Brad Daugherty is the Cavs all-time leader in points scored and rebounds and is one of the greatest players ever to wear the Cavalier uniform. Yet, Daugherty has disassociated himself with the franchise, and will not even appear at The Q tonight for a game honoring him with a bobblehead night. Papa Cass reports this morning that this goes back to the firing of Wayne Embry. And he implores Big Brad to bury the hatchet.
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Wednesday night, the Cavaliers will honor Brad Daugherty. And, no surprise, he won't be there.
Of
course, no one is expecting Daugherty to be floored by the fact that
the Cavs will be passing out bobbleheads bearing his likeness. Not in a
league where the Pistons once held a Zeljko Rebraca bobblehead
promotion.
But this isn't the first time he's turned his back on the team's attempts to honor him.
The reason stays the same: "scheduling conflict."
It's a convenient way of saying "bite me" without actually saying it.
For
far too long now, there has been a thick layer of ice between Daugherty
and the only NBA city he ever called home. Now a seasoned color
commentator, he has shown no desire to ever work Cavs games, even as
Mark Price, with no formal training, tried his hand at it for a season.
In
the past seven-plus years, he has never made appearances at Cavs games.
More than that, he has never made anything that even resembled a public
appearance in association with the team.
In short, it appears that Daugherty wants nothing to do with his former team.
It
all stems from the 1999 move by then-owner Gordon Gund to phase out
Wayne Embry as the team's general manager and bring in Jim Paxson.
Daugherty is good friends with Embry and apparently did not like the
way the team handled the move.
So he decided to shun the team. And continues to do so.
It
would make more sense if the Cavs drew their own line in the sand and
refused to honor Daugherty. It would make more sense if Gund still had
controlling interest in the team.
It would make more sense if there was an ongoing war of words between Daugherty and the team. But there is nothing of the sort.
Instead,
the only thing we hear is a long, cold, inexplicable silence. This is
more of a cold war than the U.S. and Soviet Union could ever have hoped
to wage.
The fans, the ones who remember Daugherty fondly, are the only ones who really lose out.
His
absence wouldn't be as much of a travesty if Daugherty was just another
Joe-Blow-Eric-Snow player. But he is a significant figure in the
history of the franchise. And, lost in the shuffle of other, more
front-and-center Cavs alumni like Austin Carr, Jim Chones and Campy
Russell, we are forgetting about him.
Daugherty is still the Cavs' all-time leading scorer, rebounder and has converted the most free throws in team history.
He
was the centerpiece player of what is still the most successful run in
franchise history, with three 50-win seasons and three playoff series
wins from 1989 to 1993.
With averages of 19 points and 9.5
rebounds per game, he is still the best center in Cavs' history, and
figures to hold that title for a long time unless Zydrunas Ilgauskas
suddenly steps it up or Greg Oden somehow falls into the Cavs' laps
next summer.
And yet, he stays away, perfectly willing to let his Cleveland legacy collect dust in the attic. And all because of what?
Embry
has moved on. Gund has sold the team. Paxson has been fired. The arena
has been re-named. The team colors have even been changed.
The
Cavs of 2006 are far different than the Cavs of 1999. It's time for
Daugherty to realize that, and even if he still harbors a grudge, to
realize for whom he's really appearing.
The fans want you back,
Brad. No matter how you feel about the Cavs organization, come back for
them. Help them reminisce about those days at the Coliseum that they --
and you -- can never have back.