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George Mikan dies, 1st great NBA center

BB73

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'16 & '17 Upset Contest Winner
I'm amazed at the 10 broken bones during his career. I think the elbows were flying in the old days!

foxsports.com

NBA great George Mikan dies

George Mikan, professional basketball's first dominant big man who led the Minneapolis Lakers to five championships, died at a Scottsdale rehabilitation center, family members said Thursday. He was 80.


<ID>Mikan had suffered from diabetes and kidney failure. One leg was amputated several years ago, and he recently was hospitalized for six weeks for treatment of a diabetes wound in the other leg. He also underwent kidney dialysis three days a week.


<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=3 width=177 align=right border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=caption>George Mikan, seen here with Shaq in 2002, was the NBA's first great big man. (Andrew D. Bernstein / Getty Images)</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

Last Saturday, he was moved from the hospital to the rehabilitation center, his son, Terry, said. He died Wednesday night, according to family members.

Six-foot-10, nearsighted with thick glasses, Mikan was so effective as a center at DePaul that he forced the NCAA to adopt the goaltending rule.

As a professional, Mikan dominated from the moment he arrived.

Mikan's Lakers won five league titles in the first six years of the franchise's history. A rough player, Mikan led the league in personal fouls three times and had 10 broken bones during his playing career. He averaged 23.1 points per game in seven seasons with Minneapolis before retiring because of injuries in 1956. Mikan was the league's MVP in the 1948-49 season, when he averaged 28.3 points - a phenomenal total in that era - in leading the Lakers to the NBA title.

"He obviously was the first of the real high-profile players," Boston Celtic great Bob Cousy said when told of Mikan's death. "He literally carried the league. He gave 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 much as they came to see the game."

A statue was erected in honor of the NBA Hall of Famer at the Target Center in Minneapolis.

"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,"' current Minnesota star Kevin Garnett once said. "Without George Mikan, there would be no up-and-unders, no jump hooks, and there would be no label of the big man."

Long before the term was invented, Mikan was the league's first superstar.

"It was certainly fair to say he was the Michael Jordan of his time, but I take it another step," Vern Mikkelsen, Mikan's Hall of Fame teammate, once said. "He was Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson and Larry Bird, all rolled into one in our time.

"Everywhere we went, George was immediately recognized not just because he's tall but because he was immaculately dressed and he had the glasses on and he had a big smile on his face. He was inundated, absolutely inundated."

Teams and leagues were often short-lived in pro basketball's early days. Mikan's first title came with the National Basketball League, his second with the Basketball Association of America. The rest were with the NBA, formed when the two league's merged in 1949.

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 and the distinctive red, white and blue ball.

"We were trying to get the network television contract, and I thought the typical brown ball was very hard to see in a large auditorium," Mikan said. "I decided on a ball with different-colored panels of red, white and blue for three reasons. First, it was patriotic; second, the TV viewability was just fantastic; and third, because of the salability of the ball. The young kids really liked it. In fact, we ran product comparison tests and the youngsters invariably chose our ball over the others."

In recent years, Mikan spoke out against the small pensions given to those who played in the league before 1965. Terry Mikan said most of his father's awards and memorabilia had been sold. Mikan received a monthly pension check of $1,000, his son said.

Born June 18, 1924 in Joliet, Ill., Mikan didn't play high school basketball, but when he entered DePaul, first-year coach Ray Meyer worked to transform him, monitoring exercises and drills that led to a devastating hook shot with either hand. Mikan was the tournament's MVP when DePaul won the 1945 National Invitation Tournament, scoring 53 points against Rhode Island. </ID>
 
osufootball727 said:
Tonight, Shaquille O'Neal offered to pay for the funeral of George Mikan. Classy action by a classy guy.

Well said.

For those who truly were able to give up ESPN, the evil network had a worthwhile piece on George Mikan and his financial struggles to meet the demands of his then-failing health due to the NBA pension cut-off. This NBA legend had to go so far as to sell all his All-Star Memorabilia and even an MVP trophy in order to take care of himself. Apparently, the NBA cut off offering its retired players pensions a year or two after Mikan retired. He had since battled severe diabetes, which included losing a leg. His family is broke.

Way to be Shaq. Shame on you NBA.
 
Upvote 0
Not just shame on the NBA - shame on the players too. Both sides are perfectly capable of giving a small slice of the pie to the handful of surviving players who retired before the original CBA. The players especially need to step up and make that happen. They would not be living the comfortable lifestyle they enjoy today if it weren't for the contributions of men like George Mikan.

Classy move by Shaq, and also by Charles Barkley, who called on the players to do the right thing during the postgame show tonight.
 
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