Kisah tragis mantan pemain NBA 80an...

Tragis mengingat NBA player jaman sekarang sudah bergelimang duit sebelum 
mereka membuktikan apa2. Bahkan Blake Griffin yg musim lalu makan gaji buta 
sudah kaya raya dari iklan/sponsor sebelum memainkan 1 gim pun di NBA.

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The sad tale of Ray Williams: 10-year NBA vet now homeless
By Dan Devine

Amid the ceaseless acquisitive frenzy that is NBA free agency, the Boston Globe 
dropped a harrowing profile of Ray Williams, a former captain of the New York 
Knicks and a reserve guard on the Boston Celtics' 1985 NBA Finals team who 
played for six teams during a 10-year NBA career from the late '70s through the 
mid-'80s. Williams' name might not ring out with today's fans, but he averaged 
20 points per game in two different seasons (1979-80 and 1981-82), hung 52 on 
the Detroit Pistons as a member of the New Jersey Nets on April 17, 1982, and 
once drew (admittedly aspirational) comparisons to the great Walt Frazier.

Now, writes the Globe's Bob Hohler, he's homeless.

Every night at bedtime, former Celtic Ray Williams locks the doors of his home: 
a broken-down 1992 Buick, rusting on a back street where he ran out of 
everything.

The 10-year NBA veteran formerly known as "Sugar Ray'' leans back in the 
driver's seat, drapes his legs over the center console, and rests his head on a 
pillow of tattered towels. He tunes his boom box to gospel music, closes his 
eyes, and wonders.
Williams, a generation removed from staying in first-class hotels with Larry 
Bird and Co. in their drive to the 1985 NBA Finals, mostly wonders how much 
more he can bear.

The most sobering thing about Hohler's piece? Williams' decline into 
unemployment, poverty and homelessness appears to have just kind of ... 
happened.

Williams, a former University of Minnesota standout who averaged 15.5 points 
and nearly six assists per game during his time in the league, adamantly tells 
Hohler that he's "never fallen prey to drugs, alcohol, or gambling," and he's 
never been arrested, so it's not like he's some shiftless sociopath whom we can 
easily vilify. According to the feature, there wasn't one key traumatic event 
that keyed Williams' downfall, with one possible exception — already down on 
his luck, Williams received a grant from the NBA Legends Foundation, which 
provides need-based assistance to people who have been involved in the pro 
game. But according to court records, Hohler writes, "he lost the money ... 
when the widow of a condominium owner who agreed to a lease-to-own contract 
with Williams opted out of the contract after the owner died." Which sounds 
like a horrendously bad break that exacerbated an already ugly situation.

It doesn't sound like a case of over-the-top avarice, either; while Hohler 
notes that Williams was "no longer able to sustain his NBA lifestyle" when he 
first filed for bankruptcy in 1994, he doesn't mention any particularly 
conspicuous consumption or extravagant expenditures. As the story goes, 
Williams just hasn't been able to hang on to any of a slew of off-court jobs 
over the course of the 23 years since he retired in 1987. Now, he's got nothing 
except the '92 Buick he sleeps in and a '97 Chevy Tahoe that he can't get out 
of hock.

There's no prime mover behind the disintegration, no obvious flaw in the system 
against which to rage. Like any story of slipping through the cracks in 
American society, that makes it harder to digest, compartmentalize and set 
aside.

Maybe NBA players of today, who make exponentially more money than their 
predecessors before ever stepping on the court, do owe a fiscal debt to the 
players who came before; then again, maybe Williams bears the blame because he 
blew the roughly $2 million he made in contracts during his career. Maybe 
Williams' family, former friends and associates merit some scorn for allowing 
him to live alone in a car in Florida; then again, maybe they've all had to 
distance themselves from Williams after 20-plus years of never getting his 
stuff together and failing to repay repeated loans, favors and kindnesses. 

Maybe agencies like the Legends Foundation and the NBA Retired Players 
Association need to do more to help people like Williams; then again, maybe 
they've already done enough, having given him grants totaling more than 
$12,000. Maybe his coaches, teachers and mentors failed him, setting him to 
serve as one more awful example of how, when it comes to young basketball 
players, the only training and skill development that anybody really cares 
about takes place on the hardwood. Then again, maybe "Society's to blame" is a 
red herring that divests the downtrodden of personal responsibility.

Whichever way your sympathies run, the story of how Ray Williams' life fell 
apart should serve as a cautionary tale for athletes of the imperative to 
prepare for life after the game — and, frankly, a jarring reminder to all of us 
that we should appreciate what we're lucky enough to have while we're lucky 
enough to have it. 


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