The Punch
One Night, Two Lives, and the Fight That Changed Basketball Forever
Chapter One
What Hit Me?
December 9, 1977
He had always worried about the scoreboards. That morning, during shootaround,
Rudy Tomjanovich caught himself staring up at the scoreboard in the Los Angeles
Forum, wondering if the thing was really safe.
"I always thought about it in the empty arenas," he said. "For some reason, I
worried that one day one of the damn things would break and it would come
crashing down on us during a game." Now it had. At least that's what he thought
when he came to, lying flat on his back, that night in the opening minute of the
third quarter. The Houston Rockets and Los Angeles Lakers had been tied 55-55 at
halftime, and he was having a great shooting night: 9-for-14 from the field. His
jumper, one of the NBA's sweetest, felt perfect every time he released the ball.
The only surprise was that he had actually missed five times.
The Rockets had gone up 57-55 to start the second half. There was a missed jump
shot at the other end, and Kevin Kunnert, the Rockets' 7-foot center, g ... read full excerpt from: The Punch: One Night, Two Lives, and the Fight That Changed Basketball Forever ebook