Feature Article

Julius Erving Doesn’t Want to be a Hero Anymore

By Robert Huber

Page 4 of 12

“Freddie?”

She looks up sheepishly, smiling, over granny shades. Freddie, indeed, a month later, here in the pro shop at Julius's golf club just south of Orlando, a place so posh a guard in a booth has to nod you in; at last, off of Florida's ubiquitous sun-pounded strip into lush equatorial f1ora — moneyed Florida.

Freddie is trying on clothes for Julius. One number, brown shorts with overlying flaps to look like a skirt, Julius thinks might be too tight for golf. He hands her a golf ball. When she puts it in her pocket it protrudes absurdly, like a misplaced erection.

“Too tight, you need room to swing,” Julius says, mimicking his own. “Sexy, though.”

After she settles for a couple of trim tops, we head out in golf carts to the practice range. When you're sitting next to him, Julius doesn't seem tall — cut high, Larry Brown calls it, all legs, though he's 30 pounds over his greyhound playing weight of 216. And those hands. He lights a fat cigar with hands so long they appear blessed with an extra down-looping segment mid-digit. longer than any other player he ever measured against, what gave him control to wave the ball around like a pom-pom before finger-rolling or slamming it home. Freddie is going to hit balls while he watches and talks.

A long time ago, it was Isaac Hayes who taught Julius something important about how to conduct himself, though inadvertently. Julius loved Isaac Hayes, but once, when Hayes was giving a press conference in full Black Moses regalia, with the chains, the look, it didn't sit right with Julius. He was 20 years old, still at UMass, at the very beginning of his own phenomenon, He decided that off the court, he had to be himself — not Dr. J, but Julius Erving.


 

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Hero vs Man
Posted by | Sep. 5, 2008 at 12:50 AM
COMMENT:
I once knew Jules and Turk rather well through the game. I was one white guy who played over the rim, although about 6" below the Doc. I lost track of him after his retirement, when he was with Orlando and had lost Corey. I was stunned to run across a reference to his new wife. Then I found Bob Huber's article and am saddened. I had believed after all the post playground philosophizing we all did, that Jule would be the one a pro athlete who would beat the odds and not fall prey to losing his way after his career was over. I was wrong. I also feel bad for Turk, for the cavalier way he treated her (take it or leave). I hope she finds some peace. I hope he grows up and becomes the man I believed he was (and still can become). Down deep, I believe he's unhappy with himself, regardless of what he says. Hero of the game, mere mortal man away from it.

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