為什麼這篇Mikan game鄉民發文收入到精華區:因為在Mikan game這個討論話題中,有許多相關的文章在討論,這篇最有參考價值!作者MerinoSheep (美麗奴羊)看板NBA標題[情報] George Mikan 今天過世 ...
現在季後賽殺的正激烈 似乎沒人會注意這條新聞(也許是大部分人不知道他吧)
雖然沒看過您打球的英姿 但久仰您的大名(默哀.....)
http://espn.go.com/classic/obit/s/2005/0602/2074322.html
Thursday, June 2, 2005
Mikan was first pro to dominate the post
Associated Press
PHOENIX – George Mikan, the "gentle giant" who a half-century ago brought fam
e and stability to the fledgling world of professional basketball and literall
y transformed the game, has died 18 days shy of his 81st birthday.
George Mikan, right, led the Minneapolis Lakers to five NBA titles.
Mikan died Wednesday night at a Scottsdale rehabilitation center following a l
ong fight with diabetes and kidney ailments. His right leg was amputated below
the knee in 2000, and he had undergone kidney dialysis treatment three times
a week for five years, his son Terry said.
Prior to the start of Thursday's Game 5 of the Eastern Conference finals betwe
en the Detroit Pistons and Miami Heat at AmericanAirlines Arena in Miami, ther
e was a moment of silence to honor Mikan.
A superstar decades before the term existed, Mikan was the first big man to do
minate the sport. No one before had seen a 6-foot-10 player with his agility,
competitiveness and skill.
When the Minneapolis Lakers came to New York in December, 1949, the marquee at
Madison Square Garden read "Geo. Mikan vs. the Knicks."
"He literally carried the league," Boston Celtics great Bob Cousy said. "He ga
ve us recognition and acceptance when we were at the bottom of the totem pole
in professional sports. He transcended the game. People came to see him as muc
h as they came to see the game."
College basketball instituted the goaltending rule because of him, and the NBA
doubled the width of the free throw lane. Slowdown tactics used against him -
- his 1950 Lakers lost 19-18 to the Fort Wayne Pistons in the lowest-scoring g
ame in NBA history -- eventually led to the 24-second shot clock.
"George Mikan truly revolutionized the game and was the NBA's first true super
star," NBA commissioner David Stern said. "He had the ability to be a fierce c
ompetitor on the court and a gentle giant off the court. We may never see one
man impact the game of basketball as he did, and represent it with such warmth
and grace."
Ray Meyer, who was in his first year as DePaul coach when he began transformin
g Mikan into a basketball star, said that despite Mikan's longtime illnesses,
he was shocked and saddened at the death of his lifelong friend.
"He had the most positive attitude you ever heard," Meyer said. "Never once di
d he feel sorry for himself. He was a great basketball player, but I think he
was a better human being. I loved the guy. I thought he was one of my family."
Mikan was moved last weekend from a Scottsdale hospital, where he had been for
six weeks for treatment of a diabetic wound in his leg.
"He had a fierce determination to excel, which he exhibited in his athletic ca
reer and business career," Terry Mikan told The Associated Press on Thursday,
"and that probably extended his life five years."
Mikan led the Minneapolis Lakers to five league titles in the first six years
of the franchise's history. Nearsighted with thick glasses, he was as rough on
the court as he was mild-mannered off it. Mikan led the league in personal fo
uls three times and had 10 broken bones during his playing career. He averaged
23.1 points in seven seasons with Minneapolis before retiring because of inju
ries in 1956. Mikan was the league's MVP in the 1948-49 season, when he averag
ed 28.3 points in leading the Lakers to the title.
"Ed McCauley was our center. Eddie was 6-9, but weighed about 185 pounds where
George was probably 250," Cousy recalled. "When we'd walk down the street in
a group, Eddie would brush against a pole or big tree and say `Excuse me Georg
e.' Even to someone close to his height, George seemed humongous."
A statue of Mikan taking his trademark hook shot was dedicated at the Target C
enter in Minneapolis in April 2001 at halftime of a Timberwolves-Lakers game.
"We were in hiatus a long time, the old-timers," Mikan said at the time. "They
forgot about us. They don't go back to our NBA days."
Timberwolves star and 2004 MVP Kevin Garnett knew of Mikan, though.
"When I think about George Mikan, I skip all the Wilt Chamberlains and Kareem
Abdul-Jabbars and I call him the 'The Original Big Man,"' Garnett said. "Witho
ut George Mikan, there would be no up-and-unders, no jump hooks, and there wou
ld be no label of the big man."
The Lakers moved to Los Angeles in 1960 and became one of the most successful
franchises in professional sports.
"Frankly, without George Mikan, the Los Angeles Lakers would not be the organi
zation we are today," Lakers owner Dr. Jerry Buss said.
Born June 18, 1924, in Joliet, Ill., Mikan didn't play high school basketball,
but when he entered DePaul, Meyer, the young new coach, recognized the potent
ial.
Meyer said he worked with Mikan for six weeks alone, making him shoot left-han
ded and right-handed, a procedure still known as the "George Mikan drill."
He had him punch a speed bag, take some dancing lessons to improve his grace a
nd also jump rope.
Mikan was two-time college player of the year and led DePaul to the 1945 Natio
nal Invitation Tournament title. He scored 53 points in the semifinals against
Rhode Island, a phenomenal number in that era, and was named the tourney's MV
P.
Mikan played one season with the Chicago Gears before moving to the new Lakers
franchise.
"George was a giant among men in the early days of the NBA," said Celtics pres
ident Arnold "Red" Auerbach, who coached against him. "He was one of the great
est players of all time. He was the first player to really be an imposing and
intimidating figure on the court."
Mikan coached the Lakers for part of the 1957-58 season, and was commissioner
of the American Basketball Association in 1967, introducing the 3-point line a
nd the distinctive red, white and blue ball.
He practiced law and, in his later years, began pressing the NBA and the playe
rs' union to boost the tiny pensions given to those who played in the league b
efore 1965. Terry Mikan said most of his father's awards and memorabilia has b
een sold. Mikan received a monthly pension check of $1,700, his son said. Unde
r current rules, his widow will get half that much.
Terry Mikan said one of his father's reasons for fighting so hard against his
illnesses "was his hope that he would be alive when the collective bargaining
agreement was reached and the decision had been finalized on the pre-65ers and
their surviving families. He gave his heart and soul to that effort."
Mikan is survived by his wife of 58 years, Patricia; sons Larry, Terry, Patric
k and Michael; daughters Trisha and Maureen, and numerous grandchildren and gr
eat-grandchildren.
"I've got one word that describes my dad, and that's kindness," Terry Mikan sa
id. "Whenever he would make a toast at a family function, dad would ask us to
raise our glass to kindness, and that's the type of man he was."
Mikan's career stats*
Year G FG % FT % AST REB PTS
1948-49 60 .416 .772 3.6 ** 28.3
1949-50 68 .407 .779 2.9 ** 27.4
1950-51 68 .428 .803 3.1 14.1 28.4
1951-52 64 .385 .780 3.0 13.5 23.8
1952-53 70 .399 .780 2.9 14.4 20.6
1953-54 72 .380 .777 2.4 14.3 18.1
1955-56 37 .395 .770 1.4 8.3 10.5
Total 439 .404 .782 2.8 13.4 23.1
※ 編輯: MerinoSheep 來自: 61.229.183.122 (06/03 08:46)
※ 編輯: MerinoSheep 來自: 218.175.180.251 (08/24 19:03)