SAM Bowie's role in the rise of Michael Jordan has become a distant memory since His Airness entered the NBA nearly 40 years ago.
Bowie was drafted second overall in the 1984 NBA Draft, allowing the Chicago Bulls to select MJ third before His Airness led the franchise to six championships the following decade.
But if the ex-Kentucky standout was honest in the pre-draft process, the NBA's history might have been very different.
The Houston Rockets were always going to pick Hakeem Olajuwon with the top pick that year.
The Rockets wouldn't pass up on the promising yet already dominant 7-foot center, who also was a homegrown talent having played college basketball at the University of Houston.
Bowie was the next best center after a highlight-packed four years at Kentucky – and the Portland Trail Blazers, who owned the second overall pick, needed a big man.
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They already had Jim Paxson, a small forward and two-time All-Star, as well as would-be Hall-of-Fame shooting guard Clyde Drexler, hence they targeted the 7-foot-1 center over Jordan in the draft.
They did so even though legendary coach Bobby Knight, who had worked with MJ during the 1984 Olympics trials, reportedly urged Portland's general manager to select Jordan anyway.
"But we need a center," Blazers GM Stu Inman said in response, as Bill Simmons recalled in an ESPN column.
"So play him at center!" Knight reportedly replied.
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However, Inman and the Blazers didn't know that Bowie was nowhere near as healthy as they thought he was.
A stress fracture in his left tibia, which caused him to miss two seasons in college, bothered the center at the time of the draft and would flare up after joining Portland.
He would also break his right tibia with the leg issues eventually forcing the player to retire in 1995 after an injury-laden career.
Years later, Bowie revealed that he hid his health problems from the Blazers before they drafted him in 1984.
"I can still remember them taking a little mallet, and when they would hit me on my left tibia, and 'I don't feel anything' I would tell 'em," he said in ESPN's documentary Going Big.
"But deep down inside, it was hurting. If what I did was lying and what I did was wrong, at the end of the day, when you have loved ones that have some needs, I did what any of us would have done."
Bowie also recalled that while sitting next to Olajuwon, Jordan, and other NBA prospects on Draft Night, he knew that "deep down inside I physically wasn't what these guys were."
Had Bowie been transparent about his injury woes, the Blazers might have been more inclined to draft Jordan instead.
Or, they would have gone for other big men that were also available, such as Sam Perkins or Charles Barkley – but either way, the NBA would have taken a very different course than it actually did.
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Interestingly, Portland used their No. 1 pick to select an injury-prone center that would prove to be a bust again some 23 years after the Bowie fiasco.
In 2007, they passed on Kevin Durant, Al Horford, and Mike Conley to pick Greg Oden, who ended up making just 82 appearances for Portland.
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