Final delivery: Jazz honoring legendary champion today
Sloan, an assistant to head coach Frank Layden, approached Malone, the team's first-round draft choice in 1985, with a question phrased in the form of a challenge.
"You'll probably change after a couple years, being in this league?" said Sloan, his inquiry intended as much as anything to be food for thought for Malone.
The power forward's response: "No, coach, I'm not gonna change."
Whether or not he has is open to debate.
From this day forward, however, Malone stands as a man whose image in Utah is designed with perpetuity in mind. He is captured in a larger-than-life statue, which will be unveiled outside the Delta Center late this afternoon.
Hours later, at halftime of the Jazz's home game against Washington, Malone's retired No. 32 uniform will be raised to the rafters of the downtown Salt Lake City basketball arena, joining those of Layden, the late Pistol Pete Maravich, Darrell Griffith, Mark Eaton, Jeff Hornacek and longtime teammate John Stockton.
"With the 18 years of memories, of accomplishments, I think we'll have our hands full just trying to present what needs to be presented in the short period of time we have," Jazz owner Larry H. Miller said. "I don't think we need to manufacture too much stuff."
Erecting a statue seems quite enough.
Hoisting the oversized jersey is icing that really was only a matter of time.
It goes up nearly 21 years after an insecure young man arrived from the backwoods of Louisiana, 18 of which were spent playing for the Jazz in an ultraconservative state that alternately loved and learned to live with the ups and downs of the NBA's No. 2 all-time scorer.
Deseret Morning News graphic
Malone career timeline
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