It’s a mystery that’s hung over the New York Knicks since 1997. Fans have debated its answers online for years. Former players have kept quiet. For nearly 20 years, fans of hip-hop and basketball have waited for their “Deep Throat” to this burning question: Which New York Knick was Notorious B.I.G. rapping about in the song “I Got A Story To Tell”from his final album, “Life After Death”?
Holy crap. Anthony Mason? That’s damn right.
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figcaption class=”image__caption” js-image-caption”> Poor Anthony Mason.
Flash the heat on ’em, he stood emotionless
Dropped the glass screamin, “Don’t blast here’s the stashA hundred cash just don’t shoot my ass, please!”
N**** pullin’ mad G’s out the floor
Put stacks in a Prada knapsack, hit the door
Grab the keys to the five, call my n**** on the cell, “Bring some weed I got a story to tell, uhh”
Yup, yup, yup! Fully masked, Biggie pulled a gun on Mason and robbed him of thousands of dollars. Ouch! Not a good look for Mason. At the end of the song, Biggie retells his story to his friends in a recording, and they all laugh at how scared Mason was at the sight of a gun. Never has getting robbed and cheated on been so embarrassing.
But remember, for decades, nobody knew which Knick Biggie was rapping about. He left one clue in the song’s outro: “One of them six-five n*****, I don’t know.” Fans of basketball and hip-hop poured over Knicks rosters and their height measurements from 1995 to 1997, when “Life After Death” was recorded. Possibilities that were floated out there over the years: John Starks, Larry Johnson, Allan Houston and Hubert Davis.
Starks, however, was cleared in September 2014, when “Highly Questionable” asked him whether he was the player in “I Got A Story To Tell.” He denied that, but did confirm that the story was, in fact, true:
They gave the people what they want.
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