On this day in Boston Celtics history, Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Celtics player and coach Tommy Heinsohn passed away after a long illness. Heinsohn, who was part of every one of Boston’s NBA-record 17 titles in one form or another, had been broadcasting for much of the time after leaving the team as a coach in the late 1970s and had been calling games with partner Mike Gorman right up until a few months before his passing.
As a player, Heinsohn won 8 banners with the team in his career stretching from 1956 to 1965, 6 All-Star bids, and 4 All-NBA team honors among many others. As a coach, the Holy Cross product would win two more titles in 1974 and 1976, and take home Coach of the Year honors in 1973.
One of only five people ever inducted into the Hall of Fame as both a player and a coach, Tommy may yet make it in as a broadcaster as well, a feat yet unmatched in league history. Rest in Peace, Tommy — you are missed.
It is also the date that Celtics legend Ed Macauley left us nine years earlier in 2011.
Macauley came the Celtics after being selected by Boston in the (now defunct) St. Louis Bombers dispersal draft in 1950, the team that had selected him with the fifth overall pick of the Basketball Association of America (BAA – a precursor league of the NBA) draft out of St. Louis University.
“Easy Ed” Macauley would go on to have a Hall of Fame career in the league, winning a title with the (then) St. Louis (now, Atlanta) Hawks in 1958.
It was a season after being traded there by the Celtics with Cliff Hagan in the deal that would secure the draft pick used to take Boston icon Bill Russell.
Did you know that BC alumnus Marvin Kratter ’37 was the owner of the Boston Celtics from 1965 -1968? #FunFactFriday [📸 https://t.co/P06vX9v7oz] pic.twitter.com/ejdFfUKjX8
— Brooklyn College Alumni Engagement (@BkCollegeAlumni) October 1, 2021
An oddly sad day for Celtics history, it is also the date the team lost former owner Marvin Kratter in 1999.
A real estate developer who dabbled in the world of sports ownership as the principal owner of the Celtics from 1956 to 1968, Kratter would eventually sell the team to P. Ballantine and Sons Brewing Company for a short period of time.
On this day in 2007, Boston Celtics point and shooting guard Gabe Pruitt made his debut for the team.
A product of the University of Southern California Trojans, the Los Angeles native would be taken by the Celtics with the 32nd overall pick of the 2007 NBA draft.
Having landed with a contending team, there was little chance for Pruitt to see the floor in his inaugural season with Boston, but he got the nod for the first time in a 106-83 win over the Atlanta Hawks.
For having played just under three and a half minutes, it was a solid debut with Pruitt putting up 4 points and an assist with no fouls or turnovers.
That same date in 1948 saw Celtics wing Al Lucas debut for Boston, one of just 2 games the Fordham product would play for the team.
It came in a 77-55 blowout of the (then) Minneapolis (now, Los Angeles) Lakers at the old Boston Garden, and saw Lucas go scoreless, perhaps explaining his exceedingly brief tenure with the team.
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