
Jan. 23--MIAMI -- For the fifth time as a member of the Miami Heat , Alonzo Mourning is stepping away.
This time, he won't be coming back. After a career distinguished by his on-court performance and off-court dignity, the seven-time All-Star center announced his retirement Thursday.
"After 16 years, I truly feel that it is best that I retire from the game of Basketball," Mourning said in front of a sign that read, "Warriors Do Not Live in the Past, the Past is Dead, Life is Now, and the Future is Waiting."
He then gathered himself and added, "At 38 years old, I feel like I've physically done all I can for this game. As God only knows, it's been an amazing ride.
"It's not a sad day. But it's a day to celebrate. I could think of a million people right now that would love to walk the path that I walked."
Just weeks shy of his 39th birthday, and after more than a year of rehabilitation from a devastating knee injury, Mourning made his announcement in the same room where he had announced a previous retirement because of kidney illness and later announced a return to the team.
A South Florida icon respected as much for his charitable foundation as his ferocious dunks and blocked shots, Mourning in recent months had spoken of a life larger than Basketball, a life rich with his two children and civic endeavors.
"My health is more important than anything," he said Thursday. "God willing, I'll be able to live another 40 or 50 years. And I want to do it in a comfortable state. Right now I'm there."
The next stop for Mourning likely will be in the Basketball Hall of Fame, after a required waiting period that, in the interim, will feature the retirement of his No. 33 jersey.
A two-time Defensive Player of the Year, Mourning accomplished his ultimate professional goal with the Heat's 2006 NBA championship team.
He said if the Heat had not been in the middle of the pack and not been coming off a league-worst season, he might have been tempted to try another comeback.
After his last injury, he stressed a desire to return, retaining his locker at AmericanAirlines Arena and working out frequently.
"I saw that light at the end of the tunnel, that, 'Hey, I could get back and do this,'" he said. "But I wasn't quite confident and sure that I could do it at the level that all the fans and me, myself, wanted to."
In recent days, be it his charity work, his attendance at the presidential inauguration, or having to put his body through more grueling workouts, he decided it was time.
That doesn't mean he's completely leaving the game. He has done network television and has mentioned moving into a team's front office.
"I think a part of me always wants to be connected with the game," he said. "I know that there will be opportunities for me out there."
In many ways, closure came not Thursday, but Wednesday night, in the locker room, with guard Dwyane Wade and forward Udonis Haslem, the team's lone remaining contributors from the 2006 title team.
"I just told them that I love them," Mourning said.
That passion, Wade said, will endure.
"He's still what Miami Heat Basketball is all about," Wade said. "For any player who comes here, Alonzo is always going to be the mirror image of what you would like to be."
Ira Winderman can be reached at iwinderman@SunSentinel.com
2
Times named the Defensive Player of the Year (1998-99 and 1999-00).
5
Blocked shots in the title-clinching Game 6 of the NBA Finals in 2006.
3
The Heat's all-time leader in points (9,459), rebounds (4,807) and blocked shots (1,625).
Inside
Riley looking at big picture. ?? Page 2
Mourning timeline from Hornets to retirement. ?? Page 3
Video
Is Alonzo Mourning the most popular sports figure in South Florida? Ethan J. Skolnick tackles that question in a report at SunSentinel .com/Heat
To see more of the Sun Sentinel or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.sun-sentinel.com/. Copyright (c) 2009, Sun Sentinel, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services. For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write to The Permissions Group Inc., 1247 Milwaukee Ave., Suite 303, Glenview, IL 60025, USA.