Kevin
McHale
Kevin Edward
McHale (born December 19, 1957) is an American former professional
basketball player who starred for thirteen seasons in the
NBA for the Boston Celtics. He is currently an executive
with the NBA's Minnesota Timberwolves.
Early
life
Kevin McHale was born to an Irish father and
a Croatian mother in Hibbing, Minnesota. Hockey, not basketball,
was McHale's favorite sport as a youngster. But a growth spurt
during high school forced McHale to give up hockey and he turned
his full attention to basketball. In his senior season at Hibbing
High School McHale was named Minnesota's Mr. Basketball of
1976 and led his squad to a runner-up finish in the AA Minnesota
State Championship game.
In 1992,
McHale was elected to the Minnesota State High School League
Hall of Fame.
College
The 209 cm (6 ft 10 in) McHale played basketball at the power forward position
for the University of Minnesota from 1976 to 1980, with career averages
of 15.2 points and 8.5 rebounds per game.
He was
named All-Big Ten in 1979 and 1980 and still ranks second
in school history in career points (1704) and rebounds (950).
In 1995,
to coincide with the University of Minnesota's 100th anniversary,
he was selected as top player in the history of University
of Minnesota men's basketball.
NBA
highlights
McHale helped form what is considered one of the league's best-ever frontlines
with small forward Larry Bird and center Robert Parish. The trio of Hall of
Famers became known as "The Big Three" and would lead the Celtics
to five NBA Finals appearances and three NBA Championships, in 1981, 1984 and
1986.
Possessing
a wide variety of offensive moves close to the basket, the
agile, long-armed McHale played in seven National Basketball
Association All-Star Games between 1984 and 1991 and lead
the NBA in field goal percentage in 1987 and 1988, shooting
60.4 percent each season. Also a standout defensive player,
McHale was selected to the NBA All-Defensive First or Second
Team six times and twice blocked nine shots in a game, the
most ever by a Boston Celtics' player (blocked shots did
not become an official NBA statistic until the 1974 season).
For the
first five years of his career McHale primarily came off
the bench for the Celtics, winning the NBA Sixth Man of the
Year Award in 1984 and 1985.
Early professional playing
career
Heading into the 1980 NBA Draft the Celtics held the number one overall pick.
But in a shrewd pre-draft trade, considered by some to be among the most lopsided
in NBA history, Boston Celtics President Red Auerbach dealt the top pick and
an additional first-round pick to the Golden State Warriors for Parish and
the Warriors' first-round pick, the third overall. With that pick the Celtics
chose McHale.
McHale's
stay in Boston got off to a rocky start as he held out for
a large contract, even threatening to play in Italy, before
signing a three-year deal with the Celtics. Backing up Bird
and Cedric "Cornbread" Maxwell at forward McHale
made an immediate impact and was named to the All-Rookie
First Team as Boston finished with the NBA's best record.
In the
playoffs the Celtics swept the Chicago Bulls in the first
round, but faced a 3-1 deficit in the Eastern Conference
Finals versus the Philadelphia 76ers. Boston stunned the
76ers, winning the last three games of the series, including
Game 6 on Philadelphia's home court. McHale helped save the
Game 6 win by blocking Andrew Toney's shot and corralling
the rebound with 16 seconds left in the game and the Celtics
leading by a point. In the NBA Finals Boston defeated the
Houston Rockets in six games to capture the club's fourteenth
championship.
The Celtics
failed to advance to the NBA Finals the next two seasons.
Philadelphia exacted a measure of revenge in the 1982 Eastern
Conference Final, beating Boston at its home arena, the Boston
Garden, in a seventh game. In the 1983 Eastern Conference
Semi-Finals, the Celtics were swept by the Milwaukee Bucks,
leading to the firing of Boston head coach Bill Fitch.
Following
the 1982-83 season McHale's contract with the Celtics expired,
and the New York Knicks signed him to a contract offer sheet.
Auerbach retaliated by signing three of New York's top free
agent players to offer sheets. The Knicks elected to re-sign
their players and give up their pursuit of McHale. McHale
eventually re-signed with Boston, his $1 million a year contract
making him the fourth-highest paid player in the NBA.
McHale
won the first of his consecutive NBA Sixth Man Awards as
Boston won a league-best 62 games in the 1983-84 season.
Led by their new head coach, former Celtics' player K.C.
Jones, Boston was bolstered by the acquisition of point guard
Dennis Johnson from the Phoenix Suns.
After surviving
a tough seven-game semi-final battle with the Knicks, the
Celtics avenged the previous season's playoff loss to Milwaukee
in the Eastern Conference Finals. Boston would face the Los
Angeles Lakers in the NBA Finals in a highly-anticipated
matchup.
In Game
4 of the finals, with the Celtics trailing in both the game
and the series, McHale delivered a hard foul to Kurt Rambis
as the Lakers' forward raced to the basket. The physical
play touched off a benches-clearing scuffle. McHale's takedown
of Rambis slowed the Lakers' fastbreaking "Showtime" offense
and changed the complexion of the series. The Celtics prevailed
in seven games to win the team's fifteenth championship.
McHale
continued to come off of the bench during first half of the
1984-1985 season, but moved into a starting role in February
1985 after Cedric Maxwell injured a knee. On March 3 versus
the Detroit Pistons McHale hit 22 of his 28 shots, setting
the Celtics' single-game scoring record with 56 points. [1]
Two nights later, McHale scored 42 points against the Knicks,
the only other time in his career he topped 40 points in
a game. The 98 points in consecutive games is still a Celtics'
record. On March 12, just nine days after McHale scored 56,
Larry Bird established a new Celtics' single-game scoring
mark by pouring in 60 points versus the Atlanta Hawks.
Boston
captured its second straight Eastern Conference title, but
was upended in the NBA Finals in six games by the rival Lakers.
McHale led the Celtics in scoring (26.0) and rebounding (10.7)
versus the Lakers, including a 32-point, 16-rebound performance
in the decisive sixth game.
Sweet
Sixteen
The 1985-1986 edition of the Boston Celtics is considered one of the greatest
teams in NBA history [2].
The Celtics
acquired former NBA Most Valuable Player Bill Walton in a
trade from the Los Angeles Clippers in September 1985, and
added the 211 cm (6 ft 11 in) center to its already-formidable
frontline. Boston sent Cedric Maxwell to the Clippers to
complete the trade, clearing the way for McHale to move into
a full time starting role. McHale joined starters Larry Bird,
Robert Parish, Dennis Johnson and Danny Ainge as the Celtics
steamrolled the NBA with a league-best 67-15 record and captured
the franchise's sixteenth NBA title.
The team
set an NBA record by finishing with an 82-18 win-loss record
(including playoffs), breaking the record of 81 victories
by the 1971-72 Lakers. Boston also set the NBA mark for most
home victories in one season, finishing 50-1 (including playoffs)
in 48 games in the Boston Garden and three games in Hartford,
Connecticut.
Boston
won 41 of its first 50 games, including two victories over
the Lakers. In a rout of the Clippers on December 30, 1985,
McHale set his single-game high in rebounds with 18 (a mark
he tied versus the Pistons in 1989).
An extremely
durable player through the first five seasons of his career,
McHale missed 14 games in early 1986 due to an injured Achilles
tendon in his left ankle, but he was healthy when the playoffs
began. Boston rolled through the Eastern Conference, winning
11 of 12 games versus Chicago, Atlanta and Milwaukee.
For the
second time in five years the Celtics faced Houston in the
NBA Finals, and the result was the same as in 1981, as Boston
won the title in six games. McHale averaged 25.8 points per
game in the finals to lead all scorers.
"Torture chamber"
" When I was healthy, I always felt I could score," McHale once told
reporters. "When it went into what I called 'The torture chamber,' I knew
it was in."
By his
seventh pro season, McHale had rehearsed and refined his
low-post moves and had become one of the NBA's most dominant
offensive forces, out-leaping, out-spinning and out-maneuvering
defender after defender in his "torture chamber".
McHale was never better than the 1986-1987 season, when he
set career highs in scoring (26.1) and rebounding (9.9).
He also became the first player in NBA history to shoot sixty
percent or better from the field (60.4%) and eighty percent
or better from the free throw line (83.6%) in the same season.
McHale was named to the All-NBA First Team and was named
the NBA's best defensive player by the league's coaches.
Late in
the 1987 regular season, McHale broke the navicular bone
in his right foot. Ignoring doctors' advice that the injury
could be career threatening, McHale continued to play. In
the playoffs a hobbled McHale averaged 39 minutes per game
and connected on 58 percent of his shots as Boston once again
won the Eastern Conference title. Boston swept the Bulls
in the first round for the second straight year and survived
two seven-game series with the Bucks and Pistons. A tired
and hurting Celtics team could not defend their championship,
losing to the Lakers in six games in the NBA Finals.
Offseason
surgery on his injured foot and ankle forced McHale to sit
out the first month of the 1987-1988 season. He scored 22
points in 22 minutes of play in his return to the Celtics
on December 1, 1987, versus Atlanta.
Teammate
Danny Ainge once called McHale "The Black Hole",
joking that when the basketball was passed inside to McHale
it disappeared, because he rarely passed it back. In a win
over the Dallas Mavericks on April 3, 1988, McHale played
the role of passer, distributing 10 assists, the only time
in his career he reached double-digits in a game.
The Celtics
won 57 games and made their fifth straight appearance in
the Eastern Conference Finals. McHale shot 60 percent from
the field and averaged a career playoff-high 25.4 points
per game as Boston defeated the Knicks in four games and
the Hawks in a thrilling seven-game semi-final series. But
the Celtics were toppled by the Detroit Pistons in six games
in the conference finals. Head coach K. C. Jones retired
at the end of the season, and the Celtics of the Bird-McHale-Parish
era would never again advance past the conference semi-finals.
Later
professional playing career
Injuries limited Bird to just six games in the 1988-89, but new head coach
Jimmy Rodgers coaxed the Celtics into the playoffs behind the play of McHale
and Parish and second-year guard Reggie Lewis. The Celtics faced the Pistons
in the playoffs for the third straight year and were swept by Detroit in the
first round.
The 1989-90
season marked the last time McHale was healthy enough to
play in all 82 regular season games for the Celtics. Bird's
return from his injuries moved McHale back into his role
as Boston's "sixth man". McHale provided an offensive
spark for the Celtics off of the bench, becoming the first
player in twenty years to finish in the NBA's top ten in
field goal percentage (fifth) and free throw percentage (seventh)
in the same season.
The season
was one of discontent for Boston. Second-year point guard
Brian Shaw left the team to play in Europe after a salary
dispute. And Larry Bird was criticized by teammates, including
McHale, for taking too many shots and trying to dominate
games on his own. The disfunctional Celtics still had enough
talent to win 52 games and finish second to Philadelphia
in the Atlantic Conference. Boston took the first two games
of its first-round playoff series with the Knicks, including
a record-setting 157-128 blowout in Game 2. But the Knicks
fought back and won the last three games of the series, bouncing
the stunned Celtics from the playoffs. Head coach Jimmy Rodgers
was fired following the playoff disappointment.
McHale
contemplated retirement in the offseason after having another
surgery performed on his balky right ankle, but he came back
for the 1990-91 season. Boston paired young backcourt players
Lewis, Dee Brown and Brian Shaw--back from his year in Europe--with
Bird, McHale and Parish and hired Chris Ford, a longtime
assistant coach and member of the Celtics' 1981 championship
team, to be its head coach.
The season
got off to a promising start as Boston sprinted to a 29-5
record, but the Celtics were soon slowed by injuries to McHale
(ankle) and Bird (back). McHale missed 14 regular season
games and Bird 22, as the Celtics limped to a 27-21 record
over the last three months of the season. In the playoffs,
Boston defeated the Indiana Pacers in five games in a hotly-contested
first round matchup, but for the third time in four years
the Celtics were eliminated by Detroit, this time in a six-game
semi-final series.
McHale
played in a career-low 56 games and Bird played in just 45,
as each suffered through an injury-plagued 1991-92 season.
Boston struggled for most of the regular season, but got
hot as the playoffs approached, winning 15 of its last 16
games and finishing with 51 wins, the third-most in the Eastern
Conference.
The Celtics
swept the Pacers in the first round, but were defeated in
seven games in the conference semi-finals by the younger,
quicker Cleveland Cavaliers. Bird retired from the NBA three
months later.
The 1992-1993
season was McHale's last in the NBA. Severely hampered by
leg and back injuries, he averaged just 10.7 points per game
and shot less than 50 percent from the floor (45.9%) for
the only time in his career.
In the
first round of the NBA playoffs against the Charlotte Hornets,
the Celtics were stunned by the loss of Lewis, their leading
scorer, who collapsed during Game 1 due to what eventually
proved to be a fatal heart condition. McHale performed brilliantly
in the series, averaging 19.6 points per game and shooting
58 percent from the field, including 30 points and 10 rebounds
in Game 2, but Boston fell to the Hornets in four games.
McHale
announced his retirement, without fanfare, while talking
with reporters at the scorer's table after the Game 4 loss
in Charlotte.
Legacy
In 971 regular season games, McHale averaged 17.9 points and 7.3 rebounds,
and in 169 postseason games averaged 18.8 points and 7.4 rebounds.
As of the
end of the 2005-2006 season McHale ranked ninth in NBA history
in career field goal percentage (55.4%) and he is among the
Celtics' career leaders in several categories, including
games played, points scored and rebounding.
McHale's
number 32 jersey was retired by the Celtics on January 30,
1994, during a halftime ceremony at the Boston Garden.
He was
chosen one of the NBA's fifty greatest players and was named
to the NBA's 50th Anniversary All-Time Team in 1996.
McHale
was elected to the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 1999.
Kevin McHale. (2007, January 10). In Wikipedia,
The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 05:20, January 12, 2007,
from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kevin_McHale&oldid=99696866
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