Student Forum With Former Senator Bill Bradley

By Steve Vivona

On November 23 former New Jersey Senator and Basketball Hall-of-Famer Bill Bradley visited St. John’s to impart some wisdom learned both on the basketball court and the floor of the Senate to students in the University’s Sport Management Program. Sen. Bradley was invited by his former teammate from the New York Knicks Dr. Dick Barnett, now a Professor of Sport Management at St. John’s.

Senator Bradley recalled the trials for the 1964 Olympic basketball team were held at St. John’s as well as several practices during his rookie season with the Knicks. “So I have fond memories of the pain I felt here at St. John’s,” he quipped.

“We’re living in a world of incredible change,” he observed. “Like a good team we have to be able to deal with it in an effective way.” Senator Bradley discussed forces that he believed were shaping today’s world as well as the business of sports management, most notably globalization and technology.

“The business of sports management is now global. It’s not simply local,” he observed, adding that 25% of current NBA players were from foreign countries. “When you’re looking for players you look all over the world.” He added that the media has also reinforced this idea, noting that on a political trip Russia several years ago students asked him if he knew Michael Jordan.

“Unless you have a global view of the business of sports management you’re not going to be as good as you can possibly be,” Senator Bradley stressed.

 Technology is another major force shaping the world of sports management, Senator Bradley told his audience. “Technology makes globalization happen faster. It makes you better. It enables you to do more things in a shorter period of time with less input.”

He added that technology has become a much more pervasive influence in today’s sports world than when he was a player. Companies offer a battery of physical and psychological tests designed to gauge how effective a player will be at a certain position or whether he/she can handle the demands of professional sports.

“The business of sports today has changed dramatically. There were no courses in Sport Management when I was in college,” Senator Bradley stressed. “It’s become a global business driven by technology. But at its core it is what it always has been. That is making a judgment about another person’s character and personal qualities.” 

He added that gauging personal qualities is essential for building teams with a good moral character. “You have to ask yourself, ‘Does this person have discipline and resilience? How well will this person bounce back from adversity? Can this person imagine doing something differently?’”

Following his presentation Senator Bradley took questions from the audience and was presented with a special plaque from Dean Kathleen MacDonald of the College of Professional Studies as well as a Red Storm jersey bearing his number from his playing days with the Knicks.

View the Photo Gallery from the forum. >