Shop Fantasy Central Golf Guide Email Travel Subscribe SI About Us Pro Basketball Fantasy Almanac WNBA Minors

 
  U.S. SPORTS
  pro basketball
scores
schedules
standings
stats
matchups
injuries
transactions
players
teams
scoreboards
baseball S
pro football S
col. football S
m. college bb S
w. college bb S
hockey S
golf plus S
tennis S
soccer S
motor sports
olympic sports
women's sports
more sports
 WORLD SPORT

EVENTS
 Sportsman of the Year
 Heisman Trophy
 Swimsuit 2001

CENTERS
 Fantasy Central
 Inside Game
 Multimedia Central
 Statitudes
 Your Turn
 Message Boards
 Email Newsletters
 Golf Guide
 Cities
 Work in Sports

CNNSI.com GROUP
 Sports Illustrated
 Life of Reilly
 Television
 SI Women
 SI for Kids
 Press Room
 TBS/TNT Sports
 CNN Languages

COMMERCE
 SI Customer Service
 SI Media Kits
 Get into College
 Sports Memorabilia
 TeamStore

 

This time, Barkley says he means it

Click here for more on this story

Posted: Sunday October 24, 1999 11:47 PM

  Charles Barkley Entering this season, Charles Barkley has scored 23,468 points and pulled down 12,337 rebounds. Todd Warshaw/Allsport

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) -- This time he means it. No joke.

Charles Barkley even had a halftime ceremony before the hometown fans at Sunday night's Houston Rockets-Detroit Pistons exhibition game to prove it.

This season, his 16th in the NBA, will be his last.

Barkley, who has teased fans a number of times in recent years with the threat of calling it quits, formally announced his pending retirement in the Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center, just a half-hour drive from his hometown of Leeds.

With his trademark flourish, he announced he would give $1 million each to alma maters Leeds High School and Auburn University and to a program for inner-city Birmingham youth called Cornerstone Schools.

"I don't think God gave me this gift so I could play basketball and have $50 million in the bank and live happily ever after," Barkley, 36, said. "I don't think that's what my life is for.

"I made up my mind that I was going to retire last season," Barkley, 36, told the crowd at halftime. "A reporter asked me, 'You have athletes making absurd amounts of money but why aren't they doing great things with it?' It really annoyed me, because it was true."

He was joined at center court by his mother, Charcey Glenn, and grandmother, Johnnie Mae Mickens, who raised him together.

"It's time for me to do something else," Barkley said. "It's time for me to have some fun now. I don't think my life could get any better. But it's time to do something else."

The 11-time All-Star has gained fame for his game - he was named one of the NBA's 50 best all-time players in 1997 -- and infamy for his mouth. Barkley has been one of the league's most colorful players -- on and off the court, known for everything from denouncing athletes as role models to once throwing a man through a barroom window.

"There's been some negative things that have happened that people are going to accentuate," Houston coach Rudy Tomjanovich said. "He's a really good player with a great heart. I love the guy."

"He's going to be missed," added Pistons guard Grant Hill. "There's not going to be another Charles."

The 6-foot-6, 252-pound Barkley once remarked, "If I weren't earning $3 million a year to dunk a basketball, most people on the street would run in the other direction if they saw me coming."

He is a season-long farewell tour from his final NBA dunk, though. Barkley signed a one-year contract estimated at $9 million on Oct. 4.

"I'm glad it's over with," he said. "This is the last night I'm going to talk about retiring. I'm not going to let everyone ask about it every city I go to."

Barkley is one of only three players in NBA history with more than 20,000 points, 10,000 rebounds and 4,000 assists. The others are Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Wilt Chamberlain.

He ranks 13th in career scoring (23,468) and is fourth among active players.

Barkley led the Olympic Dream Team in scoring in 1992 and 1996.

He hasn't lost his skills either, averaging 16.7 points and 12.4 rebounds last year. Only Sacramento's Chris Webber averaged more rebounds.

Barkley's college coach at Auburn, Sonny Smith, was on hand Sunday.

"This was not one of those flirtations where he comes off the cuff and says something," said Smith, adding that Barkley talked about possibly retiring over the summer. "This is something he's planned out, how he wants to go out and when he's going out."

Smith said the NBA would be a more boring place without the loquacious Sir Charles.

"I don't think there's any doubt about that," he said. "Charles has developed marketing -- both himself and basketball."

 
Related information
Multimedia
Rockets coach Rudy Tomjanovich admires Charles Barkley's passion for the game. (178 K)
Charles Barkley thinks an early retirement decision makes things easier. (159 K)
Visit Multimedia Central for the latest audio and video
Search our site Watch CNN/SI 24 hours a day

Sports Illustrated and CNN have combined to form a 24 hour sports news and information channel. To receive CNN/SI at your home call your cable operator or DirecTV.

Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


CNNSI Copyright © 2000 CNN/SI
An AOL Time Warner Company.
All Rights Reserved.

Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.