Rastapopoulos
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Reminded me of some great quotes
Oct. 26, 1998: A story in the New York Times reveals details of an unusually candid Kenny Anderson's finances. In it he notes that upkeep and insurance on his eight vehicles costs about $75,000 annually, and says, "I was thinking about selling one of my cars. I don't need all of them. You know, just get rid of the Mercedes." It becomes the second-most famous player quote of the lockout, right behind New York center Patrick Ewing's, "We make a lot of money but we spend a lot of money." No doubt those have been Exhibits A and B in players association huddles over what not to say if this year's talks unravel.
Oct. 28, 1998: The smell of sulfer is in the air after a meeting with full union membership. It stretches past midnight and features a pair of famous exchanges. In one, Chicago guard Steve Kerr calls parts of the owners' latest proposal "an insult," triggering a similar remark from Stern about the players' desired 63 percent split of revenues. More famously, the Bulls' Michael Jordan gets into it with Washington owner Abe Pollin (who later would hire him as a player and part-owner) and tells Pollin, "If you can't make a profit, you should sell your team." A young Stephon Marbury reportedly was amused, saying, "Get a load of the old dude."
Dec. 19, 1998: Sixteen players participated in the exhibition game before a crowd of 9,512, with Ewing's team beating a squad headed by Alonzo Mourning 125-119. All proceeds were donated to charity after the "financial need" claim for a players' share earned public ridicule.
