Take FedEx Rodrick Rhodes, for example. Rhodes was the Houston Rockets first pick in the 1997 National Basketball Association (NBA) draft. On paper, he looked like a cant-miss proposition. If youre a first round NBA choice, its unlikely that youre a stiff. Theres no question about your talent the question mark is your desire.
Counting Rhodes and Sta. Lucia Realtys Johnny Taylor, the NBA has welcomed 35 NBA first round picks since 1975. Only a handful played as advertised among them, Glenn McDonald (U-Tex, 1978-79-80, Manhattan, 1983), Rob Williams (Tanduay, 1986), Michael Young (Manila Beer, 1986, Great Taste, 1987), and David Thirdkill (Tanduay, 1987, Purefoods, 1988). Most came looking for a vacation in the tropics, resting on their laurels and thinking theyve got nothing left to prove on the court.
The problem with "stars" is their ego. They couldnt be bothered to play hard. Theyre unmotivated by challenge.
Rhodes, 28, suited up for the Rockets, Vancouver Grizzlies, Philadelphia 76ers, and Dallas Mavericks in three NBA seasons. The fact that four different teams signed him up indicated he got game. In his first year as a pro, Rhodes started in 13 of 58 games for Houston where his teammates included Hakeem Olajuwon, Charles Barkley, and Clyde Drexler.
Rhodes had the benefit of being coached by some of the games most celebrated tacticians Rick Pitino, Henry Bibby, Rudy Tomjanovich, Larry Brown, and Don Nelson. So he learned from the best.
Despite his glowing background, Rhodes has played like a court jester for FedEx. In two games so far, hes been overshadowed by teammates Jermaine Walker and Bong Alvarez. Rhodes has played so poorly that FedEx team manager Lito Alvarez confirmed the other day hes on the way out.
In his PBA debut last Feb. 10, Rhodes was an eyesore, contributing a paltry 13 points on a miserable 4-of-18 from the field. He grabbed four rebounds and was slapped five turnovers before fouling out in the third period. Rhodes was certainly no Colossus on the court he was more like a pipsqueak. Walker, in contrast, was a pillar of strength but couldnt tow the Express to victory all by himself. Coca-Cola spoiled FedEx first PBA outing via a 66-62 decision.
Last Sunday, Rhodes was back on the floor and embarrassed himself even more. He shot only four points in the first half and wound up with 15, nine in the fourth period when FedEx fate was beyond relief. Red Bull badly beat the Express off the boards, 61-29, and the discrepancy made the difference. Rhodes shouldve been more active under the glass but wasnt in the first half, he didnt collar a single rebound. Believe it or not, Red Bulls Jimwell Torion whos about nine inches shorter outrebounded Rhodes, 9 to 4.
FedEx prized rookie Yancy de Ocampo, who delivered 15 points and four rebounds last Sunday, was understandably disenchanted. Rhodes didnt even practice the day before, he noted. As for his own personal stats, de Ocampo said sure, he chalked up nice numbers but individual honors dont mean a thing if your team loses. Why has Rhodes played so listlessly? "Di umubra ang gulang niya sa PBA," replied de Ocampo.
So much for NBA credentials.
But Alvarez said never mind, help is on the way. He confided that former University of Houston forward Tim Moore is coming, possibly tomorrow, to replace Rhodes.
Moore, 29, is a 6-7, 235-pounder wholl be a perfect complement to Walker. The bull-strong bangers fresh from playing for the Leicester Riders in the English league where he averaged 27.8 points and 8.4 rebounds. Hes seen action in Argentina, the Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Paraguay and Spain so he k nows what the international games all about.
Moore averaged 17.4 points and 11.1 rebounds for Lee Community College in Texas in 1993-94. He went on to play three years for the University of Houston where he hit at an 18.2 clip and hauled in 10.4 rebounds a game. As a junior at Houston, Moore averaged 20.1 points, 10.6 rebounds, three blocked shots, 1.7 steals, and 33.2 minutes.
Moore wasnt drafted by an NBA team and never played in the majors. But from all indications, hell be more of a force to reckon with than Rhodes. Hell be hungry and eager to show what hes got. Hell be out to prove himself.
As for Rhodes, he goes down in PBA history as another forgettable import.