When basketball fans around the world gear up for the summer Olympics every four years, it’s a given that NBA players will participate for the United States. It wasn’t always this way — and the root of the world’s best representing the USA can be traced back to the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona.
The Dream Team.
theGrio slideshow: Memorable Dream Team moments
Twenty years later, there’s still very little doubt the ’92 Olympic men’s basketball squad was the greatest collection of talent ever assembled in team sports. NBA TV’s documentary The Dream Team chronicles what the group of players meant to basketball globally and reveals never-before-seen footage of team practices and trips, as well as interviews from all 12 of its members. All of the NBA players on the team (11) are enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame. The documentary, which premieres tonight, is a must-see.
Here are 5 of the film’s most intriguing moments:
1) The ‘Dream Team’ lost a game.
Training camp started for the Dream Team in June, 1992. It was a chance for the enormously talented squad to learn how to play together. The team’s coach, Chuck Daly, scheduled a scrimmage between the team and a select group of college players. The college stars, including a young Grant Hill, Chris Webber and Penny Hardaway, were understandably geeked at the opportunity. And the college players quickly took it to their shockingly unselfish NBA counterparts.
“We didn’t know how to play with each other,” Scottie Pippen admits in the documentary. “We didn’t want to step on anybody’s toes or hurt any egos. And so these young kids…they were killing us.”
Sloppy passes and an overall lack of energy spelled doom for the future Hall-of-Famers. The Dream Team’s first ‘game’ as a team ended in defeat.
But there’s more to the story.
Mike Krzyzewski, who was an assistant coach under Daly, claims the head coach ‘ threw’ the game as a way to send a message to his players. Larry Bird questioned why Michael Jordan didn’t play much during the scrimmage. Wherever the truth lies, the loss did wake up Team USA. They went on to defeat their Olympic opponents by an average of nearly 44 points per game.
2) Isiah Thomas’ ‘snub’ wasn’t just about Jordan
Isiah Thomas deserved to be a member of the Dream Team. For many basketball fans, the common thinking is that Michael Jordan didn’t like Isiah and wouldn’t play if Thomas was a part of the team. And that may be true — Jordan alludes to this vaguely in the documentary, though it still isn’t clear – but Thomas’ snub went beyond Jordan. MJ said the bad rap on Thomas and ultimately the hesitation to include him on the team was also coming from ‘higher places.’
The NBA’s deputy commissioner at the time, Russ Granik, said the choice not to select Thomas was also a matter of timing. The team was selected right after Thomas’ Pistons had lost to Jordan’s Bulls in the 1991 Eastern Conference Finals. Before the game ended, the Pistons walked off the floor, marching in front of the Bulls’ bench on their way to the locker room. Team USA selection committee member Rod Thorn said this poor sportsmanship left a “bad taste” in a lot of peoples’ mouths.
Scottie Pippen may have put in the clearest context: “No I did not want him on the Dream Team.”
3) Charles Barkley’s ‘star’ power
“Everyone in the world has an ego. The only difference with us is that we have a reason to have an ego.”
The ‘Round Mound of Rebound’ still makes a living saying whatever comes to his mind. Barkley is a fixture on TNT’s Inside the NBA show and his penchant for (trash) talking has endeared him to a new generation of basketball fans. During the ’92 Games, it was Barkley, not Jordan, who was the team’s leading scorer.
Barkley was also the Dream Team’s most visible player in Barcelona. Each night Barkley made a point to walk the tree-lined streets of Las Ramblas, where thousands followed him. Barkely posed for pictures, signed autographs and ‘hung out’ with tourists and opposing players alike.
“[Barkley] was the most memorable person in the 1992 Olympics,” long-time NBA reporter and columnist Mike Wilbon said.
While it was clear the world still held Jordan up as the game’s greatest player, it was the charismatic Barkley who captured more hearts and praise than any Dream Team member.
4) Opposing teams’ respect for the Dream Team
It would never happen in today’s game. In 2008, picture Spain’s Olympic basketball team members Pau Gasol and Ricky Rubio posing for pictures with Team USA’s LeBron James and Kobe Bryant before the opening tip.
Sounds foreign, doesn’t it?
But that’s exactly what went on during the Dream Team’s run to the gold medal in 1992. Opposing players posed for pictures before games, took pictures from the bench during games and sought autographs following games.
“It was a surreal feeling,” Charles Barkley said of the other team’s adulation for Team USA.
As fans in the stands or watching at home, it’s normal to root for your team or cheer for your favorite player. Once the players start cheering for their opponents, it almost seems unnatural.
But that’s what the Dream Team was — a team so magnificent, the game became a formality.
5) Bird, Magic officially pass the NBA’s torch to Jordan
Sure, Jordan was on top of the basketball world by the time the ’92 Olympics rolled around. The Bulls had just won their second consecutive NBA title. Back injuries had slowed Bird considerably (he would ultimately retire following the Barcelona Games) and Magic hadn’t played in a year due to his HIV virus.
But the opportunity for all three players to play together was also a chance for Bird and Magic to officially give Jordan their seal of approval.
And that’s exactly what happened.
Jordan deferred at first. Although he was asked by coach Chuck Daly to join Magic and Bird as captains of the Dream Team, he refused.
“I knew how much it meant to both of those guys because they never had the opportunity to play on the Olympics,” Jordan said. “So I said, ‘You know what Chuck, don’t worry about me. Let those old dogs do it.”
Magic and Bird relished the opportunity. As the documentary’s narrator Ed Burns explains, the two were the team’s ‘most revered’ players. Their rivalry and friendship had saved the NBA and propelled it to new heights throughout the 1980s.
But Jordan got his chance to show the “old dogs” it was his time on the court. He routinely gave all of his Olympic teammates a show during team scrimmages – and Magic and Bird understood that they were leaving the league in good hands. One particular scrimmage left an undeniable impression on the team’s two oldest members. Jordan had just torched Magic’s team, where several teammates thought it was him playing against five.
“Larry and I were talking and Michael walks in and says ‘There’s a new sheriff in town,'” Magic laughs in the film. “And we both hit each and other said, ‘He’s not lying.”
‘The Dream Team’ premieres tonight at 9 p.m. ET on NBA TV.