The NBA Star who Abandoned A Franchise

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • Journey back to June 16, 1975, a pivotal moment in NBA history when the landscape of professional basketball dramatically shifted. This video explores the monumental trade that sent six-time NBA MVP Kareem Abdul-Jabbar from the Milwaukee Bucks to the Los Angeles Lakers, forever changing the trajectory of both franchises.
    Delve into the complex web of personal and professional challenges that Abdul-Jabbar faced during his time in Milwaukee. From cultural isolation to growing frustrations with the team's direction, we uncover the lesser-known factors that pushed the NBA's most dominant big man to seek a change of scenery.
    This mini documentary video examines:
    - The cultural and social climate of 1970s Milwaukee and its effect on Abdul-Jabbar
    - The immediate and long-term consequences for both teams
    - How this trade reshaped the NBA's competitive landscape for years to come
    - The legacy of Kareem's decision
    Whether you're a die-hard NBA fan, a student of sports history, or simply intrigued by the human stories behind major athletic decisions, this video offers a fascinating look at a turning point in basketball history. Join us as we unravel the events leading up to this blockbuster trade and explore its lasting impact on the NBA.
    Parts of this video were made with the help of AI tools, they did not modify the story in any way.

Комментарии • 385

  • @ignatiusjackson235
    @ignatiusjackson235 Год назад +166

    People need to understand. NBC *postponed the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson* in order to make this announcement. Kareem was really something else, man.

    • @ethanweeter2732
      @ethanweeter2732 Год назад +14

      To postpone Carson in the mid to late 70s would have been a huge deal.

    • @cubbdacrossfacecrippler
      @cubbdacrossfacecrippler Год назад +8

      We understand just fine. We've had LeBron with the decision, Kobe wanting out of LA, MJ retirement mid prime. So the magnitude of the moment is understood.

    • @orthotech9758
      @orthotech9758 Год назад +2

      ​@@cubbdacrossfacecripplerdon't forget Magic's announcement.

    • @kybelian
      @kybelian 11 месяцев назад +1

      The NBA never wanted Kareem in Milwaukee. It just could not admit it. Same with Lebron in Cleveland hence The Decision in prime time. So this worked out that the Bucks got a championship and the NBA got its best player in one of its big markets. It also knew how to put most of the blame on the player in what was a bigger corporate-media business decision

    • @petergreen5337
      @petergreen5337 8 месяцев назад +1

      ❤Thank you for your point

  • @ryansnustad9133
    @ryansnustad9133 Год назад +1

    Lew Alcindor is a legend by any metric and whatever you choose to call him. A very young Kevin Garnett played him in a movie against Earl 'the goat' Manigault.
    Kareem shattered all records, except for rebounds. Still a top 5 player. Of All Time.

    • @erics9754
      @erics9754 8 месяцев назад

      NO he played Wilt lmao.

  • @briankleinschmidt3664
    @briankleinschmidt3664 Год назад

    Wow. Just think - if he stayed in Milwaukee and followed the Koran, he would have established a thriving Muslim community in the nation's heartland. - Professor hindsight.

  • @necrophagiakc
    @necrophagiakc Год назад +73

    You're beating around the bush Kareem had the same problem black players had in Green Bay playing for the Packers then they felt alone there wasn't enough other Black people around to make them feel comfortable players they always felt like they were on display in public walking around in Green Bay John Jefferson, James Lofton and others would say they had to drive an hour or more just to get a haircut there wasn't any black barbershops in Green Bay or surrounding areas..

    • @bruceluther5738
      @bruceluther5738 Год назад +10

      Yet Kareem married a white chick stop

    • @taytay8283
      @taytay8283 Год назад +11

      @@bruceluther5738 naw he married a black lady Janice Brown in 1971 divorced in 78…. What are you talking about

    • @bruceluther5738
      @bruceluther5738 Год назад +6

      @@taytay8283 then he married a white lady. My point is as a Muslim he must recognize Allahs revelation that their is only one race human and we have different hues of skin not separate races

    • @vincenthammons-kd9du
      @vincenthammons-kd9du Год назад

      the double standards in your statement are unreal now imagine a white man saying that about black people.

    • @mcNuggetMuncher
      @mcNuggetMuncher Год назад

      Don't ever let a white guy cut your hair they dont know nothing about them waves

  • @xanderc1225
    @xanderc1225 Год назад +244

    As a lifelong bucks fan I understand why he left. I live in Wisconsin and know it’s not LA or New York but he had reasons that couldn’t be fulfilled here at the time. It’s sad but there wasn’t many other cultures here besides native Americans, white polish/ Germans and the small black communities that existed. It’s much different now than it was back then. And now fully understanding what happened I don’t blame him for leaving and I’m glad he helped us win a chip and franchise history. Chips here matter way more than building super teams in big markets!!!

    • @Supyloco
      @Supyloco Год назад +6

      I mean, I don't know about the Knicks, but for the Lakers, the stakes are about chasing our eternal rival.

    • @ebonyknight5
      @ebonyknight5 Год назад +2

      Exactly

    • @LordPorter06
      @LordPorter06 Год назад +9

      Born and raised in Milwaukee and it’s trash.

    • @supermoneyball420
      @supermoneyball420 Год назад +5

      @@LordPorter06 It’s funny when ppl talk about Giannis being loyal as a difference between him and Kareem with the Bucks or like Bron and KD leaving teams now, like he grew up in Greece and he’s from Nigeria idk if I became like a superstar in Barvaria or something I would probably love it but I get it when ppl wanna leave 💀💀

    • @supermoneyball420
      @supermoneyball420 Год назад

      @@LordPorter06 Maybe not KD I guess that’s kinda different bc he also left the bay but Bron didn’t even get to miss a single Ohio winter before he left for Miami he’s not even from Cleveland that’s like u grew up in Racine and they just made u the entire economy of Milwaukee one day always been crazy to me 😭

  • @Rysofly
    @Rysofly Год назад +10

    Milwaukee was and is RACIST. Heck they recently beat up a Bucks player a few years back if y'all can recall. And simply because he was parked in a wrong spot returning a Redbox movie at Walgreens. They profiled and when they found out he was a bucks player it was an oops. Then they did pay him quietly.

    • @llll-is6em
      @llll-is6em 10 месяцев назад

      USA was and is racist

  • @don8244
    @don8244 Год назад +57

    As a New Yorker who had Puerto Rican family only in NY and NJ, Kareem's concerns are relatable. When I moved to Maryland it was a culture shock. Everything closes so early, there's more hostility towards Latinos, and its main city in Baltimore is a nightmare of crime in comparison to even the Bronx.

    • @frank-ko6de
      @frank-ko6de Год назад

      multiply that hostility by 10X when it came to Black citizens in Milwaukee and Wisconsin, in general. Especially by the cops. Theres a reason why no Black free agent ever goes to Milwaukee, theyre usually drafted and then, they leave as free agents.

  • @big8dog887
    @big8dog887 Год назад +152

    Correction: Magic Johnson was the Finals MVP in 1980 (though many feel Kareem should have been). Kareem did win a second Finals MVP with the Lakers, but it was in 1985 against the Celtics.

    • @justinmunson1412
      @justinmunson1412 Год назад +8

      Can’t believe that error

    • @w.davidholland7228
      @w.davidholland7228 Год назад +18

      Kareem didn't play, the Lakers didn't believe they could win. Everyone except Magic. When Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was out, for a game I think, Magic said we're still going to win, without Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Is Lakers teammates looked at him crazy, because he was a rookie. he played center in place of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, and did exactly what he said they would. The Lakers won without KAJ and a rookie lead his team to the first five NBA championships.

    • @w.davidholland7228
      @w.davidholland7228 Год назад +7

      Magic deserved it as a rookie playing CENTER, Losing his best teammate.

    • @tomfassel6563
      @tomfassel6563 Год назад +25

      @@w.davidholland7228 that was for one game they didn’t have Kareem. The other 3 wins Kareem definitely played and averaged 33 points per game that series

    • @harmonicdissent
      @harmonicdissent Год назад +1

      Thank you. I was about to say the same.

  • @THE_HMRC
    @THE_HMRC Год назад +5

    Milwaukee was just.....too white...for Kareem....Him saying that he did not fit in culturally was a nice way of saying this.

  • @thecellulontriptometer4166
    @thecellulontriptometer4166 Год назад +126

    As a life long Bucks fan and longtime Wisconsin resident, I don't begrudge Kareem a bit for requesting a trade. He brought a championship to the Bucks, and his reasoning for wanting a trade makes sense even today. I really appreciate his contribution to Buck's history.

    • @The_Bigot
      @The_Bigot Год назад +2

      Yeah I guess that’s more important than honoring a contract you willingly signed.

    • @Cantfakethefunkk
      @Cantfakethefunkk Год назад +20

      @@The_Bigotyou do realize that free agency wouldn’t become a thing for over a decade after this right?

    • @ericbrower6769
      @ericbrower6769 Год назад +9

      @@The_Bigot NBA free agency didn't exist until 1988. He couldn't choose which team to sign with.

    • @Amick44
      @Amick44 Год назад +2

      And it was only 1 time. Harden and Durant hop teams like journeymen who are just trying to keep a job. LeBron isn't that much better.

    • @erics9754
      @erics9754 8 месяцев назад

      Can not criticize Kareem here many fanboys lol. I never liked him I liked Wilt and always wished Wilt would kick his bratty ass.@@The_Bigot

  • @kevingreen2400
    @kevingreen2400 Год назад +44

    Kareem stated in his 2nd memoir that he would often drive some 90 miles from Milwaukee to Chicago to hang with friends and listen to jazz. This is a good perspective on the trade, well done

    • @JamusChristus
      @JamusChristus Год назад

      He could've easily lived in Waukegan and commuted.

    • @panam4redd
      @panam4redd Год назад +10

      @@JamusChristussometimes you just wanna be somewhere you know you're accepted

    • @JamusChristus
      @JamusChristus Год назад +1

      @@panam4redd bingo

    • @carlfrye1566
      @carlfrye1566 3 месяца назад +1

      1970's Milwaukee obviously was not the cosmopolitan/big city like Chicago so it isn't unusual to hear he went there for friends and clubs/music.

    • @carlfrye1566
      @carlfrye1566 3 месяца назад

      ​@@panam4redd: Milwaukee wasn't a haven for jazz and night clubs, it was natural to seek out other places to find that. Like a country boy playing for the Bulls going to a rural club for country music.

  • @KOGOSTOMUS
    @KOGOSTOMUS Год назад +18

    Oh yeah this is going places

  • @direkramseychikboy9102
    @direkramseychikboy9102 Год назад +22

    Milwaukee waited for Giannis for another Title

    • @dontheavatar
      @dontheavatar Год назад +4

      Being patient vs the lakers being greedy.

    • @G-TV_TheOneManArmy
      @G-TV_TheOneManArmy Год назад +4

      17 vs 2 I'm sorry but yeah

    • @bruceluther5738
      @bruceluther5738 Год назад +11

      The basketball gods gifted Milwaukee with Giannis

    • @xanderc1225
      @xanderc1225 Год назад +2

      @@G-TV_TheOneManArmy 2 that hold lots of weight compared to always having superteams built from money and location

    • @G-TV_TheOneManArmy
      @G-TV_TheOneManArmy Год назад +4

      @@xanderc1225 I can give you a good 9 rings where the right teams won 80s showtime lakers won and Shaq and Kobe Lakers won 1 ring (I assume it's lebron James) doesn''t count because he's synonymous with superteams but I still don't count the 2020 Lakers a super team but that's me

  • @jameswinston8533
    @jameswinston8533 Год назад +7

    Milwaukee is still one of the most segregated city in America, so just imagine was it was like in the 60's 70's
    It wasn't about the team why he left, it was the city and state

    • @KnightBoat
      @KnightBoat Год назад

      The segregation index measures the entire metro, not just the city proper.
      A lot of Milwaukee's older neighborhoods developed along ethnic lines, but in over 20 years of living there I can't say I ever had to look very hard to find a mixed crowd.
      However, the suburban counties are very white, very geriatric, and tend to be very racist.

    • @DrDoom-wo8hb
      @DrDoom-wo8hb Год назад +1

      @@KnightBoat Nice spin on manufactured (read: REDLINING) racial segregation from the racist white trash that controlled and (continues to control) Milwaukee, but go ahead.

  • @willn8664
    @willn8664 Год назад +4

    Who came back to this video after Giannis possibly leaving?

  • @goofydog2
    @goofydog2 Год назад +8

    Reading his book, Kareem said that when he went back to play against Milwaukee, after being in LA for years, he said he suddenly 'realized how much he loved and missed the place and especially the people.'

  • @nicholashazlett4369
    @nicholashazlett4369 Год назад +35

    A kick in the pants being a Bùcks fan/madisonian. The man knew what he wanted. Had the stones to go get it. Cant argue with this. Its admirable. We should all be so bold. This should apply even if your the best basketball player in the world.

  • @brianarbenz1329
    @brianarbenz1329 Год назад +7

    Kareem valued aesthetics, not just salary, in ways that almost no other NBA star did. That’s admirable. I always wished he could have been drafted by the Bulls, so that he could have played in a city obviously more suited to his eclectic ways, yet still in the Great Lakes region.

  • @bucksdiaryfan
    @bucksdiaryfan Год назад +47

    Kareem, as a Buck, was arguably the MVP of all time (he declined in his Laker years). He gave everything he had to the franchise. But he's a painfully shy person who has a hard time making friends. Thus he was extremely lonely in a city that didn't have a lot of citizens who shared his eclectic interests. So he gave the team six phenomenal seasons and then felt it fair to ask them to cut him loose. Fair deal.

    • @lwmson
      @lwmson Год назад +12

      I can agree with all you said except the part about him "declining" as a Laker. Don't be ridiculous. As a Laker he was still an all-star, won NBA MVP three times, and five NBA titles.

    • @bucksdiaryfan
      @bucksdiaryfan Год назад +5

      @@lwmson I'm just going by the statistics, not the team and media honors you cite. So your claim is he was just as good when he was in his late 30s as when he was 25? Who's being "ridiculous" now my friend?

    • @frank-ko6de
      @frank-ko6de Год назад

      you also forgot to hear the quiet part out loud, which is Milwaukee was a very racist city to its Black citizens, He was still a private person in Los Angeles or New York City, But, stay clueless and deluded.

    • @therealjaystone2344
      @therealjaystone2344 Год назад +1

      @@bucksdiaryfanhe did carried the lakers in the 80s because magic wouldn’t win anything without his presence. His sky hook shot was no doubt indefensible and how his special offense carried the lakers to a dynasty. He already won six rings by 1988 and he never thought he would be the GOAT (before MJ).

    • @Elguapodelfuego
      @Elguapodelfuego Год назад +4

      Wilt was better

  • @michaelmccormack494
    @michaelmccormack494 Год назад +32

    Lew/Kareem gave em six. In retrospect, that's a lot! He also gave them his best, at his absolute prime, in the '74 Finals... His play in those playoffs went way beyond. His game six 15-foot baseline hook in Boston is one of the NBA's shot of shots, on the order of Jerry West's 1970 Finals 65-foot bomb. I rooted hard for the Bucks because of Lew/Kareem and The Big O.

    • @Psyfi85
      @Psyfi85 Год назад +2

      Agreed, he knew who he was, throughly. And those WI winters probably weren’t missed much, college ball there, familiarity.

    • @manny4552
      @manny4552 Год назад +2

      Yeah that 1974 team of Kareem Oscar and Dandridge was really great but Oscar was padt his prime and even if Kareem was the world's best player.. the legend 34 year old John havlicek was still in his prime

  • @shawngraham9115
    @shawngraham9115 Год назад +11

    Kareem was the MVP of the 1980 final through the first 5 games but he was injured during the 6th game and Magic won the MVP for that finals. Kareem did get his 2nd finals MVP in 1985 in the win over Boston, the first time the Lakers would beat Boston in the finals after losing the previous 8 against Boston. Bill Russell won 7 of his 11 titles vs the Lakers.

  • @ronaldoarcher4522
    @ronaldoarcher4522 Год назад +1

    What do you call it when a team trades or cuts a player. Do we say the team abandoned a player.

  • @lonniewilson9279
    @lonniewilson9279 Год назад +2

    This article worked very hard to stay clear of the hard truth even avoiding any reference to his race and the Black culture.. His requesting a trade had everything to do with Milwaukee being a overwhelmingly white city figuratively and culturally. Kareem was a sophisticated Black Muslim male who needed to be amongst more people like him.

  • @area51ville
    @area51ville Год назад +5

    Kareem Abdul-Jabbar...the original diva

    • @femgoo
      @femgoo Год назад +2

      Aka Roger Murdock, Airline pilot!! 😂😂

    • @area51ville
      @area51ville Год назад

      @@femgoo don’t get the reference

    • @femgoo
      @femgoo Год назад

      he acted in the movie Airplane (1980) where he played the co-pilot. !

    • @RK-um9tu
      @RK-um9tu Год назад +1

      translation - I am a white male.

    • @area51ville
      @area51ville Год назад

      @@RK-um9tu translation hebrew israelite or whatever purple,green,orange,blue,and yellow out fit you got on

  • @dispassionateobserver
    @dispassionateobserver Год назад +7

    Some really good clips of a Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in this video. Stuff that I haven't seen before, and I've watched a lot of video of Kareem.

  • @williamellis9851
    @williamellis9851 Год назад +2

    bs KAREEM WAS GREAT BUT WILT HANDLED HIM HIS FIRST YEAR AFTER THAT NO ONE COULD

  • @eksit101
    @eksit101 Год назад +2

    Dude, the NBA was almost dead at that time. Games were aired on delay. Grive me a break.

  • @darrylnelson05
    @darrylnelson05 Год назад +1

    Say what? He loves White Women, there were plenty of White Women in Milwaukee.

  • @bronzremix
    @bronzremix Год назад +2

    Interesting that at the end of it all it was Junior Bridgeman whose the richest of all these men... probably richer then them all combined.

  • @ebonyknight5
    @ebonyknight5 Год назад +5

    Can’t blame him for wanting to work and live in a place that he was more comfortable!!!!

    • @Amick44
      @Amick44 Год назад

      And he didn't pull the shenanigans that a lot of guys do. Like a Harden, for instance. Or Kyrie. He didn't fake injuries or whine and sit out for no reason.

  • @kevinlawrence8580
    @kevinlawrence8580 Год назад +6

    Kareem is my fellow jazzhead!

  • @malz92
    @malz92 Год назад +2

    Imagine living in Wisconsin as a Muslim in 1974! Poor guy

  • @DeeNice681
    @DeeNice681 Год назад +5

    Props to Kareem for doing those. I like the Bucks but understand. If a team can’t win and your doing all you can then go. I still wish Don Nelson would have said ‘yes’ to that Marques Johnson-Jamaal Wilkes trade. Marques would be in the hall!

    • @marcbasil
      @marcbasil Год назад

      …? They won a ring lol

  • @bpsactclass2218
    @bpsactclass2218 Год назад +3

    You made a mistake. Magic was the 1980 NBA Finals MVP, not Kareem. Kareem was finals MVP in 1971 and 1985. That is actually very impressive - 14 year gap! I really enjoyed the video.

  • @jackson4274
    @jackson4274 Год назад +1

    As a Wisconsinite I think we failed Kareem from an off-the-court perspective. There was not a lot of tolerance for Muslims in the 1970s unfortunately.

  • @scotthovland7380
    @scotthovland7380 Год назад +6

    I was 13 and loved him and couldn't understand why he didn't like us. Broke my heart

    • @hench1985
      @hench1985 Год назад +6

      A lot of it had to with the Big O Oscar Robertson retiring. He spoke with Oscar after the Bucks won the title again in 2021 and they both loved how the Bucks won it again

    • @erics9754
      @erics9754 8 месяцев назад

      He did not like you because he is a racist.

  • @wellingtonmiddleton3739
    @wellingtonmiddleton3739 Год назад +1

    Not one of the greatest but The Greatest. Check out this man's resume from high school, through college and the N B A. No other player can match it or even come close. Yes, Bron, M J and others were and are great but Kareem is the greatest of them all - A basketball fan, not a personality fan, from the beautiful, tranquil Islands of The Bahamas 🏝️🌅🏖️🇧🇸. Peace, love, life and blessings ❤️🙏

  • @thedagothexperience
    @thedagothexperience Год назад +2

    I wonder if Kareem knew about the history of the Arab slave trade before he converted?

    • @RK-um9tu
      @RK-um9tu Год назад

      Arab slave trade was not in the USA, so what is your point?
      All he needs to know is the Christian slave trade.
      Bet you feel pretty stupid right now...

  • @michaelmagic988
    @michaelmagic988 Год назад +2

    just eat people if you want to fit in in milwaukee

  • @michaelscalzo6716
    @michaelscalzo6716 Год назад +6

    Gonna be a great channel

  • @joseyeastwood
    @joseyeastwood Год назад +1

    Kareem never wanted to play for Milwaukie he hated the weather and playing in the city he was from New York and played in Los Angeles at UCLA and the main reason was he was a Muslim in a city where their weren't many.

  • @forestgump8357
    @forestgump8357 Год назад +3

    They literally interrupted network television to announce this trade.

  • @sptx9670
    @sptx9670 Год назад +1

    The way he was treated by the league and Wisconsin he should have left

  • @DRUtastic
    @DRUtastic Год назад +4

    Not even considered a top 3 laker to most fans. Shows how much the city appreciated his greatness

    • @marcbasil
      @marcbasil Год назад

      Why would he be considered a top 3 laker..? He was a Buck & is known as a Buck. That’s where he played best

    • @JoeAltDelete
      @JoeAltDelete Год назад +1

      Kareem is absolutely a top 3 Laker of all time, top 5 at a minimum

  • @davefleming1117
    @davefleming1117 Год назад +7

    He was simply the best center i ever saw play. My dad said Wilt. But i was huge Celtics fan but Kareem was always my favorite individual player.. the single most beautiful unstoppable shot of all time. That great sky hook. He could rebound and play defense as well as a pretty damn good free throw shooter too! Miss you Kareem

    • @Elguapodelfuego
      @Elguapodelfuego Год назад

      Wilt blocked that sky hook multiple times in a game

    • @_Game0ver_
      @_Game0ver_ Год назад +1

      @@Elguapodelfuego outside of those instances, over the span of his entire career, it was an unstoppable shot. Wilt was also a freak of nature, let's not forget.

    • @brianarbenz1329
      @brianarbenz1329 Год назад +1

      @davefleming Be careful with using “my Dad said.” That launches endless Airplane! vibes. (A movie which also had many Milwaukee-LA ties.)

    • @davefleming1117
      @davefleming1117 Год назад

      LMMFAO

    • @thekububeach
      @thekububeach Год назад

      @@Elguapodelfuego Only 2 times

  • @charliebronson1274
    @charliebronson1274 Год назад +1

    Hopefully Giannis stays.

  • @guitary
    @guitary Год назад +6

    As a Bad Boys Pistons fan who hated seeing the phantom foul that robbed a championship, i disliked the manhandling of an old man Kareem on his retirement tour even more. Not that he didn’t bang down low with the best of em, but having to deal with Mahorn pulling the chair or Laimbeer plain stiff as a board straight as an arrow arms and hand in perfect position to defend his hookshot, but having to deal with hardcore boxing out and no cheap layups without being jacked to pieces….
    Okay, I didn’t really hate it. I wish he retired earlier.

    • @FabrizzioJoaquinMonsalveSalced
      @FabrizzioJoaquinMonsalveSalced Год назад +2

      bro they robbed the pistons, the pistons should have 5 titles and be the the second dynasty after the celtics

    • @ednunez7682
      @ednunez7682 Год назад +1

      @@FabrizzioJoaquinMonsalveSalced oh bullshit. They lost. Deal with it!

    • @Amick44
      @Amick44 Год назад

      ​@@FabrizzioJoaquinMonsalveSalced3. 3 titles.

    • @leroystover1062
      @leroystover1062 Год назад +1

      That was a bad call on Laimbeer😢

  • @Wallyworld30
    @Wallyworld30 Год назад +2

    Bucks ended up getting Brian Winters who became a 2x Allstar with Bucks and Junior Bridgeman great player played 10 years for Bucks and traded other assets from this trade for 2 first round picks. Bucks were an amazing squad in 80's never had a single losing season that decade. I grew up in the 80's and felt betrayed I never got to see Kareem in a Bucks uniform. Thank the good lord Giannis is the superstar the city loves that the superstar loves back.

    • @DrDoom-wo8hb
      @DrDoom-wo8hb Год назад

      Had an amazing squad that didn't win SHAT minus Kareem, come on man!! LOL

  • @aaron-uj5qs
    @aaron-uj5qs Год назад +1

    Thats fine cuz this is giannis's city n we all know it

  • @jaylenbarnes2.079
    @jaylenbarnes2.079 Год назад +2

    Great Video

  • @lucasjleandro
    @lucasjleandro Год назад +1

    The Big Guy won a title and leaves. At least he got a title. Kareem with the Bucks is like Napoleon on Italy if the stories ends there will already be a great history

  • @v.e.7159
    @v.e.7159 Год назад +1

    Lew Alcindor was a Milwaukee Buck. Kareem Abdul Jabar was a Laker.

    • @RK-um9tu
      @RK-um9tu Год назад

      He changed his name in LA because Milwaukee would have bomb his house...

  • @STONESGAM
    @STONESGAM Год назад +1

    I am from Milwaukee and don't blame him for leaving. However, I do kind of blame the Bucks for bringing him back to Milwaukee a few years ago for events and to help promote the team. It's like dude you didn't like it here and couldn't wait to be traded don't act like you have so much love for the city now. It was so phony.

  • @nosajdabeno
    @nosajdabeno Год назад +3

    Kareem and the Lakers beating The Celtics in the finals were my introduction into basketball. My Dad would watch the games and of course I would join him, asking questions when something happened that I didn’t understand. I remember my Dad telling me to pay attention to Kareem and his sky hook. For its time it was a thing of beauty! I really am glad I got to watch the Showtime Lakers, then Michael and Da Bulls (the only time I “cheated” on The Lakers ha ha!), and of course Kobe. For me, today’s game just isn’t the same. I still watch, don’t get me wrong, but it just doesn’t have the same vibe as it used to for whatever reason. Again, that’s just ME and MY OPINION! I don’t expect anybody to agree. If you do, cool. If not, I’m actually glad you either just started watching like I did all those years ago, or you still love the game as it’s played today!

  • @ExhaustedElox
    @ExhaustedElox Год назад +1

    Took us 50 years to get another one, but I don't begrudge Kareem for leaving. He had to do right by himself and Milwaukee wasn't right for him at the time.

  • @Rinaldiii
    @Rinaldiii Год назад +3

    Nice video to help understand him

  • @freddyes2242
    @freddyes2242 Год назад +31

    Kareem, wilt and shaq had a similar story of leaving a weaker market and going to a super market in Los Angeles and getting a super team or powerful duo. Shaq got Kobe and glen rice, kareem got magic and worthy, wilt got west and Baylor but Baylor fell apart: I think you can add Dwight, Anthony Davis but Dwight failed with Kobe and Davis and lebron won a ring. These super teams and leaving franchises isn’t new.

    • @Youralwayswhining4367
      @Youralwayswhining4367 Год назад +5

      Kareem had a very huge ego to fill back then

    • @ihytj6251
      @ihytj6251 Год назад +7

      @@Youralwayswhining4367 that ego was deserved. He earned that right

    • @MrPabloJoven
      @MrPabloJoven Год назад +20

      Magic didn't arrive in LA until 79 and Worthy was in 82. Kareem didn't leave to create a super team. The Laker team he went to had a 30-52 record prior to his arrival. You can disparage him leaving Milwaukee but it's false to accuse him of leaving to create a super team or team up with some other super player already on the Lakers.

    • @melvynsngltn27
      @melvynsngltn27 Год назад +5

      Glen Rice wasn't there until 1999 Kobe was a rookie bench player

    • @atribecalledlen3567
      @atribecalledlen3567 Год назад +2

      @@melvynsngltn27 facts he reached with rice

  • @mazzb305
    @mazzb305 Год назад +2

    Weird seeing young Marv Albert 😂😂😂

  • @its420somewhererightnow
    @its420somewhererightnow Год назад +2

    Giannis was cloned from KAJ's DNA!💯💯💯

  • @bigpasty1582
    @bigpasty1582 Год назад +2

    I hope the bucks don't lose Giannis in a similar way. Media and fans in Wisconsin have a tendency to annoy our stars

  • @ericgarringer6911
    @ericgarringer6911 Год назад +1

    Honestly who doesn't want out of Wisconsin in the winter lol

  • @JeffreyBlessedYT
    @JeffreyBlessedYT Год назад +2

    interesting.

  • @Revolver1701
    @Revolver1701 Год назад +1

    The interrupted Carson to announce the trade to the Lakers. Wow.

  • @lutherwalker7639
    @lutherwalker7639 Год назад +2

    May i have some more videos sir...💯👌🙏

  • @edwardmcduffie2518
    @edwardmcduffie2518 Год назад +2

    Someone please tell me how the Knicks did not land the hometown hero???

  • @camoss3724
    @camoss3724 Год назад +2

    Had the Bucks let Kareem play out his contract, he would have been a free agent but subject to compensation as per the rules of the time. The Bucks did well to trade him when they did and got a much better return than had they waited until he hit free agency. I remember the Knicks were one of the teams frequently mentioned as a potential landing spot (Kareem was from New York), but they had very little to offer in terms of the young talent the Bucks were seeking. The Lakers actually had players who could help Milwaukee's team.

    • @JuanVillegas-d8v
      @JuanVillegas-d8v Год назад

      Typical Knicks, unable to land the big one, with the exception of 33 Patrick Ewing. Other than that our GMs have been terrible for most of our relevancy. I remember we gave u an entire team for Melo and then couldn't achieve more past that since so much already went into merely getting him. Ugh.....We got 2 chips in the 70's but if we would've got Kareem.... 4 to 5 at LEAST...

    • @camoss3724
      @camoss3724 Год назад +1

      @@JuanVillegas-d8v Had the Knicks landed Kareem back then, they probably would have resembled a lot of those early Laker teams Kareem played on. That is, one megastar and a bunch of guys who'd have a hard time getting a pickup game after the season.
      Remember the 1977 Western finals? The Blazers dominated the Lakers at every position but center. That trade left the Lakers very thin at a number of positions, something that didn't begin to turn until the 1977 draft when the Lakers took Norm Nixon with their first-round pick, and then of course, Magic Johnson in 1979.

  • @InAntWeTrust
    @InAntWeTrust Год назад +1

    AKA Kareem wanted to be around some black folks lol 😂

  • @margarinetaintedgreen8140
    @margarinetaintedgreen8140 Год назад +3

    By a huge margin, MIL was the most successful franchise ‘70-‘74. 5 yrs at 74%. 4 Conference Finals. 2 Finals. 78-18 Championship season. “Abandoned a franchise.” Terrible title.

    • @TheCman183
      @TheCman183 4 месяца назад

      But he did abandon them. Even after they tried every possible avenue to give him what he wanted.

    • @margarinetaintedgreen8140
      @margarinetaintedgreen8140 4 месяца назад

      @@TheCman183 Kareem wanted to live somewhere else. 6 years. See above levels of success. That franchise largely owed their huge success to one man: Cap. Word-choice-wise, “abandon” is unfair.

  • @flynt1977
    @flynt1977 Год назад +2

    True to his faith. Can't hold that against anyone.

  • @Nonukes2024
    @Nonukes2024 Год назад

    Dave Cowan's./ Celtics....kick his Ass.
    Schooled.....him so bad....he requested a trade outa Milwaukee

  • @Supyloco
    @Supyloco Год назад +2

    I wanna see a video on how the Lakers landed Mikan, because the story itself is fucking wild.

  • @Tjthehbk
    @Tjthehbk Год назад +1

    Im looking forward to the next video you do, you have a good commentator's voice lol Keep it up !!!!!

  • @grant1739
    @grant1739 6 месяцев назад +1

    Jordan>kareem

  • @youtuber3328
    @youtuber3328 10 месяцев назад

    to be COMPLETELY honest i did do and/or PROBABLY will SOMEWHAT like the bucks because i did do and/or PROBABLY will really LOVE legend kareem abdul-jabbar

  • @bballanalytics1552
    @bballanalytics1552 Год назад +1

    awesome channel!!! your content is very high-quality, look forward to more

  • @grannydeez13
    @grannydeez13 Год назад +1

    Bro has definitely disrespected the city multiple times over the years 🙄

    • @RK-um9tu
      @RK-um9tu Год назад

      Truth hurts doesn't it

    • @grannydeez13
      @grannydeez13 Год назад

      @@RK-um9tu yes, he hurt my feelings

  • @joescorner8650
    @joescorner8650 Год назад +2

    New favourite channel

  • @RD22
    @RD22 Год назад

    Now Jabbar is pitching da Jab for da man. Maybe LeBron should have listened to Ice Cube ....not Kareem & Adam Silver.

  • @Jiltedin2007
    @Jiltedin2007 Год назад

    Excuse me, but the NBA made history in 1980 when A Rookie named Magic Johnson won the NBA Playoff MVP Award.

  • @Amick44
    @Amick44 Год назад

    Maybe one day some people will write how Durant, Kyrie, Harden abandoned multiple franchises. LeBron, too.

  • @kelly747k
    @kelly747k Год назад

    I was born & raised in Wisconsin pretty much after his time... and used to tolerate him & enjoyed him in Airplane... but now knowing he was pushing out, screw him... he could've helped a franchise get championships, but he left... he still is above Trump, but kinda at that level... almost shit like Trump.

  • @mgpanther81
    @mgpanther81 Год назад

    Even as of 1029, Milwaukee was in the top 5 most segregated magor cities in the US. Add the lack of diversity to the fact that no one can name remarkable things from Milwaukee and...Aside from that I have no idea how real estate agents sell that city. From there you have a chance to go to L.A. in the mid-70's? I'd have recommended a CAT scan if he HADN'T taken that move! Plus, he got that city a trophy before he left.

  • @OrionOodama
    @OrionOodama Год назад

    The former Lew Alcindor is already a proven commodity entering the NBA, a generational talent.
    And inasmuch this feature gives a clear reason why he left the Bucks, there are eventual talents who stayed amidst the city's atmosphere and culture.
    And for this, I appreciate Michael Jordan. Perhaps he and Chicago complemented each other at the right time and situation. MJ turned a franchise into a viable and respectable commodity and still is quarter a century after playing his final game. MJ was intensely loyal, while the Bulls were so foolish and full of themselves they can redo the glorious era shortly after "The Last Dance."
    And there's Tim Duncan. Since his close signing with Orlando (yeah, another what if for the Magic), TD stayed there for good and still his home upon retirement.
    Kudos for the Bucks owners and management for keeping the team in Milwaukee.
    They lost Kareem in 1975. 23 years later, they traded Dirk Nowitzki on draft night (another what if, the second time). They smarten a bit by keeping Giannis.

  • @paullupo756
    @paullupo756 Год назад

    Milwaukee got 2 of the best basketball players in the trade. Winters and Bridgeman. Kareem wanted to home boo who. After he got traded he kiss David Sterns ass to win Championships . David Stern only wanted big cities in the NBA championship game to make big money. If Kareem was that good,why didn't Milwaukee get more championships. Why because a small market. Wilt Chamberlain was a Great basketball player

  • @zyxwut321
    @zyxwut321 Год назад

    Wow, look at young Marv Albert? Who knew THAT guy once existed? Dude's as old as Methuselah.

  • @maureencora1
    @maureencora1 Год назад +3

    I Wonder Today Do Black Players on the Utah Jazz in Salt Lake City Feel Like Kareem in 1970s Milwaukee, WI?

    • @braydo525
      @braydo525 Год назад

      this might be the dumbest comment i’ve ever read

    • @DrDoom-wo8hb
      @DrDoom-wo8hb Год назад +1

      DUH!! And that goes for Portland, Minnesota, Denver and an assortment of other cities.

  • @jessesmith-garcia5313
    @jessesmith-garcia5313 Год назад

    That makes sense, Totally understand that, Kareem leaving Milwaukee.

  • @ethanweeter2732
    @ethanweeter2732 Год назад

    Milwaukee and Wisconsin are very Catholic. I can imagine how he might have felt in Milwaukee as a Muslim.

  • @philipbrown9185
    @philipbrown9185 Год назад +1

    To think that Kareem requested to be traded to either the Lakers or the Knicks is mind boggling. Older Knicks fans can only imagine how dominant the Knicks could have been with Kareem, at his peak, in their lineup.

  • @BradTaylor-n8t
    @BradTaylor-n8t Год назад

    The only reason I didn't like the Lakers back then was this guy. Can't stand the guy and his teammates felt the same, I'm told.

  • @franklinsiao7863
    @franklinsiao7863 Год назад

    he did NOT win the finals mvp in 1980. it was 1985...magic won it

  • @phillipstankey8881
    @phillipstankey8881 Год назад

    The Bucks did well enough in tht trade...sucked to lose Kareem...but the return was decent

  • @Franz19970
    @Franz19970 Год назад

    Besides L.A where he went to college and New York where he grew up, he shoukd have came here to the Baltimore/Washington area

  • @davidwalker9886
    @davidwalker9886 Год назад

    Yeah they tried everything but they realize that they cannot put chains on them in those days like the Boston Celtics did Bill Russell your Russell at the top Boston player ever Boston need to recognize that not as a slave of Boston's owners but as a black basketball player next time you think a Boston call that Russell town on give the man to respect

  • @jameswinston8533
    @jameswinston8533 Год назад

    Unless you were a black man who was born and raised in Milwaukee in the 60's and the 70's it wasn't a place for a black man

  • @martinjkrumm8764
    @martinjkrumm8764 Год назад +12

    The Lakers have a long list of present and future Hall of Famers they didn't draft:
    Wilt Chamberlain
    Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
    Shaquille O'Neal
    Steve Nash
    Kobe Bryant (traded from Charlotte)
    LeBron James
    Carmelo Anthony
    Anthony Davis
    Dwight Howard
    Karl Malone
    Gary Payton
    The Suns also have an extensive list of this nature:
    Dennis Johnson
    Charles Barkley
    Shaquille O'Neal
    Chris Paul
    Grant Hill
    Jason Kidd
    I apologize for any I've left out, but here's my point: What is it about these two markets that's so attractive to some of the best players of all time? I am just a little surprised there's no videos like that here, at least that I can find. The fact that the Lakers have 17 titles while the Suns have none is secondary as far as I can tell. I'm not a diehard fan of either of these teams btw.

    • @pookyman12
      @pookyman12 Год назад +4

      *17 Titles
      (+30 Year LA Lakers Fan)

    • @FabrizzioJoaquinMonsalveSalced
      @FabrizzioJoaquinMonsalveSalced Год назад

      Jerry West, Baylor

    • @martinjkrumm8764
      @martinjkrumm8764 Год назад +5

      @@FabrizzioJoaquinMonsalveSalced I don't think you read my comment close enough. The Lakers did draft those guys in Minneapolis. I made a list of those guys they DIDN'T draft.

    • @tomfassel6563
      @tomfassel6563 Год назад +1

      @@martinjkrumm8764 well most of those guys you names won’t be put in the HOF as Lakers but for other teams. They just happened to play for the Lakers at one point trying to win a ring

    • @patfinch9907
      @patfinch9907 Год назад

      The LA Lakers are basically the New York Yankees of Basketball 🏀. Every NBA Player or Future player all want to be a Laker just like Every Baseball player wants to be a Yankee at some point in their career. That and the LA Lakers are one of the most Valuable Sports Teams in North America alongside the Dallas Cowboys 🏈, New York Yankees ⚾️, Toronto Mable Leafs 🏒, New York City FC & LA Galaxy ⚽️. By playing as a Laker you are also playing in the footsteps of some of the NBA’s Greats, LeBron James, Jerry West, Wilt Chamberlain, Gary Payton, Dwight Howard, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Shaq, Kobe Bryant, Magic Johnson etc, same is true with Being in the New York Yankees as you are in the footsteps of MLB greats like Yogi Berra, Babe Ruth, Derek Jeter, Joe DiMaggio, Lou Gehrig, Mickey Mantle, Mariano Rivera, Reggie Jackson etc.

  • @Youralwayswhining4367
    @Youralwayswhining4367 Год назад

    Kareem was chasing bright lights/ and fame thought he was some kinda actor.

  • @HigherThinking
    @HigherThinking Год назад +8

    Your ability to get an hour worth of info into 8 min is to be commended 👏

  • @pickzkickz
    @pickzkickz Год назад +1

    He couldn't win alone.

  • @jonisafreak3
    @jonisafreak3 Год назад +2

    He hated the east coast he left the east and literally never came back. Never showed New York no love where he was born and raised. Hell of a basketball player but never likes how he abandoned the east like that.

    • @jamessanders6788
      @jamessanders6788 Год назад +5

      How did he abandon the East? The man lived his adult life out.

    • @Righteousone18
      @Righteousone18 Год назад +1

      He played in LA for so long it only makes sense to buy a house and live there. I read he’s in Harlem from time to time for speaking engagements