IncredibleArticles.com

Home

Contact Us

Author Guidelines

Terms of Service

New Member?

Author Login


Categories



Advertising
Automotive
Business
Computer
Entertainment
Finance
Food
Health
Home & Family
Internet
Legal
Science
Self Improvement
Shopping
Society
Sports
  Baseball
  Basketball
  Bodybuilding
  Extreme
  Fishing
  Football
  Golf
  Hockey
  Soccer
Travel
Writing



Partners
Screen Printed Jackets
Sport Bottles
Promotional Maglite Flashlights
Embroidered Caps
Custom Imprinted Highlighters
Promotional Manicure Items
Custom Imprinted Sewing Kits
Custom Imprinted Leatherman Tools
Coolers
Custom Mirors
Yardsticks
Imprinted Maglite Flashlights
Promotional Coolers
Imprinted Balls
Promotional Golf Items
Custom Imprinted Key Tags
Promotional Pens
Highlighters
Imprinted Portfolio Bags
AAA Maglite Flashlights

E-mail this article E-mail this article
Report this article Report this article
Publish this article Publish this article
IncredibleArticles.com - Sports - Basketball

Larry Legend - The NBA Player

by Incredible Articles - Last Modified: 12/05/2007

arry Bird is widely regarded as one of the three greatest NBA players to ever lace up their sneakers on basketball's premiere stage alongside Michael Jordan and Magic Johnson. He led the Celtics to three NBA championships in the eighties before retiring from the NBA in 1992. In 1996, he was voted to the NBA's 50th Anniversary All-Time Team. He was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1998.

Bird was born in West Baden Springs, Indiana and his family experienced much financial difficulty during his early years. The Bird family was also embroiled in personal turmoil, which came to a head when his father, Joe Bird, committed suicide in 1975. Bird admits that being poor motivated a great deal. His humble beginnings also earned him the "The Hick From French Lick."

The most famous of Bird's nicknames was "Larry Legend," which he earned for his exploits on the court and for having a sixth sense about the game. He possessed an uncanny ability to anticipate and react to the action on the floor. He could see the plays before they actually happened. For this reason, his first NBA coach Bill Fitch nicknamed him "Kodak" because he form mental snapshots of every play. This ability allowed him to make passing into an art form. He could often spot open teammates even before they knew they were open. This gift also allowed him to snag critical rebounds and make key steals even though he was not extraordinarily big or quick.

Bird finished his high school career as the all-time scoring leader of Springs Valley High school. He accepted a scholarship of Indiana University in 1976, but left after a month. He later enrolled at Indiana State University and led the Sycamores to a 33-1 record and to the national championship game in 1979 where his team lost to the Michigan State University, led by Earvin "Magic" Johnson, who would become Bird's chief rival in the NBA for over a decade. Off the court, the two were close friends and together, they rejuvenated first the college game and later the NBA.

Though Bird's team lost to Johnson in the college championship, Bird would edge out his nemesis in terms of individual honors as he was regarded as the best college basketball player at the time, winning both the Naismith and Wooden Awards.

Once Bird and Johnson entered the NBA with the Boston Celtics and Los Angeles Lakers, respectively, they became the league's biggest stars. Together, they won eight NBA championships in a 10 year span, with Bird bagging three titles and Johnson capturing five.
About the Author

Jonathon Hardcastle writes articles on many topics including Sports, Recreation, and Games


This article has been viewed 62 times.

You may reprint this article. The HTML code below can be copied and pasted into your page to recreate the article in its simplest form with no formatting. Simply click inside the box, or right-click the box and choose Select All to select the entire contents. Then press Ctrl->c on your keyboard to copy the text to your clipboard. You can then paste it into the code for your own page.
You may modify the simple HTML tags in this code to suit your formatting needs, but the article title, byline, content, author bio and source credit must remain unchanged, and all links must be retained as active hyperlinks. You may not use images from our site.
Copyright ©2007 IncredibleArticles.com