Quote
"He told me he couldnt wait for the basketball season to end, so he could go back to baseball and get out of shape."
B
Bill Russell"How much does that guy make a year? It would be to our advantage if we paid him off for five years to get away from us in the rest of this series."
William Felton Russell was an American professional basketball player who played center for the Boston Celtics of the National Basketball Association (NBA) from 1956 to 1969. He was the centerpiece of the Celtics dynasty that played for 12 NBA championships and won 11 during his 13-year career. Russell is widely considered one of the greatest basketball players of all time.
"He told me he couldnt wait for the basketball season to end, so he could go back to baseball and get out of shape."
"What do you think of the Chicago Bulls winning three in a row?" -- Russell: "Not much."
"Im a pretty direct man. You say something I like, Ill tell you so; you say something I dont like, Ill tell you also. A diplomat Im not. So Ill tell you right out that there are no secret or hidden or financial or philosophical reasons behind this. I just dont feel like playing anymore. As for coaching — that prime incubator of ulcers — no, thank you. I dont want to coach anymore, either. I never considered myself primarily a coach, anyway. Anytime I was ever around a group of coaches Id feel nervous — all that nonsense about how to "handle" kids, how to "motivate" them! I was a player. Now Im not a player or a coach anymore."
"Something everybody else but Bill Russell excelled in was giving the coach good advice. I made the decisions, but I listened an awful lot. Sometimes in practice the other guys would talk for half an hour and I wouldnt say a word. I encouraged them to tell me what they thought."
"People didnt give us credit for being as good as we were last season. Personally, I think we won because we had the best team in the league. Some guys talked about all the stars on the other teams, and they quote statistics to show other teams were better. Lets talk about statistics. The important statistics in basketball are supposed to be points scored, rebounds and assists. But nobody keeps statistics on other important things — the good fake you make that helps your teammate score; the bad pass you force the other team to make; the good long pass you make that sets up another pass that sets up another pass that leads to a score; the way you recognize when one of your teammates has a hot hand that night and you give up your own shot so he can take it. All of those things. Those were some of the things we excelled in that you wont find in the statistics. There was only one statistic that was important to us — won and lost."
"Nobody can write a story about the Celtics and not talk about Red Auerbach. Much of my success as a professional is a result of the way he first approached me. A lot of guys said Id never make it because I couldnt shoot. My first day with Red he told me right out that he didnt care if I never scored a point. He said they had the guys on the Celtics who could score. What he wanted from me was defense and rebounding. That suited me fine. He and I had one big thing in common — the will to win. When he appointed me coach he just said. "The job is yours." He never put pressure on me. He never even came to practice unless I invited him. Of course, I did — often. I would have been crazy not to take advantage of one of the smartest guys the game has seen. In moments of weakness, I almost like Red — a little."