Not So Briefly On Aging, Arvydas Sabonis, And Being Sworn About
My wife and I took our children to the park. There was a newly poured concrete slab with a basketball hoop at one end. Nearby, a father and his son were eating sandwiches. On the table beside them was a basketball. “Can I borrow that for a few minutes?” I asked them, and the father agreed. I took slow jumpshots from my favorite places on the court, banking most of them in.
I can’t be more blunt about my love of basketball. But lately, frustratingly, it has been running headlong into what I can only assume is the grim reality of aging. Whereas I could once play daily for hours, I now need time off between games and can no longer imagine playing multiple days in a row. Walking up and down the stairs the night of and the day after playing is an often excruciating experience. And when I’m playing, I can feel what I described to a doctor once as something in my knees – both of them – shifting. Rather than be concerned, she just sort of nodded at me, as if to say, “What exactly were you expecting?” I feel like Louis C.K. did when he went to the doctor as a 40-year-old. I’m only 33.
In that I only ever played eight weeks of organized basketball I take genuine pride in acknowledging that I am a self-made player in essentially every respect. Whatever I can do out on a court is the result of time, repetition, and experience, including my trusted bankshot, a historical anachronism that all players now eschew. But with physical limitations now starting to affect my ability to perform in the way that I am accustomed to, I find myself having to change, almost as if I spent more than a decade learning how to play the game only so that I could then start to figure out what I was still capable of. I suppose that I am sad about this although only because I know that it isn’t coming back. I will never be the player that I was in my mid-20s and I miss that because I didn’t realize then the player that I was.
Now I find myself fascinated with aging athletes. This includes professionals like Steve Nash, once among the very best players in the NBA, now one robbed of his game by a body that seems determined to undermine him. His thoughtful and revealing episodes on ESPN’s Grantland show a man coming to grips with what is now almost gone. I watch with glee when the 38-years-old Tim Duncan – arguably the greatest power forward the game has ever seen – continues to keep putting up 16 points and 8 rebounds in the NBA Playoffs. And this interest extends beyond the court too. I was taken with the runner at the 4:17 mark of The Runners. He talks about getting slower every year but enduring.
“What’s that feel like, to get slower?” He’s asked by the interviewer as he keeps moving at a considerable clip.
“Terrible.” He says and pauses, still running, before adding, “But again, it’s just another challenge.”
As I get older and slowly lose access to the sorts of movement that once made me a more effective player, I’m can either adopt that same attitude or stop playing altogether. I’ve concluded for the time being that playing badly is better than not playing at all. That’s a hard conclusion though. Bad play is an exceptionally disappointing experience. I will cuss myself on the court and the people I’m playing with often say encouraging things. This has been a challenge forever for me, one that could used to be offset by understanding that I plenty of time to play better. Due to this worsening pain, I am not sure if continuing to wait for those better days makes sense.
The Other Dream Team
Arvydas Sabonis’s best days were behind him when he came to the United States to play professional basketball. He was 31 and largely robbed by injuries and rehabilitation that had stolen his legendary athleticism. His play in the NBA reflected that: 12 points, 7 rebounds, 3 assists a game. Those aren’t the numbers of a player who is widely discussed as having shown the potential to be one of the league’s all-time greats. Sabonis was 7’3″ but moved like a much smaller player at a time when 7’3″ players did no such thing. We are accustomed now to Tim Duncans and Kevin Durants and Dirk Nowitzskis, huge players capable not only of grinding down low but of shooting from distance. This though is 2014. Sabonis had an embryonic version of the same sort of game at 7’3″ in the mid-1980s. Given the difficulty that Duncans, Durants, and Nowitzskis give modern defenses now, it is almost impossible to imagine them successfully defending something vaguely similar 25 years ago. George Karl’s appraisal of Sabonis’s game hints at Sabonis’s potential:
“People don’t understand that when he was younger, Sabonis was a perimeter player and he played facing the basket,” Karl said. “He was a very athletic player, but then he tore up his Achilles in both feet, and he got bigger and thicker and wound up being more of a power player with the Trail Blazers. And one of his biggest assets was his ability to pass the ball. He could score, too, but you could run your whole offense through him
It should be noted that hyperventilating about Sabonis’s NBA potential is a cottage industry for basketball fans and writers. There are no shortage of what-if articles, including this one, and this one, and this one. Those interested in Sabonis before the NBA hardly have enough available footage. Some of what there is makes it into The Other Dream Team, a profile of Lithuanian players who first played for the USSR – including Sabonis, whose play against an ascendant David Robinson helped the USSR to upset the United States at the 1988 Seoul Olympics – and who later represented a newly-free Lithuania in the 1992 Barcelona Olympics.
The documentary captures retired players looking back on astounding careers. This was not necessarily because of their on-court achievement (although they had those too), but because of how unexpected they seemed to find the disparity of their youthful expectations with their memories of what really occurred. For Sabonis, who learned from a magazine article that he had been drafted by the Portland Trailblazers, even imagining a career in the NBA was too much. He has said that it never occurred to him that the USSR would allow him to leave.
Even for those familiar with the story of Lithuana’s 1992 Olympic team – famous for, among other things, wearing (absolutely hideous) uniforms donated by the Grateful Dead – the documentary offers both the comfort of traditional underdog story and the sort additional details that make its consumption worth any basketball fan’s time. This includes Sabonis, who even in 1992 was already losing what it was that had informed those that spoke in hushed whispers about his potential.
When he finally arrived in the NBA, he was in his early 30s and he played basketball like the hugely talented but hugely limited player that he was. He had no more explosive athleticism. Of his constant foot pain, he once remarked that he would only be concerned about it if he could not feel it anymore, as that might be evidence that he had died. The Portland Trailblazers general manager Bob Whitsitt was famous for saying that Sabonis would have qualified for a handicapped parking permit based on his x-rays alone.
Even a hobbled Sabonis was able to occasionally feed on his opposition. Throughout this video there are highlights of Sabonis carving up similarly sized players unfamiliar with the notion of seven-footers dribbling to the hoop or sweeping across the lane or shooting from range. Even the announcers get in on the act, flummoxed seeing a seven-footer head-faking his defender and then driving around him for the easy layup. It is easy to watch those cherry-picked plays with a wistful interest of what might of been.
But there’s plenty to take from what was. Although more immobile than he once was, Sabonis maximized his contributions in the limited time he found himself on the floor. Those statistics I mentioned earlier – 12 points, 7 rebounds, 3 assists – came in a little less than 25 minutes per game. He averaged just barely more than half-a-game’s worth of minutes per night and put up those numbers. He was hugely effective in the limited minutes that he could play.
My Wednesday Night
Although almost everything about Sabonis piques my interest, it is that last part that holds my attention now. How exactly did he make what was left work? I look to someone like Sabonis because he continued to grind the game out even after his body stopped letting him give the game his all. This is what all players eventually face. Steve Nash above? That runner from the documentary? There is no escaping the passage of time. There is only holding it off for as long as possible.
My basketball season generally ends every spring at roughly this time. My weekly game shuts down for the summer because the middle school gym where we play it shuts down too. Pickup games at the local rec center are few and far between and complicated now more than ever by the three children and one wife who quite understandably prefer me to be at home. I’m then left with a long summer without the game.
I’ve spent the last few weeks cramming in what games I could, including an hour at the gym on Wednesday’s when my daughter was at a nearby percussion music. I’ll leave the house with her a few minutes early, drop her off, then speed over to the rec center in a desperate attempt to maximize what time I’ve got. This means no warm-ups, no stretching, no nothing. Just hope for a game and jump in when there’s an opening. This has meant woefully inept performances, including one several days before Wednesday’s in which I missed all but two shots that I took. My performance was positively Starks-ian in its ineptitude, and with every miss came that much more concern about the next shot, and with that much more concern came the next inevitable miss. These weren’t difficult or contested shots. I wasn’t trying to do something I couldn’t. I can still get open. I just couldn’t make anything.
That Monday night was a 4-on-4 full-court game. It had to happen that way because there were only eight guys. Wednesday night’s game was full-court 5-on-5. It was painfully obvious from the get go that everybody else on the court was more athletic than me. Even the 22-year-olds in knee-braces were faster and stronger and most importantly, more confident. When I was there age, I worked with a guy who had played college basketball. He had a real game. When I played basketball with him, I never did more than I was able to. I took open shots when if they were available, I did whatever I could to keep my guy from scoring, and if I grabbed a few rebounds, so much the better. As I got that fundamentals down, I often found myself trying to do more than I could, either because it was expected or because it felt possible. Sometimes, it was, but these days, there is really no reason for me to try doing anything more than I was doing when I was 22. It’s easy to forget that against lesser competition. It is remarkably easy to remember that against nine superior players.
So that’s what I did, up and down the court, focusing on my guy defensively and setting screens offensively. This freed me up for what would have been open look had I not been in search of the next pick. The guy defending me found me so boring that he started drifting and when he did, I could get to my two favorite positions: left and right of the basket at about 45 degrees. From there, I can get a good look at an easy bankshot. I took and made two of them when the opportunity presented itself, and then I accidentally cut lower than I meant to, closer to the baseline than to my preferred spot, so that the only part of the backboard I could shoot at was its very top corner. It is a tough but possible shot and I was open when our point guard found me. I shot it automatically. It fell in.
“He banked that?” my defender said, incredulous.
“All day.” I heard. “That guy will do that to you all day if you let him.”
I limped back up the court. The game went on and I got one more good shot, this time after cutting underneath the basket, somewhere I hadn’t ventured and that my then interested defender hadn’t seen me go before, putting in a left-handed turnaround before my defender had recovered. The game ended and we waited for the next game.
“How’d that motherfucker bank it from there. FROM THERE!” my defender was saying, looking at the spot on the floor and up at the narrow slice of visible glass. “There’s nothing up there to aim at.”
“I don’t know. But he’ll does that all the time.”
I knew that wasn’t true. I knew then that I hurting already. I knew that keeping up with these players was taking more out of me than it was taking out of them. Frankly, I was relieved that I had to go get my daughter shortly. But I wasn’t going to let my defender know that. I was just going to let him keep swearing about me.
You shouldn’t play with people much younger or better than you. It will only lead to bad comparison and depression. If you do a race you look at how you placed in your age group not how the 20 somethings or elites blew you away. That might make it harder to find games but unless you are trying to improve your game by going against superior players you are asking for a world of hurt.Report
It’s nice when your sport allows that. I took up fencing again four years ago at age 56. There’s no choice — they’ll chase you out of the beginners classes at some point because you’re too good, and then you’re going to fence people better than you are and younger than you are. So I take my Aleve, and I stretch religiously after each session, and while I’ll never hit an A-rated fencer who’s paying attention, from time to time I can honest-to-God fool someone with a B rating and score a touch that embarrasses them :^)Report
This isn’t a luxury I have. Run a game when there is a game, assess the level of play as quickly as possible, and adjust accordingly. If this means running against better players, so be it. And if that means all of the trickeration necessary to hang with those better players, then so be that. Yes, there will be disappointment, but it can be minimized at times.Report
I haven’t played ball in a number of years now, since I damaged my shoulders, which left me with a hitch in my shooting motion. But the very last pickup game I played in, I did what I mostly did, focus on picks, a few rebounds, and frustrating the guy I was defending. I took only one shot, the game winner, from behind the three point line, and since I had to leave after the game anyway, I just turned and walked off the court like I’d never doubted I’d hit it.
Sometimes you just have to milk it a bit.Report
Some college friends and I are down to playing one annual game on the birthday of the guy who was always the driving force behind any given pick-up game we’d play. So our last game was last June. My game is basically like yours, and in that game last year I also hit the game winner from behind the (visible only to us) three (two is ones-and-twos) line after hitting very little for most of the game. We play a crazy game we call the “Century Game,” which is born of our crazy college selves playing the “Temperature Game,” which is ones and twos up to the F temperature at the start of the game. One time that was 100F on this guy’s birthday, and since then we’ve been playing the Century Game annually.
The guy whose birthday that is moved to Australia since last year, so the continuation of the annual tradition is looking dubious right now. So right now my basketball ego is pretty much living off that improbably walk-off jumper from a year ago. I’m a little afraid to go back on the court now, especially given the collapse of any semblance of a fitness regime that I allowed to happen this winter. I can live with that.
Happy hooping, ballers!Report
..The Century Game, then, being ones-and-twos up to 100 regardless of temperature.Report
That’s the story of my life too. I’ve never actually been good, even when I was younger. I would usually just try to match up against a top player for the other team and try to frustrate them as much as possible.
Now in New England, I struggle to find teams that I can even do that on now. I tried playing with the college kids and those games just end up way too competitive for me.Report
Sam,
As someone that has only recently become a fitness junkie, I found this to be a very interesting post. I’m going to write a follow up post that takes your ideas about sports and aging and write from the perspective of someone that only recently got back into shape after spending years being out of shape and overweight. We took different paths but we are both trying to find the outer boundaries of our capabilities and how those boundaries are influenced by the fact that we’re older.Report
One quick note,
I can write it quickly but I won’t publish it until next week.Report
I’m looking forward to it as well.Report
Looking forward to it Dave. I’m somewhat the same. I’ve always been active but i had a few years where i didn’t do much and let my weight rise and condition sink. However in the past 3 years i’ve worked myself into the best shape of my life or at least since i was playing hockey in college. In any case i’m much more into exercise and training and various sports now then ever really.Report
Cool post, Sam.
Now do one on Rony Seikaly!Report
Surely you’re not comparing Seikaly and Sabonis.Report
Only insofar as they were tall European imports before that was really a “thing”. As a child, they sort of blended together. As I learned more about Sabonis’ career later in life, I came to much more greatly appreciate what he had been.Report
I loved those 92 Lithuania jerseys.Report
I used to love watching Šar?nas Mar?iulionis. He had a very aggressive game, and was kind of a tweener, half shooting guard, half linebacker.Report
When I run more than twice a week now my knees also start to get that really sick feeling (also known as “pain”) on the inside-front. It’s a pisser.Report
While I don’t know that your bank shot counts as “age and treachery” so much as an Icaran failure of hubris on the part of the kid defending you, you’re more than entitled to enjoy it.Report
Whenever I play against younger players, they respond to bank shots as if I’m literally turning lead into gold in front of them. There is this constant disbelief that there is another way to shoot the basketball, and after the first game, I inevitably get, “Do you shoot anything else?” And I have to very briefly explain that, no, I can’t calculate the range as well when I’m focused on the leading edge of the rim versus a large backboard with painted targets on it. Then they look confused and wander off.Report
I will say that the bank shot is enjoy a bit of a renaissance. I think for a long time it was considered “ugly” especially amongst the young’ns. But I think that is starting to change.
Growing up, the courts I played at were almost exclusively black. I had no problems getting into the runs because I was young and knew most of the other young people from school. But there was this short, old white guy. He looked like Art Garfunkel. He was rather squat and knew how to use his body to create space. And he had this awkward little half-hook, half-scoop layup that he would spin off the backward and in every damn time. He couldn’t shoot over people, but he’d use his girth to fend his man off and then extent his arm out, flip the ball up, and sink it. The young people — myself included — were beside ourselves. “WHAT THE HELL IS THAT?!?!” He also had really good handle, meaning he was hard to keep out of his preferred little spot. And most young guys (talking teenagers here) don’t have the strength or the body awareness to know how to deal with a little billiard ball of a man with 50 years of wit to him.Report
I used the bank shot a lot when I played regularly. Like you said, there’s a friggin’ target on the board for a reason. In much the same way I often use my pool stick to line up the angle for a shot so i know where to hit the ball,Report
OTOH, my friend plays soccer in an age 60+ league in Mexico. Full 45-minute halves. He loves it, says lots of these guys have real game.
They can only play about once every two weeks so all the guys can recover.Report
I know a lot of aging musicians. Playing is seriously athletic, bodily injury often means an end to some part of your career, because endurance, timing, and reflex speed are essential. Yet people have careers of 60 years and more, if they manage to not die young.
If you want to keep in the game, play like a musician.
Or take up golf.
Are you familiar with the inspiring story of Fred Hersch, a jazz pianist and composer who re-learned how to play after being in an AIDS coma?Report
Awesome… I’m in very much the same boat, a 38-year-old basketball player who is nowhere near the player I used to be… Round about 18 or 20 years ago, if everything was lined up just perfectly, I could throw down the occasional dunk. I had quickness to go by defenders and a reliable jumper out to 20 feet.
Much of that is gone now. Dunking is out of the question and I can’t jump over opponents to out-rebound them. Somewhere around 2009, my confidence in my jumper inexplicably left as well and damned if I know when that’s coming back. And I completely relate to the idea of being in severe pain the night of and the day after playing…
And while friends my age talk of retirement, and fears of torn ligaments and broken bones pop up, I keep playing as often as I can get a game together.
But what I enjoy about playing at this age is that my game has to change. I relish that. Some of the guys I play with talk about “if I knew the game as well as I do now back when I was 18, I would have been unstoppable” and that’s true to some extent. You don’t need to be a great athlete to be an effective basketball player. While my athleticism has waned, my knowledge of the game has increased and I’ve got enough tricks in my bag to hang with younger players. My passing is better, I rely on fundamentals to put myself in the right place at the right time. And every now and then a little burst that I had forgotten about shows up for a play or two…
Hell, the group of guys I usually play with are all a bunch of guys in their late 30s and into their 40s and we regular run teams of 18- and 20-year-olds off the court.Report
Another guy a lot like Andrew here, only I’m 47 and my sport is association football (which Brits accuse USans of calling “soccer”, which is a fair cop, but it’s their word in the first place, and they still use it regularly as well). Fortunately, I’ve never had a serious knee problem since I partially tore an ACL while jogging in the early 90s – my right hamstring is my personal millstone, it appears to have done about a thousand more miles than the rest of my body. I’ve also watched lots of teammates pass out of the game, but I’m not about to budge, and I train about three times as much on off-days as I used to in my 30s.
I’m also all about “age and guile beat youth and a bad haircut”. When I switched from baseball to soccer around ’95, I was regularly the fastest guy on the field, so I didn’t really need to have any other tricks. I’m still pretty quick for my age, about average overall, but like Andrew said, experience has just taught me so much to supplement diminished physical capacity – and I agree that key among them are simplicity and fundamentals. So many times I see a youngster do something over-elaborate when if it were me it would be bang-bang: control, read the situation, dish it off, keep possession, keep things moving, move on.
The flow of the game just moves so much slower than it did back in the day, in my perception, so I don’t need to move as fast to be in the right place. I’ve seen the platonic ideal of this a few times… Still playing at the top level despite being in his mid-30s, usually a Brazilian, has stopped following the team dietician’s rules and trains with a cigarette in one hand. And you never see him sprint during a game. But time after time, the camera tracks to follow the ball, and he’s just there, breaking up the opposition’s move.Report
Just reading this now. Awesome piece, Sam.
FWIW, I am now sitting with both ankles up because I spent time on an elliptical and did some weights yesterday and they are both killing me. Such is my lot now.Report
Loved this post Sam. Aging has been interesting for me in certain ways. I don’t have the stamina or the physical strength I once did but I find my hand-eye-coordination has never been better. I shoot way better now than I did when I was in my 20s. My gun knows where to go on my shoulder and it just comes more easily. I find that when I play a game of pickup basketball it’s the same thing. I can’t drive hard or chase young guys up and down the court but I know the shots I can make and they come easier than they used to. I think slowing down has actually improved my concentration which means I am not firing from the hip but taking my time to execute form better. But yeah, the next day it feels like I was run over by a truck.
An interesting side note: Last weekend I played my nephews and my daughter’s boyfriend in a game of HORSE in my mom’s driveway. I killed them. I was taking ridiculous shots because I know that backboard so well. I have been playing in that driveway for almost 30 years. My nephews know that it’s my ‘home court’ and so they are used to it. My daughter’s boyfriend? I think he was a little shocked when I drained a long bomb from the deck because I know the springs are shot and when the ball hits the board it just drops straight down. So age + experience = little victories.Report
…but I find my hand-eye-coordination has never been better.
This too will pass, my young friend. The across-the-board effects of my recently completed decade from age 50 to 60 has been… disturbing. Annoying. Several other adjectives. And I think I’m doing well compared to many of my contemporaries.Report
I’ve never been any damn good at basketball’s athletic side. But I can box out and set picks like nobody’s business.
Take out the thug, but otherwise play like Rodman.Report