Jo Jo White, Hall of Fame NBA player
Joseph Henry White (November 16, 1946 – January 16, 2018) was an American professional
basketball player. As an amateur, he played basketball at the
University of Kansas and represented the
U.S. men's basketball team during the
1968 Summer Olympics. As a professional, he is best known for his ten-year stint with the
Boston Celtics of the
NBA, where he led the team towards two NBA championships and set a franchise record of 488 consecutive games played.
[1] White was inducted into the
Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2015.
After the Olympics, White was drafted in
1969 in the first round (9th pick overall)
[19] by the
NBA's
Boston Celtics, who at that time had just won their 11th
championship in 13 years.
[20] There was some reluctance during the time of the draft as White had a mandatory two-year military commitment.
[21] Then Boston general manager,
Red Auerbach, was able to shorten White's commitment and allow him to participate in the 1969–70 NBA season. He later stated that his short stint helped him prepare for his first Celtics training camp,
Quote:"I was a Marine, so I had been through all the physical and mental challenges that comes with military training. Plus I was in excellent condition because of my military obligation, so I feel that this gave me an added advantage."[22]
White was also drafted by the
Dallas Cowboys.
[13]
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However, before White even reported to training camp, the Celtics' center and player-coach Bill Russell announced his retirement and cut ties to the organization.
[23] Also, the team's long-time
shooting guard Sam Jones would end his career, requiring White to replace those duties. With the sudden departure of Russell and Jones, White would endure a rebuilding season where the franchise experienced their first losing season (34–48)
[24] since 1950
[25] (the year before Red Auerbach was hired
[26]). White made the All-NBA rookie team during the
1970 season.
The Celtics got back on track by drafting
Dave Cowens, trading for
Paul Silas, retaining veteran
John Havlicek, and hiring coach
Tommy Heinsohn. With White leading the attack from the
point guard position, the team returned to its winning ways in 1971. He was an
All-Star for seven straight years from
1971 through
1977, finishing in the top ten in the league in assists from
1973–
1977. In 1972, he participated in the now-defunct NBA One-on-One 16-man tournament where he reached the championship (which occurred during halftime of Game 5 of the Finals) and faced 6'11" Detroit Piston
Bob Lanier, who used his eight-inch height advantage to win the $15,000 prize.
[27]
In
1974, White and the Celtics reached the
1974 NBA Finals. They would face the
Milwaukee Bucks who were returning with their championship-winning core from the
1971 NBA Finals, including future Hall of Fame members
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and
Oscar Robertson. With the Bucks starting point guard,
Lucius Allen, injured at the onset of the playoffs, White would lead a small, quick line-up (featuring undersized, All-Star Cowens at Center) towards the first Celtics championship in the Post-Russell era.
[28] The following season, White led the Celtics in minutes in a season where they would finish 1st in NBA Atlantic Division with a 60–22 record but lost the Eastern Conference Finals.
[29]
In
1976, White was part of a dominant Celtics squad which featured 5 veterans averaging double-digit scoring.
[30] During the playoffs, White led the Celtics to the NBA championship and was a starring player in what is often referred to as
"the greatest game ever played"[31][32][33][34] in NBA history. In the triple overtime win against the
Phoenix Suns in game 5 of those finals, White was the game's high scorer with 33 points, had a game high 9 assists, leading the Celtics to a 128–126 win. Logging 60 minutes of play time, only the Suns'
Garfield Heard (61) played more minutes. White was named the
most valuable player of the
1976 NBA Finals.
[35]
White went on to become one of professional basketball's first "iron men", playing in all 82 games for five consecutive seasons during the 1970s and setting a franchise record of 488 consecutive games played. White suffered an injury during the 1977–78 season.[url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jo_Jo_White#cite_note-36][36] With the end of the streak, White and the aging Celtics became a less effective squad and followed their championship with an exit from playoff semifinals in 1977 and then two losing seasons.[
citation needed]
Unable to retain his all-star form following the injury, White was traded by the Celtics to the
Golden State Warriors in the middle of the
1978–79 NBA season. Boston Globe writer Bob Ryan described the tension leading to the White's trade from Boston
[37]
Quote:"...being a Celtic, and, specifically, being a part of the Celtic mystique, meant a lot to Jo Jo White. In fact, being a part of the Celtics family and being able to come in and exchange quips with Red Auerbach and being able to identify oneself as a "Celtic" probably meant more to Jo Jo White than to any Celtic in the modern (i.e. post-Russell) era. Circumstances dictated that he leave, but leaving Boston was far from painless."
White would retire in
1981 with the
Kansas City Kings. He returned to the Jayhawks as an assistant coach from 1982–83. In 1987 at the age of 41, White attempted a professional comeback as a player-assistant coach with the
Topeka Sizzlers of the
Continental Basketball Association.
[38]
http://generational-theory.com/forum/new...rocessed=1