web analytics
<
Tag Archive - The Lowdown

The Lowdown: Bob Pettit

Years Active: 1955 – 1965

Regular Season Stats: 26.4 ppg, 16.2 rpg, 3.0 apg, 43.6% FG, 76.1% FT, 25.3 PER

Postseason Stats: 25.5 ppg, 14.8 rpg, 2.7 apg, 41.8% FG, 77.4% FT, 22.6 PER

Accolades: 2x MVP (1956, ’59), 10x All-NBA 1st Team (1955 – ’64), All-NBA 2nd Team (1965), 11x All-Star (1955 – ’65),  4x All-Star Game MVP (1956, ’58, ’59, ’62), NBA Title (1958), 2x PPG Leader (1956, ’59)

“I never tried to be a team leader in basketball. I wasn’t a guy who did a lot of talking. I just wanted everybody to see that I worked hard, that I’d give my full effort all the time. In business, I try to surround myself with the best people and then let them do their thing.” And if that doesn’t succeed? “Then we all sit down, talk it over, and work things out.”

- Via Dr. Jack Ramsay’s “Transition Game: Bob Pettit”

That’s a fairly accurate description Bob Pettit gave of himself in that interview with Jack Ramsay. Many have worked as hard as Pettit but none harder. You listen to him speak for any length of time and invariably he returns to the ethos of hard work, determination and consistency. These would be hallmarks of his Hall of Fame career.

Bob’s initial forays into basketball were strongly encouraged by his father, a sheriff in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Despite being cut from the high school team twice, the practice ultimately paid off as Pettit eventually made the squad and would subsequently led them to the Louisiana state title. A fairly successful stint at Louisiana State University followed where he averaged ho-hum 27 points and 15 rebounds a game in his time as a Tiger. His play in these years, however, was predicated on him being a back-to-the-basket, low post threat. And at 6’9″ he had the height, but with only a scant 200 lbs to that frame, he didn’t have the weight to succeed in the pros that way.

So, Pettit totally retooled his game upon entering the NBA and would prove to better than ever.

Despite the fears over his frailty, the Milwaukee Hawks selected Pettit 2nd overall in the 1954 Draft. The Hawks were abominably terrible the previous year winning only 21 games. Their leading scorer was Don Sunderlage with a sizzling 11 ppg. Pettit immediately seized the reins of the team and although they improved to only 26 wins his rookie season, Pettit put together a spectacular campaign of 20.4 ppg and 13.8 rpg.

His success was due to virtually abandoning being a back-to-the-basket player and instead becoming a dangerous marauder. He was one of the first big men(not just in position but in actual height) to roam the court and thrive on constant movement. He had a tremendous mid-range jump shot and could score off the dribble with some skill but his biggest money maker was with the incessant attacks he made on the offensive glass and with off-the-ball cuts. Bill Russell, quite the authority on hustle and rebounding, had this to say about Pettit:

“Bob made ‘second effort’ a part of the sport’s vocabulary. He kept coming at you more than any man in the game. He was always battling for position, fighting you off the boards.”

Pettit made the All-NBA 1st Team, which he would do until his final season, and ran away with the Rookie of the Year award in that 1954-55 season. Likewise, the Hawks were ran out of Milwaukee that offseason. Facing dismal attendance, owner Ben Kerner moved the club to St. Louis in hopes that the team (and his pocketbook) would finally succeed. The move turned out better than he could have imagined.

Continue Reading…

The Lowdown Hall of Fame Snubs: George McGinnis

Indianapolis Star

Years Active: 1972-1982

Regular Season Stats: 20.2 ppg, 11.0 rpg, 3.7 apg, 1.88 spg, 0.48 bpg, 45.8% FG, 66.4% FT, 20.0 PER

Postseason Stats: 20.7 ppg, 11.8 rpg, 3.9 apg, 1.41 spg, 0.41 bpg, 43.5% FG, 68.2% FT, 19.7 PER

Accolades: 2x ABA Champion (1972-73) 1975 ABA MVP, 2x All-ABA 1st Team (1974-75), All-ABA 2nd Team (1973), 3x ABA All-Star (1973-75), All-ABA Rookie 1st Team (1972)

All-NBA 1st Team (1976), All-NBA 2nd Team (1977), 3x NBA All-Star (1976-77, ’79)

New York coach Lou Carnesecca was quoted as saying that Indiana’s muscular 6-foot-8, 235 pound rookie George McGinnis looked like a heavy weight contender. Carnesecca amended his evaluation following the third game [of the ABA Finals] Friday night.

“Now, you can say he’s the champion,” said the diminutive Nets’ coach, who barely would reach McGinnis’ elbow.

Carnesecca made his reevaluation after the burly McGinnis wrecked the Nets, scoring 30 points and grabbing a game high 20 rebounds…

- Via The Evening Independent, May 13, 1972

Burly is indeed the most accurate description for the body and physique of George McGinnis. Just an absolute mammoth of a power forward who, aside from Artis Gilmore, was probably the strongest man in the ABA. Unsurprisingly, he was an absolute beast on the boards trampling and demolishing opponents, particularly on the offensive glass. His career average of 3.7 is 10th all-time amongst players who have appeared in at least 240 games (equivalent to about 3 seasons).

This steady stream of offensive boards and subsequent putbacks partially fed his healthy point production. Also of aid were his sweet mid-range jumpesr and his cunning-but-not-quite-graceful drives to the hoop. For 7 straight seasons he averaged above 20 points a game culminating in 1975 when he topped off at 29.8 per game.

And as if this wasn’t enough of an offensive threat, he could pass the ball extremely well.  6 straight seasons he held an assist per game average above 3.5., including 3 seasons above 4.5 in that stretch. Big George also had quick, strong hands which led to a career steals per game average of 1.9. That’s an incredibly high total for anyone let alone a power forward. In fact, that 1.9 is 4th all time amongst forwards and 26th overall.

McGinnis, however, surly had pitfalls to his game. For starters, he turned the ball over with a galling frequency: 4 a game over the course of his career. Also his free throw shooting was always poor. It showed signs of improvement until 1975 (74%) and thereafter it plummeted to embarrassing levels by his retirement (45.3%).

The Indiana Pacers, though, weren’t complaining of these deficiencies in 1971 when they acquired the homegrown talent. McGinnis was from Indianapolis and was attending Indiana University when the allure of big time professional dollars led him to leave college after his freshman season. A very unusual move at the time, but given his 30 ppg and 15 rpg averages that one season, he was ready for tougher competition.

Continue Reading…

The Lowdown Hall of Fame Snubs: Jo Jo White

via murphman61 (flickr)

Years Active: 1970 – 1981

Regular Season Stats: 17.2 ppg, 4.9 apg, 4.0 rpg, 1.3 spg, 44.4% FG, 83.4% FT, 14.2 PER

Postseason Stats: 21.5 ppg, 5.7 apg, 4.4 rpg, 1.1 spg, 44.9% FG, 82.8%, 15.1 PER

Accolades: 2x NBA Champion (1974, ’76), 1976 Finals MVP, 2x All-NBA 2nd Team (1975, ’77), 1970 All-Rookie 1st Team, 7x All-Star (1971-77)

The Celtics lazed through more than three periods until Jo Jo White did a 12-minute hustle Sunday to shoot Boston past Phoenix 98-87 in the opening game of the NBA championship series… White, scoring 12 straight points in a 4:15 span, finished with 22 points – all but two in the final two periods.

- Via St. Petersburg Times, May 24, 1976

The highwater mark of Jo Jo White’s illustrious career came in the 1976 Finals. He played more minutes, scored more points and made more assists than other player in that series thus earning the Finals MVP award. There’s that heroic sequence in Game 1 described above where he knocked down a pair of jumpers, drove for two baskets and hit four straight free throws in just 4 minutes to thwart a Phoenix attempt to steal the series opener.

In Game 5 of the series, which some describe as the greatest game in NBA history, the Suns and Celtics played a triple overtime thriller that saw John Havlicek hit a supposed game winner in the 2nd OT that was instantly topped by Gar Heard’s turnaround jumper.

 

Jo Jo White amazingly played almost every moment of the 63-minute contest. Despite the heavy workload, White saved his best for those overtimes scoring 15 of his 33 points in the extra periods and pushed Boston to a 128-126 victory. Exhausted from the marathon affair, White slumped in his seat after the game and simply wondered aloud…

“Would you believe we’ve got another game in Phoenix Sunday?”

White managed just 15 points in the closing Game 6 as Boston collected its 2nd title in 3 years and 13th in 19, but he had more than pulled his weight already in the previous game and indeed, had been an iron horse for the Celtics for years by that point.

Continue Reading…

The Lowdown Hall of Fame Snubs: Larry Foust

Years Active: 1951 – 1962

Regular Season Stats: 13.7 ppg, 9.8 rpg, 1.7 apg, 40.5% FG, 74.1% FT, 20.1 PER

Postseason Stats: 12.4 ppg, 9.7 rpg, 1.3 apg, 39.4% FG, 78.1% FT, 19.1 PER

Accolades: 8x All-Star (1951-56, 1958-59), All-NBA 1st Team (1955), All-NBA 2nd Team (1952)

Larry Foust, rugged Piston center, poured in 37 points as Fort Wayne made it four straight over the Royals. Foust scored six of his team’s seven points in the overtime after the regular game ended, 94-94.

- Via The Milwaukee Journal, Decemeber 2, 1954

Larry Foust is one of the many victims of failed basketball memory. The depths and passage of time naturally erode the ability to recall the greatness of things achieved by those in the past. Compounding this natural tendency is the fact that none of Foust’s clubs exist as he knew them.

The Fort Wayne Pistons have since moved on to Detroit. The Minneapols Lakers headed west to Los Angeles. The St. Louis Hawks went down south to Atlanta. Nevertheless, Foust is a player worth not only recalling, but one worthy of Hall of Fame induction. During the 1950s he was one of the premier NBA centers and yet is unrecognized as such.

During his heydey (1951-58), Foust recorded the 4th most win shares for a center. Of the top 6 players on this list, Foust is the only one not enshrined in the Hall of Fame. George Mikan, Neil Johnston, Ed Macauley, Arnie Risen and Clyde Lovellette are all deservedly in.

Looking at Foust’s production, this is an unfortunately recurring theme. He is routinely in the lofty company of various Hall of Fame players and yet he is the one outside looking in. During the entirety of the 1950s, Foust scored the 3rd most points and grabbed the most rebounds of any center in the NBA. Amongst all players he was 8th in points scored and 2nd in rebounds. Finally, his player efficiency rating (PER) of 21.o was 5th amongst centers and 9th overall.

But Foust’s greatness goes beyond the consistent stream of points and rebounds  he accrued over his entire career. He set a then-record for single-season FG% in 1955 with a startling .487. Only 5 players in NBA history to that point had even shot above .450 for a season.

A spectacular rookie, he was an all-star in his very 1st NBA season with the Fort Wayne Pistons and would enjoy 7 more selections to the contest in his 12 year career.

Despite his personal achievements, the ultimate team goal eluded Foust. From 1951 to 1954, Foust was the undisputed cornerstone of the Pistons franchise. His one-man show culminated in 1953 when the Pistons dragged the star-studded Minneapolis Lakers to a 5th do-or-die game in the Western Division Finals.

The addition of forward George Yardley and guard Andy Phillip transformed the Pistons into a more complete team and they appeared in back-to-back NBA Finals in 1955 and 1956. Despite reduced minutes, Foust continued to perform as Fort Wayne’s best player, leading the NBA in win shares per 48 minutes (WS/48) in each of those seasons.

(Curiously, Foust is one of only two Hall of Fame eligible players to lead the league in WS/48 and yet not be inducted. The other is Kenny Sears)

In the 7th and deciding game of the 1955 Finals with the Syracuse Nationals, Foust delivered 24 points to lead both sides, but the Pistons fell short by a single point, 92 to 91 after losing a 17-point lead in the contest. The next season the Pistons were handled by the Philadelphia Warriors in 5 games. Despite the brevity of the series, the Pistons wasted several opportunities ultimately losing 3 of their 4 games by a combined 11 points.

Foust’s final game as a Piston came the next season in the Western Semis. Losing the mini-series 2-0 to the Lakers, Foust did his damnedest to keep Fort Wayne alive with 30 points in the final game which they lost by 2 points. That offseason, Foust was traded to Minneapolis and the Fort Wayne franchise moved on to Detroit.

After seeing reduced minutes, despite not having reduced ability, in his final Fort Wayne season, Foust found rejuvenation in Minnesota. Averaging 17 points and 12 rebounds he was an easy selection to the All-Star Game after missing out the previous season. The Lakers however were continuing their post-Mikan slide and finished with an abysmal 19 wins.

The terrible season immediately paid off, though. The Lakers secured the #1 overall pick in the 1957 draft and took Elgin Baylor #1. Baylor, Vern Mikkelsen and Foust powered the Lakers to a respectable 33-39 record in the regular season and then pulled off an upset of the St. Louis Hawks in the divisional finals. Foust’s quest for a title fell short again as the Boston Celtics swept the upstart Lakers.

For Foust the series was his final hurrah as a big-time contributor, particularly in Game 3 where he scored 26 points opposite the defensive wizard, Bill Russell.

Foust finished his career with 2.5 seasons in St. Louis as a reserve big man. Like all of his basketball stops, he again appeared in the NBA Finals only to have his championship aspirations dashed. In 1960, the Celtics outlasted the Hawks in 7 games while in 1961 the C’s trounced St. Louis in 5 games.

Despite his long list of accomplishments, Foust’s career, if it’s remembered at all, is usually reduced to a simple trivial matter: he hit the game-winning shot in the infamous Lakers-Pistons game that ended 19-18, the lowest scoring game in NBA history.

Admittedly, Foust was not a ground-breaking, earth-shattering player who revolutionized the game. However, there is a place in the Hall of Fame for players like Foust. The steady, persistent and unheralded purveyor of excellent play. Alex English and Joe Dumars are probably the best modern examples of this and Larry Foust is the 1950s standard bearer for this type of player.

50 years after his retirement and 28 years after his death, the chances of Foust being inducted are slim, but it’s well worth keeping alive the fact his career, his achievements are Hall of Fame worthy.

The Lowdown: Alex Groza

Years Active: 1950-51

Career Statistics: 22.5 ppg, 10.7 rpg, 2.4 apg, 47.4% FG, 75.6% FT

Accolades: 2x All-NBA 1st Team (1950-51), All – Star (1951), 2x FG% Leader (1950-51)

Alex Groza was bona fide, qualified and without a shadow of a doubt Hall of Fame material. Yet, his NBA career was so short, I couldn’t find a photo of him in the league, hence the University of Kentucky picture.

The brevity of his professional career was in fact due to circumstances arising from his collegiate days. Along with a couple dozen others, Groza was implicated in, and confessed to, point-shaving that occurred in 1949.   The scandal didn’t hit until 1951 and Groza, despite his small-time role, was one of the big-time losers.

NBA Commissioner Maurice Podoloff, affectionately known as “Poodles” by owners who had no respect for him whatsoever, banned Groza for life from professional basketball for actions that occurred in amateur basketball. The decision was horribly high-handed and robbed the NBA of one its singular, amazing talents. Continue Reading…

The Lowdown: Terry Cummings

Years Active: 1983 – 2000

Career Stats: 16.4 ppg, 7.3 rpg, 1.9 apg, 1.1 spg, 0.5 bpg, 48.4% FG, 70.6% FT

Accolades: 1983 Rookie of the Year, 2x All-Star (1985, 1989), All-NBA 2nd Team (1985), All-NBA 3rd Team (1989), All-Rookie 1st Team (1983)

The 1982 draft was a loaded class. Dominique Wilkins, James Worthy, Fat Lever, Clark Kellogg, Ricky Pierce and Sleepy Floyd are the highlight players, but the man who walked away with the Rookie of the Year crown was Terry Cummings. T.C. was a lithe combination of power and speed that initially toiled on the moribund San Diego Clippers.

Mercifully, he would be traded into the good graces of perennial powerhouse Milwaukee and when that situation began to go south, Cummings again would be bailed out with a trade to the San Antonio Spurs, sparking the greatest turnaround in NBA history until the 2008 Celtics.

Terry’s good fortune ran out soon after that as a devastating knee injury robbed him of his explosiveness. Nevertheless he soldiered on for another decade as a reserve forward. But when he was at his best, few in the NBA could match his presence, his grace, his strength.

Continue Reading…

The Lowdown: Billy Cunningham

Years Active: 1966 – 1976

Career Stats: 21.2 ppg, 10.4 rpg, 4.3 apg, 1.8 spg, 0.5 bpg,  45.2% FG, 73.0% FT

Accolades:  ABA MVP (1973), 4x NBA All-Star (1969-’72), ABA All-Star (1973), 3x All-NBA 1st Team (1969-’71), All-NBA 2nd Team (1972),  All-ABA 1st Team (1973), NBA All-Rookie 1st Team (1966), NBA Champion (1967 Philadelphia 76ers)

There are three distinct Billy Cunninghams. For the first three years of his career, he was the 6th Man for the 76ers entering games and delivering a hot dose of instant offense. For the next several years after that, he was perhaps the best forward in all of basketball. His game flourished beyond scoring and encompassed tremendous rebounding and deft passing. However, the last three years of his career were filled with frustrating injuries that eroded a unique and sparkling talent.

Before his hotshot pro career, Cunningham grew up in New York City and then headed down south to attend the University of North Carolina. In his 4 years at Chapel Hill, Cunningham  averaged 24 points and 15 rebounds. At the conclusion of his senior year, 1965, he was named ACC Player of the Year. With such play, it’s unsurprising the Philadelphia 76ers made him the 5th overall pick in the 1965 Draft and back north Billy headed and was immediately injected into one of the great rivalries in the NBA.

Continue Reading…

The Lowdown: Maurice Stokes

Stokes tallied 32 points and nabbed 20 rebounds in Rochester’s 100-98 loss to New York Saturday. On Sunday, he dropped to 17 points but again collared 20 rebounds as the Royals handed the champion Syracuse Nationals a 83-80 defeat.

Via Stokes Off To Fast Start in Pro Loop

Years Active: 1956 – 1958

Career Stats: 16.4 ppg, 17.3 rpg, 5.3 apg, 35.1% FG, 69.8% FT

Accolades: 3x All-Star (1956-’58), 3x All-NBA 2nd Team (1956-’58), 1956 Rookie of the Year

Maurice Stokes was not the 1st black player in the NBA. That honor belongs to Earl Lloyd in 1950 (and Wat Misaka was the 1st non-white person in the league in 1947). Nor was Stokes the first selected at a lofty draft position. Ray Felix was taken #1 overall in 1953. Nor was he the first all-star. That would be Don Barksdale in the 1952-53 season.

Maurice Stokes was simply the 1st black superstar in the NBA. Not just a really good or all-star caliber player, but one who truly shifted the fortunes of a franchise by himself and could alter the way the game as a whole was played. He wasn’t merely a player who did an established role particularly well, he expanded, fused and created new roles for his position (power forward) in ways that still have been mastered by only a few players.

Continue Reading…

The Lowdown: Kevin Johnson

Photo by Hogue News

Whom does KJ remind you of? He can penetrate like Magic. He’s as quick with the ball as Stockton. He’s as good with his left hand from close-in as Larry Bird. His attitude is part Mailman Malone, part pit bull. He has dunked over a pair of All-Star centers—7’4″ Mark Eaton of Utah and 7-foot Kevin Duckworth of the Portland Trail Blazers…Beyond that, says teammate Tom Chambers, KJ “has the quickest first step I’ve ever seen.”

Via KJ!

Years Active: 1988 – 2000

Career Stats: 17.9 ppg, 9.1 apg, 3.3 rpg, 1.5 spg, 49.3% FG, 84.1% FT

Accolades: 3x All-Star (1990-’91, ’94), 4x All-NBA 2nd Team (1989-’91, ’94), All-NBA 3rd Team (1992), 1989 Most Improved Player

Over the past decade it’s become fairly commonplace to see a diminutive point guard rise up amongst the lowpost trees to deliver a slam. Derrick Rose, Steve Francis and Russell Westbrook are some prime examples, but they’re exploits don’t hold the revelatory power that Kevin Johnson’s assaults had in the late 1980s.

Short players had certainly been dunking for a while. Buffalo Brave Randy Smith in the 70s and Johnson’s contemporary Spud Webb come to mind, but Johnson’s frequency of slams was at a then-unparalleled  level. But don’t let the dunks fool you. KJ was a superb point guard. He could dish the ball with expertise and run an offense like a floor general should.

Prior to Steve Nash’s run in the desert, Kevin Johnson held the mantle as most recognized and lovable Suns player. Rightfully earned too, considering he played 11 seasons and almost 700 games with the club. However, Kevin Johnson’s NBA sojourn began as a Cleveland Cavalier.

Continue Reading…

The Lowdown: Fat Lever

CBS Sacramento

 Lever’s low profile has been largely of his own doing. On the court his moves are efficient and, thanks to his stamina, relentless rather than spectacular. And he shows all the apparent passion of a CPA at a Chapter 11 hearing. “Some guys show their feelings, some guys don’t,” he says. “I may not, but they’re jumping around inside.”

- Via Fat is Lean and Tough

Years Active: 1983 – 1994

Career Stats: 13.9 ppg, 6.2 apg, 6.0 rpg, 2.2 spg, 0.3 bpg, 44.7% FG, 31% 3PT, 77.1% FT

Accolades: 2x All-Star (1988, ’90), All-NBA 2nd-Team (1987), All-Defensive 2nd Team (1988)

Lafayette “Fat” Lever was indeed “relentless rather than spectacular.” But in a peculiar twist, that relentlessness became spectacular. Think of him as the stream of water that unerringly flows forth through the years, centuries and millennia and eventually turns into the mighty Mississippi or carves out the Grand Canyon.

This 6’3″ point guard was like that mighty stream. He just wore on you in every stat, every facet and every way.

Continue Reading…

Page 1 of 41234»