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Keeler: Dikembe Mutombo, “best defensive player to ever play in NBA,” didn’t just bring out best of Nuggets. He brought out best in people.


Dikembe Mutombo, center, surrounded clockwise by his wife, Rose, and adopted children, Reagan, 12, Biamba, 11, Nancy, 11, and Harouna, 6, on Feb. 11, 1996. (Photo by David J. Phillip/The Denver Post)
Dikembe Mutombo, center, surrounded clockwise by his wife, Rose, and adopted children, Reagan, 12, Biamba, 11, Nancy, 11, and Harouna, 6, on Feb. 11, 1996. (Photo by David J. Phillip/The Denver Post)

For Cory Slater, it was love at first swipe. As Dikembe Mutombo stuck his left hand on Shawn Kemp’s hip and his right hand on history, blocking his eighth Seattle shot in the Nuggets’ iconic Game 5 win over the top-seeded SuperSonics, a kid in New Jersey knew he’d found his team and his player. His moment and his muse.

“I’m only 12 years old, and I had just gotten into sports,” Slater, now 42, told me Monday night by phone. “I didn’t know the significance of the Nuggets doing that. I didn’t know what that meant. But to sit and watch that, how everybody was just going crazy — I was a Nuggets fan ever since.

“In the ’90s, everybody had ‘their’ guy. He was ‘our’ guy. He made me a Nuggets fan. He made me not just a Nuggets fan, but a sports fan.”

Before Nikola Jokic, there was Mt. Mutombo. No. 55, who passed away Monday after a battle with brain cancer at the too-soon age of 58, brought the world to the Nuggets. And the Nuggets to the world.

“He was always globally-minded,” recalled former Denver teammate LaPhonso Ellis, a stalwart of those early ’90s squads, including the ’93-94 crew under coach Dan Issel that became the first No. 8 seed in the NBA Playoffs to ever upset a No. 1.

“And much of this may be where he was from (the Democratic Republic of Congo), but the reality is, a lot of people didn’t know he was raising two of his nieces and nephews before he ever raised any of his own children. Some of that was cultural. But to be able to handle that level of responsibility, and to give up yourself to take up that level of responsibility, says a lot about his character and who he was as a person.”

Dikembe Mutombo (55) of the Denver Nuggets spins around Michael Cage of the Seattle SuperSonics during the third quarter of their Thursday night NBA playoff game in Seattle April 28, 1994. Seattle beat Denver 106-82. (AP Photo/Gary Stewart)

As to the “who,” Deke’s Instagram profile probably said it best: The Son of the Congo, DRC. CEO, NBA Global Ambassador, Humanitarian, Businessman, Father, and now…Hall-of-Famer.

Mutombo, who was drafted by the Nuggets out of John Thompson’s Georgetown dynasty in 1991 and spent the first five seasons of a storied 18-year NBA career in Denver, forever seemed bigger than the game. Although he excelled there, too: Mutombo, Rudy Gobert and Ben Wallace are the only players who’ve ever been named NBA Defensive Player of the Year four different times.

His was the rarest of legends, the kind we can close our eyes and conjure just from sounds alone. The thunk when his palm hit a basketball and swatted a shot five rows back. That laugh. The one that came from deep in the belly, deep in the soul, a thunderclap of sheer joy.

Whether through The Dikembe Mutombo Foundation or a wag of the finger, Deke gave better than he got. In …read more

Source:: The Denver Post – Sports

      

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