Bill Walton seems like a blowhard making obvious points during basketball games.
However, it seems, his life as an undergraduate basketball player as part of the John Wooden dynasty at UCLA seems fascinating.
Walton grew up in a family that was taught to fight in what they believed in. He joined protests, spoke his mind, and argued with his own coach. Wooden was an old-fashioned coach who believed the team needed discipline from the littlest thing such as putting on socks, tying shoes, and making sure their hair was cut close to the head and there was no facial hair. He believe discipline in day to day life translated to discipline on court.
It seems quaint, but people still make their players do the same thing today (Manny Rodriguez, formerly of the Red Sox, joined the Dodgers and was told by the coach to cut his hair--he did so, but only a touch, and certainly not in the spirit of what was expected).
In any case, it's interesting how activism seems to have disappeared, mostly through taunting and a growing conservatism in politics, and perhaps the thought that mere protest was not enough, that anger wasn't efficient.
But during the day, even an athlete as prominent as Bill Walton who, these days, would be in line for huge contracts and would be told to stop raising ruffles, then joined protests because it was important to him just as it was important to many other people on campus.
What ever happened to that idealism?
Three recent talks
-
Since I’ve slowed down with interesting blogging, I thought I’d do some
lazy self-promotion and share the slides for three recent talks. The first
(hosted ...
4 months ago
No comments:
Post a Comment