I liked this from the Globe article:
Times have changed since Williams joined the NBA. As the 10th overall pick in 1977 out of the University of Minnesota — he played there with Kevin McHale — Williams signed a four-year, $500,000 contract with the Knicks. He received no significant endorsements.
By contrast, 19-year-old Brandon Jennings, the 10th pick last year, received a two-year, $4.5 million contract with the Bucks after landing a $2 million deal with Under Armour and playing a season in Italy for $1.65 million.
Hey Boston Globe, how about, instead of using a current NBA rookie contract as a basis for comparison, you compare that 500k contract in 1977 with what a plumber, nurse, truck driver, etc. would have made in a four-year period in 1977. Oh yeah, and he got a 1.5 million deal in 1981. Obviously top players back then were still getting less than today's players even adjusting for inflation, but come on, that's serious money. He should have been set for life.
If he has mental illness or addiction problems, or had some crisis I could understand, but from the article it sounds like he was ridiculously blessed and then stupidly squandered his money, and now is complaining that nobody is bailing him out. It says he has diabetes, but so do plenty of people who manage to support themselves by working and who don't have the benefit of starting out as millionaires. Plus the article mentions that he has had "jobs as a cleaner, handyman, high school girls’ basketball coach, bakery worker, and golf course groundskeeper," but doesn't say why none of those worked out. I'm not too sympathetic. He needs to learn how to keep a job and take some responsibility, that's all there is to it. And I'm speaking as a relatively irresponsible person, and even to me I'm not buying his sob story.