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22 years ago, on Feb. 14 1995, the Blazers traded number 22 to the Rockets for Otis Thorpe, the rights to Marcelo Nicola and a first round pick. Seems like a good time to remember what Clyde The Glide could do:
How he made some of the passes he did with his head down all the time was incredible. Tremendously physical player that became a decent shooter after having learned that flat, frog-legged jumper because of a low roof on the hoop he grew up with. Also, one of the nicest professional players I ever met. Was extremely friendly the several times I was lucky enough to meet him.
I happened to see a few games of him in college and was fascinated by how he played. It was the first time I can remember that the Blazers drafted the player I wanted them to get and why my number all throughout high school, college ball was 22. Thanks for the memories.
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This....and his performance on Dancing with the Stars..his decision to go into the HOF in a Rockets uniform says everything a Blazer fan needs to know about Clyde
There's no denying that Clyde had very special talents from a physical standpoint. But where he lost me was his lack of heart. He just didn't have it deep down inside. And that's why guys like Isaiah Thomas and Michael Jordan made him their bitch at nut cutting time. When the pressure was on, he folded like a cheap suit. Terry Porter was the heart and guts of that team (with a lot of help from Buck Williams). Clyde wanted the money and adulation but he didn't want the heat and pressure that went with all that. And whenever it came he usually got chumped by his opponent who wanted it more. A million dollar talent with a 5 cent heart and a smoke and mirrors work ethic......and it was always someone else's fault with Clyde.....he was always pure joy to watch....so long as nothing was on the line. Then he just plain broke hearts.....his decision to go into the HOF in a Rockets uniform says everything a Blazer fan needs to know about Clyde Drexeler...............
There's no denying that Clyde had very special talents from a physical standpoint. But where he lost me was his lack of heart. He just didn't have it deep down inside. And that's why guys like Isaiah Thomas and Michael Jordan made him their bitch at nut cutting time. When the pressure was on, he folded like a cheap suit. Terry Porter was the heart and guts of that team (with a lot of help from Buck Williams). Clyde wanted the money and adulation but he didn't want the heat and pressure that went with all that. And whenever it came he usually got chumped by his opponent who wanted it more. A million dollar talent with a 5 cent heart and a smoke and mirrors work ethic......and it was always someone else's fault with Clyde.....he was always pure joy to watch....so long as nothing was on the line. Then he just plain broke hearts.....his decision to go into the HOF in a Rockets uniform says everything a Blazer fan needs to know about Clyde Drexeler...............
I remember a playoff game, it looked like Kersey was taking a bad shot but actually it was an alley-oop to Clyde, who materialized out of nowhere and slammed it down. Magic Johnson was calling the game and said "Call him Mister Glide!"
Loved it.
