Robert Horry and the Art of Clutchness

“Clutch means me getting it done.” Robert Horry.

Houston Rockets vs Orlando Magic (June 11, 1995-NBA Finals, Game 3)

The ball is inbounded to Hakeem Olajuwon deep in the post, screens are being set, late fourth quarter nerves are running and Shaq is trying to stop dreams from coming true, giving Houston more problems than Apollo 13. Still it’s Hakeem and the Rocket’s lucky day as the center finds a teammate behind the arc with a trademark, beautiful pass. The player receiving the ball hits a three over Horace Grant, fogging his goggles, and making the Magic disappear with an ace-in-the hole play pulled from his bag of tricks.

It’s a dagger basket by a young Robert Horry.

The Magic left him open to shoot all day. The team didn’t think he had what it took. The former Alabama standout who played in the shadow of Latrell Sprewell brought it all to the light; however, with a shot that sank like the sun at dusk. Years before he helped Shaq drink championship champagne he made him taste bitter defeat. Before he made everything in his career right, he proved everyone wrong. While everyone though he was just a Will Smith lookalike with a Fresh Prince fade he threw the competition out the door like Jazzy Jeff. ARGH! Opposing fans would scream as all their hopes and dreams were in for a rude-Robert awakening. The number 2-5 was a man that made Houston’s second five so strong, but after two big shots and two championship rings, Horry was on the move further Northwest. Although his time in Phoenix, wasn’t his best (especially with Danny Ainge), Rob never threw the towel in, he kept playing hard until Hollywood called with a script idea that was about to re-write history.

Los Angeles Lakers vs Philadelphia 76ers (June 10, 2001-NBA Finals, Game 3)

With the NBA Finals tied at one game apiece there is not much between the Goliath Los Angeles Lakers and the David, Philadelphia 76ers. There isn’t even any love, definitely no brotherly love in Philly for hometown boy Kobe Bryant as he dribbles the ball up court to a chorus of boos. The ball ends up in the hands of Brian Shaw who quarterbacks a great heave to Robert Horry in the corner. Horry is all alone as Sixers’ Aaron Mckie is too late to reach the Laker jersey in the corner. Horry hoists up his third triple of the game and it hits twine and parquet. Rob breaks the back of the Sixers, and silences the fans while pumping his fists with the passion that just left the First Union crowd. This is his time, this is his moment. This is his game.

The Lakers gave up serious swingman talent Cedric Ceballos in order to get Robert, but in return Horry answered the call and gave everything he had to a team that became more with his addition. He had to give up the number 25 because of retired Laker legend Gail Goodrich, but Horry’s legacy in L.A. may one day result in his number 5 jersey being raised to the rafters. This player played his part and role in Hollywood better than most stars but this was no act, Bob was the genuine article. This fourth quarter moment maker was not lazy at other moments in the game. He just liked to wait for the last scene to draw the final curtain…and boy did he draw. This Western assassin had a lot of bullets in his gun. Give him just a second to aim a shot and…BANG!

Next: More clutch plays by Big Shot

Los Angeles Lakers vs Portland Trail Blazers (April 28, 2002-Western Conference First Round, Game 3)

We’re in the Rose Garden and the Los Angeles Lakers are about to be pricked by the blooming, blazing Portland Trail Blazers. So, Bryant sets a trail driving against the self-dubbed ‘Kobe-Stopper’ Ruben Patterson, taking him and what seems like the rest of the Trail Blazers side into the paint. He furiously kicks the ball out to the three-point line on his right to Robert Horry who calmly catches the peach, sets it on it’s seams, rises and drains the clutch three with just two seconds left.

Three years, three trophies and three-balls aplenty, Horry kept repeating like episodes of ‘Scrubs’ on Comedy Central. He drained a game-clinching three-pointer in at least one game in four straight playoff series over the course of the Lakers’ three-peat campaigns. He really did change the game. Shaq and Kobe may have been the out of this world superstars, but every leading man needs a supporting actor and that man was Robert Horry. Along with Rick Fox, Horry formed a forward tandem for the dynasty ages. He played his classic clutch role along with Derek Fisher, the same Fish that continues to save L.A. to this day.

Clutch three after clutch three. Who says it doesn’t rain in Southern California? When Horry poured, L.A. reigned.

Los Angeles Lakers vs Sacramento Kings (May 26, 2002-Western Conference Finals, Game 4)

In one of the most fiercely competitive series in NBA Playoff history. there’s nothing between the Californian Kings and Lakers in this bitter clash for the Western throne. Kobe’s on the drive again but he cant find the basket from the baseline. The rebound falls to Shaq but his putback needs a mulligan and is tipped away from the rim by Vlade Divac . The loose ball bounces outside the arc to Robert Horry for a straight ahead, straight forward three which is classic Horry and vintage NBA history.

Former Laker Vlade Divac must have been real jealous as he dismissed Horry’s latest triumph as a “lucky shot”, but there is no ‘Cheap Shot Rob’ here. Vlade needed to “read a paper” or the history books or something. Read all about it. Time and time again Robert Horry’s being doing it and coming up big when needed. Hitting three’s with a Reggie Miller purity meeting M.J. clutch. Still in 2003 when the Lakers were looking to go for a fourth championship, the San Antonio Spurs and a 25 point deficit got in the way during the Western Conference Semi-finals. Horry was in a familiar position as the Lakers rallied back from a blow-out looking to close-out the Spurs in Texas, but something just wasn’t clicking. Horry drew his long-range gun and fired but his shot was in and out like Kevin Kline in the nighties. As the buzzer sounded the Lakers hadn’t just lost the championship to the San Antonio Spurs, this was the beginning of the end as they also lost their ‘Mr. Fourth Quarter’ to their Western Conference  rivals.

Next: Horry’s legacy 

San Antonio Spurs vs Detroit Pistons (June 19, 2005-NBA Finals, Game 5)

The clocks winding down, we are in clutch territory yet again but this time Robert Horry’s role is to make the inbound pass. Has he been taken out the equation? He passes to Manu Ginoboli on the left hand, three-point side, who pivots around his defender and passes back to Bobby who’s been left open by Rasheed Wallace. Brent Barry can see the smirk on ‘Big Shot Bob’s’ face; “your going to leave me open?” It’s all good. Corner pocket, ‘Mr. Big Shot’, Robert Horry three, San An victory, sorry Chauncey.

Still even though the jersey changed, fans didn’t have to expect anything new. Horry even dunked and checked his way to victory showing that even in his latter career he’d always go hard for the sweet taste of victory. Horry made it a record seven championships for his career and a top three all-time clutch player. Bird, Jordan and he…sorry Kobe.

The statistics and rings speak and count for themselves. The Hall should make way. Fame? Horry was infamous in a town where celebrities ran the courtside as well as the baseline. For the record Robert is one of only nine players in NBA history to have won seven or more championships. Out of these nine of a kind guys, he’s the only one who did not play on the 1960s Celtics. This Laker legend is in a generation and class of his own, joining his 2000 champion team-mate John Salley as the only other player to win championships with three different NBA teams.

He may have not started games, but he sure did finish them. Carrying his team and family name with pride. Robert’s arc of talent extended from behind the line as he also became the first player in NBA history to record 100 steals, 100 blocked shots and 100 threes in one season. Still, speaking of more big three’s, his seven in ’97 against Utah made for the most three-point field goals made in a game without a miss.

He’s even outdone the greatest players of all-time. Fellow Laker alumni and all-time points leader Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is now second in playoff games played behind Horry. Now if you thought that was big, the record for the number of three-pointers in an NBA Finals doesn’t belong to Michael Jordan’s 42 anymore, it belongs to Robert Horry’s 53. Could the greatest Sixth Man of all-time be the greatest clutch player in NBA history? Time will tell,  but one things for sure, there is nobody like Robert Horry, no substitute. When talking about the greats people may not start with Robert, but they sure will finish with him. Like at the end of the game, at the end of the day its all about Horry. The rafters and the Hall of Fame are waiting, here’s hoping the NBA doesn’t leave it to the last minute; they’re not experts at that like he is. Hands down, seconds out, nobody did it like him. Three, two, one…none.

“That’s just Robert man,” said Kobe Bryant.

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