However . . . I think it's really reaching to retire his number based on that one series. The guy was essentially a journeyman player who was a perfect compliment to Walton and Lucas on the front line, and you certainly DO have to consider a guy's career numbers when you're debating whether or not to retire his number.
Well, it's totally up to the team whose numbers they retire and they are free to set any standards they wish. There are always extenuating circumstances. See my earlier post about all the players who had their numbers retired due to an untimely death. I doubt if Wendell Ladner's career numbers were considered when the Nets retired his jersey number (ironically, his career numbers are better than Bobby Gross', but he only played 55 games and averaged only about 5 PPG for the Nets prior to his untimely death in a commercial airline crash.
And then you have guys like Jordan and Maravich that have their jerseys retired by teams the never even played for. At least Bobby Gross played for the Blazers and was a key contributor to their one and only (so far) championship. I kind of get Maravich. He was from Louisiana, played college ball there and much of his NBA career in the city of New Orleans (for a different franchise). So, I get the connection and the desire to honor a native son. But, what the heck did Michael Jordan ever do for the Miami Heat to become their first, and so far only, retired jersey?
In short, if you keep retiring the number of players like Steele, Twardzik, and Gross, the whole idea becomes meaningless. The next time we win a title, is the organization going to retire the number of every guy who played a key role in the championship series??
Pretty soon there won't be any more numbers to retire.
Well, I hope we'll be having that discussion a few years down the road.
Unfortunately, once the Blazers started retiring all the key role players from the '77 Championship team, the mold was cast. Given their role in bringing that championship, I do think they deserve to be honored in some fashion, but I think a Portland Trail Blazer Wall of Fame at the RG with plaques describing their contributions to that '77 champsionship and photos of them in action, would have been more appropriate (and more educational for younger Blazer fans) than hanging their jerseys from the rafters.
And while I don't normally wish to emulate anything the Lakers do, I do like what they've done to honor the key players from the Minneapolis era that brought them their first championships. They have their jerseys hung, in a group, from the rafters, but current players are free to wear those numbers. So, they are honored for their contributions, but their numbers aren't actually retired and permanetly taken out of use.
BNM