Ailene Voisin: Unlike Webber, McDyess sacrifices

EmKingsFan4

Starter
Ailene Voisin: Unlike Webber, McDyess sacrifices



By Ailene Voisin -- Bee Sports Columnist
Published 2:15 am PDT Thursday, June 16, 2005

AUBURN HILLS, Mich. - The old Antonio McDyess would have just dunked in your face. He would have utilized the free-throw line as a launching pad, his 6-foot-9 frame elevating, seemingly levitating, for spectacular dunks and one-stride bursts that left defenders flat-footed.



But that was also the healthy McDyess, not this creaky Detroit Pistons model.

Two knee injuries. Three knee surgeries. Countless hours of pain.



As is so common with players who suffer knee injuries, his career has been dramatically altered, his visions of superstardom shattered by physical limitations and a chronic diet of lousy luck. His leaps and bounds are selectively few.

Yet here he is in the middle of the NBA Finals, his teammates having sprinted into this best-of-seven championship series with a victory Tuesday night, pursuing the only goal that matters: the ring.

"I always kind of look back and say, 'What if I hadn't gotten hurt?' " McDyess told reporters after Wednesday's practice at the Palace of Auburn Hills, "but with everything that's happened, with three knee surgeries, I would have said that this never would have happened."

The Pistons will never be his team. His minutes will be limited and his field-goal opportunities minimal. But in contrast to another gifted forward - a once explosive, healthy, multidimensional Chris Webber, presently hampered by debilitating knee ailments - he is content just to be standing on two legs, and having eased into a supporting role on one of the league's elite teams, to be playing in only the second postseason of his career.

McDyess does what Webber would not.

McDyess sacrifices, then picks his spots and contributes.

In 19 invaluable minutes against the San Antonio Spurs on Tuesday, for instance, in the game that precluded a sweep, the nine-year veteran provided a brief, but prodigious boost off the bench.

He swiped rebounds, blocked shots, scored 12 points mostly on midrange jumpers and turnarounds. He also produced one explosive maneuver - a combination of pump fakes, step-through and bank shot - that left Spurs coach Gregg Popovich reminiscing about the way he was.

"That's the Antonio McDyess we all remember," offered Popovich on Wednesday.

But it's been what? Almost five years since the former Alabama star exploded for the rebound basket that rescued the U.S. Olympic team in the 2000 semifinals in Sydney? Three years since he tore his patella tendon? Another 16 months since he heard the devastating "pop" as the same kneecap burst during his preseason debut with the New York Knicks?

As he so often has since this series began, McDyess, 30, relived the entire frustrating ordeal again, related how he repeatedly begged his physical therapist to cut him loose, asked his agent to have him waived, lay in bed on many nights last season, wide-eyed, wondering whether his career was finished. Cried when the Pistons outlasted the Miami Heat and advanced to the championship series. Cried, but remained grounded.

In the old days he would have jumped out of the building.

These days the landing would be simply be too painful.

"It's not easy," he explained, adding that he can no longer "run as fast, jump as high, move as quick. (But) when you can't do the things you normally do, and you know you gave your all, even after surgery, and you can't do more, you can't do anything but accept your role, and that's coming off the bench. I don't have a problem with it, because it seems like to me, when I'm in the game, I'm the go-to guy, so I feel like a starter."

For the better part of six seasons, the Quitman, Miss., native, who said his high school class consisted of a whopping 119 students, was a fixture in starting lineups in Denver (1995-97), Phoenix (1997-98) and Denver again (1998-2001).

His was the classic tale of the smalltown star who spoke openly of remaining humble while achieving individual goals that once were only imagined: All-Star and all-league selection; member of the gold-medal-winning 2000 Olympic squad; coveted free-agent status.

This also was a player whose fundamentals were enhanced by his tireless work ethic; he may have played fast and furious, but he was always slow to leave the practice floor.

Before the injuries, he had improved his jumper and his ballhandling. Since the injuries - after trades and signings and subsequent stops in New York, Phoenix and, finally, Detroit - he has relied more on intellect than instinct. He insists that he had no choice, but of course he did, especially after Pistons GM Joe Dumars signed him to a four-year, $24 million free-agent contract last summer.

He could have taken the money and moaned. He could have become disruptive, could have dominated the ball, could have complained about his reduced responsibilities.

But that isn't McDyess, never was McDyess, which is why his cheering section during these Finals is crammed with former coaches and teammates. This is one of the league's good guys. Never mind that he no longer jumps as high, runs as fast, score as many points.

"The old McDyess was taking the ball to the goal, trying to jump over you, shoot every shot," he said. "Now I know when not to jump. Maybe I wouldn't have gotten hurt if I was this Antonio ... "

Asked who would win a pickup game between the old and the new Antonio, he laughed. "Probably the old Antonio," he said.

http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/story/13073770p-13918992c.html
 
I just HAD to post this article because I COULD NOT believe that Voisin managed to take a shot at Webber in an article that has absolutely nothing to do with him...An article about someone else altogether...Unbelievable. But I guess I should know better than to underestimate how far she'll go out of her way to knock someone she doesn't like. Shame on you Voisin!
 
NO reason Webber should have been mentioned in this article. Also, ESPN and ABC have both done a tribute or lengthy backgroud of what once was for McDyess. Cant she be creative and not write about something that everyone is already talking about? Tell us something we dont know. He would have been one of the best players in the league had he not been injured (20ppg, 10rbg) but he got injured and now he is doing everything he can to make the most of his opportunity. I havent been pleased with Voisin's writing recently.
 
sun rises in the east, banana is yellow, lakers suck, and AV... - well You know the drill
 
Chris Webber must have rudely rejected Voisin one night several years ago when she tried to lure him into her "love van" in the parking lot at ARCO Arena. I don't understand her motivation to gratuiteously hammer him.

Did I spell the G-word right?
 
Haha, Wow!!! She really must have a problem ... it was one thing to complain about Webber while he was ruining the Kings, it is another to even care about him when he's wasting another teams money.
 
True, he is a little bit more mobile than webber and has had 3 knee surguries to webbers 1, but that was a cheap shot. The article is trying to show what antonio went through to get where he is at right now, and she has to involve webber in it. And its not like she said, "webber knows what antonio goes through on a daily basis", but she has to say, "antonio does what webber doesn't." What a *****.
 
sloter said:
Haha, Wow!!! She really must have a problem ... it was one thing to complain about Webber while he was ruining the Kings, it is another to even care about him when he's wasting another teams money.

I feel that your sarcastic attempt to throw even more unnecessary barbs at Chris Webber is probably meant to prove some point.

What, exactly, is that point? I'm afraid I don't "get" it.
 
Anyone else imagining Ailene in a small dark room, in front of an old fashion typewriter, on a small wooden table, with a flash of lighting exposing every picture of Webber ever taken covering every inch of her walls, and each picture has a dripping red X on his head colored with Ailene's own blood.


My favorite part of the article was left out:

Reach Ailene Voisin at (916) 321-1208 or avoisin@sacbee.com
 
Last edited:
Stolen Blueprint from Ailene's desk for all her Bee articles:


-Find story that's already been covered by major news networks

-Add unbelievable spin that no one would think of or fathom

-Venomous jab at Chris Webber and/or Rick Adelman

-Use quotes gathered by more reputable journalists
 
Poison is the game and Poison is her name.

The situations aren't similar. McDyess was out of commission for years. If McDyess was in Webber's situation, he'd have done the same thing. No way would any player who had a good year like Webber (23/10/5) before the knee injury, come back and just roll over. I would question his heart if he did such a thing. Webber came back and though he didn't have a great regular season, he was still a key player in the playoffs. This year he came back and though not as effective as he once was, he still has playing well.

The idea that McDyess is sacrificing is bs. That's not a knock on Mcdyess, but after 3/4 years of not playing or contributing much, he's in no position to "sacrifice" anything. He's lucky to still be in the league, and it looks like he realizes that.
 
Oh GAWD......

:: puts head and in hands, shakes head, taking a min to regain composure::

You have got to be kidding me. This has moved on from being a hatred, this is an obsession. This woman is sick and the Bee is even worse because they employ her. I don't quite know what that makes me since I am a subscriber! :(
 
I think she works on the 'no such thing as bad publicity' principle.

That is to say, if she writes a piece on Mcdyss or anyone else in the nba not connected with the Kings then it is likely to get skimmed over by Kings fans flicking through the Bee. However, make an irrelevant reference to CWebb or Rick or whoever and suddenly the article is the subject of discussion.

The (sad) fact that the discussion centres around Ailene and her mindset rather than the quality (or lack of it) of the article seems to be lost on her.

Before i came to this site i didnt really appreciate the degree of her negativity and i cant really understand where she hopes that taking such a line will get her. We dont want a sicophant, just objective, informed journalism. Her bosses at the Bee must surely see some potential for that from her...perhaps its fighting to get out and all it needs is Petrie to sign a high profile player who she can admire rather than despise for us to see her better side.
 
In 2 days she's made digs at Chris and Rick for no reason. I really wonder what they did to pee her off so badly. To bring Chris up in an article that he has nothing to do with is totally disgusting to me. He's not even a Kings anymore and she's still hounding him with her negativity. She isn't even a good writer. Why do they keep her? I just don't get it.
She'd been quiet lately, should have known her poison would be back in full force on both of them. What do we have to do to get her to stop? has anyone ever emailed her and asked what her problem is and why she has to dog them out at every opportuntity? The worst part is that she gets paid to write this bulls*** They need to ship her off to Antartica and let the penguins deal with her. Poor penguins.
 
loopymitch said:
They need to ship her off to Antartica and let the penguins deal with her. Poor penguins.

Maybe then, her fingers would freeze off and she would no longer to type any more B.S.
 
thesanityannex said:
Maybe then, her fingers would freeze off and she would no longer to type any more B.S.


We could only hope for that but her lips would have to freeze too or she'd find a way to dictate her venom.
 
loopymitch said:


We could only hope for that but her lips would have to freeze too or she'd find a way to dictate her venom.

That was already taken care of.....................Before she was shipped of to Antarctica, her vocal cords were removed by none other than Chris Webber, assisted by his long time anestheseologist Rick Adelman.
 
Back
Top