I'll never forget where I was when I heard of the JFK assassination. I'll never forget where I was when I heard about the terrorist attacks on 9/11. Likewise, I will never forget where I was on that June 19th morning when I heard about Lenny Bias.
Bias was a regular at Red's bball camp in D.C. Red knew him from when he was a kid. Red knew how special he was and in an incredible Auerbachian coup, Red was able to position the Cs to get Lenny Bias. It was like fate was again smiling on the Celtics.
When they drafted him, visions of the 60s string of championships were not just possible, but realistic, if not likely.
Bias ran the floor like James Worthy, could shoot the corner J like Bob McAdoo and rebounded like Elvin Hayes. He was explosive and smooth at the same time and was as tough as nails on the basketball court. This is not hyperbole. Look at some of the youtube clips. He had the potential to be better than Jordan.
What Bias would have done for the Celtics, aside from being the heir apparent to Larry Legend and the bridge to the future, would have been to prolong the productive professional careers of Bird, McHale and Parish perhaps as long as five years. He could have played the 3 or 4 and would have given Bird and McHale rest by replacing them on the floor and given Parrish rest by playing the 4 and having McHale slide over to the 5 and all of this with no dropoff in production if not an increase.
Bias' death that June morning was the death knell for this proud franchise's title aspirations for more than 20 years. What a terrible, stupid waste.