Spencer Haywood was Seattle’s first pro sports superstar. / David Eskenazi Collection

So vilified was Spencer Haywood that an opposing team forbid him to use the visiting locker room, forcing the Olympic gold medalist to change into his basketball uniform in the team bus and walk through the snow before playing.

So splendid was his early pro career in Seattle that more than 40 years later, he remains the best player to pull on the Sonics green and gold (unless you’re not impressed with a single season average of 29 points and 13 rebounds).

So controversial was his drug-addled late career that the Los Angeles Lakers, in the middle of the NBA Finals with a star rookie, Magic Johnson, kicked him off the team.

If any of this is at all intriguing, set aside the evening of May 21 to learn about the man who left the cotton fields of Mississippi to become Seattle’s first pro sports superstar.

On this Monday that the Seattle City Council votes on a pivot point in the long-running saga of the attempt to return pro basketball to Seattle, comes news from the roots of pro basketball here.

Full Court, a documentary film that chronicles one of the most exhilarating and tragic stories in NBA history, will have its premiere at the Seattle International Film Festival at the Uptown Theater, just a couple of blocks from the old Coliseum where Haywood energized a sports market that wasn’t sure pro ball was a big deal.

Haywood was good enough to help the U.S. win a gold medal in the 1968 Summer Games in Mexico City, but not old enough to play in the NBA. The original owner of the Sonics, Los Angeles entertainment mogul Sam Schulman, knew Haywood would fill his hoops house if he could get a court to agree that the NBA’s age minimum was an unfair restraint of trade.

But upon signing with the Sonics in 1970, neither Schulman nor Haywood knew that the court that would decide matters would be the U.S. Supreme Court. By a vote of 7-2 in 1971, the court said the NBA — whose representation included an eager young attorney by the name of David Stern — was operating illegally.

The abolition of the rule changed basketball forever. Starting with Haywood, numerous NBA greats from Moses Malone to Kobe Bryant to LeBron James proved that, for a talented few, college was a waste of time.

The court victory was the beginning of one of the most uproarious careers in U.S. sports. Ten years later, when he fell asleep on the Lakers practice floor during the Finals after a night of partying on crack and was fired, was its brutal end.

But Haywood has been sober for more than 35 years, regaining a quality life for himself, running his own business and living in Las Vegas. It was time to tell the story cinematically.

“There’s enough highway between him and the part that he can talk about it,” said Dwayne Clark, a longtime Seattle sports fan and successful businessman who is the film’s exceutive producer. “He’s been fantastic. It’s not always been easy. Like somebody wanting you to tell about your divorce: ‘Well, let me think about that.'”

The genesis of the film has its own good story. Clark, CEO of Aegis Living, a Redmond-based upscale assisted living company, was an early supporter of Chris Hansen’s efforts to build an arena that would bring back the NBA. At a dinner with other Hansen backers, he met Haywood for the first time. They spent most of three hours talking together.

Clark didn’t think too much more about Haywood until meeting him again. This time, the event was a charity fundraiser the past summer led by Seahawks QB Russell Wilson at a local resort. Clark recently had founded a film production company and was looking for subjects. Haywood was there and said hello.

The more they talked, the more Clark recognized that Haywood’s story could be his first film, especially after Haywood’s recent news that he had been elected to the basketball Hall of Fame.

“When I got home, I called him,” he said. “I said, ‘Spence, I want to make a documentary about you.’ He said, ‘I’ve been waiting a lot of years for this phone call.'”

But further conversations did not go nearly as well.

“Spence is a very stubborn guy,” Clark said. “I think he’s worked with a lot of people who haven’t been fair or honest with him. I think he was suspect of my intentions. We negotiated and he played hardball with me. The things he wanted were not possible. He talked to me like we were making a major Hollywood movie. I told him we’re not making $50 million blockbuster. It’s a documentary.

“Finally, I said, ‘We’re not making this film. It’s over. Not going to do it.’ I hung up. That was it.”

Or not. Haywood called back in an hour. In college in Detroit, Haywood had a mentor, Dr. Wayne Dyer, a teacher and counselor who went on to write 21 New York Times best-selling books on self-discovery and personal growth. Clark also was an avid reader of Dyer’s works, and had talked with Haywood about his teachings.

“I was pissed off, Spence was pissed off — then he told me Wayne just died,” Clark said. “Spence said, ‘I guess he’s intervened to tell us both to grow up and do this deal.'”

That was Aug. 29. The deal was on. Next Clark made a connection with AMS Pictures, a Dallas-based documentary filmmaker. Its CEO and founder, Andy Streitfeld, said he didn’t do sports films.

“I don’t want a sports film,” Clark said. “I want a human-rights and civil-rights film.”

Streitfeld liked the story so much he co-invested and the project was underway. The producers traveled the country, gathering interviews from NBA figures such as Pat Riley, Charles Barkley, Shaquille O’Neal, and former Sen. Bill Bradley, along with former Sonics great Lenny Wilkens, and longtime NBA executive Rick Welts, the former Sonics ballboy in Haywood’s time who is president of the Golden State Warriors.

Said Clark: “I told Andy it’s a story about a boy growing up poor in Mississippi, among nine siblings picking cotton, then getting to go to college by playing ball, but being denied a living because of a stupid rule that the Supreme Court said was wrong.

“He said,  ‘That’s a good story. I’m in.'”

If you don’t know the name Spencer Haywood, don’t miss the chance to learn.

 

 

Share.

9 Comments

  1. Mavis Jarvis on

    Thanks for the article, Art. But, Spencer Haywood the greatest Sonic EVER? I would easily take Lenny Wilkins, Gary Payton, Shawn Kemp, and Jack Sikma ahead of Haywood.

    • Every one of those guys–very good players all–had the advantage of being surrounded by quality teammates, except maybe Lenny. Haywood didn’t have talent around him to draw the opponents–he had to more or less do it alone. Pair HIM with Payton or Gus–that’d be scary good.

      Yes–whether you like it or not, Spence was the best player the Sonics ever had.

      • You’re right, pix. Haywood had to do it himself, and occasionally overdid it.

        It helps to have seen them play in person. Haywood in his best year was LeBron.

        • Mavis Jarvis on

          Fair enough. I can see Haywood rated as the most physically talented Sonic, but I’d still maintain that all the people I named contributed more to the franchise. Sounds like we’re simply defining the word “greatest” differently.

          I’ll have to check out that documentary.

    • From a pure athletic basketball standpoint, he was the best. Others made greater contributions over a longer time. But in a one-on-one match in their primes with any you named, I’d take Haywood.

  2. I was at a party in high school and the news of Spence’s signing broke. We were all a bunch of athletes and had followed him in the ABA. It was always who’s better, Haywood or Dr J? That was the Bird or Johnson, Durant or James discussion of the day. So when Schulman signed Haywood it was earth shaking and the whole city was on fire.
    Unfortunately his addictions eventually came to fore and his NBA career was not near what it should have been. I remember often seeing his tricked out Caddy on Capitol Hill with him always in a brim with the “Shaft” outfits that were SO not Seattle. Living here he was a total fish out of water and I’ve always thought he was the perfect example of the value of a good wife. If he had one, he’d have had Dr J fame, I’m convinced, but he was a total playboy and it really ruined his career. Having the pleasure of seeing such an athlete up close at Sonics games (when a kid could still move down near the floor) was like watching Griffey – something special every game.
    I am really happy to see that his life straightened out, that he is past the addictions and has regrouped. I will definitely see the film: Maybe call the boys over for a great get together!

  3. Paul Harmening on

    It’s so weird I’m 72 and I can still vividly remember the day when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of Haywood. Then afterward, watching him play. You nailed it again Art. He was the best of the Sonics best when he played here. How-ev-ah, I would have loved to see Spence and Shawn go one on one in their prime.