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Sports Shorts: Ex Commissioner made NBA 'truly global brand' dies

January 02, 2020 11:15 IST

IMAGE: David Stern's greatest accomplishment as commissioner is widely considered to be the way he transformed the NBA, once largely an unknown commodity outside the United States, into a globally televised powerhouse. Photograph: Andrew Innerarity/Reuters

Former National Basketball Association Commissioner David Stern, who oversaw the explosive growth in the popularity of the game during his 30-year tenure, died on Wednesday at the age of 77, the league said.

Stern, the NBA's longest-serving commissioner before being succeeded by Adam Silver on February 1, 2014, had been in serious condition after emergency surgery on December 12 in New York following a sudden brain hemorrhage.

 

“Every member of the NBA family is the beneficiary of David’s vision, generosity and inspiration," Silver, who worked with Stern for 22 years, said in a statement.

"Because of David, the NBA is a truly global brand."

Under Stern, the NBA experienced extraordinary growth, with seven new franchises -- including expansion to Canada in 1995 -- a more than 30-fold increase in revenue, a dramatic gain in national TV exposure and the launch of the Women's National Basketball Association and NBA Development League.

He also had a role in many other initiatives that helped shaped the league, including a drug policy, salary-cap system and dress code.

"Without David Stern, the NBA would not be what it is today," former Chicago Bulls superstar and current Charlotte Hornets owner Michael Jordan said in a statement to The Athlete.

"He guided the league through turbulent times and grew the league into an international phenomenon."

Stern's greatest accomplishment as commissioner is widely considered to be the way he transformed the NBA, once largely an unknown commodity outside the United States, into a globally televised powerhouse.

Under Stern's leadership, the league opened 13 global NBA offices and became in 1990 the first U.S. professional sports league to stage a regular-season game outside North America when the Phoenix Suns played the Utah Jazz in Japan.

"David Stern was the most important non-player/non-coach who ever passed through the NBA and it’s not really close," Bill Simmons, broadcaster and author of "The Book of Basketball: The NBA," said on Twitter.

"David Stern earned and deserved inclusion in our land of giants," the National Basketball Players Association added in a statement.

Bill Russell, who won 11 championships in 13 years with the Boston Celtics long before Stern became commissioner, said in a tweet: "He changed so many lives. David was a great innovator and made the game we love what it is today. This is a horrible loss."

Another retired NBA star, Shaquille O'Neal, called Stern: "The best commissioner to ever do it."

Asked to name his most cherished courtside moment, Stern, in an 2014 interview with the New York Times, pointed to a photograph of him presenting Magic Johnson with the most valuable player trophy at the 1992 All-Star Game, months after Johnson retired from the Los Angeles Lakers on disclosing he had contracted the virus that causes AIDS.

The 1992 "Dream Team" -- the first US Olympic men's basketball squad to include active players from the NBA -- was another special moment.

"This much-maligned group of players and sport, on the march to the gold medal stand, being feted like a combination of the Bolshoi, the Philharmonic and the Beatles," Stern said.

Johnson remembered that journey on Wednesday: "When David allowed me to play in the 1992 All Star Game in Orlando and then play for the Olympic Dream Team, we were able to change the world," he said on Twitter.

Stern also presided over four NBA lockouts, including two that resulted in shortened seasons in 1998-99 and 2011.

Stern, who had remained affiliated with the NBA and held the title of commissioner emeritus, was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2014 and the FIBA Hall of Fame in 2016.

Legendary New Yorker Yankees pitcher, Don Larsen, dies at 90

IMAGE: Former New York Yankees pitcher Don Larsen tips his cap during introductions for the 65th Old Timers' Day game before their MLB interleague baseball game with the Colorado Rockies at Yankee Stadium in New York, June 26, 2011. Photograph: Ray Stubblebine/Reuters/File

Don Larsen, who in 1956 pitched the only perfect game in World Series history for the New York Yankees, died Wednesday, his agent said. He was 90 years old.

Larsen died of esophageal cancer in Hayden, Idaho, Andrew Levy, who represented the pitcher, tweeted Wednesday night.

The unlikely Larsen, in Game Five of the '56 World Series on Oct. 8, pitched to 27 Brooklyn Dodgers batters, retiring pinch hitter Dale Mitchell on a called third strike before catcher Yogi Berra leaped into his arms.

"Don's perfect game is a defining moment for our franchise, encapsulating a storied era of Yankees success and ranking among the greatest single-game performances in Major League Baseball history," the Yankees said in a statement.

"The unmitigated joy reflected in his embrace with Yogi Berra after the game's final out will forever hold a secure place in Yankees lore. It was the pinnacle of baseball success and a reminder of the incredible, unforgettable things that can take place on a baseball field."

Larsen had lost Game Two of that series, but his perfect game earned him the World Series most valuable player honors as the Yankees won the series in seven games.

"I'll show 'em all," Larsen had said when manager Casey Stengel announced the day before the right-handed Larsen would be starting Game Five "Don't be surprised if I pitch a no-hitter too."

The next day he did.

"I must admit I was shocked," Larsen wrote in his autobiography The Perfect Yankee.

"I knew I had to do better than the last time, keep the game close and somehow give our team a chance to win. Casey was betting on me, and I was determined not to let him down this time."

Nicknamed "Gooney Bird" because of his flaky nature, Larsen pitched for seven teams in a 14-year career and never won more than 11 games in a season while posting a 81-91 record. He had joined the Yankees in 1955 after going 3-21 in Baltimore.

After winning nine of 11 games in 1955, he posted a 11-5 record ahead of the perfect game in 1956.

He remained a welcome and familiar face at Yankees' annual Old-Timers' Day celebrations in the decades following his playing career, which ended in 1967.

Source: REUTERS
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