Karl Malone Interview
Karl Malone was chosen by the Jazz in 1985 out of Louisiana Tech with the 13th overall pick in the draft. Malone’s first season was a success, averaging 14.9 points and 8.9 rebounds. After his rookie season, the Jazz saw in him the potential to be the cornerstone of their offense. So, they traded star forward Adrian Dantley to the Detroit Pistons and decided to build around Malone. This turned out to be the correct move, as Malone upped his production to 21.7 points and 10.9 rebounds per game.
At the same time, reserve point guard John Stockton was winning the trust of the coaching staff and the love of the fans. By the 1987ā88 season, Malone was the foundation of the offense and Stockton was the floor general. Malone made his first All-Star Game in 1988 on the strength of 27.1 points per game, and made his first All-NBA team at the end of the season. This would be the first of 14 consecutive All-Star appearances for Malone. The Jazz went 47ā35, third in the Midwest Division, and defeated the Portland Trail Blazers in the first round. It was in the next round however, that the Jazz as a team rose to national prominence. The Jazz took the eventual champion Los Angeles Lakers, led by perennial All-Stars Magic Johnson, James Worthy and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, to seven games. Malone upped his production to 29 points per game in that postseason.
The next year, Malone averaged 29.1 points, good for second in the NBA behind Michael Jordan, and 10.7 rebounds, which was fifth in the league. At the 1989 NBA All-Star Game, Malone finished with 28 points, 9 rebounds and 3 assists en route to his first All-Star MVP. The Jazz finished 51ā31, but were upset in five games in the first round by the Golden State Warriors. The next year Malone increased his scoring to 31 points and his rebounding to 11.1 a game, but the Jazz were once again eliminated in the first round, this time by the Phoenix Suns.
For the time Malone and Stockton played together on the Jazz, the two formed one of the most productive guardāforward combinations in NBA history. Playing Jerry Sloan’s scrappy and tough style and perfecting the pick and roll to a maximum degree of efficiency, the Jazz became a staple to make it to the playoffs and to have a winning record in the regular season. Malone led the Jazz to multiple 50-win seasons with the exception of 1992ā93 (47ā35) where the Jazz stumbled after the All-Star Game (when he and Stockton won co-MVP honors).
Through this time, Malone continued to put up stellar numbers, averaging 28/11.2, 27/11.2, 25.2/11.5, 26.7/10.6 and 25.7/9.8 from 1992 to 1996. The Jazz however, only made it as far as the Western Conference Finals in this period, losing to the Portland Trail Blazers (1992), the Houston Rockets (1994) and the Seattle SuperSonics (1996).
During the 1996-97 season, Malone put up a resurgent 27.4 points per game while leading the Jazz to a 64ā18 record, the highest win total in Malone’s 12 seasons with the Jazz. The Jazz were the best team in the Western Conference and the second-best in the league, and for his efforts Malone was awarded his first NBA Most Valuable Player honor. After sweeping the Los Angeles Clippers and easily defeating the Los Angeles Lakers, the Jazz took on the Houston Rockets, led by Hall of Fame-bound, but aging trio of Hakeem Olajuwon, Charles Barkley, and Clyde Drexler. The Jazz beat them in six games (the last victory coming on a memorable last-second shot by Stockton). Malone finally got to the Finals in 1997, where he was pitted against the Michael Jordan-led Chicago Bulls. In a matchup of the two previous MVPs, the Bulls took the first two games at the United Center. Malone struggled from the field, going 6 of 20 for 20 points in game two. However the Jazz rebounded to take the next two games at the Delta Center behind Malone’s 37 points in Game 3 and 28 in Game 4. The Bulls took the next two games and the series.
The next season saw the Jazz once again dominate. Malone put up 27 points per game and just missed out on his second MVP award, losing to Michael Jordan. Nevertheless, the Jazz posted a 62ā20 record, which was the best in the NBA. The Jazz once again were seated at the top of the Western Conference, and in the 1998 playoffs they defeated the Rockets, Spurs, and Lakers en route to their second consecutive Finals appearance. The rematch with the Chicago Bulls would start differently, as Malone put up 25 points and the Jazz won Game 1, 88ā85. Malone found himself unable to put up consistently stellar numbers, due in large part to the swarming defense of renowned defenders Dennis Rodman and Scottie Pippen. Despite Malone’s 28 points in Game 6, the Bulls won the game and the series.
In the lockout-shortened 1999 season, Malone won his second MVP award and the Jazz went 37ā13 in the abbreviated season. They lost in the second round to the Trail Blazers, and for the next couple of years the Jazz fell out of contention for a title. Despite the decline of his team, and his advancing age, Karl Malone still put up All-Star numbers, averaging 25.5, 23.2, 22.4, and 20.6 points per game in his last four seasons with Utah. In the 2002ā2003 season, Karl Malone passed Wilt Chamberlain for second on the all-time scoring list with his 36,374 points. He became a free agent after that season.
Malone stayed on active duty for one more season, joining the Los Angeles Lakers in an attempt to win a championship, the only major achievement absent in his career. His bid failed as the Lakers were defeated in five games by the Detroit Pistons in the 2004 NBA Finals, a series where Malone sprained his right knee and played injured for four of the five games before missing game five, with the Lakers down 3ā1 and the series almost over. Although several NBA teams such as the Lakers, Heat, Timberwolves and even the eventual champion San Antonio Spurs sought his services for the 2004ā05 season, Malone decided to retire as a player on February 13, 2005. The Jazz retired his number 32 jersey in his honor. Despite his retirement, the Lakers never renounced his rights.
HT: First of all, congratulations on your Lakers signing.
KM. Thank you
HT: Like I said before, Iāve never seen you so happy.
KM: right.
HT: When you were at the signing with Gary Payton.
KM: Ya – right
HT: You had the biggest smile and every time Iāve seen you around recently youāve got that big smile.
KM: Right, well you know its like in life, you have to make changes, itās not always going to be popular with everybody. But in the end of the day, you do what you feel is in your heart and you follow the right reason.
HT: Right
KM: Wasnāt for the money, you know, I have an opportunity to win a championship at my age, if it donāt work out, I will be the first one to say it, but you have to give it a chance, you have to make an opportunity and so many times in life, well we want to do things but we donāt and five years from now we always say we wish and we should have. Itās too late then.
HT: I am going to start off with a tough question, I mean you took a hit of 18 million dollar pay cut to be here?
KM: Right
HT: Thatās for the year! Would you have taken the plunge like this had it been without Gary Payton coming with you? Did Garyās commitment seal the deal for you?
KM: Well, it sealed the deal but you know, Gary wouldnāt have came if I had made more. In our situation, I made the choice to let him make the most and I make the least. But one of us had to, to make it work. So, if Gary wouldnāt have came I would have made more.
HT: Who, who had the idea of going with the Lakers first?
KM: I think, I did, but I think I kinda read about Gary saying, āyou will I will.ā
HT: Because I heard about you may be taking a pay cut to come over here. I really thought no, thereās no way.
KM: Right
HT: Whoās going to take an 18 million dollar pay cut and then from there, I started hearing that maybe Payton will too.
KM: Right
HT: Is tha it?
KM: Its kinda of. But initially said that if weāre able to pull it off Iāll take the least amount. Which hey, Gary had to take a big one and I and I had to take a big one. So we both did. So, now weāre here and I think we know what people expect out of us.
HT: Right
KM: So, weāre here to do a job and do it the best of our ability.
HT: Right. A winner always prepares for a new season believing that you have a chance to win a championship.
KM: Sure
HT: Obviously with the Utah Jazz you could always realistically expect a chance, because you guys got to a couple of NBA Finals and you were always in the playoffs.
KM: Right
HT: And I know you always prepared hard. Maybe you didnāt want people to know how hard you trained in the off-season, but Iāve known about it for a few years.
KM: I trained like this for the last 16 years. I trained like this.
HT: Itās like Jerry Rice-like!
KM: Yes. Absolutely. I heard about his summer training. But yeh, thatās what itās like.
HT: How many hours are we talking about?
KM: I donāt know. It just depends. It depends on how I feel. The least amount being an hour to an hour and a half. It can be up to three hours. Sometimes four hours. Thatās my job and you feel good. Iām just saying that right now, Iām kinda on off time. I will take about three to four days off and I get started again tomorrow. Iāll hit hard tomorrow and Iāll go from there.
HT: Do you always do the court stuff too?
KM: No. I do no court stuff.
HT: Oh really.
KM: No court stuff at all. No basketball. Itās all training, weights, cardio stuff.
HT: So itās like baseball players really.
KM. Yes
HT: See, I know Vlade will workout and play at UCLA.
KM: I donāt play any sports. No basketball in the summer. I donāt touch a basketball!
HT: People donāt realize how tough it is mentally! 16 years of just working your ass off for the prize..
KM: 16 years of preparation to get ready to play every year. Iāve knocked years off my career by training so hard in the summer. Maybe. But I think I added years to my career by training and staying in shape year round. In the summer time I fluctuate four to five pounds in my training weight. Which is, like right now, Iām at the peak of my training. Thatās why I took four to five days off because I was peaking. And then I will take four to five days off and I will start back in probably in the morning, the next day. And I got the Olympic games coming up this summer, Iāll do that and then probably take a week off and then Iāll get ready for training camp.
HT: Iāve been familiar with how hard you work year round, but you must be hitting it extra hard this summer?
KM: Yeh! Cause ha
HT: But then again its kind of a nice pain isnāt it?
KM: Itās the excitement of what Iām about to embark on. I did have an opportunity to speak to Jerry Rice the other day and he said, āGod how do you feel? You should feel like a kid in a candy store!ā He said, your exercise, everything, should be different, he said you know, not that your trying, just because thatās how you are going to feel. You know, thatās exactly how I feel. I just feel that I feel energized. I just feel like I canāt wait to get started. You know, after 18 years itās like, Iām proving myself all over again. Because Iām with a new team and I know the expectations.
HT: Oh yeh.
KM: I know its 30 to 35 minutes a night. But itās the excitement that go along with it . You know. Itāis saying something that every game means something. From the start to the finish. Thatās what Iām looking forward to.
HT: You and your old team mate John Stockton, up until now at least , itās always been āStockton to Maloneā.
KM: Right
HT: Or āMalone to Stocktonā. If heād played one more year, would it have been hard for you to not stay with him?
KM: Oh, absolutely!
HT: So, you were committed to him, no matter what?
KM: Well, Iāll say that he made my decision easier. If he would have stayed it would have been tougher.
HT: Were there any other good fits that you could think of?
KM: Yeh. you know, I thought about it.
HT: This is obviously ideal, but you had to make a sacrifice.
KM: NO, no. I thought about it
HT: But others were willing to pay!
KM: Well yeh, I thought about San Antoino. I thought about Sacremento and Dallas. Of course a lot of them could have paid more , but I just chose to come here. And like I said once you make a decision to do something, you give somebody your word, then all of the sudden you canāt play to the end when somebodyās start offering you beaucoup money and say, āGod, I tell you, I change my mindā. Once you give them your word, you give them your word and thatās what I did with them from the start. They made the call in the beginning and now weāre here .
HT: I saw an interview with you, maybe four years ago. It was the whole talk about guys who didnāt have the help. Like Barkley in his career, and Ewing. You had Stockton but you were talking about that maybe one day Iād like to play with a big man and be able to say, āOkay, you got it tonight, āBig-man.ā
KM: Right!
HT: āI get you tomorrow!ā
KM: Right!
HT: Was that a factor, that you canāt get any better then Shaq?
KM: Aww! No, that was a definite factor. To be able to play with a dominant center like him. Itās awesome! Awesome feeling to have to know that you are going to line up with the best center in the league every night. āYouāre going to make me better and Iām gonna make him betterā.
HT: Thatās a factor too isnāt it, because heās been the greatest player in the league at certain points, but you must have felt that youāre really going to be pushing him too?
KM: Oh yeah! Well Iām going to push him without saying anything. Iāll work hard. Iām going to get the rebound and run the floor and I feel he is going to do the same thing. So, I think weāll push each other. Weāll make each other better. And I think as a team weāll get better as a team. I think it is going to be exciting. I think it is going to be very exciting!
HT: Was there any thought at any point that youād ask GP to come to the Jazz?
KM: No.
HT: This just started going this way and you just went all the way?
KM: It just started going this way.
HT: And the whole package just seem to get better and better
KM: Right
HT: The more you think about it, then thereās Shaq, thereās Kobe and GP
and itās LA. Big market.
KM: Right. So, it just stared going this way, we just didnāt turn around, we just kept going in this direction and nowā¦.
HT: Was it partially that you felt like āfor a change, I donāt want to have to carry the load?ā
KM: Well yes. But then, I think it was better for everybody. Think is was better for the Jazz. I really do. I think about me going to another situation, would put pressure on them. Because obviously theyāre rebuilding and it would have been hard for them to tell me, Thanks but no thanks- kinda. So, I had to make that decision. I had to bite that bullet and say, āyou know what, Iāll make the decision and goā. And I tried to do it with a lot of dignityā¦.
HT: I saw that heartfelt letter you wrote to the people of Utah.
KM: Right, I tried to do it the right way. And thatās how I felt. Why did I do it? Because thatās what I felt like I wanted to do, not that I had to do it. This Friday weāre doing a fan appreciation that me and my wife put together. So, thatās who I am. And thatās the kind of things I do.
HT: And you didnāt want to go to a young really promising young team because youād have to teach and lead all over again?
KM: But I felt that Iād be holding them up. That is why I left the Jazz.
HT: I am talking about going to another situation. A young team for the future?
KM: No. I couldnāt go to a situation like that, I had to go to a team that I felt needed me and needed me right now. I couldnāt go to a team like that. So, I went to this situation and I am happy. Iāve never been less paid and more happier then I am now!
HT: Itās fantastic to see in sports today. It really is. Now, having played with Stockton , one of the greatest point guards ever. Did you feel that it was crucial to get a point guard like Gary Payton to put it all together between you, Shaq, and Kobe?
KM: Right I think that Gary is definitely key.
HT: No disrespect to Derek Fisher but..
KM: Thatās what I am going to tell you now. Weāre forgetting about Derek Fisher, Devean George and those guys that can learn a great deal, and the two young kids coming in. So, I think that we are going to learn a lot, all of us. Iām 18 years in and Iām still willing to learn. So, thatās what its about. Itās about a team. Itās about now coming together as a team. And not being a traveling circus but being a team that everyone wants to see play. From the start of training camp to hopefully the NBA Championship game.
HT: You know whatās fantastic about this, is that in baseball or in basketball when you get a veteran coming in, it usually takes up so much of the cap space that they either get the championship within the couple of years, or not, and then the team has to rebuild.
KM: Right
HT: But in your situation, you are not taking up cap space and youāre also going to help all the young guys coming up, as well contribute to the championship run.
KM: See I looked at this situation as, I took a huge pay cut, but opportunities I want to do away from basketball I think will help off set some of that. I want to do movies. Iāve had numerous inquiries about endorsements, the right ones. So, no, itās not going to $19 million, but itās a sacrifices you have to make. Sometimes you have to make a sacrifice to get some kind of reward or benefit whether it be a championship or whatever. And if itās meant to happen, it is going to happen! If it canāt happen here in LA, it wasnāt meant to be.
HT: Right. So you must feel like, having had the success and the money already got that youāve already won in life?
KM: Right!
HT: So now is the time to do something more meaningful?
KM: Well, doing the things that I want to do, I feel like I already won in life. What I do now is I just try to enjoy life. Enjoy my family, enjoy what God gave me, which is a great talent to do the things I am capable of doing. So, Iām excited. Iām looking forward to the season. I canāt really explain it to you, but itās like 10 years ago. Hoe Iām like pumped up for training camp and I never get excited about training camp. I am excited to run out of the tunnel the first night at the Staple Center and get the first introduction.
HT: And the excitement you are going to feel once you feel that āmy God weāre really finally gelling together!ā
KM: Right
HT: Because the expectations are that you guys are going to win more then 70 games!
KM: Well, I know. The expectations are huge. So, there is going to be some teams out there that will tells us we are not. But the expectations are huge.
HT: Exactly. It happens that the western conference was loaded for a couple of years, but now even more loaded!
KM: And a lot of teams re-loaded.
HT: People have always looked at you as a real nice guy, opinionated and honest. And youāve always remained faithful to help fulfill the dreams of a small market team. But have you always had the ambition of one day playing in the spotlight in a big city like New York, Chicago, or LA with national exposure?
KM: Thatās why I did it now. Everything is timing.
HT: Right.
KM: I just feel that the time was right. I just feel this was the time to make a move and not look back five and ten years from now and say I should have.
HT: Right
KM: This was a perfect time for me to move and I did it the way I wanted to do it which was with a lot of class. And I took the initiative to do a lot of things myself and thatās why Iām here right now, because this is how I wanted to do it
HT: Right. So, youāre just open to the way life came about, because had you guys won the championships in 1998 with Utah, you may not be thinking that way now?
KM: I probably would have though. But sometimes change is good.
HT: I donāt know if you are familiar with the sports talk show world, but thereās a lot of positives and a lot of negatives about your signing. Some of them are saying things like āKarl Malone and Gary Payton are basically trading their salaries to buy a championshipā.
KM: No! If weāre buying a championship, then maybe we wrote a checque! Youāre not buying a championship taking a pay-cut!
HT: Youāve still got to earn it right? No oneās giving you nothing!
KM: You aināt buying a championship and taking a pay-cut!
HT: No.
KM: How refreshing is it for the fans out there to say it isnāt about the money anymore? Itās truly about a team to winning a championship. Focus on that! Weāre not buying anything. Weāre the ones that gave up the money! Is that buying?And if my memory serves me correctly, I am going to be playing 30-35 minutes a night and so is GP. So, we are going to earn it! So, for all those guysā¦.thoseāre guys that wish they could have did what me and Gary is doing now. But they didnāt have the balls to do it. And they let somebody else tell them what to do.
HT: This is unprecedented isnāt it? You canāt think back in NBAā¦
KM: Right. You canāt think back, but you tell me that we did not pick out one or two fans about what we did? True fans! It is about winning. Itās not about the money all time. So, they didnāt have anything to write about but that. Those Clowns that are saying that is the ones that have no balls! And they get behind the mike and the TV and they can talk about it, but when they see you in your face then they all buddy buddy with āya. So, Iāll say theyāre little punks!
HT: You know, thatās a great thing you said about, winning fans over, because I am a New York fan.
KM: Right
HT: LA has always been to me a show boating team. Theyāre great players, Kobe and Shaq, but fans leave in the third quarter and so forth. But with what you guys did makes me want to come out and watch the games and root for you.
KM: Well, the thing about it is. It donāt happen. Like you said, I canāt see what negative you can say about what Gary and I did, because it never have happened in sports!
HT: No.
KM: How about never happened in sports?! Why you gotta make a negative spin on it? We did something that have never happened!
HT: Right!
KM: And probably will never happen again. So, why donāt you say āThis is great for the NBAā and what they needed. āNot these guys are trying to buy a championship and trying to do all of thatā.
HT: You say it like it is man. Thatās cool.
KM: I donāt be bullshittināman.
HT: Now you are regarded as the greatest power forward in NBA history. We talked about the sacrifice you made to win the title.
KM: But you know what
HT: But now would you feel your career is incomplete if you donāt win the championship?
KM: Well, why do you think I did what I did? I go to Arkansas and I train in 90-95degree heat out there. Iām not doing that just to show up to the season in good shape. Iām not doing it just to make the playoffs. Iām doing it to win a championship. I wouldnāt have went through all this if I felt that my career would have been complete by not winning a championship. I made this move to win a championship. But it donāt say it is going to happen. And if it donāt happen I can be the first one to say, ā You know what, I tried something that 95 percent of the people wouldnāt even dare try. If you look at the BIG picture. So, that why I did what I did. And you know what , respect that! And for all those people out there thatās negative, respect that! Because they didnāt have the balls to do it. You know, they didnāt have the balls to do it. I did! Gary did! So, why do you respect it and stop hating! Thatās all you have to do. Because it donāt happen in sports! Commissioner Stern got to be smiling from here to here, ācause itās refreshing!
HT: I know youāve been critical of the league from time to time. But right now what youāre doing makes the product better. And it says something for Commissioner Stern and the NBA that we got athletics like this
KM: When you look at all the negative going on now, they need this.
HT: I donāt know if youāre familiar with Paul Kariya?
KM: Paul Kariya and Teemu Selanne. They used to play together in Anaheim? Kariya took the one-five?
HT: But theyāre still young.
K.M.: Right
HT: And there going to make theirs. Theyāre probably not going to make up what they lost this year.
KM: Now the Jazz got $27 million and nobody want it!
HT: They tried to get Cory Maggette, right?
KM: Any they offered me $5 million. Thatās what they wanted to pay me. Then I saw what they were offering some these other guys they were trying to get. Are you kidding me? I just seen the day they traded Keown Clarke (laughs)! Figure that one out.
HT: So, you donāt dwell on the dough that youāll probably never make up. Weāre talking upwards of maybe $30-$50 million dollars.
KM: Donāt get me wrong. Hold on, yes.
HT: Some team might have signed you up for four years?
KM: Yes. Iām not blowing it off. If you got 30 million, you want 40 million, if you have 40, you want 50! No, I am not blowing it off, because its huge. But at this pointā¦
HT: You are going to get endorsements and ā¦.
KM: You hope so!
HT: But itās still not going to make up a $18 million loss.
KM: Right. I like to say you hope to get endorsements. It donāt say I get endorsements, Iām saying you hope you do. But somewhere in life, you draw the line.
HT: Itās not about the money?
KM: Itās not about the money! Thatās what Iām saying. How can anybody turn this into a negative because itās not about the money. Itās about team, itās about wanting to win a championship. Itās about putting yourself in a position to maybe win a championship. Thatās what I chose to do. And people have to respect that. Or they should!
HT: We have to admire you for not playing for the buck, or the points! Youāre rolling the dice for life.
KM: Right
HT: Because you might make up that money from a movie opportunity or something?
KM: Might! I never count my chicken before they hatch. Of course, that would be awesome. If it was in the real world, Iād been in action movies, all over the place, and Iāll make up that money. But Iām a realist, and it might not happen. So, I am prepared either way. I know what I want! But what you want you donāt always get! I want a championship, but thereāre 28 other teams out there that say they donāt want you to have one. And I want to have a movie career, but it might not happen. Thatās how I am as a person, you know. But Iām not content, Iām content with life, but Iām not content with my profession, because I want a championship. And thatās why I did what I did. And if all the other stuff come along with it, it would just be gravy, it would be awesome!
HT: You know the fans are so sour with baseball, theyāre all complaining about the, it a big deal that Ken Griffey got 14 million instead of 20 million. That was a big deal! That he took that kind of pay-cut per year.
KM: But look how they booed him? When he got hurt they booed him. In his home! Thatās unbelievable.
HT: Itās not always their fault, but fans are just generally down on sports. The move youāre making is a tremendous gesture to sports isnāt it?
KM: I think as a whole.
HT: Would you encourage that for other top athletics to do that?
KM: I canāt encourage any other athlete! Only you know what you what to do, only you know in your heart what you want to do. No, I canāt encourage it. I can only control me and what I do. I canāt encourage anybody else to do anything other than what they want to do. And you canāt make them do that. Thatās something theyāre going to have to want to do themselves.
HT: The Lakers are doing what George Steinbrenner does with the Yankees, except theyāre not spending George Steinbrenner cash!
KM: Well, because they got it all in two guys pocket, and you have to realize it, respect that, and go on. Things can happen, they will if they want. The decision has been made and itās been done, and you go from there.
HT: And lets not forget, just like a college junior, instead of coming out and making all that money, decided to stay all four years for the experience, but he might get hurt. Have a career-ending injury, and that could happen to you guys. People donāt even think about that!
KM: No, they donāt talk about that. Itās amazing!
HT: People arenāt even talking about that! What if GP gets hurt, or you get hurt?
KM: Thatās what I said, everybody said weāre supposed to win a championship. All of us have go to stay healthy. Youāre right. We are rolling the dice. Big dice Vegas is 7/11. Thatās why I picked number 11, ācause itās a lucky number.
HT: So, youāre going for the 11 are you?
KM: Yeah. (laughs)
HT: Oh, thatās beautiful! So, you didnāt want to take # 32?
KN: No. Because out of respect to Magic! Thatās the ultimate respect to say that his jersey is retired for a reason, and I donāt have the right to come in and take that jersey down. I want that jersey to stay up there. Thatās my ultimate respect to him.
HT: But thatās some gesture that he made to you though?
KM: Ya! That was a hell of a gesture he made to me. He let me know how bad he wanted me here. But I wanted to show him how much he meant to the league by returning the gesture.
HT: Thatās like Joe DiMaggio saying, āhey take my number, kid.ā
KM: Oh yeah, absolutely! What he done for the league, it donāt deserve to come down. For me or anybody else. It deserves to stay up there. So, thatās why I did what I did.
HT: But itās mind boggling that four out of five players on the floor are going to be first ballot Hall of Famers! Its more then āShowtimeā, or Birdās Celtics or even MJās Bulls.
KM: Now what weāve got t do is go out there and put it together
HT: right. Now you guys got to go out and do it. But the rest of the team, right now, its week lot, in my opinion. I watch the NBA, you know, compared to the rest of the western conference teams. There a lot of players who have done very well to win the championships and fit in with Kobe and Shaq. But still theyāre barely B plus players?
KM: Well, thatās why we gotta make sure.
HT: That why its not a given. No one is giving you anything.
KM: Thatās right, nobodyās giving us anything!
HT: Even those guys have to play better than they ever did.
KM: Right. And we have to play even better!
HT: Give me your assessment of what your rivals San Antonio, Sacramento, Houston?
KM: Oh, they got better! Every team in the west.
HT: Is there any particular that you think have done excellent.
KM: I think all of them have. I definitely Minnesota have done better. Thatās why nothing is a shoe in. It is going to be some exciting basketball this year. And like I said, weāve got to be ready to play every night. But theyāve gotten better as well. So, we realize that.
HT: Houstonās just going to keep getting better and better.
KM: Yeah. Houston is going to get better and better. Phoenixā young, up and coming team. The whole west is going to be tough. Iāll say it again, the team that win it in the West, could win the championship again. So, it is going to be tough.
HT: San Antonio, I think they did the right thing not going for Kidd, and instead getting deeper. Itās almost in preparation for you guys, really. I know you donāt want to talk about Kobeās situation.
KM: No. no.
HT: But should Kobe not be available, or if his availability is limited. How do you think you guys will handle a situation where there is already an existing power struggle between Phil Jackson, Kobe and Shaq? And what if Kobe has to be in and out during the season?
KM: Well, weāre going to support Kobe, no matter what as a team. Heās not going to be in this thing by himself. He got a support system that weāre going to give him, and thatās what weāre going to do. Weāre not going to dwell on what happened in the past, weāre going to help him get through a tough situation. And we are going to be there for him when he needs us. Thatās my assessment. And me, when Iām your friend, Iām your friend for life! Iām your friend from now on, not just tomorrow or the next day, itās for life! Thatās who I am. Even though Iām just coming into this situation, thatās who Iām going to be.
HT: You know, having talked to you for a few minutes, these questions that I came up with are generally negative but it seems to like these situations are not even going to be a problem for you? Because youāre going to be there to support him.
KM: Right
HT: People are worrying about whether there might be chemistry problems, but if you made this kind of sacrifice there aināt going to be no selfness!
KM: I knew all this going into it. The most selfish act you can have is money. Greed. I eliminated that already. So, it is not about that. A guy donāt need you when heās scoring 40 points and hit the game winning a jumper. A guy needs you now, and what heās going through now. Thatās when he needs you. Thatās when you get stronger as a man, itās not when heās scoring 40 and making 20 million in endorsements, and 15 to 20 million from the Lakers. Thatās not when he needs you, a guy needs you when heās down and out. Thatās when Iām there for him!
HT: How about in terms of adjusting your game? You wonāt be getting as many touches.
KM: Hey, Iāll adjust my game. Like I said, I go back to selfishness. I knew what I was getting into before I did. Itās not going to be āI need more shots, or I need thisā.
HT: With you rebounding, my God!
KM: Rebounding. And Iām going to run the floor. And Iām going to make Shaq run the floor. If he donāt run the floor, Iāll be getting the lay-up.
HT: Potentially this could be absolutely dynamite!
KM: It could be. But Iāll tell you what, I ām going to come in shape, and hopefully he do to, because weāre going to push the ball. And I want to be one of the first down the floor!
At age forty! So, if youāre 28 or 29 year old and you want a 40 year old be down on the floor before you, Iām not going to look bad, you are. So, weāre going to see.
HT: How many more years do you think guys like Barry Bonds and yourself could play? I mean you guys are practically in your peak!
KM: I donāt know. Barring injuries, who knows!
HT: As long as youāre enjoying the game?
KM: Enjoying the game. Itās like I got a new lease on life, right now so who knows.
HT: Right now it looks like you have a whole bunch of years?
KM Right! So, Iām just going to see what happens. But its like this, I want them to want me as well as I want them. And when you do that and you have that combination, who knows how long you can play? Playing with Shaq and Kobe might take years off my career. So thatās just going to be one of those things.
HT: Youāve had a lot of experience against Phil Jackson teams, what has your opinion been of him?
KM: I always respected coach. As a coach and a person. And I like his philosophy, and I buy into it. And I am a veteran and I adjust to the situation. But Iāve never had any problems with him away from anything else. Just been great and a smooth transition and like I said, I am excited about the opportunity to learn things from him. I go into this situation almost as a rookie. Iāve got to prove myself all over again. I am not expecting my teammates to warm up to me. I have a responsibility that I gottaā warm up to them.
HT: Because you have to learn the whole system too right?
KM: Oh yeh. I never been a guy that studied tape but Iāve study some of the tapes already so, Iām ready for this. Iām ready for it already!
HT: Are there types of coaches that you tend to like more? Or are you just a person that just respects whoever is in authority?
KM: I respect whoever is in authority. It doesnāt matter what coach.
HT: Whether itās Pat Riley or Jeff Van Gundy?
KM: I respect whoever is in authority , but thereās a lot of things I donāt need. Maybe a young guy do. So, as a coach, you gotta respect that as well.
HT: Know that you got 18 years under you belt.
KM: Right. I donāt need a whole lot of line drills and all that. I know what I need to do to get in shape. I donāt need head games being played because thatās not what I am all about.
HT: It about getting the job done.
KM: Right!
HT: You know, this European trend, young European players coming in. Thereās a big thing about people being critical about the young players not developing, because they donāt work on the fundamentals. Do you think the drafting of the young Europeans is a trend? You played with Kirilenko, who is excellent.
KM: If you look at what is happening now, those young European players know how to pass, dribble and shoot. While we over here as Americans āstreet ballā between their legs, behind their back. Thatās not getting it done! So, of course that is whatās going on. And the sooner we realize that the better off we will be but weāre not getting it done right.
HT: So, do you think there will be a backlash on this whole European player trend?
KM: Aināt no doubt basketball is an American game, but now we have to go out and prove it. Seriously. Because I think they are definitely catching up with us.
P.10; Thatās what I think. Because if the Dream Team could lose in the Olympics to the Yugoslavians.
KM: That wasnāt a real dream team. That was a fake. The Dream Team was number one and number 2. That we sent over there last year were imposters. (Laughs)
HT: Buy thereās going to be another one because youāre involved, right?
KM: Right.
HT: Are you an emotionally guy? You talked about your loyalty to your friends and so forth.
KM: Yes. Iām an emotional guy. Iām a very sensitive guy. I do like to make people happy, I like to be happy. I try to be happy all the time, because people feed off me. I donāt like to be a guy that go around and mope, thinks somebody feel sorry for me. I like to make my own breaks, I donāt like nothing given to me. I like to think that I earned it. And I look into the mirror every night and say āYou know what, I earned thisā.
HT: So, Larry Miller (Utah Jazz owner), and your ex-coach, Jerry Sloan:. Is it sad to leave them? But still your friends forever?
KM: Sad to leave them, weāre friends forever, but itās not my fault, itās their fault.
HT: It is going to be strange for you not to be playing next to John Stockton?
KM: Itās going to be strange, but I got Gary Payton!
HT: Youāre going to be so excited!
KM: Iāll go from one to the other, so I think thatās awesome.
HT: How important is the points record to you?
KM: Its important but
HT: The chances are youāre going to get there but might take a little longer?
KM: 12.8 points a game. I should be able to do that in two years.
HT: You got a nice grin on your face there. That would be a hell of an accomplishment though?
KM: It would be great accomplishment, but it would be a personal one that I donāt get caught up in.
HT: Can you talk a little bit about your daughter, Cheryl Ford?
KM: Iām very proud of her!
HT: Sheās having a terrific year as a rookie in the WNBA.
KM: Sheās awesome, man! When I see her play, its like, āgod thatās my daughter right there!ā Sheās awesome. Her Mom did an unbelievable job raising them. She has a twin brother, majored in Forrestry at Louisiana Tech. thatās going run our business one day. But Iām proud of all of them, and Iām proud of the career that sheās doing. Iām just happy for her and what sheās doing.
HT: Sheāll be able to come out see you play out here now too?
KM: Yeah!
HT: Man, everything is going great for you!
KM: I have my days. I have my moments.
HT: Isnāt it amazing you initially make that sacrifice. Itās a big sacrifice, $18 million dollars a year. But you look like the happiest guy in the world!
KM: I am making less, but no, donāt get me wrong its a lot of money, but Iām the happiest Iāve ever been, because I made this decision myself with my family. There wasnāt anybody dangling any carrot. Once it got close, a lot of teams came out of the woodwork, and started dangling a lot of things. But I stood firm to what I believe in and I came here and I am not looking back.
HT: Are you moving out of Utah completely?
KM: Well, we bought a home here.
HT: So, your house is on the market over there?
KM: Yeah, we put it on the market, but I build homes for a living too. I have a construction company.
HT: So, you can always have a place over there? You have a lot of businesses over there, right.
KM.: Yes.
HT: What kind of businesses?
KM: I have Toyota-Honda dealership there. Real Estate company there. So, weāre gonna always call Utah home as well. Weāll be back and forth.
HT: Now the pictureās coming together. Youāve done very will over there, now youāre going to spread out over here too.
KM: Yes. Thatās what lifeās about. (Smiles)
HT: You are going to be like Magic Johnson!
KM: Right, right! Magicās definitely a hero of mine. Like you said, I will be expanding a lot of things. Of course I want to get into acting, while Iām out here. Weāll see what happens, basketball first and all the other stuff will fall in line, once you do what youāre supposed to do and thatās play basketball.
HT: I know you like to drive to trucks and you like log and hunting and fishing and camping and all that kind of stuff. Its just the way this excitement being in LA, that sort of like the
KM: Yes. Itās the excitement, or whatever
HT: What kind of movies you think you want to do. I think youād be great in something like āThe Last Boy Scoutā. Wasnāt a great movie but if you were in it with Bruce Willis it would have been great.
KM: Oh man, I would love to been in action packed movies! Thatās something Iāve always thought about doing. I like to do some of my own stunts. Lot of stuff I would like to do. Weāve had opportunities, but I want the right situation. I just donāt what to do something just to say I did a movie. I want to do something that really means something and really matters.
HT: Even if you won two or three championships in Utah.
KM: I still had this ambition. I still had ambition to do this.
HT: I think in the past people had you wrong, you know, that youāre a serious guy, and youāre committed to basketball.
KM: I always had other interests other then basketball.
HT: People were surprised that you did that wrestling thing with Rodman.
KM: Thatās what I wanted to do. I donāt go out to try to shock and surprise people. I go out to be myself. And thatās something I like to do. And that why I did what I did. When Iām ready to do something I do it, I donāt really get caught up in what people think or what they say, because this is what I want to do.
HT: I think youāll be good in one of those Jim Brown roles.
KM: Yeah! Iām looking forward to it, but I ām not looking to do the āstarring Karl Maloneā, I just want pick and chose the roles that Iām in to become a great actor. I want it to matter. I do a small part this time, I want to do a bigger part next time. And thatās how I want to do it, I donāt want to be just thrown out there. I want to pick and chose the things I do. I have a great opportunity now that Iām kinda mix about because I donāt want to be that basketball player. Iād rather be a cop and have two or three lines and a basketball at 40 lines because I want to get away from that.
HT: And the other thing is, you got a great personality, you got great presence for film, itās better for Hollywood to want you and let them spend their money rather than spend your own money to be in a movie like some athletes
KM: It just like an endorsement. You want the people that want you to come to you. You donāt want to call them. They know how to get in touch with you. The same thing here. If you want me in a role youāll find me. If you donāt you wonāt. Itās the same as when youāre endorsing a product. Itās the same thing. I am who I am, Iām not going to change because Iām in California. Iām going to be the same person I am.
HT: Did you even seen the movie call the āAmazing Grace and Chuckā with Alex English? That was a nice role.
KM: Yes. It was a nice role he had.
HT: He did a great job too. You be great at a role like that.
KM: I want action! Like āPredatorā or āSniperā.
HT: Who would you like to work with?
KM: Jackie Chang, Wesley Snipes, Bruce Willis, Arnold Schwarzennegger, Mel Gibson, Danny Glover! I would like to work with those guys.
HT: Guy mostly, villains also?
KM: I would like to be really just a Bad Ass! Not a bad guy or good guy, just a Bad Ass. A nice guy but I could flip a switch like that!
HT: But youād be great in Jim Brown kind of roles.
KM: I love war movies. I love that kind of stuff. āWhen We Were Soldiersā with Mel Gibson. āBlack Hawk Downā, āPlatoonā. I love war movies. I would love war action packed westerns. That was my favorites.
HT: Youāre just so excited arenāt you?
KM; Oh, yeah!
HT: Itās all out here. You are in the right place.
KM: Iām excited but my focus is basketball. I feel that everything will come together after that.
HT: So you donāt think youāll necessarily be more active with NRA activities because youāre out here now?
KM: Iāll be what they want me to be. Iām NRA! I am who I am. Iām not changing just because Iām here in California. Iām NRA. Thatās what I believe in. I believe in rights to bare arms. Guns donāt kill people. Itās the people whoāre using them.
HT: What would you consider your highlights? I know the Olympic gold was one of them.
KM: I think the Olympic gold was one. The second was the second Olympic gold. Those were my career highlights.
HT: And, of course, you could be 8 months away from your first NBA Championship?
KM: That would add to it. That would be the cream of the crop.
HT: Everything else is gravy!
KM: ya
HT: Oscar nomination! Everything else is gravy. Icing on the cake.
KM: ya (Laughs)
HT: Any regrets?
KM: Nope! I have no regrets.
HT: mmm
KM: Because I think about thoroughly my decisions I make, and once I make āem. Itās like anything else. Me and my brotherās gotta saying we always say,
āIt is what it is-deal with it!ā and thatās what we do. Thatās my saying. I donāt regret, no! It is what it is and I deal with it.
HT: Do you think you might want to get into commentating in basketball?
KM: I donāt know, but I wonāt close the door on anything, but Iāll just see.
HT: I know you did a radio talk show, youāre a great talker.
KM: I love that! I love doing a talk show, but Iām not going say what I will and wonāt do, Iām just going to let it happen and see.
HT: Yes, because you can do so many things and if youāre but if youāre busy with movies or something youāre not going to be able do any of that.
KM: Right
KM: But I just want to do smart things thatās going help or enhance my career, not, you know, make it bad. So Iām just going to pick and choose what I do.
HT: Thatās beautiful. OK. Thanks very much.
KM: You bet!

