Bill Walton ESPN SportsCentury | 2000 | Life & Career Documentary

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i don't believe it phelan is at the bottom of that pile for the big differences [Applause] as a shot blocker defender and team leader he was compared to bill russell as an inside scorer he rivaled kareem abdul-jabbar and as a passer he stood alone among centers bill walton possessed all of the pieces of greatness except one due to inadequate bone structure in his feet he spent more than half of his nba career on the sidelines but beyond the frustrations of his injuries he projected a social awareness rare to his profession here is bill walton basketball player and political activist in that order [Music] [Music] protest at their absolute height american boys being killed the whole fabric of america was unraveling [Music] sports america didn't like the exterior society which was changing at a rapid rate this gifted athlete comes in but he has attitudes that are unconventional and even seemingly radical his hair was long he was hippie it was known that he smoked bleed is he smoking pot or is he a communist or what's going on it was his way of making a statement i always told bill what he represented to me was a rebel with a cause i grew up in an environment where i was encouraged by my parents by my coaches to question authority think for myself they have an opinion thinking people can only be turned against the present government and its agency [Music] born to play basketball and educated to raise political hell rarely had a man more closely fit his time than bill walton as big man on the ucla campus the 611 center was impossible to ignore walt was out front burn it down shut it down those were his words he wanted to do something important in the influential through basketball he was a person that people looked to your voice is going to be heard more than our voices so he let it be known where he stood with ucla in the midst of a record run of seven consecutive national championships walton was often torn between his loyalty to a coach and a need that demonstrate where he stood in a nation divided he was a champion of all minority talks but when you're representing a team in a university there are times when you know there's some things you probably shouldn't do during the kent state situation he was out there riding with everybody else and coach just look and shake his head i think he was led by other people on doing some things i would rather he'd not been involved in but he has a right to do it he was an older guy a great coach a young great player he wanted to win and wouldn't want to win that may have been the only thing they had in common toward that end wooden imposed his rules with a predictable regularity there's a plane ride the stewardess comes by and offers bill and what do you want he says a glass of wine and a moment later she comes back with a glass of ginger ale and she says what i said the gentleman in that other seat said i was to give you this and that's john wood one of the saddest days for coach wooden had to have been the day he came down and had to bail me out of jail after i got arrested in the anti-vietnam war protests who said bill i know you feel very strongly about this but i just don't think that you're getting arrested and taking part in these demonstrations and what it's all about i think you should write letters and i scripted this letter to president nixon you know i requested that he resign which wouldn't he was so mad but he looked up at me with those sad soft eyes and he said well i can't sign this you're not going to send this in are you bill and i said yeah coach i'm sending this in well i sent it in and sure enough nixon resigned it was unbelievable wooden was right as always after leading ucla to two national championships the three-time player of the year joined the portland trailblazers in 1974 and marched on the nba in full revolutionary regalia he was very pain about conditions about the war and he's one of the few people that had that type of visibility and put his prestige out there if you're not part of the fight [Music] that's a selfishness that does not accept he would do his own thing and people just didn't want to hear that they called him a rebel so you don't think there's anything contradictory about being a basketball player and say a social critic [Music] the person who happens to play basketball walton's high ranking among the 60s leading radicals was enhanced by a close friendship with activist and writer jack scott he and bill kind of connected on some of their thoughts about how athletes were being used and abused he was very instrumental in my life and in my progress as a human being you know jack scott was involved in all the battles of the day whenever i was out there it was always close at one time they were living together the family commune and all that bill walton had called and wanted me to come to a party i've never seen a place one little living room in portland oregon where so many 60s radicals of some degree of fame attended and walton was right there in the middle of it in 1975 walton's roommate jack scott made national headlines when the fbi suspected him of harboring fugitive patty hearst who as an avowed member of the symbionese liberation army was wanted on bank robbery charges bill walton stood by him to the extent that it cast a shot on his career by that i mean when he sat down to do an interview one of the first things would come up with jack scott have you ever had any dealings at all with patty hearst have you helped her in anyway no not at all what about jack scott have you helped him [Music] jack and i are real close friends a lot yeah as well as his you know his beautiful wife mickey you had a star player was having his phone tap for the fbi it was nervous for a lot of these people i was having a staff meeting and the channel 8 people came breaking into the meeting to take pictures of me the fbi got jack scott's father mixed up with bill's father that it was bill's father that was asked to transport petty ears didn't know who patty hearst was i had never met petty hurst i have no idea what she even looks like i was dragged in on the periphery of that event and you know in retrospect it was a disaster for all people involved walton and all through all this was just somebody who supported these causes i think he sort of grooved on being a part of it walton had ample time to pursue his counterculture activities in his first two seasons injuries kept him out of 78 games while the blazers cruised along under 500. he brings in this baggage while violating a basic law of sport america which is thou shalt not speak out unless thou is playing at a championship level he seemed to have so many views often counter to mainstream u.s kind of thinking and so he thought wait what's this guy all about why did he just play basketball you know and just shut up born in la mesa a middle-class suburb of san diego bill walton was the second of four children his father ted was a social worker and gloria his mother a librarian i grew up in an unathletic household it was all about books it was all about music they had a very traditional home and religion was important but it was mixed with social obligation and this should be a better country my dad very interested in social justice and change she always had to have something fresh to talk about i would get up crack a dawn every day and always beat my dad to that newspaper the education was the big thing and if they had time for sports then spend as much time as they wanted as long as they got their schoolwork done my parents would always challenge us they would initiate these discussions about what was going on in the world his opinions were being made they would not accept that they would always keep pushing it before he was born he was never still in it he was jumping around and then as soon as he was born he was on the go all the time and it sounded as if he was just trying to talk too fast and then we realized that he did have a hang up on certain words the stuttering problem that has plagued me throughout my life has it has limited me as a person i just retreated from it i that i'm not gonna talk his biggest fear was to get in front of somebody and then stutter not to be able to really say what he wanted to say he was gawky and too tall and he doesn't feel comfortable in his body he's definitely self-conscious he always wanted to walk next to the building where she walked down the sidewalk because if you're next to the building you don't look quite as tall bill never wanted to be seven feet tall he wanted to be 611 because 611 was tall but seven feet was a freak as he said i was a very reserved young boy with a big nose and a horrible speech impediment found safety found sanctuary found peace freedom and a way to express myself through basketball go on to the basketball court and everything that doesn't work for him in the normal universe suddenly works bruce was the perfect older brother and boy did he used to just beat me up on a constant basis i developed a greater sense of speed and quickness because i knew i had to get away from him bruce would just take bill inside and pound him and he forced the ball in the basket we'd be in a backyard court we had a thorn bush off to the side so i'd fake one way and pull up with that jumper he just bam knocked me right down into that thorn bush walton debuted auspiciously on blessed sacrament's elementary team fourth grade he was playing with sixth graders i put him in i told him enough look just pass the ball don't you next thing you know he's making a pass but the ball goes in i said i knew you were going to be good but you're making it look so easy one of the first championship games i ever played i was very nervous didn't know really what to do in the pre-game moments i'm pacing back and forth in the restroom bill was just fidgety as can be i said come on get with us this is part of winning he said hey you've got to learn to love these moments because that's what it's all about and that lesson there capsulized what the rest of my career came to mean to me as a kid i played basketball all the time the competition the sweating the content the yelling at the referees basketball for me was a celebration of life we'd go for the breakfast table to go out playing all day long literally until we dropped that was really our whole life was growing up as kids we'd go over to the elementary school that had the eight-foot baskets and we would think that we were the nba guys so we would be throwing it down he'd play by himself and then three of us would try to pass around and get the ball inside he'd be in there blocking the shot before we could even get in at helix high walton's primary competition came from a crosstown rival and childhood friend elias delgadillo it was a kind of a wake-up call i would give bill you got to beat elias it was a challenge for bill and he rose to meet it i would recall those long arms the spider arms into the jaw into the chest asking for the bomb as a sophomore and i believe he was six two at the start of the season by the time he finished his junior year he was six nine i cajoled a key to the high school gym and then the in the nba came to san diego with the san diego rockets and then they found out that i had the key to the gym we'd have uh pat riley and alvin hayes and bill was competing with him and he was in high school and he was blocking guys shots they were pro players our coach would have a tennis racket and with a tennis racket he would extend it all the way up and so with that i would have to learn how to shoot and arc the ball higher you couldn't shoot over him we went 66 and zero i think it was our junior senior year obviously we were killing people by you know 40 50 60 points out of whack ball goes up bill goes up helix players split build spins in midair fires the ball down court it was like seeing a college team with a fast break offense [Music] despite his dominance walton remained rail thin through high school but he had first rate protection bruce was bill's protector if you fouled bill bruce was going to very proudly pick up a personal foul and the other guy was going to be eating a little plywood there was a game when we were playing against a team that was particularly intent on roughing me up this guy cut him in half and bill shoots mesa bassett shoes free throws makes a free throw we're coming back the other way they were running down the court side by side [Music] bruce gets the poor kid elbow in the chest all of a sudden there was a big gasp from the crowd and there was bruce standing there over the top of this fallen opponent of bruce had the most sheepish grin on his face i never saw that guy in the rest of the game despite walton's 29 points and 25 rebounds a game in a 33-0 senior season sports illustrated selected tom mcmillan of pennsylvania as high school player of the year we just smiled at that i wonder if they really know what's happening out here after they ran that story the sports illustrator called and they said who's this walton kid we've been told that he's the best player in the country that we got the wrong best player and nobody in the nation caught on john wooden caught on san diego had never even had a division one player and i told coach wooden i said he's the best high school player i've ever seen and goes shuts the door to the hall and he says danny don't ever make a statement like that would get to san diego go to the game i said well what'd you think of him he says well he is pretty good isn't he and that was an accolade for coach when coach wood actually started calling and coming around that that was a dream come true because from the first time i ever saw ucla play basketball i knew that's what i wanted to do it was a wonderful world for him he got everything he wanted one side of his life was the free spirit and then the other side the basketball side was completely disciplined with great players and a great coach coach wooden outside of my mom and dad has been the single most inspirational and influential person in my life he spent his whole time dreaming about what would work for us as individuals when bill walton joined john wooden in 1970 the standards had never been higher ucla had won four consecutive national championships paulie pavilion was yankee stadium ucla were the yankees you're playing with the best players in america you have the best coach of all time the weather's great and at least half the fans are of the female persuasion it's a great lifestyle poly pavilion just glowed you walk out on that court as the chosen few people just jumping up and down and screaming the band was playing and the cheerleaders kicking their legs in the air and throwing the pom-poms up and it was just such an unbelievable moment of celebration in a brilliant college career never was walton's talent at a higher point than in the 1973 championship game against memphis state bill walt has now made and get this 21 out of 22 field goal against tonight walton finished with a finals record 44 points as the bruins took their seventh straight title as a college player he was incomparable he had a presence on the court that was so intimidating and engulfing this cloud hung over the gym wherever he was i was not a fun person to be around before the games during the games because i had to win and i would work myself into a rage into a terror we used to do a drill in the hallway outside of the locker room where we would just pass the ball back and forth you know one hand to hand both hands as quickly as we could and my my fingers would be beat red if he was burning the ball in so hard bill would get so up before a game but he'd have a hard time coming down and he finally went to wooden and asked for permission to smoke some dope because it helped bring him down and finally wooden said yes but don't tell your teammates bill walton changed everything inside i would love for people to get by me i could put so much pressure on people that they would get by me and they would run into bill walton as soon as that ball's visible that he could just leap right off of that position without having to gather to come up he had the ability to time his leap so that he caught the rebound and turned his upper body had the facility to throw that great outlet pass he was a control tower to whom you ran both your offense and your defense there's never been anybody quite like him [Music] but the tower known as bill walton was already experiencing severe structural stress he would spend at least 20 to 30 minutes with heating pads underneath his knees and on top of his knees so that his his knees would be just crimson when he got ready to suit up for practice after every game he would sit with ice for 20 30 40 minutes every day he was a great athlete body quickness eyesight vision coordination he has all these great assets and he has your grandmother's feet midway through walton's senior season ucla's winning streak had reached 88 games january 19th 1974 at notre dame a 12-point lead and the ball with a couple minutes to go walton limping a bit 70 to 61 intercepts he's got two more goes from 11 to seven about 10 seconds now the crowd gets into it and then that's when the defense picked up you have to take the air out of it oh here's the steal deadly goes all the way 70 to 65 pandemonium now crowd smelled it and momentum was going 32-31 that's clay do you believe that for three minutes and 22 seconds that you can shut out ucla and beat them 12-0 if you look back that's what we did notre dame 71 ucla 70 with six seconds left into walton he can't score the longest winning streak in collegiate sports history has ended where it began three years ago i'll tell you that you know we lost that game 17 years ago 14 days and 27 hours it's that big of a thing to them failed expectations we should have done a lot more that's the kind of defeat you absolutely never get over digger phelps he ruined my life that day exposed as merely human even to themselves the bruins went on a binge losing back-to-back games at oregon state and oregon but even after the trauma of that lost weekend further disappointment awaited at the final four march 23 1974 north carolina state at greensboro 11 point lead down the stretch in regulation with the ball couldn't hold on seven point lead in the second overtime couldn't get it done first carolina state has ended ucla national championship reign for bill walton uh that loss is one that he'll be thinking about probably almost every week if not every month of his life he says well i guess i really don't know how to play basketball and i'm a total failure i'm worthless i'm totally worth i sat there for an hour and a half just repeating the same thing if i had one thing to do over again [Music] it would be the day we lost to north carolina state in the semi-finals of the ncaa tournament that lesson of coach wooden is about not beating yourself failing to prepare is preparing to fail i'd like to have that week back the walton era ended at 86 and 4. he averaged 20 points and his 16 rebounds a game eclipsed kareem abdul-jabbar's school record [Music] when i left ucla and joined the portland trail blazers as their number one draft pick it was tough his college player of the year and just all worlds and he comes and because of injuries and so forth it's just nothing works out 17 games into my rookie season came to practice one day and i couldn't run and it felt like there was stabbing knives being jabbed into my foot they told me there's nothing wrong with you walton you're just a malinger you're a quitter and i was stunned it wasn't getting fixed and so they were putting them out there because they thought he was a malinger and that made the problem worse my problems were undiagnosed stress fractures these were cracks in the bones that developed from playing too much basketball you could never point to one moment when it happened and people couldn't see it the players were wondering what's going on with this guy i think and some of them had the idea that maybe he didn't have the didn't want to be there the local media cited walton's diet as the cause for his injuries he had goats milk and carrots but he'd have paper bags of juices people thought you could eat some meat man you're wasting the way to nothing eats a real food things were so bad so often that i would call up the owner virtually every 48 hours and say i don't want any part of this i quit and i'd hang up the phone and then i would sit there and i'd just toss and turn all night long i said what do you mean quit you can't walk away bill this is what you love before the 76-77 season the the patience was beginning to wear thin that walton may not despite his phenomenal college career be the franchise player that spring the blazers hired jack ramsey as head coach then they obtained maurice lucas in the aba dispersal draft giving walton the enforcer he had missed since he played with his brother in high school i guess he was more impressed when i told him that i was going to protect him i'll take care of all that dirty work he would go around maurice lucas literally and threaten people on our team that if they didn't play the game of their lives he was going to kill him under the protection given him by lucas walton emerged as the team leader by mid-season the cloud of doubt that hovered over him for two years was replaced by blazer mania everybody's watching and everybody's trying to look like him what bill is and what most of the culture of oregon was at that time is a pretty natural fit the local love inn peaked in game six of the 1977 finals against philadelphia as the walton show drew a 96 percent tv share in the portland area and catching using muscle they go to the lob behind him [Applause] bobby gross will look as walton he wants walton comes up on daryl ducking puts it in so walton knows he's in a shootout here's mcginnis lucas comes up against [Music] [Applause] the 1977 portland trailblazer championship team was the youngest team in the history of the nba to ever win the championship and it was all so magical i remember bill had a habit of reaching over and palming my head i wanted to be part of jack ramsey's brain waves so i reached out put my hand right on top of his head trying to just get a little bit more right from the great coach the city went crazy and it was the biggest sporting event that ever happened to oregon it was like this miracle that happened in portland this sport that they didn't really understand had come there and in a relatively short time they were the champions they would come by the house in the middle of the night just yelling and screaming gold blazers go and they would leave flowers on the front steps i just want to make sure that the guy that took my bike i i started on my bike today sometime i want to make sure that guy brings it back to me i mean it's like it's the only bike i have we were all healthy that following year and ride knowing in victory we just started the season like nobody can beat us [Music] a very few did as portland built a 50-10 record through february when stress fractures reappeared in walton's feet the blazers won just eight of the remaining 22 games without their leader despite intense pain walton played in the first game of the playoffs scoring 17 points in a loss against seattle he asked if he could go into the doctor's office the day before the second game of the series and have a shot just to see how it would feel i went out there and after taking that shot and was able for the first time to to run it all and move 15 minutes into that game the bone split in half it was like a about like a racehorse in the stretch who broke his leg or something he just sort of just you could see him hobbling wally walker phil couldn't even jump that time the pain killing shots that i took in my foot was obviously a mistake the biggest mistake though was that i did not have enough courage enough conviction in my own personal character to be able to stand up and say no it's about a young man not accepting entirely his own responsibility for decisions made in the rush and promise of victory well it did demoralize the organization at the time because headline stories were that scenario medical staff against pill wall walton sued the team doctor over the treatment of his foot claiming negligence but there would be no compensation for the irreparable damage done to his relationship with the blazers there was just no trust and there was no confidence there was no mutual respect and i made the decision that i couldn't work under those conditions bill was angry he was depressed they'd taken away what must have seemed like his life and the consequences instead of being a championship had all been negative my decision to leave the portland trailblazers was the toughest decision i've ever had to make in my life because that was my team and i loved those guys but the breakdown and trust in what makes a team work had been so complete after sitting out the 1979 season walton signed as a free agent with the san diego clippers it was a marketing dream it was perfect hometown boy comes back you know mom and dad are here it's all wonderful the warning sign was that the news conference where he was announced after all the media left i'm talking to bill and i said what are you up to now i got to go to the hospital and get some bone spurs removed from my ankle holy smoker they didn't announce that one to the public his foot and ankle were poor shock absorbers and some of them both jumping and coming down there was a lot of shock going on his feet at that time and i think that's why he kept breaking down i went and saw every doctor i took every imaginable treatment and nothing worked the more i tried the more frustrating it got the more confusing it got it was a disastrous point in my life i thought he was done because from every indication that i had the ankle and the foot was just dust it needed bailing wire to be held together how do you play basketball when you're an athlete in a team game and you're injured it's the worst feeling in the world because you have no life and you're not part of the team yet there's nothing really you can go do to satisfy yourself it was like seeing uh you know somebody like carving the eyes out of the mona lisa or something he was such a brilliant player but i felt for him in search for a viable alternative to basketball the former radical changed his image and enrolled in stanford law school i just called him up and asked him what the hell are she doing [Music] the most valuable player in pro basketball and he led the portland trailblazers to the world title meet phil walton famous lovers why are you selecting famous lovers bill trying to join that category he said hey you know i just think if i changed my approach and maybe my health would change the franchise would have thrived in san diego if bill had had 10 healthy seasons down there but without that it was such a disappointment it is without question the biggest failure of my professional life because of the fact that the injuries kept coming back professional basketball failed in san diego and a lot of lives were hurt ruined because of that and i take full and complete responsibility for that 1985 walton's ailing foot had been completely rebuilt through multiple surgeries and after playing in 67 games for the lowly clippers walton went in pursuit of a winning situation called up red hour back and said red i desperately want to be on your team and larry bird was sitting across the desk from everything and larry said you go get that guy he knew that he could help us with this limited amount of time that he would play and he did exactly what we asked him to do he realized that it was his last hurrah and he also realized how fortunate he was to be the sixth man so he was able to contribute without having his body breakdown [Music] they used walton as their comic foil and he loved it bill was the butt of a lot of their jokes i mean larry would make fun about walt's feet and about his beard and his berry eating and his politics after almost a decade out in the cold walton happily absorbed the hazing in scrimmages he led the bench against the starting team usually battling with kevin mchale the practice sessions for the boston celtics were incredibly spiritual events and the trash talking and the rivalries and the competition it was just incredible he'd always be like you know go green team you know and uh we would just all laugh and you know say well we're gonna kill the green team today occasionally i would stumble into a fortunate play where the ball would bounce my way and they would just tease me unmercifully about hey you know this guy he used to be able to do something out there and then he'd play well i mean i'll you know we'd run on the car you know flashback absolutely we always say he thinks it's 1977 again he's with portland averaging eight points and seven rebounds in 19 minutes walton appeared in more than 70 games for the only time in his career he won the nba's sixth man award and the celtics won the title they're just blocked in the room screaming go celtics go celtics nba champs it ended up being like a week-long party i'd call him up and he'd answer the phone headquarters world championships and boston celtics go on speaking and that would just start laughing for me to be revitalized to have that chance once again that i had lost so many years before that's what made it so special for me [Music] i have this image of an ankle and foot that has been just pulverized over time there's a lot of sad moments in an athlete's life one of the saddest for me was in 1987 we were playing in a big playoff game in boston the crowd at the garden just chanting my name walt walton walton full volume and i wanted so desperately to get out there and help the team and do what i could and and i couldn't go a dispirited walton stayed on the sidelines for the next two years then as he trained for one last comeback attempt in february of 1990 the last fishers of a broken career opened wide i was in the weight room at my house as uh finished my workout i was on my way back from the weight room to the house i couldn't take another step and the pain was just too great and i literally had to get down on my knees and crawl into the house and i called my friend and i said i need some help i need my crutches i can't walk [Music] that was [Music] he it came to the conclusion that basketball is done now what do i do to live the rest of my life and that was to fuse the ankle and the foot he had bone against bone there was no more cartilage left in his ankle he either lives with it the way it is or he has the ankle fused so it doesn't move anymore and if there's no motion then there's no pain my life is over you know i've got nothing i can i'm never going to be able to run again i'm never going to be able to yell at the rest you know basketball has been it for me he said what am i going to do with my life what am i going to do with my life and he looks at me says well i'm a seven foot tall redhead with a big nose and has a starting problem i think i'll go into nba broadcasting right my decision to go into broadcasting was one of the biggest stretches in recorded history i have been cursed my entire life with a hormone speech impediment and when i was 28 years old i ran into legendary hall of fame broadcaster marty glickman who took me aside and said bill we've got to fix this stuttering problem and i said i i i couldn't even talk and i told him that i used to stutter and stammer also when i was a kid and got over it through application and some instruction and he could get over it also they worked together for some period of time bill flew back and forth spent as much time as he could with a great marty clickman look what happened the trailblazers retired his jersey and he launched into a 15 minutes thanks to everybody and my jaw is absolutely on my knees and i looked turned to my dad and i said ted where did that come from i think he's making up for a lot of his years where he couldn't speak because he's talking all the time i miss basketball a lot pat i miss the competition what do you miss the most well what i really miss the most is you know i was waking up every morning and knowing that in just a couple hours i'm going to go out and kick somebody's ass one who has worked alongside bill on broadcast he just won't stop talking the natural ham uh as it turns out who knew it's an astonishing metamorphosis i take my broadcasting career very seriously i prepare i work i practice it's just like being a player when they throw that ball up when that red light comes on you've got to be ready he'll go for example what he thinks the opening will be and practice it for a half hour in the mirror of his hotel room until he finally sees himself how he looks how he says it how he smiles bill kind of has a go sell thing where you love him or you hate him but you you have to watch them they played good defense in san antonio they rebounded well the offense that's what sucked for for new york he does kind of enjoy it when the critics in the audience have their next snap by some comment that he's made i'm sure he'd give it up in a second if he could you know run and jump again i think he's the most significant basketball player who's ever laced up with sneakers bill walton influenced the game at both ends of the floor at a higher degree than any player who's ever lived if you would take all the fundamentals you would want in a center i think bill walton healthy would rate higher than any player that's ever played it was love of game and a sense of purity that carried him almost in spite of the enormous vulnerabilities of that body i don't think anyone could match bill walton when he was at his peak the only problem was he wasn't there long enough the contradiction is in his personal life he was the explorer and the counter culture guy and in his basketball life he was the ultimate orthodox person he's had a lot more highs and a lot more lows than the normal person would ever experience and to still be leading a charm life is pretty remarkable he doesn't walk on water but he knows where all the stones are right below the surface in the political world beyond the microphone walton remains abrasively candid he actively backed former knicks star bill bradley in his ill-fated bid for the 2000 presidential nomination at a democratic caucus in iowa walton handed vice president al gore a note that read thank you in advance for withdrawing from the race for espn classics sports century i'm chris fowler [Music] you
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Channel: SQUADawkins
Views: 41,394
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Keywords: bill walton, walton, bill walton mvp, bill walton funny, bill walton commentary, bill walton ucla, bill walton story, bill walton injury, bill walton finals, luke walton, bill walton highlights, bill walton funniest moments, bill walton nba, bill walton ncaa, bill walton espn, bill walton 2005, best of bill walton, bill walton cupcake, bill walton moments, bill walton hilarious, bill walton dave pasch, bill walton interview, cold pizza bill walton
Id: 0KNKDjC3JiY
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Length: 42min 49sec (2569 seconds)
Published: Tue Mar 29 2022
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