By 1992, his eighth season with the Philadelphia 76ers, Charles Barkley already had a lot to say about the league in his book ‘Outrageous'. He was the new all-star in Philly who replaced the legendary Julius Erving, and had a lot to prove not only to his fans, former coaches, and teammates, but to himself. Outrageous is an autobiography that roughly follows the story of Sir Charles’ entrance into the National Basketball Association.
If you’ve ever heard of Charles Barkley, there's a good chance that there was some controversy that was tied with his name. It seems as if a lot of people associate a “bad boy” image with Barkley, and as is the case with every story, there is a second side to it. You get the no filter opinion on a lot of aspects of professional and amateur sports as a player, and his personal perspective on the management and coaching (Including his hatred for coach Bob Knight and 76er owner Harold Katz).
Barkley grew up in Leeds Alabama and was raised by his single mother and grandmother. He shares his experience of growing up without a father figure, how he felt cheated and missed the companionship seeing other kids with their fathers. He started playing basketball in middle school, but said he never really excelled until his junior year of high school. He entered his senior season with no college offers until the Alabama state tournament, where he gave the state’s top recruit Bobby Lee Hurt the business. He played at Auburn for 3 years before declaring for the NBA draft and being picked 5th overall.
He had a unique entrance into his first season with the 76er’s. Two seasons before Barkley arrived, the 76ers were a dominant championship team. Even though Barkley was good, he didn’t quite fit into the lineup under Billy Cunningham who “didn’t start rookies, period.” (pg. 130). This of course never stopped Barkley from wanting to play well, and actually gave him the challenge of proving his coach wrong, an accomplishment he never shies away from.
Charles Barkley is no different from the common person, and has faced his fair share of challenges throughout his lifetime. Despite growing up without a father, he found a mentor to help fill that void in his life, Moses Malone. Throughout Outrageous, Barkley references Moses Malone’s influence on him throughout the book. When Malone was traded to the Washington Bullets in 1986, Barkley comments in his book how devastating to his mental health the move was, saying “it screwed me up a great deal for some time because in losing Moses, I lost another father figure, someone who was more important to me than anyone in my life,” (pg. 150).
Charles Barkley made it clear he did not want to be looked at as a role model. In fact, he doesn’t believe any athlete or entertainer should be looked at as a role model. He expresses this thought while talking about an experience he had hosting a radio show, where a woman in the crowd grabbed the microphone and told him he was “being a poor role model for young people who look up to professional athletes.” Charles pushes the narrative that younger people should look to someone who works hard and contributes to their family and society.
Reading the book in the present day brings to light one of the major flaws, some of his points are not relative to today’s world. The book was written in 1992 after all, but a good amount of what he talks about relating to the NBA was out of date by the next season. Nobody could have predicted who was going to win the NBA finals the following season, or the following 3 seasons for that.
I would suggest the book to anyone like me, someone who had a hard set opinion on the type of person Charles Barkley was. You are not going to agree with everything he says, every choice he makes, or his opinions on certain people, but you are going to learn about the story of Charles Barkely that the media does not report on (Or at least the other side of the story). Maybe you know him as one of the 80s and 90s most dominant players, an asshole that does not care about what people think of him, the guy who spat on a little girl courtside, or the fourth host on Inside the NBA who never won a championship, but I guarantee everyone has something to learn after reading Outrageous.