[Congressional Record Volume 152, Number 25 (Thursday, March 2, 2006)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1640-S1641]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
KRESMIR COSIC
Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, I would like to take a moment to recognize
one of the greatest foreign athletes to play in my home State of Utah--
Kresmir Cosic.
My dear friend from Yugoslavia fell victim to cancer in 1995, but
this Saturday, Brigham Young University will officially retire
Kresmir's No. 11 jersey during a ceremony at BYU's final home game this
season. It is a fitting tribute to a four-time Olympian and two-time
all-American already enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame.
Kresmir--or Kresh, as I called him--is a legend at BYU, but he will
most likely be remembered for opening the door for foreign athletes in
American colleges and the NBA. He truly had a global influence--Drazen
Petrovic, Toni Kukoc, Dino Radja, and Vlade Divac are just a few
players who owe their success in America to their former coach from
Yugoslavia.
When I visited Yugoslavia one time, Kresh heard that I would be in
Zagreb and drove up from Zadar so he could introduce me to one of his
former players, who was a leader of The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints in the area. He arrived in a VW bug, and to see Kresh
unwind out of that little car was a humorous experience.
I considered Kresh to be a tremendous friend. When he became the
deputy ambassador for his country, he went out of his way to see me,
and I was more than pleased to be an advisor and help him. He
tirelessly walked the halls on Capitol Hill, trying to dispel
misunderstandings about Croatia and Bosnia and the Serbian war waging
in his native land.
The last time I saw Kresh was at Johns Hopkins Medical Center. The
doctors thought he was in a coma, but when I spoke to him, tears came
to his eyes, and a warm look of caring showed he understood my words of
consolation.
After his death, when once again I was in his native land, I was
pleased to see his wife, the person he loved so much.
Mr. President, I have only mentioned just a few highlights from the
life of this great man. I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the
Record a touching article from the Deseret Morning News that summarizes
why so many of us in Utah are looking forward to finally seeing his
jersey hang from the Marriott Center's rafters this weekend.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
[From the Deseret Morning News]
Late Cougar Cosic's Talent, Fun Couldn't Be Contained
(By Dick Harmon)
Kresimir Cosic could barely fit into my '63 Volkswagen that
day. But who'd have guessed this world, as well, could hardly
contain him and, at the age of 46, gave him back to God.
I was just 17, puttering around in my Bug when I saw the 6-
foot-11 Cosic walking down the sidewalk of a street in Provo
on his way to basketball practice. I stopped and asked if he
wanted a ride. He said he did and he crammed himself into the
car. It was like putting a praying mantis in a thimble.
The first thing Cosic did was reach over and turn on the
radio. He broke out in a big smile, turned his face to mine
and said: ``I love the music.''
In a nutshell, that epitomized all you need to know about
Cosic, the Yugoslavian. He loved life. He loved basketball,
and he loved playing to the largest crowds in the college
game when they hatched out the Marriott Center back in 1972.
To Cosic, music played when he had a basketball in ``his
hands. He may have been one of the most entertaining players
who ever lived. Certainly he was the most gifted passing
center to play the game. As they say in Europe, Cosic was
Magic Johnson before Magic Johnson.
On Saturday, folks at BYU will officially retire Cosic's
No. 11 jersey during a ceremony at the final home game this
season, against New Mexico. There is a generation of BYU fans
who never saw Cosic play. They got robbed.
``When we toured Europe a couple of summers ago, everywhere
we went, they knew BYU basketball because of Cosic,'' BYU
coach Dave Rose said.
Cosic's resume reads like he invented basketball. In
Europe, and in his native Yugoslavia, he just about did. A
four-time Olympian and two-time all-American, Cosic is
enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield,
Mass.
Cosic died in May 1995 of lymphatic cancer. The week before
he passed, he was distraught when he talked to his former
coach, Glenn Potter, because he felt he'd defeated the
cancer, but in the process, he'd contracted hepatitis and was
going to get a liver transplant. ``The next thing I knew, he
died,'' Potter said.
Cosic's passion for the game overwhelmed his approach to
play. Cosic took more pleasure in passing the ball and
setting up teammates than shooting. Still he could be heard
yelling ``Opa, Opa'' (I'm open, I'm open). He thought himself
a point guard, but he was a devastating inside player, a
master of the hook, fade-away, running jumper, set shot and
long bomb. He was a showman, a Globetrotter-type star who
oozed charisma on the court in an era absent of freshman
varsity players, dunks and 3-point lines.
Imagine, if he played today.
``This was before the 3-point shot, and you weren't allowed
to dunk the ball,'' remembered guard Belmont Anderson, now a
podiatrist in Las Vegas. ``He had a Larry Bird range with his
outside shot. When he'd take it, the coaches would yell, `no,
no, no . . . good shot, Kresh.' They frowned on taking the
long shot because you weren't rewarded for it. Imagine what
he'd have done if the 3-point shot was in back then or if he
was allowed to dunk.''
Cosic was famous for leading the fast break, making a
pinpoint pass or doing a jackknife lay-up, tucking in his
knees, going airborne, looking like a camel in flight. He
once took off against UCLA's Sidney Wicks, and the Bruin big
man looked perplexed--he'd never seen a 6-11 guy playing
point guard.
``He loved to dribble the ball up court,'' Potter said. ``I
remember one day in scrimmage he took off with the ball
leading the break, and our point guard, Bernie Fryer, ran up
behind him and stole the ball. He was upset. They were on the
same team.''
Said Anderson: ``If you were cutting for the basket and he
had the ball, you had to be alert because Cosic could hit you
with a pass, and if you weren't ready, it would hit you in
the head,''
Cosic was a master of behind-the-back and between-the-leg
deliveries, Potter added. ``I remember one game in the Smith
Fieldhouse, Moni Sarkalahti cut for the basket and Cosic
passed the ball between his own legs, between the legs of the
center guarding him, and hit Moni in the hands for a lay-
in.''
Former BYU assistant coach Pete Witbeck called Cosic the
best center in the college game, better than Bill Walton.
Joe Watts, now executive director of the Utah Golf
Association, was a sportswriter covering Cosic's final home
game in Provo when he penned: ``The thought leaves me with an
empty feeling, a loneliness, a sadness, like I'll be losing a
friend. Something really good will be leaving my life.
Kresimir Cosic has brought me, and many others, some of our
most enjoyable moments in basketball. He is without any
question the greatest passing center I have ever seen in the
game. That alone has been thrilling.''
UTEP's Don Haskins, on whom Hollywood based the movie
``Glory Road,'' called Cosic the best center in the Olympics.
It was a Cosic long bomb at UTEP that handed Haskins his
first defeat on the Miner home court since joining the WAC, a
five-year perfect league home record.
Cosic could have had a solid NBA career. He would have sold
tickets and helped TV ratings. Instead, he chose to return
home to Yugoslavia and help develop others and play for the
Yugoslavian Olympic team. He later became the Croatian
ambassador to the United States.
``That tells you a lot about Cosic when compared to players
today who won't even play in the Olympics,'' Anderson said.
``Cosic cared about the game, his country, more than money
and fame.''
Potter remembers Cosic's late return from playing in the
Olympics before his senior year. He missed several deadlines
to return to Provo. Potter called Cosic twice and asked when
he'd come back.
``Coach, I'll be there,'' Cosic said twice.
Finally, when he showed up in Provo, Potter asked Cosic why
he'd been delayed so long, for nearly a month. Cosic told him
when he was touring Yugoslavia with a national club team, he
once told an audience in a gym he had a film for them to see
later. It was ``Man's Search for Happiness,'' an LDS Church
film explaining the plan of salvation. After that, Cosic
said, his phone was bugged and his passport was confiscated.
Potter recalls an exhausted Cosic leaning against the
basketball standard at practices
[[Page S1641]]
that year. Potter asked him what was up and Cosic told him he
was tired, he'd gone to bed about 3 or 4 in the morning the
past few weeks. Potter asked him why.
Unknown to Potter, Cosic stayed up translating the Book of
Mormon into Croatian. ``It's something he thought was
worthwhile and he had to do.''
Potter remembers Cosic coming in his BYU office and
debating tactics of the game, arguing strategy.
The bottom line was to give him the ball.
He was such a good passer you wanted him to have the ball
in his hands.
When Cosic returned to Zadar, Yugoslavia, to coach, he
invited Potter to visit him three times. One day Cosic called
Potter and asked him to come to Zadar and help him with a
coaching problem.
``What is it?'' Potter asked.
``Coach, I don't know what to tell the guards to do.''
Potter about keeled over laughing. ``All those times in my
office, arguing.''
Cosic ended up a European hero, opening the door for
foreign athletes in American colleges and the NBA. Aside from
filling the new Marriott Center night after night in the
early '70s, his influence was global. Those who learned at
his hand or were influenced by Cosic include Drazen Petrovic,
Toni Kukoc, Dino Radja and Vlade Divac--all players on
Yugoslavia's 1984 Olympic team coached and handpicked by
Cosic.
In his final years, working in Washington, D.C., as
ambassador, Cosic worked to dispel misunderstandings about
Croatia and Bosnia and the Serbian war waging in his native
country.
Cosic told then Deseret News Washington correspondent Lee
Davidson he'd like to get back into coaching basketball
someday but wasn't sure if it was in the cards, with the
cancer and all.
``But it is what I would like to do, not necessarily what I
will do. You never know what will happen. My country may need
me to do something more. Or maybe God will have other
ideas.''
He was right. Within six months of that interview, he died.
____________________