With all due respect, it clearly was. He was always rather thin but when he returned to play, he played like a different man. He was tentative and shied away from contact after that attack.
If I recall correctly, his average points per game, rebounds, and blocked shots dropped dramatically after the attack. As a result, he averaged less than 14 points a game compared with about 20ppg in his sophomore year.
Witte played tentatively throughout the rest of the season and his short pro career in which he averaged 4.5 points in his best year and less than half that his last two years.
As Woody always said, from every bad thing you get a good thing. Maybe all of this focused Witte on a ministry that helped others and maybe that made him happier than a pro career ever might have made him.
Thanks for the backup on the post I made over a year ago, Steve.
I'd pretty much forgotten about it, but whenever the topic is brought up, I'm ready to go off. Like I stated earlier, I was 10 when this happened, yet it's still so crystal clear. Luke Witte was an absolute STAR before this crap happened. And he was never the same after. The poster who disagreed with my original post stated that through Luke's ministry he's learned to forgive. Thats fine and wonderful, but my point was that there was tension between him and Brewer when they were with the Cavs, and that they were never "buddies" as I stated. Luke may have "forgiven" but I'll guarantee that to this day that he doesn't "like" the guy, or any of the other thugs that showed up that night, nor is there any way in hell that he should like them. Useless bunch of "thugs-turned-mugs" by the most piss poor Coach in the history of basketball. When cocksucker Stepien brought Musselman up here to coach the Cavs back many moons ago, the Cavs pretty much died in the eyes of most fans. It took his dismissal and a few years to get the fans back.
Peace.