Tuesday, November 27, 2007

len bias

Len Bias
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Len Bias
Bias after being selected in the 1986 NBA Draft.
Position Forward
Height 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m)
Weight 210 lb (95 kg)
Nationality USA
Born November 18, 1963(1963-11-18)
Landover, Maryland
Died June 19, 1986 (aged 22)
College Park, Maryland
College Maryland
Draft 2nd overall, 1986
Boston Celtics
Pro career 1986�1986
Awards ACC Athlete of the Year (1986), ACC Player of the Year (1985-86)
Leonard Kevin Bias (November 18, 1963 � June 19, 1986) was an American college basketball player who suffered a fatal cardiac arrhythmia that resulted from a cocaine overdose less than 48 hours after being selected by the Boston Celtics in the 1986 NBA Draft. Bias was the second player selected in the draft, after Brad Daugherty of the Cleveland Cavaliers. Bias was known to his family, friends, teammates, and in the media as "Len" or "Lenny" rather than by his formal name, Leonard.

Contents
1 College career
2 Death
3 The lawsuit
4 Aftermath
5 The possibility
6 Notes and References



[edit] College career
From Landover, Maryland, Bias attended Northwestern High School in Hyattsville, Maryland, and subsequently the University of Maryland where he became a star player and an All-American. Wearing number 34, he impressed basketball fans with his amazing leaping ability, his physical stature and his ability to create plays. During his college career Bias was considered one of the most dynamic players in the nation. In fact, Bias was rated by some draft publications as the most complete forward ever to come out of college.[citation needed] Bias was compared by some with Michael Jordan,[1] even though Jordan himself was only in his second professional season at the time Bias was drafted.

Bias died in a dormitory on the University of Maryland, College Park campus. Later, his death would be featured as part of an anti-drug media campaign. A district court and court of appeals found that Bias had been an intravenous drug user.


[edit] Death
Bias was selected by the defending NBA champion Celtics as the second overall pick in the 1986 NBA Draft. Bias and his father flew to Boston, Massachusetts, from Washington, DC, for an NBA Club draft acceptance and product endorsement signing ceremony with the Celtics' coaches and management; as well as with Adidas' Sports-Marketing Division. His father left Boston alone, to return to Washington in the late afternoon. There he gave a short press conference for the local Washington, DC, media at what was then known as Washington National Airport. The media were at the airport expecting to interview Len Bias. So his father had to "stand-in" for him, reporting on their "day with the Celtics" and their appreciation of the beginning of a new chapter in his and his son's life. Bias arrived back at Washington National alone later in the evening, on nearly the last Shuttle flight from Boston[citation needed]. No media were present, and so far as is known he was met by no one. He retrieved his newly leased sports car from airport parking, (a 1986 Nissan 300Z, provided through his agent, as a kind of NBA/Sports Endorsement contract anticipation loan), and drove back to his room on the campus of the University of Maryland.

However, prior to, and concurrent with, some of the given timelines of his activities at the campus, Bias' vehicle would be observed and recorded by undercover agents of the Washington, DC metropolitan police department "cruising" one of the city's most notorious drug neighborhoods along Montana Avenue, in the northeast section of the city. Although the surveillance did not determine who specifically was in the vehicle, or that the vehicle stopped for any purpose, they did estimate there were at least two persons, driver and passenger in the vehicle, and they recorded its license number.

The campus timeline said he arrived back onto campus at around 11:00 p.m., and ate crabs with some teammates and a member of the football team. He left campus at approximately 2 a.m. on the 19th and drove to an off-campus gathering, which he attended briefly before returning to his dorm at 3:00 a.m. Bias took a lethal dose of cocaine through an unknown route. Cocaine, being a very powerful sympathomimetic, likely induced cardiac arrhythmia or a heart attack.

Bias went into convulsions. When the call to emergency services was made, Bias was unconscious and not breathing. All emergency medical team attempts to restart his heart and breathing were unsuccessful. According to the campus timeline, Bias collapsed sometime between 6:25 and 6:32 while talking with teammate Terry Long. According to Bias' sister, who only had a secondhand account of the story, Bias was sitting on a couch and leaned back as though he was going to sleep, but instead began to have a seizure. Bias was pronounced dead at Leland Memorial Hospital in Riverdale, Maryland, of a cardiac arrhythmia related to the cocaine overdose.[2][3][4][5][6]

Four days after his death, more than 11,000 people packed the Cole Field House, the university arena where Len Bias had played for the Terrapins, for a memorial service. Those speaking at the service included Boston Celtics president Arnold "Red" Auerbach, who said he had planned for three years to get Len onto the Celtics. Auerbach added that the city of Boston had not been so shaken since the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Reverend Jesse Jackson compared Bias' death to Jesus Christ, Martin Luther King, Jr., Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Mahatma Gandhi, describing each as "young, gifted, strong and militant, all taken in the prime of their lives . . . Lenny was vulnerable because all of us are vulnerable. He is being used by God to save a generation," Jackson continued. "Tonight, the children mourn. Let us hope they learn."[7]

Bias was buried in Lincoln Memorial Cemetery in Suitland, Maryland[8].


[edit] The lawsuit
Len Bias' parents, as executors of his estate, brought suit against three parties in United States District Court. Bias' parents sued the Adidas Shoe Company, Lloyds Insurance Underwriters, and Advantage International (and joined with Advantage International, its employee agent who represented Len Bias), a sports and entertainment agents' firm. These defendants won a grant of summary judgment in District Court. The plaintiffs then filed an appeal to the US Court of Appeals. The Court of Appeals' decision was reported in Bias v. Advantage International, Inc., et.al., (905 F.2d 1558, 1990).

The original suit claimed: (1) that Bias' estate was owed a $1 million contract signing bonus that it was alleged Adidas entered into with Bias on the afternoon of his death at the signing ceremony where he also signed his rookie contract with the Boston Celtics Basketball Club; (2) that Bias' parents were directly owed a similar amount as the beneficiaries on a "Jumbo" comprehensive liability policy that they had purchased from Lloyds Insurance (paying the initial annual premium in full) one year earlier; and (3) that Advantage International (by and through their agent - employee) had failed in their duty to their client (Bias) to obtain a life insurance policy (also of at least $1 million in value) as the parents asserted that Bias had instructed his agent to do.

In court, the parents failed on each assertion. First, the endorsement contract signed with Adidas was found to contain a "stand pat" clause of 72 hours. This meant that the signatories agreed not to take any action that relied upon, or to treat as binding, the performance terms of the contract for three days after their signing. Only at the beginning of the 73rd hour after the contract signing would the contract be in effect. In addition, if there were any change to any one of a set of conditions during the seventy-two hour window (such as the death of a signatory), the contract would immediately and automatically be terminated without prejudice to any of the parties.

Next, it was found that the Adidas-Bias contract contained an Excess Value Ratification Clause. This clause described the procedure required to implement the terms of the articles of incorporation of the Adidas company. The articles of incorporation stated that any contract at or above a specified dollar value signed by the officers or employees of the corporation, on Adidas' behalf, was to be regarded at the time of its signing, as only a preliminary notice of intent to inaugurate a contract between the parties. Further, the signatories of such a contract understood and agreed that the contract would not be regarded, relied upon, or treated as binding upon any party or the corporation unless and until the contract had been formally ratified through an affirmative vote of ratification by the Adidas Board of Directors.

It was therefore found that, at the time of signing, the signatory parties were aware that the performance terms of the endorsement contract (e.g., payment of the signing bonus) could not be considered by Bias or his estate as binding upon Adidas until three days later. The parties also knew at the time of signing that Bias' death within the three day stand-still window was one of the conditions which automatically terminated the agreement between the parties (without prejudice to either) as soon as Bias was pronounced dead. And thus, being terminated, any subsequent meeting of the company's Board of Directors to ratify a contract, which was terminated by a prior contract clause, would have been moot. Bias's parents next thought they could at least collect upon the "Jumbo" liability policy they undertook from Lloyds Underwriters in 1985.

Bias and his family determined not to enter the 1985 NBA draft at the conclusion of his highly regarded junior year at the University of Maryland. Since there was a real financial risk that an injury or other unforeseen event during his senior year could harm or eliminate Bias' chance at a multi-million dollar professional basketball draft offer and signing, his parents on their own obtained a liability policy from Lloyds Underwriters. Bias' parents hoped that the policy would insure against the chance that during his senior year Bias was injured in such a way that his potential NBA career was harmed or lost.

However, the nature and circumstances of Bias' death and his personal life style as revealed at trial led to the finding and determination that Lloyds had properly decided that Bias had voided the policy well before his actual death by deliberately engaging in acts of known high risk. At trial persons who knew Bias personally and well testified that he was a well known recreational cocaine user. His parents could not offer any evidence that impeached this testimony.

The parents then argued that Advantage International and its agent had promised to acquire a one million dollar life insurance policy, which they never did. While this was true, it was a moot point because, as Advantage International argued, no insurance policy (especially a million dollar one) would have been granted to a known cocaine user. Furthermore, had Bias' agent and/or Advantage International misrepresented to an insurance underwriter that Bias was not a known cocaine user and he was found to be so in death, it would have been insurance fraud on their part. Such a policy would still have been void. Despite the estate's beneficiaries' claims that Bias was not an habitual, known user, Bias' teammates, school trainers and others familiar with his habits testified under oath that he was. The estate's beneficiaries failed to offer any impeachment of this testimony either. Therefore, the Court of Appeals dismissed the complaint and affirmed the trial court's motion for summary judgment. Bias' parents appealed this decision all the way to the United States Supreme Court. The Court refused to hear the case and the Appeals decision stood.


[edit] Aftermath
On July 25, 1986, a grand jury returned indictments against Bias's friend Brian Tribble for possession of cocaine and possession of cocaine with intent to distribute) and Bias's Maryland teammates Terry Long (possession of cocaine and obstruction of justice) and David Gregg (possession of cocaine and obstruction of justice)[9]. Long and Gregg were both suspended from the team July 31[10]. All three defendants entered not guilty pleas in August[11].

On October 20, 1986, prosecutors dropped all charges against Long and Gregg in exchange for their testimony against Tribble[12]. On October 30, the grand jury added three more indictments against Tribble -- one count of conspiracy to obstruct justice and two counts of obstruction of justice[13].

Also on October 30, Kenneth Mark Fobbs, Tribble's roommate, was charged with perjury for allegedly lying to the grand jury about the last time he saw Tribble[14]. The state ultimately dropped the perjury charges against Fobbs on March 24, 1987, and a jury acquitted Tribble of all charges related to the Bias case on June 3, 1987[15].

The circumstances surrounding Bias' death threw the University and its athletics program into turmoil. An investigation revealed that Bias was 21 credits short of the graduation requirement despite having used all his athletic eligibility[16]. On August 26, 1986, State's Attorney Arthur A. Marshall Jr. stated that in the hours after Bias' death, Maryland head basketball coach Lefty Driesell told players to remove drugs from Bias' dorm room[17]. Two days later, Bias' father, James S. Bias, accused the University of Maryland, and Driesell specifically, of neglecting the academic status of its athletes[18].

The controversy prompted athletic director Dick Dull to resign October 7, 1986, with Driesell following suit October 29, 1986, after serving as the Terrapins' coach for 17 years[19]. The grand jury presiding over the Bias case issued a final report on February 26, 1987, that criticized the University of Maryland's athletic department, admissions office, and campus police[20].

On December 5, 1990, Len's younger brother, James Stanley Bias III, known as Jay and also a promising young basketball talent, was shot to death at age 20 following a dispute in the parking lot of Prince George's Plaza, a Hyattsville shopping mall located just miles from the University of Maryland. Two gunmen had allegedly fired several times into the vehicle Jay and two friends were in, and Jay was shot twice in the back. He was pronounced dead at the same hospital where Len had died, and was buried next to him at Lincoln Memorial Cemetery[21].

In the wake of their sons' deaths, James S. and Lonise Bias assumed vocal roles campaigning against drug use and gun violence. Lonise Bias became an anti-drug lecturer, while James Bias became an advocate for handgun control[22].


[edit] The possibility
Len Bias represents to the NBA, and especially to the Celtics organization, one of the greatest "what-ifs" in basketball history. Many considered Bias to be the perfect complement to the Larry Bird-led Celtics, a potential backup for both Bird and Kevin McHale who would have limited their minutes and perhaps in turn extended their careers. Some, including Red Auerbach and Johnny Dawkins, a Duke assistant who was a high school and college contemporary of Bias, believed that the inclusion of Bias could have allowed for the Boston Celtic organization's continued dominance well into the 1990s. Mike Krzyzewski and Dean Smith have both stated that Michael Jordan and Bias were the best players ever to come through the ranks of the ACC.[23]

It's been difficult to focus on MMA today. When I woke up this morning, I was greeted by a text message from a good friend that simply read "Holy ****, he died." Unfortunately, I immediately knew who "he" was.

Like me, countless others found out throughout the day that the "he" who had died overnight was Sean Taylor, the Redskins' young and talented safety. And, like most of those mourning his death, I didn't know Taylor personally. In fact, I don't cover football and I haven't been a Redskins fan for years.

But, Taylor's death goes far beyond being a 'Skins fan or even caring about football. Surfing over to CNN.com throughout the day illustrates that the news of his death is bigger even than the world of sports. There is something about mortality striking the seemingly immortal that moves us.

Many of you have undoubtedly read other columnists throughout the day, who have posited their own thoughts on Taylor's death. They've probably said it better and with more expertise than I can here, but I've been so moved by the events of the past 36 hours I had to weigh in as well.

The details of Taylor's death are still sketchy. As of now, motive is unknown. Did Taylor's past catch up to him or was this a random act of violence? Was it a burglary, a robbery, or a "hit"?

Ultimately, we may find out the answer to all these questions. But, those answers won't help comfort his family or his fans or those of us who are numbed with sadness at the loss of such a gifted young man. A young man who apparently made his fair share of mistakes early in life, but had also apparently turned the corner in the last couple of years. Taylor, by all accounts, was now a proud father and had also become a locker room leader at the tender age of 24.

I'm older than Taylor. Not old enough to be wise, but old enough to know that at 24, his best years were still ahead of him. His best years as a football player. And his best years as a man.

I'm old enough to know that we all make mistakes. Hopefully we learn from them and even if we do, we still keep making them. Whether or not a past mistake led to Taylor's death doesn't make his passing any more explicable or any easier to understand.

I'm also old enough to remember the day, more than twenty years ago, when the Washington area heard similarly horrible news about a similarly gifted athlete who had also met a far too premature death. As a young Terps fan, Len Bias was a god to me -- he leaped over defenders with grace and power, potentially only matched by the ACC's premiere living legend, Michael Jordan. Bias had been drafted by the Celtics only days earlier -- and hoped to continue Boston's championship legacy alongside Larry Bird -- when he died of a cocaine overdose.

Though the circumstances of Taylor's death don't appear to be the same as those surrounding Bias', the similarities are enough to bring back some of the same feelings, even if two decades later.

Here were two young athletes, seemingly at the top of their games, who had still hardly scratched the surface of their potential. And, when they died they only left us with more questions than answers.

Would Bias have been a better pro than even Jordan?

Would Taylor redefine the position like Ronnie Lott had before him? Would he spend the next decade going toe-to-toe with the likes of Ed Reed and Troy Polumalu for the title of best safety of his generation?

We'll never know the answer to those and so many other questions.

We may never even find out if the alleged robbers got what they came for when they launched their ill-fated plan. But, we do already know that they took something from us all that we can never take back -- the wonder of a young man about to realize his full potential as a human being.

That loss is perhaps the greatest tragedy of the last two days.

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