Heās short, flabby and canāt jump a lick, but . . . : Fulton Still Manages to Carry Cal Lutheran Despite Diseased Knees
It was Randy Newman who sang those now-famous words that, while ticking off short people everywhere, ring truer on the basketball court than anywhere: āShort people got no reason to live.ā
Just where that leaves short, chubby people with bad knees is anybodyās guess. In college basketball, at least, such players are usually left out completely. They warm the bench or become team managers or mop up the court at halftime. Strangely, though, at Cal Lutheran, Coach Larry Lopez gives one such unlikely player credit for turning the Kingsmen around this season.
Outside of the fact that CLU point guard Michael Fulton (5-9) is short, heās also flabby, slow and canāt jump a lick. He is perhaps the unlikeliest looking college basketball player in America.
āLetās put it this way,ā says teammate Steve deLaveaga, āheās not a gifted player. He doesnāt exactly possess, uh, a basketball physique.ā
What Fulton does have is a degenerative joint disease in both knees called osteoarthritis. He began feeling the effects of the arthritis--pain, swelling and stiffness--two years ago while playing at Marin College in Northern California. Even though the problem has gotten progressively worse, Fulton wanted to continue playing basketball and Cal Lutheran was the only four-year school that was remotely interested.
Lopez, who hadnāt seen Fulton play and who wasnāt even aware of his health problems until three weeks ago, told the guard he was welcome to walk on at fall practice but no scholarship money was promised. When the coach first saw Fulton play, his impressions ran along these lines: āGee, I donāt know if this guy can play,ā and āHe isnāt real impressive.ā
Initially, Fulton saw little or no playing time, but after CLU fell hopelessly behind in its game against Cal Poly San Luis Obispo on Dec. 6, Fulton was sent in to mop up. Instead, he hit three straight shots and ran Lopezā offense better than any of the other guards.
Heās been a starter ever since.
āSince he began starting, weāre a much better team,ā Lopez says. āHeās not quick, but he makes up for it with his court sense. He doesnāt move well, but he knows when to pass the ball.ā
To watch Fulton attempt to run is to feel pain. He shuffles along the floor in what looks like a hurried penguin walk. āOne of my teammates calls me āFlipper,ā ā Fulton says. āThe guys kid me about the way I run--Iām flat-footed and my whole foot hits the floor at the same time. It looks goofy, but thatās the way I have to do it.ā
Even though Fulton hesitantly admits that he plays in pain, itās an obvious conclusion. The arthritis is eating away the bone in his knees and he says he will have both knees replaced with artificial plastic joints next year after his basketball eligibility runs out.
Meanwhile, Fulton is forced to go through a daily ritual of ultrasound and whirlpool treatments and stretching exercises in order to walk, let alone play. The ultrasound treatment sends electric shock waves through the muscles surrounding the knees and lessens the tightening in the joint. āThat saves me,ā he says. āOtherwise I couldnāt do it.ā
To keep his knees warm, Fulton wears braces made of the same kind of rubber material used for wet suits. āFor the first five minutes of a game, Iām usually OK, but after the first timeout or any break for more than a minute, my knees start to lock up. For about 80% of the game, Iām in pain.ā
The worst is saved for last. After the game, Fulton puts ice on the knees for 20 minutes to slow down the swelling and, āI try to stay off my feet as much as possible.ā
Says DeLaveaga: āOn road trips, Iāve had to help him out of bed in the morning. Heās had to overcome so much adversity, but he works hard. I have a lot of respect for him. Thereās no question that heās our leader.ā
Such respect has come slower from Cal Lutheranās opponents. At times, opposing players have openly laughed as Fulton wobbled up and down the court. āI hear something almost every game,ā he says.
Earlier this week, when CLU played Westmont, Westmont guard Ricky Collier taunted Fulton, saying: āYou canāt shoot. You canāt do anything.ā When Fulton hit two key shots late in the game to help the Kingsmen beat the NAIAās ninth-ranked Warriors, Fulton says Collier quit hassling him.
āBut,ā says DeLaveaga, āMichael does his fair share of talking, too. He talks a lot. Heāll never be intimidated, though. He knows heās little and he knows teams will try to push him around. But he doesnāt take it. Heās a tough kid.ā
Sure, sure, he just shuffles up and pops a jumper in an opponentās face.
The fact that Fulton looks slightly out of place on the court is, at least in part, his own fault. Before the Kingsmenās first game, he got a butch haircut and then shaved a Nike swoosh on each side of his head. By his own admission, he looked more like a basket case than a basketball player. Since then, his swoosh-doo has grown out to an Army-style crew cut.
All of which brings up the other service Fulton provides for Lopez and the other players--he is the self-proclaimed team clown and resident knucklehead. Just like his knees, he tries to keep his teammates loose. āI like to keep everybody laughing,ā he says. āCoach Lopez is such a hyper guy, he needs to calm down sometimes, so I clown around some.
āBut my best attributes are my leadership and my desire. I just want to play so bad. When the guys see me hustle, it picks up the team. They know what I have to go through every day. Itās painful, but itās worth it.ā