Outside of basketball, Malone has attracted criticism for his personal life, most notably for his impregnation of a 13-year-old when he was 20.[7][8]
Early life and college
Born inSummerfield, Louisiana,[2] Malone was the youngest of nine children and was raised on a farm by his single mother, Shirley. Shedrick Hay, his father, was married to a different woman and raising a family with her. Shedrick committed suicide when Karl was 14,[9] though Malone didn't disclose the suicide until 1994. As a child, Malone often worked on the farm, chopped trees, hunted, and fished. He attended Summerfield High School and led his basketball team to three consecutive Louisiana Class C titles from 1979 to his senior season in 1981.
Although recruited byUniversity of Arkansas basketball coachEddie Sutton, Malone enrolled atLouisiana Tech University, which was closer to home. He joined theLouisiana Tech Bulldogs basketball team in his second year because his grades were too low for freshman eligibility; Malone played under coachAndy Russo.[10] In his second season with Louisiana Tech (1983–84), Malone averaged 18.7 points and 9.3 rebounds per game.[10][11] Louisiana Tech finished the 1984–85 season 29–3, at the top of theSouthland Conference, and advanced to the NCAA tournament for the first time in school history; the team finished at theSweet 16 round.[12] In each of his three seasons with the Louisiana Tech Bulldogs, Malone was an All-Southland selection.[10]
Professional career
Utah Jazz (1985–2003)
Early years (1985–1987)
In the1985 NBA draft, theUtah Jazz selected Karl Malone with the 13th overall pick. According to Malone's official NBA biography: "If professional scouts had correctly predicted the impact Karl Malone would have on the NBA, Malone would have been picked much higher than 13th in the 1985 NBA Draft."[13] In fact, Malone was so convinced theDallas Mavericks were going to select him with the eighth choice that he had already rented an apartment inDallas. Instead, the Mavericks selectedDetlef Schrempf.[14] Under head coachFrank Layden, Malone averaged 14.9 points and 8.9 rebounds in his first season and made the 1986NBA All-Rookie Team after coming in third forRookie of the Year votes.[13] On January 14, 1986, the Jazz beat theHouston Rockets 105–102 to snap the Rockets' 20-game winning streak at home. Malone scored 29 points in that game, including four free throws followed by a three-pointer byPace Mannion to rally from a 96–89 deficit with 5 minutes and 36 seconds remaining to a 96–96 tie.[15] For the third consecutive season, the Jazz made the postseason but lost the first round of the1986 playoffs to the Dallas Mavericks. In the four playoff games, Malone improved in his scoring with a 20 points per game average but was still subpar in shooting (49.6% field goals) and rebounds (8.9). After his second season, Malone became the Jazz's leader in average scoring (21.7 points) and rebounding (10.4 rebounds); in 24 of 29 games between February 1 and April 3, 1987, he was the leading scorer of the game.[13]
All-Star and team offense leader (1987–1996)
By the1987–88 season, Malone was the foundation of the offense andJohn Stockton was the floor general. Malone made his first All-Star Game in 1988 on the strength of 27.1 points per game, and made his first All-NBA team at the end of the season. This was the first of 14 consecutive All-Star appearances for Malone.[13] In the1988 NBA All-Star Game, Malone led the Western Conference All-Star team with 22 points.[16] The Jazz finished 47–35, third place in the Midwest Division, and defeated thePortland Trail Blazers in the first round.[17] In the next round, the defending championsLos Angeles Lakers, led by perennial All-StarsMagic Johnson,James Worthy, andKareem Abdul-Jabbar, defeated the Jazz in seven games. In the seventh game of the series, Malone scored 31 points and had 15 rebounds, but the Lakers beat the Jazz 109–98 and eventually won the1988 NBA Finals. In 11 playoff games in 1988, Malone averaged 29.7 points and 11.8 rebounds.[13]
Malone circa 1988
Malone signed a 10-year contract during the 1988 offseason worth $18 million.[16] In December 1988,Jerry Sloan succeeded Layden as head coach as Layden became team president.[18] Malone averaged 29.1 points in1988–89, good for second in the NBA behindMichael Jordan, and 10.7 rebounds, which was fifth in the league.[19] This scoring average was Malone's highest so far in his career. At the1989 NBA All-Star Game, Malone finished with 28 points, 9 rebounds and 3 assists en route to his firstNBA All-Star MVP. The Jazz finished 51–31, but were swept in three games in the first round by theGolden State Warriors. This season marked Malone's first with theAll-NBA First Team honor.[13]
During the1989–90, Malone increased his scoring to 31 points and his rebounding to 11.1 a game and again was selected to the All-NBA First Team.[13] In the first game of the season, Malone recorded 40 points, 16 rebounds and 5 assists in a 122–113 win over the Denver Nuggets.[20] On December 5, 1989, Malone scored 21 points and grabbed 19 rebounds in a 94–80 win over the home team, Cleveland Cavaliers.[21] Seventeen days later, Malone recorded 52 points and 17 rebounds in a 114–100 road win over the Charlotte Hornets.[22] On January 27, 1990, Malone scored a career-high 61 points in a 144–96 victory against theMilwaukee Bucks.[23] He made 21 of 26field goals and 19 of 23 free throws.[24] It was the most points scored by a Jazz player since the team moved to Utah from New Orleans. Although Malone was voted to the NBA All-Star Game for the third consecutive season, because of an ankle injury he sat out the game.[25] He led the team in scoring in 24 of the last 26 games of the season; on March 29, 1990, against theGolden State Warriors, Malone scored 49 points, and on April 12 against theLakers he scored 45. The Jazz, finishing the season 55–27, lost to thePhoenix Suns within five games in the first round of theplayoffs, in which Malone averaged 25.2 points and 10.2 rebounds. For the second straight season, Malone finished second in the league in points per game behind Michael Jordan.[13]
From January 19 to March 4, 1991, Malone led the Jazz in scoring for 19 straight games; after starting the1990–91 season 7–8 the team went 21–9 in January and February 1991. Malone scored 16 points and took 11 rebounds in the1991 NBA All-Star Game, his fourth consecutive All-Star appearance for the West, and averaged 29.0 points and 11.8 rebounds each regular-season game. He was among four Jazz players with double-figure scoring averages, the others being the newly acquiredJeff Malone (no relation) as well as John Stockton andThurl Bailey. In four games, the Jazz eliminated thePhoenix Suns in the first round of the1991 playoffs but lost to thePortland Trail Blazers in the second round. Malone made the All-NBA First Team for the third consecutive season.[13]
As he had done in 1989–90, Malone finished the 1991–92 season second in the league in scoring, averaging 28.0 points per game. He made the All-NBA First Team for the fourth straight year.[13] It was also a breakout season for the Jazz; during the1992 NBA Playoffs, the team made the Western Conference Finals for the first time in franchise history.[26] Malone scored 40 or more points in five games this season.[13] Despite his continued success and achievements, Malone encountered trouble for committing aflagrant foul. On December 14, 1991, when the Jazz played against theDetroit Pistons, Malone elbowed the Pistons'Isiah Thomas on the forehead. Thomas needed 40 stitches over his eye, and the NBA suspended Malone for the next game without pay and fined him $10,000.[27] In its first-ever franchise Western Conference Finals appearance, in six games the Jazz lost in the playoffs for the second straight season to thePortland Trail Blazers. Malone averaged 29.1 points on 52.1% shooting and 11.9 rebounds in the 1992 playoffs.[13]
Throughout the 1990s, Malone put up stellar numbers: in1992–93, he averaged 27.0 points and 11.2 rebounds per game, 25.2 points and 11.5 rebounds in1993–94, 26.7 points and 10.6 rebounds in1994–95, and 25.7 points and 9.8 rebounds in1995–96.[28] Following the1992 Summer Olympics in which Malone helped theAmerican national team, dubbed the "Dream Team", win a gold medal, Malone expressed opposition toMagic Johnson, who had recently tested positive forHIV and retired from the NBA in 1991, making a comeback to the league. Malone's point of view diverged from the support for Johnson from his Olympic andLos Angeles Lakers teammates, and the NBA implementedAIDS-related precautions after Johnson's revelation.[29] On February 4, 1993, in a game against the Lakers, Malone surpassed 16,000 career points. He and his teammate John Stockton shared theAll-Star MVP award in1993. In the West's 135–132 overtime win, Malone scored 28 points and pulled in 10 rebounds.[13]
Malone started all 82 games of 1993–94 and helped the Jazz make the Western Conference Finals for the second time in franchise history and his career. In his ninth season, Malone led the Jazz in scoring (25.2), rebounding (11.5), and blocked shots (126), made 49.7% of field goal attempts, and played 3,329 minutes, the second-most that season in the league behindLatrell Sprewell's 3,533.[13] On March 29, 1994, Malone recorded a career-high 23 rebounds, but the Jazz lost to theGolden State Warriors 116–113. However, Malone made only 8 of 29 field goals that night and commented post-game: "My rebounds are not going to be tomorrow's headline...Tomorrow's headline is going to be all those easy shots I missed."[30] The eventualNBA championHouston Rockets eliminated the Jazz from the Western Conference Finals in five games.[13] Although Malone scored 32 points in the Jazz' 104–99 Game 2 loss, along with Stockton's 18, they and the Jazz were no match for the Rockets with high-scoring centerHakeem Olajuwon. Midway into the fourth quarter, Malone and Olajuwon scored on four consecutive possessions by their teams, leading up to a 93–93 tie.[31]
For the first time in team history, in 1994–95, the Utah Jazz won 60 games. In addition, the team won 15 consecutive away games (the best such streak by the team, then the second-best streak in the league). Malone's 26.7 points per game ranked fourth in the NBA, and Malone became the 19th NBA player to reach 20,000 career points on January 20, 1995. In the1995 playoffs, the Jazz lost to theHouston Rockets for the second consecutive year, this time in the first round.[13] The Rockets becameNBA champions for the second straight season.
On January 13, 1996, Malone renewed his contract with the Jazz.[28] The Jazz only made it as far as the Western Conference Finals in this period, losing to thePortland Trail Blazers (1992), theHouston Rockets (1994) and theSeattle SuperSonics (1996).
Western Conference championship years (1996–1998)
Malone in 1997
Malone returned from agold medal winning-effort at the 1996 Summer Olympics leading the Jazz to two consecutive NBA Finals appearances. During the 1996–97 season, Malone put up a resurgent 27.4 points per game while leading the Jazz to a 64–18 record, the most regular-season wins in team history. Malone won his firstNBA Most Valuable Player award, and the Jazz were the top team in theWestern Conference and the playoff champions in that conference.[10][32] After sweeping theLos Angeles Clippers and defeating theLos Angeles Lakers, the Jazz took on theHouston Rockets, led by the aging trio ofHakeem Olajuwon,Charles Barkley, andClyde Drexler. The Jazz beat them in six games (the last victory coming on a last-second shot by Stockton). Malone finally reached the NBA Finals in1997, where they played theJordan-ledChicago Bulls. In a matchup of the two previous MVPs, the Bulls won the first two games at theUnited Center. Malone struggled from the field, going 6 of 20 for 20 points in Game 2. However, the Jazz won the next two games at theDelta Center behind Malone's 37 points in Game 3 and 23 in Game 4, including a game-winning fastbreak lay-up off a spectacular assist by Stockton in the last minute. The Bulls won the next two games and the series, with Malone struggling from the foul line in Game 6.
The next season saw the Jazz once again dominate. Malone put up 27 points per game and just missed out on his second MVP award, losing to Jordan. Nevertheless, the Jazz posted a 62–20 record, which was the best in the NBA. The Jazz once again were seated at the top of the Western Conference, and in the 1998 playoffs they defeated theRockets,Spurs, andLakers via a sweep en route to their second consecutiveFinals appearance. The rematch with theChicago Bulls would start differently, as Malone put up 21 points and the Jazz won Game 1, 88–85. Malone found himself unable to put up consistently high numbers, due in large part to the swarming defense of defendersDennis Rodman andScottie Pippen. In Game 5 of the 1998 Finals, Malone led the Jazz in scoring with 39 points, and the Jazz beat the Bulls 83–81 in Chicago. Malone scored his 39 points on 17-for-27 shooting and also made 9 rebounds, 5 assists, and 1 turnover. Many of his shots were "mid-range turnaround jumpers from the left side".[33]
Asixth game of the Finals was held at the Delta Center in Salt Lake City, and by trailing the series 3–2 the team was one loss away from losing the series.[34] Malone scored 31 points and made 11 rebounds. Although the Jazz held leads of 49–45 by halftime and 66–61 after the third quarter, the team squandered their lead in the fourth and would lose after Malone lost a pass in thepost.[35] With 18.9 seconds left in the fourth quarter and the Jazz leading 86–85, Bulls guard/forwardMichael Jordan stole the ball just passed to Malone and with 5.2 seconds left made a jump shot that gave the Bulls an 87–86 lead.John Stockton missed a game-winning jump shot. Jordan's shot has been dubbed the "greatest shot" of his career, and the Bulls' 1998 title was their third consecutive championship and sixth since 1991.[36]
Later seasons with Jazz (1998–2003)
On November 12, 1998, during thelockout that shortened the 1998–99 season, Malone declared on his Los Angeles-based radio show that he would demand a trade from the Jazz after the end of the lockout, citing a lack of respect from the team ownerLarry H. Miller and the Utah media, which he dubbed "goons".[37] A week later, Malone backed off on his trade demands, stating in an interview that he would still love to play for the Jazz with "everything else being equal".[38] The NBA regular season resumed in February and Malone won his second MVP award, with the Jazz going 37–13 during the 50-game regular season. They lost in the second round that year to theTrail Blazers, and for the next several years the Jazz fell out of title contention. The Jazz won Game 5 of the second-round1999 round against the Blazers 88–71 to force a sixth game, and Malone scored 23 points. In that game, Malone elbowed the Blazers'Brian Grant, something he also did in Game 1 and for which he was fined $10,000.[39] Despite the decline of his team and his advancing age, Malone averaged 25.5, 23.2, 22.4, and 20.6 points per game in his last four seasons with Utah. In the 2002–2003 season, Malone passedWilt Chamberlain for second on the all-time scoring list with 36,374 points. He became a free agent in 2003, the year Stockton had retired. For the time Malone and Stockton played together on the Jazz (1985–2003), the two formed one of the most productive guard–forward combinations in NBA history.[citation needed] Playing coachJerry Sloan's scrappy and tough style and perfecting thepick and roll to a maximum degree of efficiency, the Jazz regularly made the playoffs with a winning record. Malone led the Jazz to multiple 50-win seasons with the exception of1992–93 (47–35).
Los Angeles Lakers (2003–2004)
Malone with the Lakers
Malone played in the NBA for one more season, joining theLos Angeles Lakers in an attempt to win a championship. All-Star point guardGary Payton also joined the Lakers in an attempt to win his first NBA championship, and with Malone, Payton,Shaquille O'Neal andKobe Bryant, the Lakers were favorites to win the title. The Lakers rolled out to a dominant 18–3 start to the season, but on December 21, Malone suffered a knee injury against thePhoenix Suns that forced him to miss 39 games. Malone returned by the season's end, as the Lakers entered the playoffs with 56 wins and the number 2 seed in the playoffs. In the first round against theHouston Rockets, Malone posted double-figure scoring in 4 games, including a 30-point and 13-rebound effort in the Lakers' game 4 victory. The Lakers advanced to face theSan Antonio Spurs in the conference semifinals, where Malone played a critical role on defense againstTim Duncan, despite not scoring more than 13 points in any game during the series. The Lakers defeated the Spurs in 6 games in the conference semifinals before defeating theMinnesota Timberwolves in 6 games in the conference finals to advance to the NBA Finals. He scored 17 points on two occasions against Minnesota and averaged 11.5 points and 8.8 rebounds a game in the playoffs.
The 40-year-old Malone's quest to win an NBA championship failed as the Lakers were defeated in five games by theDetroit Pistons in the2004 NBA Finals. Malone sprained his right knee in game three and played injured in games three and four before missing the fifth and final game of the series.
Retirement
After his season with the Lakers, Malone became afree agent. He had knee surgery during the summer of 2004, and personal problems[40] with Lakers guardKobe Bryant[41] prompted Malone not to return for another season with the team. TheNew York Knicks sought to sign Malone for 2004–05.[42] In early February 2005, prior to the2005 NBA All-Star Game, Malone's agent speculated that Malone would sign with theSan Antonio Spurs.[43] Spurs head coachGregg Popovich confirmed his team was interested in signing Malone, should he decide to play one more season.[44]
At a press conference on February 13, 2005, at the Delta Center, Malone officially announced his retirement from the NBA after 19 seasons.[45]
The Utah Jazz retired Malone's jersey number 32 on March 23, 2006, when the Jazz hosted theWashington Wizards. He was also honored with the unveiling of abronze statue outside theEnergySolutions Arena next to teammateJohn Stockton, and the renaming of a portion of 100 South inSalt Lake City in his honor. The location where the statues stand is now the intersection of Stockton and Malone.[46]
Olympic career
In 1984, Malone and Stockton were both cut from theUnited States men's national basketball team but joined the team in 1992, when national basketball teams welcomed NBA players. Prior to that only professionals from leagues other than the NBA were allowed to compete, and that greatly disadvantaged the United States.[47]
TheOregon National Guard made Malone an honorary member after the U.S. national team beat theVenezuelan team 127–80 in the gold-medal game of the 1992 Olympic qualifier tournament.[48]
Malone played in the1992 and1996 Summer Olympics and won gold medals with the US team both years. In the 1996 Olympics, Malone averaged 8.4 points, 4.5 rebounds, and 1.4 assists per game and made 56.9% of two-point field goal attempts and 52.9% of free-throw attempts.[49] In 2010, he was inducted into Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame along with the rest of the originalDream Team.[50]
Coaching career
Louisiana Tech (2007–2011)
On May 31, 2007, Malone became director of basketball promotion and assistant strength and conditioning coach at his alma materLouisiana Tech University and donated $350,000 to the university athletic department.[51]
On May 29, 2013, Malone returned to the Utah Jazz to work as a big man coach.[52]
Player profile
Malone's statue outside theDelta Center (then Vivint Smart Home Arena, pictured in 2017)
Malone is regarded as one of the best power forwards in the history of the NBA and was known as "the Mailman" for his consistent delivery.[16] He collected two regular-season MVP Awards, eleven NBA First Team nominations and was also selected to the NBA All-Defensive First Team three times. In 2022, to commemorate the NBA's 75th AnniversaryThe Athletic ranked their top 75 players of all time, and named Malone as the 16th greatest player in NBA history.[53]
Malone wore number 32 for the Utah Jazz. He worenumber 11 for the Los Angeles Lakers (number 32 was retired honoring Magic Johnson, though Johnson himself offered to have it unretired for Malone to wear, an offer Malone declined), though he was photographed with a number 32 jersey at his Lakers introductory press conference. Malone also wore number 11 for the Dream Team, as the players wore 4 to 15 to adhere toFIBA rules.
Malone has also played 193 games without winning anNBA championship, the most in playoff history.[54]
He also owns two car dealerships in Utah and one in Louisiana. Karl Malone Toyota is in the Salt Lake City suburb ofDraper, Utah, while Karl Malone Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram is inHeber City, Utah. Malone previously co-owned a Toyota dealership inAlbuquerque, New Mexico, withLarry H. Miller Dealerships, but sold his share in 2010. He also co-owned a Honda dealership inSandy, Utah, withJohn Stockton, but sold his share, again to Larry H. Miller Dealerships, in 2010. In 2019, he bought a Toyota dealership inRuston, Louisiana, now called Karl Malone Toyota of Ruston.
Malone starred in the 1994 filmRockwell as a member ofPorter Rockwell's team.[57] He had a guest appearance as himself and as a superhero named "Pulverizer" in theStatic Shock episode "Hoop Squad".[58] Malone also made a cameo appearance as himself in the 2004 comedy filmSoul Plane and appears in an episode ofBrother's Keeper from 1998.[59] He also has a recurring role in a skit called "All Alone with Karl Malone" on the television seriesJimmy Kimmel Live!.[60]
After the1998 NBA Finals, Malone and Chicago Bulls power forwardDennis Rodman participated in aprofessional wrestling match inWorld Championship Wrestling (WCW) at theirBash at the Beach event in July 1998. Malone, a wrestling fan, teamed with his friend,Diamond Dallas Page, against Rodman andHulk Hogan.[61][62] In a poorly received match by some wrestling critics, the two power forwards exchanged "rudimentary headlocks, slams and clotheslines" for 23 minutes.[63] Malone and DDP lost to Rodman and Hogan. The event was a massive financial success for the company, drawing the highest pay-per-view buyrate of 1998 and one of the highest in the company's history.[64]
Malone married Kay Kinsey, winner of the 1988Miss Idaho USA pageant, on December 24, 1990.[65] They have four children: daughter Kadee (born November 8, 1991),[66] daughter Kylee (born April 7, 1993), son Karl Jr. "K.J." (born May 8, 1995), and daughter Karlee (born 1998).[65] K.J. played football atLSU,[67] and was invited to the 2018 NFL Combine.[68]
In 1998, thetabloid newspaperThe Globe reported that Malone had been a defendant in paternity lawsuits, filed shortly after Malone began his professional basketball career in the late 1980s. The newspaper alleged that he was the father of three children: two by Bonita Ford, a woman approximately his age from his hometown of Summerfield, Louisiana, and one with Gloria Bell, who was 13 when she gave birth. Malone and Ford were both 17 when twins Daryl andCheryl Ford were born;[69] Malone was a 20-year-old college sophomore when Bell, at age 13, gave birth toDemetress Bell.[70] No statutory rape charges were filed.[71] In the aftermath of theGlobe story, Malone met the Ford twins for the first time since visiting them in the hospital after they were born.[72] Malone did not meet with Bell at that time, and his attorney insisted that Malone had settled the lawsuits before any conclusive establishment of paternity and thus still did not know whether he was truly the father of any of the children.
TheTribune confirmed that the judge in the Bell lawsuit ruled Malone to be the father, not based on presented evidence, but rather because Malone did not respond to the suit. The paper also examined court documents detailing the evidence that was to have been presented had Malone responded and a trial ensued. One item listed was a laboratory blood test that concluded with over 99% certainty that Bell's father was either Malone or a brother of Malone. The paper also reported that applying the same blood sample to the Ford twins resulted in a similarly high probability of paternity by Malone.[73][74] According to theTribune, Malone challenged the court's ruling with regard to Bell, claiming that the judgment holding him responsible for $125 per week in child support, plus past and future medical expenses, was excessive. Before Malone's appeal was adjudicated, the lawsuit was settled on confidential terms. In the case of the Ford twins, Malone was ruled to be their father when he violated a court order by refusing to reveal his assets or submit to aDNA test. Thereafter, another out-of-court settlement was reached.[73]
By the fall of 1998, Malone accepted his paternity of the Ford twins, and Kay Malone said publicly that the twins were members of the Malone family.[75] Since that time, Karl Malone has maintained a relationship with the twins, each of whom later played college basketball at his alma mater, Louisiana Tech. Cheryl Ford went on to a professional basketball career with theDetroit Shock of theWomen's National Basketball Association.
Bell has played as anNFL offensive lineman for theBuffalo Bills,Philadelphia Eagles, andDallas Cowboys. In 2008,The Buffalo News reported that Bell's first ever meeting with Malone came shortly after Bell graduated from high school. According to Bell, Malone told him then that it was "too late" for them to have a father-son relationship.[76] However, in 2014, the two repaired their relationship and were in regular contact by 2018.[77]
In 2018, Malone said about his relationship with his older children, "I didn't handle it right; I was wrong. ... Father Time is the biggest thief that's out there, and you can't get that back."[77]
Religion
Malone has identified as aBaptist in the past, and his wife and children areCatholics.[78] However, he is said to have served asgodfather to Samuel, the son ofDavid Stockton.[79] The Stocktons are devout Catholics whose Church requires that godparents also be Catholics.[80]
Malone is an avid hunter and fisherman.[77] He owns a summer home near theKenai River in Alaska.[84] In July 1998, Malone joined his Jazz teammatesChris Morris andBryon Russell, some family members, corporate leadership ofQ-Lube, and winners of a Q-Lube contest for a four-day fishing trip to Alaska.[85]
^"Rocket Streak Stopped at 20".The New York Times. Associated Press. January 15, 1986.Archived from the original on May 15, 2018. RetrievedJuly 26, 2011.
^abFantin, Linda. Spirit vs. Letter of Law in Malone Paternity Suits.The Salt Lake Tribune, July 19, 1998.
^Fantin, Linda. Three Children Who Grew Up in the Shadow of Karl Malone; In spite of settling paternity suits, Jazz superstar never acknowledged Louisiana teens. But recently he made contact with twins; Children Claim Karl Malone Is Their Father.The Salt Lake Tribune, July 19, 1998.
^Siegel, Lee. Kay Malone Brings Message of Love To Families Panel; Keynote speaker enlivens conference with Mailman household anecdotes; Family The Focus at Utah Conference.The Salt Lake Tribune, November 8, 1998.
^"Doug Robinson: Karl Malone is one of a kind".Deseret News. August 10, 2010. Archived fromthe original on October 19, 2015. RetrievedDecember 6, 2012.Maybe Malone didn't even know he was the one who was saying those things, because he tended to talk about himself as another being, in third person. Or maybe he was just schizophrenic, whatever.