Thursday, November 28, 2019
Larry Bird Essays - Boston Celtics, , Term Papers
  Larry Bird  One of the greatest basketball players of all time emerged from the small town of French Lick, Indiana. With a  population of 2,059 people, around 1,600 of them came to watch the Valley High basketball games, especially the  blond-haired shooting whiz with a funny smile named Larry Joe Bird.    Following a sophomore season that was shortened by a broken ankle, Bird erupted as a junior. Springs Valley went  19-2 and young Larry became a local celebrity. Generous fans always seemed to be willing to give a ride to Bird's  parents, who couldn't afford a car of their own. As a senior Bird became the school's all-time scoring champion.    About 4,000 people attended his final home game.    When Bird went on to college, he found life very difficult. He started out as an Indiana Hoosier, but later left Bobby  Knight's team. In 1976 Bird enrolled at Indiana State, which had a 12-14 record for the 2 previous years. Home-    game attendance hovered around 3,100 when he arrived, but as he had done in Springs Valley, Bird single-handedly  packed the house and propelled his team to respectability. He averaged better than 30 points and 10 rebounds for the  Sycamores during his first campaign. Season-ticket sales tripled. TV stations showed film clips of Bird instead of  commercials. Students skipped class to line up for tickets eight hours before tip-off. "Larry Bird Ball" was the most  popular sport in Terre Haute. The Sycamores went undefeated and reached No. 1 in Bird's senior year-that is, until a  Michigan State team featuring a 6-foot-9 guard named Earvin "Magic" Johnson knocked them off in the 1979  NCAA Championship Game. Bird was !    named the 1978-79 College Player of the Year and left ISU as the fifth- highest scorer in NCAA history. The  Sycamores had gone 81-13 during Bird's three-year career.    Then In 1978 the Boston Celtics selected him in the NBA Draft, hoping that he would skip his senior season. Bird  decided to stay one more year at Indiana. The Celtics' record that year was 29-53. Then in ?79-80, Bird finally came  to Boston and sparked one of the greatest single-season turnarounds in NBA history. The 1979-80 Celtics improved  by 32 games to 61-21 and returned to the top of their division. Playing in all 82 games, Bird led the team in scoring  (21.3 ppg), rebounding (10.4 rpg), steals (143), and minutes played (2,955) and was second in assists (4.5 apg) and  three-pointers (58). Bird was named NBA Rookie of the Year and made the first of his 12 trips to the NBA All-Star  Game.    The next year the Boston Celtics drafted Robert Parish and Kevin McHale. That year the Celtics took the  championship by defeating the Houston Rockets. Bird once again led the team in points  (21.2 ppg), rebounds (10.9 rpg), steals (161), and minutes (3,239).    In 1981-82 Bird made the first of his three consecutive appearances on the NBA All-Defensive Second Team. He  finished runner-up to Moses Malone for the NBA Most Valuable Player Award. Bird scored 19 points in the 1982  NBA All-Star Game, including 12 of the East's last 15, earned him the game's MVP trophy. It wasn't until 1983-84,  however, that the Celtics returned to the NBA Finals. By that time Bird's scoring average had reached the mid-20s,  and he was averaging upwards of 7 assists, and making nearly 90 percent of his free-throw attempts.    Coming off the first of his three consecutive MVP seasons, Bird helped the Celtics to a seven-game victory against  the Los Angeles Lakers in the 1984 NBA Finals. It was Bird's first postseason meeting with Magic Johnson since  the 1979 NCAA title. In Game 5, with the temperature inside Boston Garden soaring to 97 degrees, Bird pumped in  34 points, leading the Celtics to a 121-103 victory. In Game 7 a record TV basketball audience watched Bird score  20 points and gather 12 rebounds in Boston's 111-102 win. With series averages of 27.4 points and 14.0 rebounds,  Bird was named Finals MVP.    Bird's scoring average soared to 28.7 points in 1984-85, the second highest mark in the league and the second  highest of his career. He boosted that average with a career-best 60 points against Atlanta on March 12. He also  made 56 out of 131 three-point attempts, second in the NBA behind the Lakers' Byron Scott. Injuries to Bird's elbow  and fingers, however, contributed to the Celtics' six-game loss to the Lakers in the 1985 Finals. Nevertheless, at  season's    
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