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ploto
11-07-2006, 12:09 PM
Van Horn spending season playing a whole new game

By Gene Wojciechowski
ESPN.com

On Halloween night -- the same evening the NBA season began -- Keith Van Horn wore a costume that still causes some team executives and fellow players to do double takes.

Van Horn went dressed as a husband and father.

At the very least, the outfit will end up costing Van Horn about $5 million, which is about how much he would have received as a midlevel salary exception on somebody's roster this year. Then there's his Nike endorsement deal. Right now, you can find Van Horn's action photo on the company's Web site, complete with his preference of kicks (that's shoes, for the hoops impaired). Next week, who knows whether he and his Air Uptempo Pros will still be featured.

That's because Van Horn, the No. 2 selection in the 1997 NBA draft, isn't playing this season -- not because he's injured or because, like numb-above-the-neck Latrell Sprewell, he can't support a household on a multimillion-dollar salary. Nope. Van Horn is sitting out the year because he wants to spend time with his family.

Of course, good luck trying to get him to talk about it. Van Horn is laying lower than the bent grass greens at Augusta National. So is his agent, David Falk.

Meanwhile, the rest of the league doesn't know whether to applaud or request that Van Horn undergo a CAT scan.

"I think there's probably a little bit of both," Denver Nuggets coach George Karl said. "I'm sure there's some players saying, 'Wow, why would he want to turn down that money?' "

Ah, money. You know how pro athletes always say it isn't about the money ... but it always is? In Van Horn's case, it really isn't about the cash. If it were, he'd probably be in a Nuggets uniform when Karl's team opens its season at the Staples Center on Thursday night against the Los Angeles Clippers. And home games wouldn't have been a problem; Van Horn lives in a pricey foothills neighborhood just west of the Denver skyline.

The Boston Celtics also were interested, so he could have made his season debut Wednesday at the TD Banknorth Garden. Had he signed a free-agent deal with the Celtics, Van Horn would have become the team's resident historian of the Atlantic Division. The guy has spent more time on the Eastern seaboard than Tony Soprano.

Philly drafted him in '97 but traded his rights to the New Jersey Nets. The Nets later traded him back to the Sixers, who later traded him to the New York Knicks.

In all, Van Horn has played nine seasons, and for five teams in the past four years. Twice he was traded during the season, from the Knicks to the Milwaukee Bucks and from the Bucks to the Dallas Mavericks. He found out about the Knicks-Bucks trade as he was taking one of his daughters to Walt Disney World for a birthday party with Cinderella.

Zippity-Doo-Da-that

As always, the money was mind-boggling (his $15.7 million salary made him the highest-paid Maverick last season), but so was the realization that he and his family would have to start all over again this fall.

So, Van Horn said enough was enough. He was tired of moving his wife and four children. He was tired of seeing his life played out in the Transactions section of the sports agate pages.

Break the news to his wife, Amy. Sell the old house. Rent a new house. Find new baby sitters. Find new schools. Try to explain one more time why Daddy is making you leave your friends. Leave them at their most vulnerable moment so you can catch up with the team in Sacramento.

"I don't think there's any question we cheat our family and our kids," said Karl, who will miss son Kobe's senior night at Boise State this season because of a Nuggets scheduling conflict. "There's no way you can give quantity to your kids."

Karl knows Van Horn fairly well. I know Van Horn a little bit, which is to say I interviewed him when he played at the University of Utah, when he was with the Nets and when he agreed to write the foreword to Rick Majerus' autobiography (Majerus was Van Horn's college coach; I was the book's ghostwriter). The Van Horn I know is unfailingly polite, modest and, for years, was apparently unable to find a good hairstylist.

He married young. Had the first of his four kids young. But I'm not sure he has ever lived young.

His father died of a heart attack when Van Horn was a freshman at Utah. He had his first child, daughter Sabrina, when he was sophomore. In fact, during Amy's nine hours of labor, Van Horn sat in the delivery room and completed a take-home final exam in health education. Keith and Amy were married before his senior season.

He could have declared early for the draft, but didn't. Van Horn used to drive a pickup truck with 101,000 miles on it, and his family lived in a plain apartment. He once told Majerus that he wanted enough money to put Amy through nursing school and to buy a Lexus, a house with a pool and a stroller Sabrina couldn't squirm from.

Instead, he earned enough money to buy the company that makes the strollers. His last contract was worth $73 million, so we're not talking about a guy who eats Beefaroni for dinner. He's set for life. So are his children. And his children's children.

Van Horn is just barely 31 (his birthday was Oct. 23). He's a 6-10 forward who can shoot, run and pass. He can start or come off the bench and give you 20-30 minutes. He can help you win games.

Yet he walked away from the game he loves -- and the millions it could have added to his bank account -- for the family he loves even more.

"I think it's great ... admirable," Karl said.

"I applaud the decision," Majerus said.

"Keith Van Horn is far more than a basketball player," Mavs owner Mark Cuban said.

This is true. Cuban watched Van Horn, who is working on his MBA, study industrial engineering on the team bus. He saw a guy arm wrestling injuries, a series of tough trades and the trickle-down effect they had on his wife and kids. His decision to sit out, Cuban said, "shows someone who is in control of his future."

Van Horn will be back next season. At least, that's the plan. But so much can happen between now and then.

Who knows -- maybe he'll get used to the husband/dad costume.


http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/columns/story?columnist=wojciechowski_gene&id=2645798

whottt
11-07-2006, 12:10 PM
Taking a year off from what? Sucking?


Sorry, I had to say it before anyone else.

T Park
11-07-2006, 12:11 PM
This has nothing to do with Rasho...

Whats this doing here...

dimsah
11-07-2006, 12:12 PM
Good for him.

themvp
11-07-2006, 12:17 PM
Well, he must spend some $$ on something, if nothing else...

jman3000
11-07-2006, 12:23 PM
dude was one of the top paid players in the league for a few years and he got that for basically riding pine. the only reason anybody ever traded for his ass was because his contract was a good incentive for teams looking for a salary dump.

but he did shoot incredibly well against us in wcsf : (

Samr
11-07-2006, 12:29 PM
Funny, I didn't even notice he was out.

Texas_Ranger
11-07-2006, 12:36 PM
Well, he must spend some $$ on something, if nothing else...

:rollin

Drachen
11-07-2006, 12:55 PM
admirable, but what is different. KVH is taking another year off? big deal.




sorry had to say it before someone else did.

CubanMustGo
11-07-2006, 12:58 PM
KVE has a Nike endorsement deal? For what, the Piner line?

jman3000
11-07-2006, 01:09 PM
lmao @ kvh getting a couple of ROY votes Duncan's rookie year.

Borosai
11-07-2006, 01:24 PM
I gotta admit, the guy has priorities...too bad nobody noticed he wasn't playing. :elephant

MoSpur
11-07-2006, 01:55 PM
Everyone in here would love to be able to have $73 million in the bank and take a year off from work at the age of 31 to rest and spend time with our families.

ChumpDumper
11-07-2006, 02:50 PM
Everyone in here would love to be able to have $73 million in the bank and take a year off from work at the age of 31 to rest and spend time with our families.No shit. $73 million in the bank kinda cushions the blow of passing up the $1 million he would have made this season, doesn't it?

mavsfan1000
11-07-2006, 03:42 PM
Being soft as usual. He can't take change to go along with not being able to play tough in Dallas.

ata
11-07-2006, 04:14 PM
..
That's because Van Horn, the No. 2 selection in the 1997 NBA draft, isn't playing this season -- not because he's injured or because, like numb-above-the-neck Latrell Sprewell, he can't support a household on a multimillion-dollar salary. Nope. Van Horn is sitting out the year because he wants to spend time with his family.

:downspin: :downspin: :lmao :lmao :lmao :lmao :lmao :lmao

timvp
11-07-2006, 04:47 PM
Don't tell me that ploto is also a KVH fan.

T Park
11-07-2006, 05:04 PM
Ya know, after reading it.

Rich or not, its a great story.

Props to KVH, hes a good guy, just not a great player.

MrChug
11-07-2006, 05:25 PM
I'm quite sure that's what all those people on welfare are doing too. They have time with thier family because they have no job to go to....

...KINDA LIKE VAN HORN!!! :LOL

Ed Helicopter Jones
11-07-2006, 07:09 PM
Hasn't he already taken 8 years off? The only difference is that this season no one is going to pay him for it.

Drachen
11-07-2006, 07:18 PM
Hasn't he already taken 8 years off? The only difference is that this season no one is going to pay him for it.

http://imagecache2.allposters.com/images/pic/ATA/24818BP~The-Simpsons-Nelson-Haha-Posters.jpg

beat ya to it!

RuffnReadyOzStyle
11-07-2006, 07:31 PM
Respect to KVH... never thought I'd say that! :lol

Actually though, he was the difference against us in game 7 last year. He hit those 3 bombs on us and, if I remember correctly, stopped at least one rally with them. He was part of the reason we had to come back from 20. We really should give the guy a little more (grudging) respect - after all, he was clutch against us when it counted. KVH, Spur Killa. :lol

LilMissSPURfect
11-07-2006, 10:31 PM
Funny, I didn't even notice he was out.
:toast


:lol

T Park
11-07-2006, 10:44 PM
Actually though, he was the difference against us in game 7 last year. He hit those 3 bombs on us and, if I remember correctly, stopped at least one rally with them. He was part of the reason we had to come back from 20. We really should give the guy a little more (grudging) respect - after all, he was clutch against us when it counted. KVH, Spur Killa

exactly what I was just thinking...

dirk4mvp
11-07-2006, 10:49 PM
He reminds me of Shawn Bradley. One of the nicest guys out there, he just sucks and most people can't stand him.

RC's Boss
11-07-2006, 10:57 PM
Can't blame him for making the dough. If Isiah wants a 6'3 combo guard w/ bad knees, I'll sit on the bench and smoke cigars like I'm Red Aeurbach :smokin

CaptainLate
11-10-2006, 03:19 PM
Rich or not, its a great story.

Props to KVH, hes a good guy, just not a great player.

These rich kids should be helping clean up the corrupt politics in this police state country we live in. :depressed Patriots trying to restore a constitutional republic are underfunded, while the fat, dumb and lazy :oink sit on their a$$e$ being so easily entertained by the bread and circus shows on the boob tube.

THE SIXTH MAN
11-11-2006, 03:53 AM
How is this Spurs related??

TDMVPDPOY
11-11-2006, 05:48 AM
We nearly pickd him over tim duncan.....