Former NBA star Abdul-Rauf has kept the faith

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  • Brock Landers
    SBR Aristocracy
    • 06-30-08
    • 45359

    #1
    Former NBA star Abdul-Rauf has kept the faith
    By JIM ARMSTRONG, AP Sports Writer Apr 3, 12:15 pm EDT





    OSAKA, Japan (AP)—Two important things haven’t changed for Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf in the 14 years since he set off a firestorm of criticism by refusing to stand for the national anthem before NBA games.
    He’s still a devout Muslim and playing basketball.
    Abdul-Rauf is now in Japan, the latest stop of a globe-trotting career that became necessary in the aftermath of being booed, inundated with hate mail and suspended by the NBA for refusing to stand for “The Star-Spangled Banner” in March 1996.


    “It was close to impossible to play in the U.S. after that,” Abdul-Rauf said. “The doors were shut, but I said the NBA wasn’t the only show in town and I was going to make use of my God-given talent even if it meant playing in Timbuktu.”
    He has found his latest refuge in Japan’s fledgling professional league, where he is settling in with the expansion Kyoto Hannaryz as the highest-profile player in the league’s five-year history.
    Kyoto’s 14-26 record and two recent losses to the three-time champion Osaka Evessa underscore the challenges Abdul-Rauf and his teammates face.
    “Whether things are going well for us or not it’s just a question of being consistent, constantly chipping away and not allowing others to dictate what we do,” he said.
    The 41-year-old guard has certainly shown the willingness to stand up to those who would impose their will on his.
    Abdul-Rauf, then known as Chris Jackson, was a two-time All-American at Louisiana State University before being taken third overall in the 1990 NBA draft by the Denver Nuggets. He converted to Islam a year later.
    “I had a lot of questions with my Christian background while growing up,” Abdul-Rauf said. “I felt like I was being someone I wasn’t meant to be.”
    Abdul-Rauf was consistently among the Nuggets’ best players, and narrowly missed setting an NBA record for free-throw percentage when he shot 95.6 percent during the 1993-94 campaign.
    He was having his best season in 1995-96, averaging 19.2 points and 6.8 assists per game, when his career changed forever after he stopped standing for the national anthem, saying it conflicted with his Muslim beliefs.
    The Denver media picked up on it and when the team played at Chicago in March, fans booed and jeered him, and the scrutiny of his actions intensified.
    The NBA suspended Abdul-Rauf—the ban lasting only one game after he and the league reached a compromise that allowed him to stand but close his eyes and pray during the playing of the anthem.
    That did little to satisfy those who questioned his patriotism.
    Abdul-Rauf was traded to Sacramento in the offseason and played for the Kings for two seasons. He then played in Turkey in 1998-99 before returning for his final NBA season with Vancouver in 2000-01. The anthem stance seemingly taken a toll as his numbers declined each of his final three years in the league, and he never quite lived up to the expectations of being a No. 3 pick.
    Since then, the native of Gulfport, Mississippi, has been inactive or played overseas, with stops in Russia, Italy, Greece and Saudi Arabia. Being abroad seems to suit him just fine.
    “I feel like I could live anywhere, not necessarily in the States,” Abdul-Rauf said. “I’m the type of person who could pick up his bags and go live anywhere and I’m not going to miss anything.”
    His current one-year contract with Kyoto came about when the team’s coach, former NBA player David Benoit, called to say he’d like to have Abdul-Rauf on the team.
    Benoit played against Abdul-Rauf both in college and the NBA and knew the veteran would bring a lot to the expansion team.
    “His experience is the most important thing,” Benoit said. “He wants to go out and play ball like he did a few years back and it’s exciting to see a guy his age still do it. Like any other player, he has lapses, but his experience is the main thing, not only for the younger Americans coming here to play but for the younger Japanese too.”
    After a hamstring injury early in the season, Abdul-Rauf is settling in, averaging 16 points a game for Hannaryz.
    “I love Kyoto, the people are wonderful and I’m not just saying that. I’m a person who speaks his mind and I’m really enjoying it,” Abdul-Rauf said.
    The league is also enjoying that Abdul-Rauf is bringing it some much-needed attention.
    “Abdul-Rauf is a guy that demands respect because of everything he has accomplished on the basketball court,” Osaka forward Lynn Washington said. “The play of ex-NBA players is needed in this league as the sport becomes more popular in Japan.”
    Abdul-Rauf’s teammates are the ones who are benefiting the most.
    “I just try to learn as much as possible from him,” said Kyoto’s Sunao Murakami. “I watch him closely every game and feel so lucky to be on the same team. He’s the best player in the league and that’s impressive given he is 41.”
    As for the future, Abdul-Rauf says he wants to go into coaching when his playing days are over.
    “I’ll play as long as God gives me the ability and the strength,” said Abdul-Rauf, who lives in Atlanta in the offseason. “Right now I have my health and am still competitive. So as long as I have the combination of those two things I will still play and afterward, I’ll look to coach.”
    One thing Abdul-Rauf knows for sure, he’ll continue to practice his faith.
    “I have no regrets (about converting to Islam),” he said. “It was the best decision I ever made in my whole life. It’s a great gift.”
  • Chi_archie
    SBR Aristocracy
    • 07-22-08
    • 63172

    #2
    Loved him as Chris Jackson at LSU........

    he could always shoot the free throws....
    Comment
    • Mikail
      SBR Posting Legend
      • 07-19-09
      • 21689

      #3
      Great story. An inspiration to us who stick to our belief no matter how unpopular it may be.
      Comment
      • whatsgood5
        Restricted User
        • 10-13-09
        • 15359

        #4
        Saw this on Yahoo, not sure what to think of him as a person, but 95.6 FT percentage is sick.
        Comment
        • Jacey
          SBR Sharp
          • 07-03-08
          • 464

          #5
          Always seems weird to me when the same people who rail on about personal freedoms get mad when someone chooses to exercise them.
          Comment
          • rm18
            SBR Posting Legend
            • 09-20-05
            • 22291

            #6
            Weird I was just thinking about his FT streak before I saw this few minutes ago
            Comment
            • Brock Landers
              SBR Aristocracy
              • 06-30-08
              • 45359

              #7
              he has Tourette's syndrome too
              Comment
              • Unicorn7
                Restricted User
                • 08-29-09
                • 1445

                #8
                nice article thks for posting I had forgotten bout him
                Comment
                • paco
                  SBR Aristocracy
                  • 05-07-09
                  • 62873

                  #9
                  May Allah bless him



                  Comment
                  • Chi_archie
                    SBR Aristocracy
                    • 07-22-08
                    • 63172

                    #10
                    do Muslims use the word/term God and Allah interchangibly?
                    Comment
                    • jjgold
                      SBR Aristocracy
                      • 07-20-05
                      • 388179

                      #11
                      Great find, I bet he made good money playing overseas and is still very good player.
                      Comment
                      • SlickFazzer
                        SBR Posting Legend
                        • 05-22-08
                        • 20209

                        #12
                        Chris Jackson could light it up!!
                        Comment
                        • paco
                          SBR Aristocracy
                          • 05-07-09
                          • 62873

                          #13
                          Originally posted by SlickFazzer
                          Chris Jackson could light it up!!
                          Please address him as Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf
                          Comment
                          • Jiggy Fly
                            SBR MVP
                            • 05-02-08
                            • 1256

                            #14
                            Wow, I was just thinking about him the other day and now you posted this. Weird.
                            Comment
                            • paco
                              SBR Aristocracy
                              • 05-07-09
                              • 62873

                              #15
                              Comment
                              • gr1624
                                SBR High Roller
                                • 03-03-09
                                • 149

                                #16
                                Loved his game in college. One of the best scorers I ever saw.
                                Comment
                                • Club
                                  SBR Wise Guy
                                  • 07-18-09
                                  • 703

                                  #17
                                  Amazing college player. So quick and so smooth in contrast to those two awkard ****s Shaq and Stanley Roberts.
                                  Comment
                                  • MilfDriller
                                    Restricted User
                                    • 11-23-08
                                    • 10186

                                    #18
                                    Sorry, but another non-thinking American.

                                    One thing I do respect is that he threw out the religion of the slave masters. That's basically the whole pt of blacks dropping the cross. And it's the smart thing to do. However, picking up some discount, trash religion in it's place is not smart at all.

                                    If you have enuff brains to drop the sham cross religion, you should be smart enuff to drop the I'm-gonna-bomb-you religion.

                                    Finally, he pulled a Pat Tillman by pissing away millions. All he had to do was go along w/ the program... AND GET PAID! Instead, he wanted to be a moron.... so you got one guy dead in the desert and the other guy shooting buckets over Ching and Wong and 50 million dollars less rich
                                    Comment
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