by Asher Price
Copyright © 2015 by Asher Price
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Crown Publishers, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York. www.crownpublishing.com
CROWN is a registered trademark and the Crown colophon is a trademark of Penguin Random House LLC.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Price, Asher.
Year of the dunk : a modest defiance of gravity / by Asher Price.—First Edition.
pages cm
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. Dunking (Basketball) 2. Basketball—Offense. I. Title.
GV888.15.P74 2015
796.323′2—dc23 2014041716
ISBN 9780804138031
eBook ISBN 9780804138048
Cover design: Rodrigo Corral
Cover photographs: Susanna Price / Getty Images (basketball hoop); Jaroslaw Wojcik / Getty Images (player)
v4.1_r1
a
For Bubu
“Mama exhorted her children at every opportunity to ‘jump at de sun.’ We might not land on the sun, but at least we would get off the ground.”
—ZORA NEALE HURSTON, Dust Tracks on a Road
Jack be nimble, Jack be quick.
Jack jump over the candlestick.
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Epigraph
Introduction
PART I: THE RUN-UP
1. Assembling the Gurus
2. Evolution and the Dunk
PART II: THE YEAR OF THE DUNK
3. The Dunking Year Begins: Twelve Months to Go
4. Taking the Measure of the Man
5. A Natural History of Leaping
6. The Rise of the Dunk
7. Besting the Fates
8. A Dunk Contest: Six Months to Go
9. Girl on Fire
10. “Dayenu”
11. Psyching Myself Up
12. Aiming Too High
13. So, Can White Men Jump?
14. It’s Gotta Be the Shoes: One Month to Go
15. Jumping Secrets of the Ninjas
16. Carrying Capacity
PART III: THE TOUCHDOWN
17. Allez Hop!
Postscript
Appendix A: The Dunker’s Handbook
Appendix B: The Physics of Spud’s Dunk
Acknowledgments
Notes
About the Author
Introduction
Nineteen eighty-six: a fun-sized Superman with closes-haven hair, dimples, and an adorable potato-chip of a name floats in his short shorts toward a basket.
It is the finals of the National Basketball Association slam-dunk contest at Reunion Arena in Dallas. Before a crackling Saturday night sellout crowd of 16,573, in midair, is Spud, the unlikely corruption of the nickname Sputnik, earned by Anthony Webb as an infant, not for some obvious early ability to launch himself skyward but for his unusually large head. A native son—his parents own a convenience store in black South Dallas—he knows the scalpers who sold him the tickets he needed tonight to pack in his three sisters, two brothers, and mother and father. A good thing, too—he got a hometown discount.
The yolk-orange rim, like those on all official baskets, is 10 feet off the ground. Webb, at his perkiest, stands five feet seven inches tall: no taller than a parking meter, as one newspaper commentator has described him. In fact, arena security has turned him away more than once when he’s reported to road-game locker rooms. He weighs 133 pounds and can’t even palm a basketball. But his legs—they are the thickness of bowling balls.
A 22-year-old rookie, Webb finds himself squaring off against his far more famous Atlanta Hawks teammate Dominique Wilkins. Also known as the Human Highlight Film, he is, at 6′8″ and 224 pounds, the defending slam-dunk champion. Webb makes the league minimum, $70,000; Wilkins, $585,000. In regulation play, Webb normally feeds Wilkins the ball, yet on this early February night in Dallas the pair is trading acrobatics around the hoop, throwing down one jam after the other in a show of skywalking one-upmanship. The winner gets nearly a fifth of Webb’s annual salary: $12,500.
The judging panel is made up of several retired NBA players, former Dallas Cowboys quarterback Roger Staubach, and, curiously, Martina Navratilova. Webb has dunked many times before—as far back as high school, at a height of only 5′3″. In a sense, Webb’s lightness works in his favor: Putting aside paper planes and Wiffle balls (disqualified for their aerodynamic flaws), you can throw a lighter object farther than a heavier one. Force equals mass times acceleration, and Webb has less mass to carry skyward. But to lift his 5′7″ frame to the rim, he must jump an extraordinary 42 inches off the ground, higher than your kitchen sink. And he faces the obvious physics problem encountered by any jumper: The moment your feet lose contact with the ground, you have no additional force to exert—even as the force of gravity is pulling you back to earth. His solution to all these problems is elegant in its ferocity: He gathers and applies all his muscle strength in the shortest time possible, about a tenth of a second—the time his foot plants before he shoves off toward the rim. In essence, little Spud Webb is exerting nearly four Gs to push off the ground, about the same acceleration a fighter jet creates as it blasts off an aircraft carrier.
An avalanche of dunks. Spud, small, self-contained, starts loud, with a reverse slam he throws down so hard that the ball ricochets off his still-airborne head and flies back up through the basket, as if to announce that, yes, indeed, I can put it down. From there, it gets increasingly fancy: a short run-up to a two-handed double-pump dunk; a 360-degree helicopter one-handed dunk (a.k.a. “the Statue of Liberty”); a lob pass to no one that bounces high off the hardwood before Spud, in one fell swoop, catches it, spins 180 degrees, and jams—a nasty bit of self-dealing. Each dunk begins with the run-up, then a super-brief foot-plant in which the legs coil and the Achilles tendons stretch to store up accumulated potential energy—and then, wham! Unleashed, upward kinetic force. To launch himself into orbit, Webb spends that coiled-up phase pushing against the hardwood floor with all those Gs, moving from zero miles per hour at the plant of a two-footed dunk to roughly 10 miles per hour through the air in less than a quarter second.
Countering, Wilkins executes some of the same muscular dunks that won him the contest the previous year: First a two-handed windmill dunk, in which the ball is spun around as if it’s in a washing machine before being thrown through the hoop; he manages, next, a dunk that starts as a windmill and ends as a one-handed tomahawk, the fierce piercing of the basket that not even vaguely recalls the American Indians; and then, beautifully, he performs a reverse dunk in which he reaches the ball down toward his ankles even as he is ascending through the Reunion Arena ether and then, swiftly, pulls it back and slams it behind his head just before making his way back to planet Earth.
A TV man asks Martina what she makes of the contest thus far. “In my next life,” she says, “I’d like to come back as a black basketball player.”
Webb has one final opportunity to best Wilkins. The crowd, now clearly in the corner of the little guy even as it respects the Highlight Film, starts chanting “Spud.” He moves to half-court, his lightly upraised fist moving in small circles, Arsenio Hall–style, as he prepares for the coup de grâce: a one-handed overhand bounce pass that leaps from the ground, bounces off the backboard, and goes back into his outstretched, soaring hand. He snatches the rock as a quick, collective inhale whooshes through the arena, and slingshots it home.
Martina goes nuts. Staubach goes nuts. America goes bananas.
And, as a six-year-old in New Y
ork City, I looked up from my GI Joes toward our bulky Sony television to witness the mini miracle. “Let’s go to the videotape!” shouted Warner Wolf, the WCBS sportscaster, and suddenly seeing the small, boyish man—only a few inches taller than I was!—dunk, I was captivated. In the odd pick-and-choose cultural moments imprinted upon a kid’s brain, Spud Webb joined a constellation that burned with the faces of Christa McAuliffe, the teacher chosen to board the Challenger space shuttle, which less than a month earlier had disintegrated on its way toward outer space; Ronald Reagan; the entire roster of the New York Mets, who would go on to win the World Series in October; and Billy Idol, whose “White Wedding” music video my two older brothers obsessively watched on MTV. That, for me, was the sum of 1986.
Webb himself didn’t know how to describe his unlikely ability.
“I haven’t the slightest idea,” he said when asked about how he jumped so high. “When I find out I’m going to write a book about it. I guess it’s just God-given talent.”
—
This is the book that Webb never wrote. Maybe Spud Webb’s gifts were God-given; on the other hand, maybe he somehow bested the destiny appointed to his five feet, seven inches. I’m interested in the limits of human talent—why some people have the mojo and others don’t, and how far, as individuals and as a species, we can push what talent we possess.
Everybody wants to dunk, at least metaphorically. We think that if we spent just a year away from our everyday distractions, we could rise above our terrestrial lot: learn Spanish, pick up the piano, re-master calculus, paint. In our fantasies, we think we might all be naturals—the capability of mastering some talent hidden inside us. A few years ago, The Onion cheekily mocked our unspent dreams in an obituary with the headline “97-Year-Old Dies Unaware of Being Violin Prodigy.”
The notion of a “hidden talent” can haunt, too. My mother stopped making art after a junior high school teacher told her she had little talent; she became an art historian instead, her days spent tromping through museums to examine other people’s work. It’s a familiar story: We leave our singing in the shower. Most adults never bother to pick up a violin, write fiction, or learn other languages. Why acquire a talent just to explore its limits?
I meant to take this dunking metaphor literally: I wanted to slam a basketball through an orange rim. My quest was to make the most of the piece of flesh I’d been given. At the extreme margin of human talent and effort, elite athletes stretch the boundaries that define our capabilities as a species. Will there come a day, the former Trinidadian sprinter Ato Boldon was once asked, when someone runs the 100-meter dash in less than nine seconds? (The record is now 9.58 seconds, set by Usain Bolt.) “Sprinters believe that—someday—somebody will run the 100 meters and the clock will read 0.00,” Boldon said. “And when a sprinter thinks like that, he’s not trying to trick himself. It’s how you have to think. This idea of human limitation is exactly what we’re competing against.” I would never run as fast as Bolt or Boldon. It’s just not in my DNA. But the test I had set myself was just possibly manageable: Given my height and vague athleticism, I felt that with a lot of effort I should be able to push a nine-and-a-half-inch ball through a 10-foot-high hoop.
I faced some challenges. I’m of Austro-Hungarian stock, more closely associated with making good pastries than with jumping ability: At the start of this project I could only swipe the rim with the tips of my middle and index fingers. As Sidney Deane (Wesley Snipes) famously tells Billy Hoyle (Woody Harrelson): “Billy, listen to me: White men can’t jump.” I owned healthy love-handles—I weighed 203 pounds—so I was going to have to lose weight and put on muscle. But I had some things going for me: height—I’m 6′2½” with orangutan arms; what a former coworker once called a “big ol’ sprinter’s butt,” just the kind of powerful posterior I’d need to propel myself hoopward; and, as I neared my 34th birthday, some leftover sportiness (I had never played a varsity sport, but once upon a time I had captained my college Frisbee team). I had never weight-lifted, either—I despise weightlifting—and so, to my mind, at least, I remained a tabula rasa. “Pure potential,” my wife, Rebecca, said, with a not-so-small degree of skepticism.
Naturally this would be a navel-gazing exercise: “I should not talk so much about myself if there were anybody else whom I knew as well,” Thoreau wrote, by way of apology, at the outset of Walden. Because in its bones this is a peculiarly American story, a story about optimism, about self-reliance, about the ability to remake oneself, Thoreau, who counted on the labor of his two hands just as I was to count on the labor of my feet, was a lodestar. The dunk is, yes, as American as jazz or apple pie. But it stretches beyond that—it is literally about upward mobility, about the very American idea, evoked so often in Walden and by Thoreau’s contemporaries, that everyone is capable of self-improvement, of rising above her lot. For me, the test was physical; for others, the barriers, involving everything from class to gender, are obviously harder to overcome. Americans have long thought that they could move on up, as they say in The Jeffersons. They believe in self-made men, and, I suppose, that’s what I was trying to do: remake myself.
On some level, then, this mission is also about wish-fulfillment. In 2008, candidate Barack Obama was asked whether he’d rather be the president or Julius Erving, the great dunker of the 1970s and early 1980s, in his prime. “The Doctor,” he said like a shot. “I think any kid growing up, if you got a chance to throw down the ball from the free-throw line, that’s better than just about anything.” (Obama first dunked when he was 16: “I still remember the day that it first happened,” he told Sports Illustrated. “One of those magical days when you’re just in a zone.”)
Yet there is an unfairness to our birthright: You grow up and the fantasy fades. Every kid wants to be an astronaut or an NBA star, but pretty quickly as we grow older we’re narrowed down into doing something more realistic. Some people simply aren’t as good, can’t be as good, as others. Basketball, like other sports, illuminates how far effort will take you. LeBron James surely works his butt off, but he was also just born with more capital. And the dunk, shorn of the thousand techniques and instincts that take years to develop on a court or a field, further crystallizes that difference: It is a simple, extremely basic maneuver; for my purposes, the beauty of the dunk (as a goal) is that either you can do it or you can’t. It has empirical finality.
Hovering over my story is the psychological question of how we disappoint ourselves when we grow up and how we try to overcome that disappointment. A “slam-dunk,” of course, means a “sure thing,” and in this sense the dunk stands counter to the adult challenges that we face, finding certainty in our lives amid the shifting questions of career, of marriage, and of children. Trying to dunk appeals because there is something childlike and uncomplicated about it. And going after it was a way, in a modestly rebellious act, of not acting my age. The idea of an adult trying to learn to dunk seemed half-ridiculous, as if trying to re-create the kind of footloose physical freedom of childhood. Yet that’s part of the joy of sports: Someone once asked Michael Johnson, the great sprinter, what it was like to run as fast as he did. He said the only thing that compared was, as a kid, going downhill go-karting on his birthday. “So you go get yourself a go-kart and find yourself a hill, and you’ll know how it feels.”
I was no kid, making this my last chance to dunk. I gave myself from the end of one August to the end of the next to improve. It was a year to discover whether, embedded in my bones, muscles, and DNA, was some grand jumping potential. A year was long enough to train my feet, hips, legs, and butt in the strange arts of explosive movement. Any longer and I figured I’d see diminishing returns; competing against my efforts were the natural force of aging and the reality of having to return to my daily work. Besides, working out the way I did was a wretched business, and I’m not one to engage in too much voluntary misery. The only rule I set myself was what I’ll call the no-needle pledge—I wouldn’t ingest or inject any medical-grade materia
l to make myself jump higher. Lord knows I’d absorbed enough of that stuff in my time.
—
In many ways, I’m Spud’s opposite. I grew up on the soft-scrabble streets of Manhattan’s Upper West Side, on a steady diet of whitefish schmear and bagels. I had shaped up as a thwacker of awnings. After Hebrew school every Tuesday and Thursday night, delighted to be liberated of religious instruction, I danced home on the sidewalks of 86th Street, and, in stride—hop, hop, leap—swung my left hand up and against the overhead canopies. Grouchy doormen gave me the stink-eye, but by the age of 12 I could touch at least half of them. On the highest ones I could just rattle the hidden metal bar that stretched the awnings taut and, for the lower ones, drum the canvas awning itself. Fine black soot powdered my fingertips. The awnings were spaced regularly, like ships huddled against piers. I had a kind of running rhythm, like overgrown hopscotch, making sure to get on my right foot for takeoff at the awnings I wanted to smack. Swinging shop signs and construction scaffolding brought their own satisfaction. Just make contact. I was like a Little Leaguer of the streets.
Hitting the lowest of these canopies, each maybe eight feet off the ground, wasn’t too hard: At that age I was always second-tallest in school. The tallest was Danny Rosen, a friendly, dopey-faced giant with the splayed feet of a duck and the sort of perpetual tan that announced that he had wintered in Vail and weekended in the Hamptons. Danny couldn’t jump. I wasn’t much of a hopper, either, but what I lacked in ups I made up for in enthusiasm: Like so many Jews, I never set foot in Hebrew school after 13, the age of Bar Mitzvah, but I kept lifting off, like a boy, at the sight of an awning. In my teenage years, hanging out with friends, especially girls, it was a silly, boyish way to show off. I leapt and leapt and leapt.
But there was a natural ceiling to my awning-slapping. I never could reach the loftiest ones. I didn’t really try, either. I was one of Frost’s swingers of birches, as interested in coming back to earth as leaving it: