Jazz cement Stockton's impact on team, state with bronze statue
Team unveils tribute outside Delta Center; Mailman's to come
He and Utah Jazz coach Jerry Sloan went there to see it.
"I had to stand next to it at the foundry and bounced into it," he said. "It felt like Greg Kite, because I'd run into him a few times, and it felt exactly the same," said Stockton about the former BYU 7-footer, who made an NBA reputation as a tough customer.
Stockton said he had no input on the sculpture, unveiled publicly Wednesday afternoon on the Delta Center plaza, except to OK the picture from which it was made. It was one of Stockton wearing the original Jazz note uniform with the short shorts and making one of those one-handed passes on the run for which he was so well known. He spent an hour and a half posing in that position so artist Brian Challis could measure every inch of him with calipers.
Stockton said he didn't recall choosing the uniform, "but I'm happy with it. Brian did a great job."
And as for his throwback short shorts, he deadpanned, "Oh, they'll come back around. Everything comes back."
Stockton was happy with the statue, except, "I think you got the biceps a little too small," he joked to Challis during the unveiling ceremony prior to Wednesday night's Jazz game with Denver. "I think they cut me a little short, but that's about all."
In a rare personal insight, Stockton told the crowd, "I was thinking back when Karl Malone and I, when one of us would be in the weight room early in the morning and the other one wasn't there, the first comment to the other person would be, 'It's mighty lonely up here.'
"That's really my first impression here. It's mighty lonely up here, and it will be good to see the big fella up here in short order."
The retired Jazz power forward's statue is in the works and will be presented some time next season, either at the time his Jazz jersey is retired or at a separate celebration. That's Malone's call, said Jazz owner Larry H. Miller.
Malone's statue will then stand a few feet from Stockton's on the plaza that is already in place and framed by a bronze-and-cement Chinese "yin yang," a circle with an "S" curve in the middle, which Miller said symbolizes "peace and unity and stuff like that."
Like "Stockton to Malone."
The yin-yang was Challis' idea. He designed the entire plaza, as well as the statue that is already in place and the one in the works.
Oh, and he may have another job after that.




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