T-wolves ‘biggest fan’ was from Austin area
Mike Stephenson couldn’t talk and still managed to get himself suspended from Minnesota Timberwolves practice for saying too much.
He couldn’t walk and still managed to crawl out of his wheelchair to wipe up a wet spot he noticed on the court before anyone else could get there.
He couldn’t shoot and still managed to leave a lasting impact on the organization that took him in and treated him as one of the guys.
Stephenson, originally from Dexter, was born with cerebral palsy and died earlier this month after the latest in a long line of bouts with pneumonia, leaving Timberwolves past and present to mourn one of the team’s biggest fans, and biggest inspirations. He was 42.
“He was so good for the players and the rest of us,” former coach and executive Flip Saunders said. “They all make a lot of money and are kind of on a different level. But Mike helped them get a better understanding that there’s other things, bigger things, that make the world go round.”
Stephenson was born in Spring Valley, and lived with his parents in Dexter during his early years. Cerebral palsy rendered him unable to talk and sentenced him to life in a wheelchair.
“When he was born the doctors told us he was severely mentally retarded and we should just put him in a home and forget about him,” his mother, Barb, said.
Barb and Randy Stephenson didn’t do that and their son grew up to earn a bachelor’s degree in political science from Southwest State University. During summers, he would return home and tool around Dexter.
“He’d talk to anybody if they had the time to listen,” Randy said, noting it would take a while for Mike to punch statements into his machine.
Although Mike hadn’t lived in the Dexter since 1976, he still had many friends in the area.
“Up until these last two weeks, I really didn’t realize how many people he did touch,” Randy said.
Mike moved to the big city after graduation and latched on with the Timberwolves.
A passionate sports fan, Stephenson started showing up to Timberwolves games regularly near the turn of the century. He had an elaborate electronic board mounted on his wheelchair that would allow him to hit certain buttons, which would prompt a computerized voice to say sentences he constructed. Never bashful, he once chased down former Wolves executive Kevin McHale at a Twins game and asked for his email.
Saunders would see Stephenson scooting around Target Center and struck up a conversation. Stephenson asked to come to practice, using that gregariousness he got from his father.
“I’ll talk to a wall if it will listen,” said Randy Stephenson, also the Dexter mayor.
Saunders started allowing Stephenson to come and watch practice, a privilege granted to very few.
“He just went there one day to buy a package of tickets to go to the game,” Randy said. “He asked if he go down and watch them practice.”
It came back to bite him later when Stephenson called into local sports talk radio station KFAN to break the news that the injured Wally Szczerbiak was practicing and likely to play in an upcoming game. Saunders barred him from practice for a week.
“Loose lips sink ships,” McHale playfully chided him once. But all was clearly forgiven because Stephenson even appeared in the team’s official photo in 2002-03.
Sam Mitchell could always hear Mike coming before he saw him. The hum of Stephenson’s motorized wheelchair or his howl of excitement always getting the forward’s attention for some basketball talk.
“I looked at Mike as an able-bodied person,” Mitchell said. “He got around differently than me, communicated differently than me. But he didn’t let his disability become a disability. Why should I treat him that way? People would always tell me how nice it was for us to spend time with him. I felt honored that Mike took time out to spend time with us. I felt like he was doing us a favor.”
He had a sports blog and a Twitter account and would pepper reporters with sharp, insightful questions about how players fit into the system, who was on the trade block and how much patience owner Glen Taylor would have with the coach on the job at the time.
“He studied up on things,” Saunders said. “He knew a lot about the game, about our players. He couldn’t accept that he had a disability.”
That’s how he was raised, to be as independent as possible. And his enthusiasm was infectious.
“He led a good life,” Randy said. “A lot of people felt sorry for them when they met him but he didn’t want any sympathy. He just wanted to be friends.”
Stephenson overcame cerebral palsy, overcame almost any obstacle put in front of his wheelchair. But he couldn’t overcome the pneumonia that returned regularly thanks to his insistence on eating by mouth rather than through a tube. His doctors warned him that eating that way could cause food to aspirate in his lungs and bring on pneumonia. But Mike just loved food too much, and eating was another activity that made him just like everyone else.
The bouts got more difficult as time went on, the latest coming on Dec. 14. It caused him to vomit, which is extremely dangerous for someone in his condition. By Monday doctors told them “a decision had to be made,” Randy said.
Rather than endure it any longer, Randy said Mike decided to enter hospice care and say goodbye.
“I hesitated,” Randy said. “But Mike just kept shaking his head yes. He knew what was going to happen.”
A funeral was Dec. 22 in Elkton and he was laid to rest in Dexter, where his parents live. The Timberwolves honored him during their game on Dec. 26 against McHale’s Houston Rockets. His picture was put up on the big screen over the court.
“They had a moment of silence for him, which was kind of touching,” Randy said. “What word do you use to describe the Timberwolves for doing that for him? Unbelievable.”
One thing is for sure, the kid his parents were told to leave behind won’t be forgotten anytime soon.
“Mike was a true fan,” Mitchell said. “He loved the players and he loved the Timberwolves. Through the good times and bad times, he was always right there in the tunnel.”
—The Associated Press contributed to this report.