Finally 4 Dantley: Coveted honor comes tonight

Published: Wednesday, April 11, 2007 5:01 p.m. MDT
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When Jazz owner Larry H. Miller delivered the arguably much-overdue news, what passed through Adrian Dantley's mind was time.

The time that has come and gone since Dantley last played in Utah, and in the NBA.

The time that finally would be his.

The time it took for Miller to come to his senses, let bygones be bygones and bestow an accolade — retirement of Dantley's No. 4 Jazz jersey, which will happen at halftime of tonight's game at EnergySolutions Arena — that so many of the now 51-year-old's contemporaries feel should have come long, long ago.

"I really didn't think that much of it," Dantley said, "because it had been so long.

"It was so long," he added, "it was like a numb feeling."

Now, though, the man who breathed life into a franchise on a respirator will be recognized for a career whose ample good times are interspersed with just enough controversy that it took Miller more than a decade-and-a-half to make the much-awaited call.

It's sweet that it came, indeed, for Dantley, though one can't help but sense the bitterness that's built over all these years.

It emerges as the scoring sensation discusses the delay and gets to the root of what those he once played against question with decided befuddlement.

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"You're kind of wondering what took so long," Basketball Hall of Famer Clyde "The Glide" Drexler said shortly after word of Miller's decision spread back in February. "I mean, he certainly was the type of player that you could shine a light on and say, 'This is how you're supposed to play, this is how you're supposed to act,"' fellow Hall of Famer Earl "The Pearl" Monroe added. "And he's been nothing but a model citizen. So, I can't imagine why it's taken this long."

But Dantley knows.

Oh, he knows.

And, no, it's not because of the time former Jazz coach and general manager Frank Layden fined him a Biblically symbolic 30 pieces of silver for alleged Judas-like behavior.

That incident, in review:

In the final 14 seconds of a 1986 game at Phoenix, during Dantley's last of seven seasons with the Jazz, a young Karl Malone missed 3-of-4 free throws in an eventual two-point Utah win. Layden blasted Malone, who would join John Stockton in succeeding Dantley as a franchise icon, from the sideline, prompting Malone, as lore has it, to shout back that he wasn't "a mule or dog." Dantley stood up for Malone in the locker room, action Layden considered traitorous. Layden wound up fining Malone two pennies (because he got in his two cents' worth) and Dantley $3 (or 30 dimes, the equivalent of 30 pieces of silver, which according to the Christian Bible is the amount of a bribe given to the apostle Judas to betray Jesus).

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Matt Sayles, Associated Press

Denver Nuggets assistant coach Adrian Dantley, once a Jazz superstar, can finally point to his number in the EnergySolutions Arena rafters tonight.

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