Mention the names Wicks and Rowe to a longtime Celtics Fans, and you are bound to get unpleasant reactions. Neither is remembered fondly in Boston. Both are thought to epitomize the antithesis of what it means to be a Celtic, especially when it comes to inspirational play, or lack thereof.
During the infamous 1978-79 season when just about everything fell apart for Battleship Shamrock, Rowe tried to console teammates during one losing streak by telling them that "there ain't no W's or L's on our paychecks." His career in New England appropriately came to an end during training camp the following season, when first year head coach Bill Fitch, who couldn't bear to watch #41 loaf down the court one more minute of practice, instructed Rowe to "keep on running" into the locker room, out to his car, and back to his apartment where he was advised he could start looking for a new employer because he'd been cut. Wicks wasn't quite that bad, but, for whatever reason, is remembered as Rowe's soul mate when it came to lack of output.
So it may come as a surprise that when the period of evaluation for these two blokes is adjusted by a few years, the reputations of Sidney
Wicks and Curtis Rowe improve immeasurably. This is
one look at the Wicks and Rowe tandem before their reputations went South.
February 8, 1990
WESTWOOD
As he embarked upon the task of restoring glory to the UCLA
basketball program 1 1/2 years ago, Coach Jim Harrick faced doubts about
the players who would provide the cornerstones in the rebuilding
process.
He wondered if Trevor Wilson, after two stormy years
under former Coach Walt Hazzard, would be able to curb his temper. Would
Wilson be able to blend his splendid individual skills into a team
concept? Would Wilson react positively to a one-week suspension from
preseason practice?
He wondered how Don MacLean, only a few
months removed from Simi Valley High, would adjust to the more rigorous
demands of college basketball. Would MacLean score as well as he had in
high school? Would MacLean have the stamina to rebound, defend and run?
Harrick has since watched Wilson, a 6-foot-8 senior, and
MacLean, a 6-10 sophomore, develop into one of the most proficient
forward tandems in college basketball. The two have proved to be worthy
heirs to a long line of exemplary Bruin forwards that includes Sidney
Wicks and Curtis Rowe and eight other NBA first-round draft choices
since 1971.
Wilson is averaging 19.1 points and 8.6 rebounds. His
teammates call him Rock, in reference to his physique and not his
abysmal free-throw shooting.
MacLean is averaging 19.8 points and
8.4 rebounds. His teammates call him Air because his on-court demeanor
is the opposite of Michael (Air) Jordan's.
Between them, that's 38.9 points and 17 rebounds a game.
As seniors in 1971, Wicks and Rowe combined to average 38.9 points and 22.8 rebounds.
Five
years later, Marques Johnson and Richard Washington averaged 34.7
points and 18 rebounds. The next season, Johnson and David Greenwood
averaged 36.6 points and 20 rebounds.
The latest tandem has led
UCLA to a 15-4 record, within a game of the Pacific 10 Conference lead
entering tonight's game at Arizona State.
MacLean is the No. 3 scorer and rebounder in the Pac-10, and Wilson ranks fifth in scoring and second in rebounding.
Said
John Wooden, who has either coached or observed all who have manned the
corners for UCLA in the last four decades: "If we were to compare them
to the other pairs, I'd say they're not nearly as stable. They're a
great pair of forwards, perhaps as fine a pair as there is in the
country from an offensive point of view, but each tends to get out of
control every now and then because of their temperament.
"Wilson
is more outgoing, has been less disciplined in the past than MacLean.
But MacLean, in his desire to excel, gets himself riled up at times and
loses a bit of control. And when he does that, he loses a bit of his
effectiveness.
"MacLean appears to be a more placid individual,
but he really isn't. Rowe wasn't (placid), either, but he appeared that
way. He was very competitive."
While Wicks and Rowe never backed down from a challenge, Wooden said, they were "spirited without being temperamental."
Physically, however, MacLean and Wilson might be their equal.
"MacLean is as fine around the board as any 6-10 man you'll see," Wooden said. "He has a great touch.
"Just taking the physical qualifications to play forward, I'd say Sidney (Wicks) had about as many as you could find in an individual, and so does Wilson," Wooden said.
College
basketball coaches across America breathed a sigh of relief in 1969
when the former Lew Alcindor finally graduated after leading UCLA to three consecutive National Collegiate Athletic Assn. championships.
But in the two seasons before Bill Walton joined the Bruin varsity in 1971 and started another reign of terror in Westwood, Wicks and Rowe kept the dynasty alive.
The Bruins won 57 of 60 games and consecutive NCAA championships in the 1969-70 and '70-71 seasons.
In 1970-71, UCLA outrebounded its foes by an average of 12 rebounds.
"We
were extremely confident of our ability to get the ball inside and
score," said Steve Patterson, who was the Bruins' center. "And if we
didn't score on the first shot, then we'd score on the second or the
third or the fourth. I remember that we used to really take control of
games on the inside."
Rowe provided consistency.
"As a
starter for me for three years, Curtis Rowe never had a bad game,"
Wooden said. "He didn't have the great games like Sidney might have, but
he never had a bad game."
Wicks was brash--outgoing and
talkative. Like Wilson, he wore his emotions on his sleeve. And, like
Wilson, he clashed with his coach.
And so, as a sophomore, Wicks was used as a reserve behind Rowe and Lynn Shackelford, neither of whom was as talented.
"That
used to trouble him," Wooden said. "He'd say to me, 'You know I'm
better than them.' And I'd say, 'I know you are. They probably do too.
It's too bad that you let them beat you out.' Eventually, he came to
understand what I was talking about, and in his last two years he was
the best college forward in the country."
As a senior, Wicks averaged 21.3 points and 12.8 rebounds.
Rowe averaged 17.6 points and 10 rebounds.
"Wicks
was like Wilson, and Rowe was like MacLean," Wooden said. "Though not
as good a scorer as MacLean, (Rowe) was steadier than MacLean has been.
Maybe I won't say that next year, or in (MacLean's) senior year."
Like MacLean, Rowe was quietly intense.
"He
had a good sense of humor--he loved to laugh--and he was very
easygoing," Patterson said. "Yet, on the court he had a demeanor that
was fearsome. He really could be scary at times on the floor. He just
had a look of a guy you wouldn't want to mess with. I think he really
scared people at times."
Today, Rowe is a community service worker in Detroit. He averaged 11.6 points in an eight-year NBA career with the Detroit Pistons and the Boston Celtics.
Wicks, a UCLA assistant coach under Hazzard, is a real estate investor in Los Angeles. He averaged 16.8 points in a 10-year NBA career with the Portland Trail Blazers, the Celtics and the San Diego Clippers.
Among Harrick's first priorities as UCLA
coach were to persuade MacLean to sign with the Bruins and to persuade
point guard Darrick Martin, who had signed several months earlier, to
honor his commitment. Accomplishing both, he has said, laid the
foundation for his program.
Equally important, it seems, was bringing Wilson into line.
"We
had a time, Trevor and I, when I needed to think about him being on our
team," Harrick said. "I felt that I needed to get Trevor's attention
and let him know that there was only one crazy guy on the team, and that
was me. And that, most of the time, things would be done my way."
Harrick didn't like Wilson riding his teammates in practice. He wanted Wilson to encourage, not chastise and discourage.
Finally, before last season, he suspended Wilson for a week.
"I
thought he was an individualist, and there was no place for that on our
team," Harrick said. "That was just his style, but it was contrary to
the way I thought.
"I told him, 'Trevor, I can't put up with this for two years. I'd be a fruitcake, so we might as well part, unless . . .
" 'We do this, this, this and this.' I had about four pages of things I wanted him to do."
Among
the requirements was a weekly meeting with a sports psychologist, Dr.
William Parham, who works regularly with several UCLA athletes.
Working
with Parham helped him control his emotions, Wilson said. And except
for an occasional flare-up, such as last month's technical foul incident
at Stanford, Wilson's behavior has steadied.
He joined Alcindor
(now Kareem Abdul-Jabbar), Walton, Greenwood and Johnson this season as
the only Bruins who have both scored more than 1,500 points and grabbed
more than 800 rebounds.
Through it all, Wilson never considered leaving UCLA.
"No way," he said.
Transferring would have meant not playing with his boyhood friend, MacLean, whom he met in the summer before the eighth grade.
"I
remember seeing this huge guy," MacLean said. "He'd miss three layups
in a row and then finally make it. We used to joke that that was the
only way he led the league in rebounding."
Wilson and MacLean
talked of playing together, but Wilson stayed close to home at Cleveland
High in Reseda and MacLean stayed in Simi Valley.
So, before hooking up in Westwood, they were teammates only in pickup games.
"We've
been playing together for so long that we kind of have a feel for each
other," Wilson said. "We know each other's strengths and weaknesses so
well, and we kind of play off them. It's become instinctive. It's not
something we talk about, but I just know where he's going to be
sometimes."
Last season, when Wilson averaged 18.4 points and 8.7
rebounds, and MacLean averaged 18.6 points and 7.5 rebounds, it was the
first time two Bruin forwards had each averaged more than 18 points in
the same season. And while Wilson led the Pac-10 in rebounding for the
second consecutive season, MacLean set a freshman conference scoring
record.
This season, MacLean has accounted for 537 points and
rebounds, only 12 more than Wilson. And in the last four weeks, the two
have experienced a role reversal. Wilson has been the more accurate
shooter in UCLA's
last eight games, making 59.6% of his shots, while MacLean has been the
more consistent rebounder, pulling down an average of 10.6 rebounds to
Wilson's 7.8.
"Trevor is about as quick a forward as I've ever
known," Harrick said. "And not many teams have a 6-10 player who can
stay with MacLean. He shoots over most of the people who guard him, he's
got good moves around the basket and he's got a soft touch."
Only two former Bruins, Alcindor and Walton, averaged more points a game as sophomores than MacLean.
"I
never thought he'd be quite this good," Harrick said. "But I thought
after last season that by January, he'd be one of the top players in the
country."
Both are expected to be first-round NBA draft choices,
although some have questioned Wilson's shooting touch from the
perimeter and the foul line. He has made only 52.9% of his free throws
this season. But Newell said: "I like (Wilson's) fire. I like the fact
that he wants to win. He'll give up his body to help his team win."
MacLean
is already being mentioned as an eventual NBA lottery pick. His unusual
shot, released on the way up, is difficult to defend, Newell said. "His
shot reminds me of Bernard King's. He shoots so quickly that he doesn't
get a lot of shots blocked."
Together, Wilson and MacLean form a combination that's difficult to beat, MacLean said.
"Coach
Harrick said there are better tandems in the country," he said, "but I
don't think--as far as playing together and being so complementary
(goes)--that there are."
Wilson, however, defers to Bruins past.
"I've
seen some tapes of Wicks, and he's far superior to either one of us,"
Wilson said. "The stats are comparable, but we have to win a
championship to be truly compared to those guys."
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