differences, so that’s going to be work — for us and for him. I see him being able to make the transition quickly because he’s a smart player, a skilled player and he can do a lot of things.

“But when you’re one of those kind of players and you’re playing all different positions on the floor, there’s more to digest.”

Odom’s reality-star wife, Khloe Kardashian, electronically voiced her objection to Odom’s ejection from a courtside seat. She didn’t see anything from her hubby that merited two techs, she tweeted to 5-million-plus followers.

Reality bites, Khloe. NBA refs don’t care what you think.

Odom, a versatile big man with exceptional skills, seems more optimistic than Carlisle that he can adapt quickly to a system that is less geometrically defined than what the Lakers played.

“At the end of the day, it’s just basketball,” he said. “From first grade to college to the NBA, it’s pick-roll on offense and help-recover on defense. Basketball is a universal language, so I’ll be all right.”

So will the Mavs, but Christmas Day gave the reigning champs an early clue that defending won’t be easy.

“The good thing is we’ve got a game tomorrow,” Carlisle said. “The bad thing is we’ve got a game tomorrow and Denver is going to come in here with a shot at the champs. It’s a situation where we’ve got to work to make quantum leaps as often and as quickly as we can as a team.”

mikemonroe@express-news.net

TP ranked as fourth most disliked player in NBA

Spurs guard Tony Parker’s brush with the tabloids during his marriage to Eva Longoria has left a mark on his popularity.

Forbes Magazine reports that Parker ranks as the in a poll commissioned by Nielsen Media Research and E-Poll Market Research. Players had to have a minimum 10% awareness level from the public to have been considered in the vote.

Earning tabloid mention or playing on the Miami Heat appears to be the fastest way to zoom up the list. New Jersey forward Kris Humphries, who was married to pop tart Kim Kardashian for 72 days this summer, ranks at the top of the list. LeBron James was second.

Here’s a list of the top 10 finishers in the poll.

1. New Jersey F, 50 percent disliked

2. Cleveland F , 48 percent disliked

3. Los Angeles Lakers G , 45 percent disliked

4. San Antonio G , 37 percent disliked

5. Los Angeles Lakers F , 36 percent disliked

6. Miami F , 34 percent disliked

7. New York F , 27 percent disliked

8. Boston F , 25 percent disliked

9. Miami G , 23 percent disliked 

10. Dallas F , 21 percent disliked

From the looks of the list, Parker is in some pretty select company. Even if some fans dislike these players, they also have been among the most  successful in the league in the last several seasons.

And I’m a little surprised that if the list included owners and veteran players  that Mark Cuban and Kevin Garnett didn’t show up somewhere.