WASHINGTON -- If you aren't from the nation's capital, my hometown, and you know the name Abe Pollin at all, it is probably because of his audacity. At the end of the 2002-2003 NBA season, he fired from the team he owned, the Washington Wizards, Michael Jordan.Such a remembrance would be as understandable as it would be unfortunate.
Indeed, Pollin, who died Tuesday afternoon at 85 as the longest tenured owner in the NBA, was much more than the protagonist in the ending of MJ's basketball-playing career as he was cast -- and wrongly, by the way. He was the kind of owner every fan, and certainly every city leader, would love to have had. The nation's capital was lucky for the last 46 years Pollin owned the Wizards, which was why Wes Unseld -- truly the greatest pro basketball player in this city's history -- dragged himself into downtown Washington on Tuesday night for what was a unglamorous meeting of a losing team from Philadelphia and Pollin's losing Wizards.
Wizards 108, 76ers 107:
(AP) There was no way that last shot could go in. No way the Washington Wizards could lose their first game in 46 seasons without their beloved owner.
Louis Williams' 3-pointer at the buzzer rimmed out, giving the Wizards an emotional 108-107 win over the Philadelphia 76ers on Tuesday night, hours after the death of team owner Abe Pollin.
"I guess Mr. P, he probably contested that last shot better than anybody," Wizards coach Flip Saunders said.
Down the hall, the opposing coach - who worked for Pollin until last season - uttered the same thought.
"Maybe Abe's spirit knocked that out," 76ers coach Eddie Jordan said. -- Read More "He loved Washington," said Unseld, who anchored the only championship, in 1978, which Pollin's teams ever mustered.
That's the irony in this city's appreciation for Pollin. He wasn't the best team owner in this city's history. That was, unquestionably, Jack Kent Cooke, the longtime owner of the local NFL team who shepherded three Super Bowl champions before allowing the club to be bought by its current owner.
Pollin, however, made Washington the sports town it has become and he did so in a most refreshing way: single-handedly
Just about the time I was becoming aware of professional sports, there was but one to follow here. That was the football team adorned in burgundy and gold. But in the middle '70s, Pollin gave us something else to cheer about, a basketball team he owned and imported from Baltimore called the Bullets and a hockey team he purchased from the NHL that got named the Capitals.
To top it all off, he built a stadium in a Maryland suburb for both to play in: the Capital Centre.
And all of that he did mostly with money from his own pocket. How 'bout that?
Unlike a lot of owners today, Pollin, a construction entrepreneur, also refused for the most part to interfere with the people he hired to run the sports in which he was invested. Over the years, they included black coaches starting with K.C. Jones in 1973, a black general manager in Unseld, and a woman, Susan O'Malley, as president.
Pollin repeated the use of his own wealth when the Cap Centre, as we all called it, became obsolete. He plunked down a couple hundred million of his own to secure a lot in an absolute dead zone of downtown D.C. and build another new home for his basketball and hockey franchises. It was originally called the MCI Center and quickly got nicknamed The Phone Booth.
When I moved back to my hometown a couple of years ago, it was in the midst of celebrating the 10-year anniversary of what is now called the Verizon Center, which was considered when Pollin built it the dumbest gamble in city history. Everyone was certain that even though Pollin built it no one would come. Downtown D.C. was too dangerous and there was nothing else there.
But after I rode the escalator up from the subway stop at the arena on Tuesday, I had to negotiate my way through the throngs that swarm this part of town nowadays. The arena is attached to the city's most-popular sports bar. It sits across the street from the brand new modern home of the Shakespeare theater. It is just around the corner from some of the best restaurants and watering holes, all of which bustle with humanity till the wee hours."He was the catalyst ... that revitalized the surrounding area," said Ted Leonsis, who bought the Capitals from Pollin and was supposed to assume the Wizards whenever and however Pollin's ownership ended. "Anyone walking down 7th Street, seeing the throngs of excited fans, the host of popular restaurants, hotels and nightspots, can attest to the lasting legacy of Mr. Pollin's deep commitment to D.C."
Pollin wasn't perfect. I still don't know why he parted with Jones as a coach, and his sending of everyone's favorite player Earl the Pearl Monroe to New York took forever to heal.
Pollin's biggest fault was loyalty. Most of us who rooted for the Wizards believe he kept Unseld in a leadership role for far too long than that single championship should have afforded him. The Wizards in the 80s and 90s were as unsuccessful a franchise as you could find.
But it wasn't as if his heart was in the wrong place or his wallet was closed to trying to make his teams -- no, our teams -- better.
And he should've dismissed Jordan. He wasn't what the team needed as a player at the time and his judgment for running the team, which was part of his role, was as suspect then as it is now. After Pollin suffered slings and arrows for dismissing Jordan, the team became a perennial playoff squad, if not ultimately a successful one.
"He was an exemplary figure in our community," Greater Washington Sports Alliance president Robert Sweeney said. "His many achievements transformed the role that sports can have in our lives."The Wizards' chief of staff, Matt Williams, said the owner called him Tuesday morning with a reminder to let the staff go home early after the Philly game so they could beat the traffic for Thanksgiving. Hours after the game, which started with a moment of silence and ended with a Wizards' win, many of Pollin's employees milled around whispering their recollections of the only NBA owner Washingtonians have ever known.











Comments (Page 1 of 1)
I am sure people will not understand the effect he had on Washington sports. It is a shame that he never owned the Redskins so he could appoint football insiders to run the team.
Thanks to Abe Pollin, I'm the the sports freak I am today. I'd have never given hockey a second glance if it wouldn't have been for being able to go see it live. I remember back in '78 when the then Bullets won the NBA Championship - wow! One of my first ever concerts at the Cap Centre. He did so much for sports and entertainment but he and Mrs. Pollin did so much more for my hometown. Many, many charities benefitted from their generousity.
Abe Pollin was a true gentlemen but when it came to his beloved Bullets/Wizards, he wouldn't back down from the new breed trying to tell him how to run his franchise. If his loyalty to his players, the league and the fans was his biggest fault, then so be it. To me he was the kind of man that no matter the decision he made, he could get up in the morning and look himself in the mirror and know in his heart of hearts, he did the right thing.
Mr. Pollin, thank you for all you've done. May you rest in peace and may your family find comfort in their memories of you.
Good riddance. Now change the name back to Bullets..
Insofar as changing the name back to "Bullets" is concerned, you are right. How did this one escape Blackistone? Blackistone and the team should reimburse the fans for the cost of the new apparel. The name "Wizard" is closely associated with Klan hierarchy, and it certainly appeals to pagan themes.
blackistone is a racist
ffa
Why is it when an old person dies they're such a pioneer and so loved, and so wonderful? Does anyone ever die old and be a sob that nobody liked?
How is Al these days?
That will be the case of Dan Snyder when the time comes.
"At the end of the 2002-2003 NBA season, he fired from the team he owned, the Washington Wizards, Michael Jordan."
Oh, come on, Kevin, your TORTURED syntax is a tip-off that you ain't tellin the truth. So much for the pseudo-revolutionary rhetoric when Kevin shifts into people-pleasing mode. LOL!
When Michael Jordan left the Bulls, he was offered a sweetheart deal by then-AOL bigwig Ted Leonsis who happened to own a majority share in the Wizards and the Washington Captials. Jordan acquired a 10% ownership in Wizards at bargain rates, with the possibility of acquiring an even larger percentage when Abe Pollin, even then, no spring chicken, eventually sold his own shares. As it stands now, Leonidas is about to acquire those shares, as stipulated by Pollin in his will.
Michael Jordan became only the fourth African American partial owner of an NBA team, with by far the largest share. Magic Johnson owned a piece of the Lakers, but not 10%, and Jay-Z, in comparison, supposedly owns only about one-half of one percent of the NY Knicks. So this was a big deal for Jordan and who knows what he was promised?
When Jordan took over as President of Basketball Operations, the Wizards had reportedly lost $40 million in the previous season. After his first year with the Wizards, Jordan decided to return as a player, and NBA rules dictate that he had to divest himself of his ownership interest in the team.
With Jordan as a player, the Wizards sold out 82 straight home games and made $30 million in profit. When he retired, as planned, at the end of his second season, he was expecting to resume his position in the head office. Instead, he was perfunctorily fired by Polin in a meeting that lasted only 30 minutes. And of course, he lost his 10% share. Jordan was used and abused.
This article, and most others about Pollin's death are both revisionist and rife with inaccuracies.
First, Kevin repeats that Abe built the arena with his own money. Never happened. Abe got private financing. Big difference.
Second, he continues to praise him for his loyalty. Loyalty to whom?
Certainly not to the fans of DC, or the season ticket holders. The Bullets/Wizards won a single championship in 30+ years. Bullets season ticket holders who stuck with a losing team at the Cap Centre for more than a decade were promised priority seating at the new arena... only to be screwed by soaring costs and a lack of available quality seating.
Certainly he wasn't loyal to Michael Jordan. Jordan came out of retirement for two years and helped Abe turn a profit and then Abe turned his back on him... there were TWO YEARS between the time Jordan last acted as President and his final retirement... Abe couldn't have told him he was unhappy with his performance during that time?
Point is, loyalty seemed to be a one way street with Abe.
Third, he repeats the inaccuracy that Abe revitalized the downtown area. Tell that to the multiple tenants of MCI Center that went out of business during the first 5-7 years.
The truth is that there was a boom in lobbying that occurred in the early 2000's that turned the city around... the restaurants and new businesses are there to serve the lawyers and their customers, not the sports fans that are already paying top dollar to come to VZ Center.
I believe Abe was a good person... his many charitable acts are documented, but he was a terrible owner, one of the worst... and that's his legacy, revisionist history be damned.