Larry Bird Coaching Information

Larry Bird Coaching Information




      The Pacers have in Larry Bird the knowledge,skills,enthusiasm,experience and ability for a great coach. In a league like the NBA it takes more than a great coach with ability and experience to succeed at a high level. With a team that is less than superb I think Larry Bird has had a moderatly good season considering his resources :Jase Merritt.
Once every generation or so, a player comes along who can truly be called a superstar. Larry Bird was such a player. Now Bird hopes to equal that success in the coaching ranks, as head coach of the Indiana Pacers.
   Bird joins the Pacers after serving as a special assistant with the Boston Celtics since his retirement on August 18, 1992. The intelligence he so habitually exhibited while playing demanded a managerial role in the basketball operations domain, and now as head coach in Indiana, Bird brings his expertise from the front office down to the court.
   For 13 years with the Boston Celtics, Bird personified hustle, consistency, and excellence in all areas of play-as a scorer, a passer, a rebounder, a defender, a team player, and, perhaps above all, as a clutch performer. Bird was so self-confident that he was known to waltz up to the opponents' bench before tip-off and predict a 40-point performance for himself. He was such a deadly shooter that he sometimes practiced three-pointers with his eyes closed. Among Bird's contemporaries, perhaps only Earvin "Magic" Johnson was considered a better passer. Few played tougher than Bird, who would leap into crowds and over press tables for loose balls.
   Bird was the embodiment of "Celtics pride." He was a classy, confident, hardworking player who thrived on pressure and inspired teammates to excel. Like Bob Cousy, Bill Russell, John Havlicek, and Dave Cowens, the low-key Bird was not one to sign big-money endorsement deals. But even those legendary players didn't fill Boston Garden, wow fans, and dominate games as Bird did.
   Bird helped rebuild a Celtics franchise that had been suffering from substandard play and poor attendance in the late 1970s. With Bird as the focal point of a well-rounded squad, the Celtics won three NBA titles and 10 Atlantic Division crowns. In addition to his three championship rings, Bird piled up an awesome collection of personal achievements. He became only the third player (and the first non-center) to win three consecutive NBA Most Valuable Player Awards. He was a 12-time All-Star, a two-time NBA Finals MVP, and a nine-time member of the All-NBA First Team. He led the league in free-throw percentage four times.
   An obsessive perfectionist, Bird attained virtual godlike status in the eyes of many Celtics fans. His last-second heroics, ranging from seemingly impossible reverse layups to miraculous 35-foot bombs over multiple defenders, never ceased to amaze those who followed his career. "Larry Bird has helped define the way a generation of basketball fans has come to view and appreciate the NBA," said NBA Commissioner David J. Stern when Bird retired.
   Bird's legend was born in the tiny town of French Lick, snuggled in Indiana's corn country, where his family led a spartan life. French Lick had a population of 2,059, most of whom came out to watch Springs Valley High home games. Attendance often reached 1,600-and they were all there to watch 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.
   Bird found the transition to college life difficult. He started out as an Indiana Hoosier but later left Bobby Knight's team. Then he left the local junior college, Northwood Institute. In 1976 Bird enrolled at Indiana State, which had posted 12-14 records in each of the two 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.
   The Boston Celtics selected him in the 1978 NBA Draft, hoping that Bird, who had become eligible for the NBA after his junior year, might forgo his senior season. In 1977-78 the Celtics had compiled a 32-50 record, their worst since 1949-50. But the 6-foot-9 forward elected to return to Indiana State for one more year, and the Celtics dipped to 29-53. Bird finally came to Boston for the 1979-80 campaign 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 contests, 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). Although Magic Johnson also turned in an impressive first season for the NBA-champion Los Angeles Lakers, Bird was named NBA Rookie of the Year and made the first of his 12 trips to the NBA All-Star Game.
   With center Robert Parish and sixth man Kevin McHale now on the team, the Celtics took the title in 1980-81, besting Houston in a six-game NBA Finals. Bird once again led the team in points (21.2 ppg), rebounds (10.9 rpg), steals (161), and minutes (3,239).
   Fans were filling not only the Boston Garden but arenas all over the country to witness Bird's exploits. In fact, the Garden sold out the final 541 games of Bird's career. Along with Magic Johnson, Bird was revitalizing the moribund NBA, helping the league live up to its new slogan, "NBA Action is Fantastic." After only two seasons, fans, coaches, and players knew exactly what Larry Bird was all about: big numbers and clutch performances. Bird's concentration and composure were unmatched. He was unflappable and virtually unstoppable. The hours he had spent working on his shot as a youngster paid big dividends in the NBA. No other player in his era was as good or as consistent a shooter as Bird.
   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, as he would the following year. Bird's 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. He also hit 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 triumph 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 game, and it was a memorable one. 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 canned 56-of-131 three-point attempts for a .427 percentage, 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 end Bird won his second consecutive NBA Most Valuable Player Award.
   The following year, which saw Boston win its 16th championship, Bird attained living-legend status. He was showered with commendations: NBA MVP, Finals MVP, The Sporting News Man of the Year, and the Associated Press Male Athlete of the Year. He led the league in three-pointers made (82) and in free-throw percentage (.896), an unheard-of accomplishment for a forward. He placed in the top 10 in three other categories. He even won the first-ever Long Distance Shootout at the NBA All-Star Weekend. The Celtics finished the 1985-86 season with a 67-15 record; their .817 winning percentage is the fourth highest ever. In the NBA Finals against Houston, Bird nearly averaged a triple-double (24.0 ppg, 9.7 rpg, 9.5 apg). In the decisive Game 6 Bird tallied 29 points, 11 rebounds, and 12 assists. He earned a second Finals MVP Award.
   The next year brought yet another amazing Bird feat. He became the first player ever to shoot at least .500 from the floor (.525) and .900 from the free-throw line (.910) in the same season. In classic Bird fashion, he did it again the following season (.527 and .916). He still managed to average more than 9 rebounds and 6 assists both seasons.
   A crafty defensive player, Bird's most famous steal came in Game 5 of the 1987 Eastern Conference Finals against Detroit. With five seconds remaining and the Celtics trailing, 107-106, Bird stole an Isiah Thomas inbounds pass and fed Dennis Johnson, whose layup gave Boston the win. The Celtics won the physical, bitter series in seven games. Boston advanced to the NBA Finals for the fourth consecutive year, meeting the Lakers for the third time. Los Angeles won the series in six games.
   Bird, now 30 years old and with worsening back and foot problems, would not win a fourth championship ring. But there were plenty more heroics yet to come.
   In 1987-88 Bird was the first Celtic ever to record a 40-20 game, with a 42-point, 20-rebound effort against Indiana. He averaged a career-high 29.9 points that year, falling just five points short of reaching 30 per contest. Bird also won his third consecutive NBA Long Distance Shootout title, a feat matched only by Chicago's Craig Hodges from 1990-92.
   In Game 7 of the conference semifinals that year against Atlanta, Bird engaged in a memorable fourth-quarter shoot-out with the Hawks' Dominique Wilkins. Bird poured in 20 points in the final period to outdo his counterpart and lead the Celtics to victory-even though he had bronchial pneumonia. The Celtics fell to the Pistons in the next round, and the Lakers knocked off Detroit in the Finals.
   Surgery to remove bone spurs from both heels limited Bird to only six games in 1988-89. The following year Bird assembled the third-longest free-throw streak in NBA history, hitting 71 consecutive attempts. Bird missed 22 games in 1990-91 because of a compressed nerve root in his back, a condition that eventually forced his retirement. In the first round of that year's playoffs, Bird badly bruised his face in a second-quarter fall in Game 5 against Indiana. His back was also hurting, but Bird came back in the third period to help lift the Celtics to victory. A disk was removed from his back after the season.
   The following year was Bird's last. He missed 37 games because of the continuing back problems. In a nationally televised game against Portland in March, Bird pulled off one final miracle performance-he scored 16 points in the fourth quarter, including the Celtics' last 9 points and a game-tying three-pointer with two seconds left. Boston won, 152-148, in double overtime. Bird finished with 49 points, 14 rebounds, 12 assists, and 4 steals. "Anytime you have Bird on the floor, anything can happen," Portland's Clyde Drexler told the Boston Herald after the game.
   In one of the only noteworthy gaffes of his career, Bird missed a routine layup in overtime that would have tied Game 4 of an early-round playoff series with Cleveland. The Cavaliers won in seven games; Boston lost three of the four games Bird didn't play.
   The end of Bird's career was at hand, but not before one last achievement: a gold medal with the 1992 U.S. Olympic Dream Team. As the 1992-93 NBA season approached, Bird decided he could not continue. On August 18 he announced his retirement as a player. He was later named a special assistant in the Celtics' front office. His duties include being actively involved in team personnel decisions, as well as scouting college players. In fact his evaluation of Eric Montross helped convince the Celtics to select the North Carolina center in the 1994 NBA Draft.
   After 897 games Bird retired with 21,791 points (24.3 ppg), currently No. 14 on the all-time list, along with 8,974 rebounds (10.0 rpg) and 5,695 assists (6.3 apg). During his career he shot .496 from the floor and .886 from the free-throw line, ranking fifth all-time in the latter category behind Mark Price, Rick Barry, Calvin Murphy, and Scott Skiles.
   Larry Joe and his wife Dinah have two children: Connor and Mariah. He has four brothers and one sister; his mother's name is Georgia. Bird is an avid outdoorsman and has a passion for country music, auto racing and the St. Louis Cardinals. He also owns "Larry Bird's Boston Connection," a hotel/restaurant in Terre Haute, where a street was named in his honor on August 4, 1984.


*This information was obtained from of NBA.com.
1