The Boston Celtics: Larry Bird, Bob Cousy, Red Auerbach, and Other Legends Recall Great Moments in Celtics History
By Michael D. McClellan and Volk Jan
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About this ebook
More than thirty interviewees are featured in this iconic book. Hall-of-Famer Bob Cousy recalls the turmoil of the fifties, as the franchise struggled to get its footing and the nation faced the birth of the Civil Rights Movement. K. C. Jones and Clyde Lovellette narrate the glory of the Bill Russell era, as Russell himself remembers his time as a Celtic. Celebrated players John Havlicek and Dave Cowens relate the ups and downs of the psychedelic seventies, when the team won two national titles, only to collapse at the end of the decade. The epic eighties Celtics-Lakers rivalry and the leadership of legends Larry Bird and Magic Johnson is told by teammates Robert Parish, Dennis Johnson, and Nate Archibald, and rivals Julius Erving and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Former Celtics honor the legacy of Reggie Lewis and relay the dark days after his untimely passing in 1993, and the revival of the Celtics under the guidance of Paul Pierce and Brad Stevens in the 2000s.
Also featuring interviews by notable Boston natives such as Michael Dukakis and Mark Wahlberg, The Boston Celtics is the ultimate history of one of the NBA's greatest franchises.
“My experience working with Skyhorse is always a positive collaboration. The editors are first-rate professionals, and my books receive top-shelf treatment. I truly appreciate our working relationship and hope it continues for years to come.”
–David Fischer, author
Michael D. McClellan
Michael D. McClellan is a lifelong Celtics fan and co-founder of the wildly popular blog Celtic-Nation.com. He is also the author of Boston Celtics: Where Have You Gone?. He lives in Charleston, West Virginia.
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The Boston Celtics - Michael D. McClellan
Where Have You Gone?
FRED ROBERTS
Staying Power
FRED ROBERTS
College: Brigham Young | Height: 6'10' | Weight: 227 lbs. DOB: 08/14/1960 | Years with Celtics: 1986-’87 through 1987-’88 Position: Forward
Notes: Selected 27th overall in the 1982 NBA Draft by the Milwaukee Bucks. Teammates with both Larry Bird and Magic Johnson.
The sports world has always been a star-driven universe, the imaginations of its fans fueled by extraordinary performances under pressure: Joe Montana’s precision passing in the Super Bowl, David Beckham’s creative shot-making in the World Cup, Albert Pujols’s towering home runs in the World Series. The stars sell the tickets and the jerseys, and they drive television revenue through the ceiling in the process. Larry and Magic arrived when fan interest in professional basketball was at an all-time low; their battles sparked the NBA’s Golden Age, and the league transformed itself into a global marketing machine thanks in large part to their epic rivalry. And the same can be said for individual sports—in golf there has always been an Arnold Palmer, or a Jack Nicklaus, or a Tiger Woods, their larger-than-life personas filling the galleries and attracting the sponsors. Imagine tennis without the historic achievements of players like McEnroe, Sampras, Agassi, Nadal, or Federer. Would we even care about the Tour de France without Lance Armstrong?
But sports cannot exist on stars alone. For every Wayne Gretzky there are hundreds of grinders doing their best to make a roster, to make a contribution, to make a living doing what they love to do the most. You see them every time you turn on the TV to watch your favorite team. You cheer for them make a big play, or sometimes just to see them get into the game. Some of them flash briefly across the sky, only to get cut or injured and disappear from view forever. But others have staying power. These are the athletes that have both the talent and the luck to persevere, and they know their place in the sports universe. They do their jobs and are always ready when called upon, and they forge a successful career as a professional athlete.
Fred Roberts is such a man. Roberts played his college basketball at Brigham Young University during the late ’70s and early ’80s, and even at the collegiate level he could be described as anything but a star. That mantle went to teammate Danny Ainge, who would be named college basketball’s player of the year as a senior. But Roberts was long and athletic and could run the court, and he worked hard to improve his game. He played in 119 games for the Cougars, averaging 15.5 points and seven rebounds while shooting 54.6 percent from the field. His contributions helped to spark a basketball renaissance at BYU, and in the process he garnered the attention of NBA scouts, with the Milwaukee Bucks taking him in the second round of the 1982 NBA Draft.
I was motivated to go to Brigham Young,
Roberts says. My older brother played on the basketball team, and I had hoped to play with him. Danny was a year ahead of me. He came in and brought a new excitement to the school and to the basketball program. We had a good time. My junior year—Danny’s senior year—we had that run to the Elite 8. We beat UCLA and beat Notre Dame before losing to Virginia. That Notre Dame game was the game where Danny sprinted the length of the court and scored on Kelly Tripucka to win it at the buzzer. So I had a great time playing ball at BYU.
Roberts chose to play basketball in Europe rather than jump directly into the NBA, a decision that would, ironically, add years to his career on the back end; it was while playing in Italy that Roberts realized the value of being in top physical shape and being able to run the floor, something he was able to do for parts of 13 NBA seasons.
My best year in college was my junior year,
Roberts says. "My senior season was a disappointment. Danny was gone, which meant that we were bringing in a pair of freshmen guards. And I don’t think I was ever in as good a shape as I needed to be at that level. As a result, I was drafted a lot deeper than I thought I would be.
Don Nelson was the Milwaukee coach at the time, and he made it sound like I was going to have a real hard time making the team. So I went overseas, which was good in some ways because we worked really hard. I was always a pretty good runner, but I’d never had a coach who really pushed his players as hard as my coach in Italy. And when I came back, I was a big man who could run, which really served me well. I think that’s the reason I was able to stay in the league as long as I did.
While in Italy, Roberts was traded from the Bucks to the New Jersey Nets, who, in turn, would trade him to the San Antonio Spurs. The latter transaction was also notable in that it involved a head coach—Stan Albeck—one of the few times in the league history that a coach was a part of a trade between teams.
I joke about it,
Roberts says, laughing. I like to tell people that I’ve been traded for everything but a player!
And how, exactly, did Roberts end up in a trade involving a coach?
When I was in Italy, an NBA team came over and played some exhibition games. Stan Albeck was the coach of that team, and he was in San Antonio at the time. They played us, and I really excelled that night. I scored 43 points and really played well, and I think Albeck may have gone back to San Antonio and told some people to keep me on their radar. And as luck would have it, I’m property of the Nets, and Albeck later decides he wants to coach in New Jersey. So my rights were included as compensation for Albeck being allowed to leave San Antonio to coach the Nets.
Roberts returned to the U.S. following one season in Italy, joining the Spurs for the 1983-’84 regular season. This San Antonio team featured the likes of George Gervin, Artis Gilmore and John Lucas, and finished with a 37-45 record, narrowly missing the playoffs. The next season, Roberts found himself traded after playing 22 games for the Spurs, landing on a Utah Jazz team coached by Frank Layden and led by a rookie point guard named John Stockton. And although the Jazz finished with a 41-41 record, Roberts found himself in the NBA Playoffs for the first time in his career. The Jazz upset the favored Houston Rockets 3-2, winning twice in Houston to advance to the Western Conference Semifinals. Despite losing to the Nuggets, 4-1, the playoff experience was truly special for the forward from Provo, Utah.
Karl Malone would join the Jazz via the 1985 NBA Draft, and it soon became clear that he was going to be a star. Roberts’s minutes and scoring average both took a hit, and his future with the team became cloudy. The NBA Champion Boston Celtics were in the market for a player to solidify their front line, and in September of 1986 they offered Roberts a two-year deal to join the team. Utah matched the offer, eventually trading Roberts to Boston for a future draft choice. This transaction was also notable, because included in the trade was an agreement for the Celtics to play an exhibition game in Utah. With the Celtics one of the biggest road draws in the league, and with the team featuring Larry Bird in his prime, having the Celtics come to Salt Lake City was a financial boon to the city and the team.
Had highly touted draft pick Len Bias not died from a cocaine overdose the previous June, Roberts’s arrival in Boston probably wouldn’t have happened at all. But the Bias tragedy created the need for a forward to provide spot relief for Larry Bird and Kevin McHale. The 1986-’87 Boston Celtics remain, in the minds of many, one the most resilient teams in NBA history; battling through injuries to key players such as Bird, McHale, Robert Parish, and Bill Walton, the Celtics slugged their way through the Eastern Conference before eventually falling to a deep, healthy, and rested Los Angeles Lakers squad. That playoff run was filled with memorable moments, including Bird’s steal of Isiah Thomas’s inbounds pass to save Game 5 of the Eastern Conference Finals. And through it all there was Roberts, the consummate professional, doing his part to help the Celtics succeed.
"With Boston losing Bias, the Celtics needed to pick up another big guy and that’s how I ended up on the team. And, boy, was I nervous. These guys had just won the world championship. And every time they’d come to San Antonio or Utah they’d whipped up on us. In fact, that last season in Utah, Bird came out and had a quadruple double. So I knew what kind of team I was joining. It was hard for me to get completely comfortable, but I hung in there and tried to do my best to help the team. We fought through so many injuries that year—Walton, McHale, Parish—and that playoff run was like a war. We just didn’t have enough to get it done.
For some reason I always felt that there were two teams within that team, at least from the public and the media point-of-view: There was the five starters, and then there was the rest of us. I always felt that if we won, it was the starters who were responsible. If we lost, then it was the bench who let them down. That was kind of a hard thing for me, and a challenge mentally. But it was still a great experience. Seeing those warriors go toe-to-toe against the Pistons in the playoffs—guys were playing injured, guys were getting mugged by players like Bill Laimbeer, Rick Mahorn, and Dennis Rodman. My respect for them just went through the roof.
What was it like playing with the Big Three?
Unbelievable,
Roberts says. "I’ll never forget speaking to Robert for the first time. In public he never really said much, but that first day he just walks up and slaps me on the back and says ‘What’s up?’ He was completely different than what I had pictured in my mind. And he was such a great, great teammate.
"Larry was just unbelievable. He was one of those guys who just thrived on the challenge, a guy who always rose to the occasion. He really invited that challenge to be put on him. He wanted it as tough as possible, and he liked to prove that he could rise above it and come out on top.
Kevin played that Pistons series on one leg—I still don’t know how he managed to ignore the pain. He just refused to give in, and he played his heart out.
By the end of the 1987-’88 regular season it was clear that the Celtics were a team in transition. Boston left Roberts unprotected during the ’88 NBA Expansion Draft, and the Miami Heat immediately took him. In another twist of fate, Roberts was immediately traded to the Milwaukee Bucks, the team that had drafted him in the first place. And, ironically, Roberts would play five seasons with the Bucks—the longest stretch with one team in his career—while also enjoying his best statistical seasons.
There would be three more NBA stops for Roberts—Cleveland (1994-’95), Los Angeles (1995-’96), and Dallas (1996-’97), with a stint in Spain and the Continental Basketball Association sandwiched in between. Exactly what you would expect from a pro’s pro, the kind of player who grew up loving the game of basketball and who worked hard to forge a long and successful career playing with—and against—some of the greatest stars the game has ever known.
Today, Roberts is a grade school teacher at Lincoln Academy in Pleasant Grove, Utah.
When I finished my career I kept my house in Milwaukee,
Roberts says. But our family lived in Utah, so we eventually made the decision to move back home. I kind of fell into education—for five years I served as a principal at a private school. That gave me a chance to transition into something that I really enjoyed, which is working children and their families. I went back to school and got my degree in education and my teaching certificate. That was in 2007, and that’s when I started teaching sixth grade.
What was it like leaving the game of basketball?
It was a difficult transition,
he says quickly. I didn’t think it was going to be as difficult as it was. I just loved the game of basketball—everything about it. I loved the competition, I loved the camaraderie of being on a team. It was a great life—playing a great gym every night, getting to play against great players, so I really missed that a lot. So I was looking for something to fill that void, and that’s when I found education. I think because I’m able to work with children that it gives me some of that excitement and joy of seeing success, and seeing people struggle and having success. It puts life back into my life.
Roberts, it turns out, hasn’t completely left the game of basketball behind. He’s also the basketball coach at Lincoln Academy.
It may not sound like much,
Roberts says with a laugh, especially when Danny Ainge is the president of the Boston Celtics and I’m coaching a junior high team, but it doesn’t matter what level you’re competing at. Being involved in sports is one of the greatest things you can do in your life, and I really enjoy working with these kids at Lincoln Academy. I wouldn’t want to be doing anything else.
Where Have You Gone?
WALTER MCCARTY
Mr. Versatile
WALTER MCCARTY
College: Kentucky | Height: 6'10" | Weight: 230 lbs. | DOB: 02/01/1974 Years with Celtics: 1997-’98 through 2004-’05 | Position: Forward
Notes: NCAA Champion as a member of the 1996 Kentucky Wildcats, coached by Rick Pitino. Selected by the New York Knicks in the first round of the 1996 NBA Draft.
Today’s NBA landscape is dotted with versatile big men, the kind of players who can score both inside and out, the kind of players who can box out and battle for the big rebound on one possession, and who can also step behind the three-point line and knock down a trey on the next. Dirk Nowitzki is the prototype, but there are others—think Kevin Durant and Lamar Odom and you get the point.
Walter McCarty is such a player, and for parts of eight NBA seasons McCarty brought that versatility to the Boston Celtics, his blue collar game on display for a city that prides itself on hard work for an honest day’s pay. The fans loved McCarty, and still do to this day. The 6'10" forward could run the floor with the best of the NBA’s bigs, in part because that was the style of basketball he played for Rick Pitino while at the University of Kentucky. He could drain a three in transition, or he could fight for rebounding position underneath the basket. It was a skill-set that helped the Wildcats win the 1996 NCAA Basketball Championship and helped keep McCarty employed by the NBA for a decade. Not bad for a player who came to the game relatively late; McCarty, who grew up in Evansville, Indiana, didn’t start playing organized basketball until he was eleven.
I shot ball every now and then,
McCarty says, but I didn’t play on a team or in a league until I was in the fifth grade. Most of my friends and classmates did—they were either coached by their parents, or playing in some kind of league, whether it was at the YMCA or in a church league, but that wasn’t me. I was just tall and out there in the neighborhood playing with the other kids. And when I did start playing ball in school, the biggest jump for me was from eighth grade to my freshman year at Harrison High School. That’s when I realized I could really become a good basketball player if I put in the work, and that motivated me to keep working and improving my game. Before you know it, I was headed to Kentucky.
Living on the Kentucky-Indiana border in Evansville, Indiana, McCarty and his family were fans of the Kentucky basketball program. Indiana University recruited McCarty, as well as McCarty’s good friend Calbert Cheaney, but McCarty didn’t feel that the bruising Big 10 fit his game. So while Cheaney headed off to Bloomington, McCarty opted for the SEC and a Wildcat program on the rise under head coach Rick Pitino.
I pretty much knew I wanted to play for Kentucky,
McCarty says. Playing on those AAU teams, I got close with guys like Tony Delk and Jared Prickett, and that was a big factor in my decision. Plus, I was really attracted to the style of ball that Rick Pitino had implemented.
The decision turned out to be fortuitous for McCarty. By his senior season, the Wildcats were loaded with future NBA players such as McCarty, Delk, Derek Anderson, Ron Mercer, Antoine Walker, Nazr Mohammed, Wayne Turner, and Mark Pope. The team finished the season 34-2, capping it all with a 76-67 win over Syracuse for the national championship.
Kentucky fans are the greatest fans in the world,
McCarty says, smiling. "It was a privilege to play there, and those were some of the best years of my life. The journey to the championship was incredible. We knew we were talented and had the potential to be great, but what we had went much farther than just talent. We were such a close team. We really