It will be nice to hear the ovation that “Oak” gets at the ACC Wednesday night.ĭid you see the Orlando-Detroit game Tuesday night? Yep, that was the same Orlando team that hung up 125 points against Toronto on Sunday afternoon without Carter, Mickael Pietrus and Rashard Lewis. “I’m like the transmission on a car I do my job, you just don’t see it.” Or when he was asked about Vince being the sole focal point of the offence, having him launch seemingly too many shots: “A shirt look good when you iron it but if you iron too much, it gonna get burned.”Īnd my all-time favourite came when he was asked how he would help Toronto win that playoff series against the Knicks after calling out Vince, saying that his young teammate was the dream teamer and had to play better. There are the famous Oakley quotes like, “Pimpin’ ain’t easy, pimpin’ ain’t dead, the ho’s are just scared.”Īnd a few more of my personal favourites like the time when he was asked about something he didn’t think was of any merit, “Man, that’s useless, like bringin’ eggs to a barbecue.” Ask some of the clubhouse guys about Oak extending generous tips for a job well done, whether it was for looking after uniforms or delivering the takeout food in a timely fashion. But that “right way” of doing things also extended to the little guy who did his job correctly. Allegedly, the Hill incident was over money and the McInnis spat over a woman but it was all about respect for Oakley and conducting business the right way. There are many well-documented Oakley stories like the time he stirred it up at shoot-around one morning with Tyrone Hill and was suspended for the game that night, and a similar run-in with Jeff McInnis. When you come up in here, you gotta play.” “It’s fine if they come in the league but don’t use the fact that you’re young as an excuse. It was listening in on an Oakley scrum at Madison Square Garden where I first heard the concept that NBA stood for No Boys Allowed, when the bruising power forward was asked about young players in the league. In the only playoff series Toronto has ever won (a best-of-five against the Knicks) it was Oakley that came out and said that Vince Carter had to play better if the Raptors were to win. If you were on his team, he had your back. He told teammates what they needed to hear and didn’t care if he lost the popularity contest along the way. Oakley was the type of player that teammates respected and opponents sometimes feared. Heck, he was a dying breed when he was a Toronto Raptor at the turn of the century. Oakley, a guy who did not always get involved in the handshaking and hugging before tip-off, probably shakes his head at how soft the league has become. If you don’t remember, the 1994 NBA Finals was a seven-game knock down, drag out battle between the Knicks and Houston Rockets where scoring 90 points meant you won the game. True, Oakley-type players are hard to find around the league, particularly these days after Oakley and his rugged New York Knicks teammates (Patrick Ewing, Anthony Mason, Derrick Harper et al) under Pat Riley made the word “force” part of the NBA vernacular.
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