
Junior Bridgeman, PGA board member and former NBA star, dead at 71
Junior Bridgeman, a former NBA pro who served on the PGA of America board and was an owner in Valhalla Golf Club, died Tuesday in Louisville, Kentucky. He was 71.
"The PGA of America mourns the passing of Junior Bridgeman,' said Don Rea Jr., the president of the PGA. 'Junior was a staple in the Louisville community and a true lover of golf. This all came together with his involvement with Valhalla Golf Club where he helped to raise the property to new heights culminating in last year's PGA Championship. Additionally, his love for our sport was on display during the time he spent as an independent board member where he provided incredible insights and guidance. Our thoughts and prayers go out to all of his family and friends."
A native of East Chicago, Indiana, Bridgeman became an All-American at Louisville, reaching the 1975 Final Four. The Los Angeles Lakers drafted the 6-foot-5 wing at No. 8 in 1975 then traded him to Milwaukee as part of a blockbuster deal for Bucks star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Bridgeman played 12 seasons in the NBA, mostly as a sixth man. He made about $2.95 million in his NBA career while never earning more than $350,000 in a season.
He became one of the most successful post-playing businessmen of any professional athlete. Bridgeman became a fast-food restaurant magnate, operating numerous restaurants, including many Wendy's locations. He also purchased Ebony and Jet magazines. He reportedly was a billionaire and last year became a minority owner of the Milwaukee Bucks, a team for which he once played.
He was also part of a group of local business leaders who purchased Valhalla Golf Club from the PGA in 2022. The course hosted the PGA Championship last year.
According to ESPN, multiple Louisville television stations reported that Bridgeman grabbed his chest at one point during a fundraising luncheon, expressing that he believed he was suffering a heart attack. The stations, including WLKY and WAVE, reported that emergency medical personnel were called.
Current Bucks head coach Doc Rivers opened his pregame press conference in Indianapolis with a statement at Gainbridge Fieldhouse.
'Just really a dark day, a tough day, losing Junior," Rivers began, before pausing to compose himself after getting emotional.
"I've known Junior for probably, what am I, 60, I've known him since I was in college. He was one of the guys, him and Quinn Buckner, that would call me at Marquette to get me to go play with the Bucks of all places. When you think about Junior's life, you know, I keep thinking about LeBron and Magic and how influential they are to our league – and they are – and what they've done off the court is amazing. But the role model we should have is Junior Bridgeman when you think about it.
"Here's a guy that I think the most he made was what, $350,000 in his career? And he's an owner. Think about that kid growing up, wanting to be an NBA player was probably his dream and he turned that dream into being an NBA owner. And if that's not what every kid should aspire to do. I was even reflecting on my career as a coach and I won titles; and all that stuff and you should really want to be like Junior.
"I mean when you think about it, he is the exact model that the league should use every day when they're talking to our young players. Tough day. Just really a tough day.'
Bridgeman was the No. 8 pick of the 1975 NBA draft out of the University of Louisville by the Los Angeles Lakers, but was traded to the Bucks as part of the deal that sent Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to L.A.
'Junior Bridgeman was an integral part of our community. From his athletic impact to his philanthropic efforts, he will be deeply missed,' said Lance George, chief marketing officer of the Al J. Schneider Company, which owns the Galt House. 'Our thoughts and prayers go out to the Bridgeman family during this time.'
Though he played 12 years in the NBA (10 with Milwaukee), Bridgeman became more well-known for his success in retirement and a standard-bearer for off-court success for former athletes. Bridgeman, who purchased a 10% minority share of the Bucks in February, became a billionaire in September.
Doc Rivers emotional about an unassuming star
"On a day like this, I just reflect on me a lot too," Rivers said before the Bucks played the Pacers on Tuesday night. "I'm just so blessed. There's a lot of benefits for me coming back to Milwaukee that I didn't anticipate. I had no idea that Junior was going to get back into the Bucks and be an owner and then we restarted a relationship. We stayed in contact still throughout the years. He flew me down to go to the Kentucky Derby with him. So, we had a relationship, but I didn't talk to him a lot and then all of a sudden he's back in.
"And you know when you tell people, seize the day and all this stuff - the last conversation I had with Junior was about using him to mentor the young players and try to figure out a way of doing that and we never got to it because you thought there was time. The second side of Junior was the first side though. When he was an NBA player, if you would have just met him on the street, you wouldn't have known. He wouldn't have told you and he didn't act like it.
"When he became a billionaire, you wouldn't have known and he would not have told you and he didn't act like it. The word gentleman is like gentle man and that is as good as you can get with Junior."
'I am devastated to learn of the sudden passing of Junior Bridgeman," NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said in a statement released by the league. "Junior was the ultimate entrepreneur who built on his impactful 12-year NBA playing career by becoming a highly respected and successful business leader. He served as a mentor to generations of NBA players and athletes across sports who were eager to learn from him about what it takes to thrive in the business world. Junior was a dedicated member of the NBA family for 50 years – most recently as a minority owner of the Milwaukee Bucks, an investor in NBA Africa and as a player who set the standard for representing the league and our game with class and dignity.
'We express our heartfelt condolences to Junior's wife, Doris, their children, Eden, Justin and Ryan, the Bucks organization, and his many friends and admirers in the basketball community.'
Bridgeman came to Bucks in Abdul-Jabbar trade and became a fan favorite
Bridgeman first arrived in Milwaukee with a difficult task, partially responsible for plugging the hole poked into the hearts of Wisconsin sports fans after the Bucks had consummated a trade to send unhappy superstar Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to the Los Angeles Lakers.
The transaction, engineered in the shadow of Abdul-Jabbar's dissatisfaction with the cultural offerings of Milwaukee, would be remembered forever as a dark chapter in Milwaukee sports history, but the return wasn't bad. The Bucks received Elmore Smith, Brian Winters, Dave Meyers and Bridgeman for Abdul-Jabbar and Walt Wesley. Winters and Bridgeman both have jerseys hanging in the Fiserv Forum rafters next to Abdul-Jabbar's.
Meyers and Bridgeman had just been taken top 10 in the NBA draft by the Lakers, meaning the 6-5 small forward from the University of Louisville would begin his career with the Bucks. He had a 43-inch vertical and a penchant for dunks.
Bucks coach Larry Costello intended to use Bridgeman primarily as a guard, but he frequently moved to forward when future Hall of Famer Bobby Dandridge was unavailable with injury, allowing Bridgeman to demonstrate that he could oscillate between the two roles.
"He has all the tools," Knicks star Earl Monroe said during February of that 1975-76 season. "Mostly all it takes for a kid like him is playing time. Most rookies don't get anywhere near the playing time he is now. So he will come along a lot sooner than ordinarily.
"Most of the guys he takes on are just his size or smaller. Most of his points come from post position. He's going to outjump most guards who get isolated on him, and he'll get his shots."
Bridgeman and Meyers were both named second-team All-Rookie, with Bridgeman scoring 8.6 points per game that first year. It was the last time he'd average fewer than double digits in his nine seasons with Milwaukee.
Though he became known throughout his career as Milwaukee's Super Sub, he appeared in the starting lineup 46 times during his second season, playing under first-year Bucks coach Don Nelson. Bridgeman became more of a fixture as a reserve the following season.
"When I was younger, I used to think it was to my advantage to come off the bench," Nelson said in 1977. "Usually, the other players who were already in the game were tired, and when you're young, you need every break you can get."
Bridgeman also won over his teammates in the process.
"When Junior comes into a room, it seems like all the light bulbs light up," general manager Wayne Embry said of the second-year player in late 1976. "He's just a fantastic person. Maybe he's not as outgoing as he could be, but to know him is to really like him."
Bridgeman ran an annual basketball camp in Milwaukee and became one of the first members on the board of directors for Milwaukee Athletes against Childhood Cancer, founded in 1976 and still in place today.
And if you looked for signs of the business-savvy and industriousness that eventually made Bridgeman a billionaire, you could find them.
The son of a steelworker played clarinet and was president of the school band at Washington High School. He once told a story that when he and his brother didn't have enough money to buy a stereo system, they built their own out of old parts. He made the Dean's List all eight semesters at Louisville, and once he came to Milwaukee, he enrolled in law school at the University of Wisconsin in Madison. He also had a shoe deal with Converse, seldom wearing the same pair of basketball kicks week-to-week.
Nelson once expressed that Bridgeman's offseason commitment to law school jeopardized reaching his potential as a basketball player.
(Editor's note: The Milwaukee Sentinel-Journal, part of the USA Today Network, contributed to this post.)

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Time Business News
a few seconds ago
- Time Business News
Junior AI: How a 24-Hour Coding Dare Turned Into a Game-Changing Shopify Photo Editor
Some businesses start with million-dollar funding rounds, massive offices, and fancy launch parties. Junior? Nah… it started with a cup of coffee, a laptop, and a crazy personal dare: 'Can I build a working AI photo editor in 24 hours?' I'm not going to lie; it sounded insane. But in e-commerce, Shopify product images can literally make or break a sale. And most sellers? They don't have the time, budget, or patience to learn Photoshop. So yeah, the idea felt worth losing some sleep over. Day one was pure chaos. No plan, no roadmap, just me and the keyboard. By the next morning, I had a working prototype a basic AI photo editing tool that could: Remove backgrounds cleanly (no more messy edges) Upscale blurry images so they look sharp Add quick AI photo filters for that extra pop It wasn't perfect. In fact, it was a little ugly. But it worked . And honestly, in tech, working beats pretty much any day. One month later, junior – mini ai tools wasn't just a half-baked experiment. It was live on the Shopify App Store, letting sellers do ecommerce image editing directly inside Shopify—no downloads, no complicated settings, no file juggling. Look, there are a ton of online photo editors out there. Most of them try to do everything —from weird meme filters to overly complex AI prompts. Junior? It's laser-focused on what sellers actually need. Think: AI Image Generator for creating extra product shots without hiring a photographer for creating extra product shots without hiring a photographer AI Photo Enhancement to make images sharper and brighter instantly to make images sharper and brighter instantly AI Background Remover that actually understands where your product ends and the background begins that actually understands where your product ends and the background begins AI Image Restoration to bring old or damaged product photos back to life to bring old or damaged product photos back to life AI Image Blending & Combination for creative campaigns or lifestyle shots for creative campaigns or lifestyle shots Batch Editing so you can process hundreds of photos in one go If you're selling online, your product image is your first lighting? Buyer clicks background? You look unprofessional. Low quality? They won't trust you enough to pay. Junior fixes that fast. Even amateur photos can look like they were taken in a studio — all thanks to AI-powered enhancements and background cleanups. We've had Shopify store owners who: Launched an entire seasonal collection in half the time because of batch editing Revived old stock photos instead of paying for a new shoot A/B tested product images made with AI generators and saw conversion rates jump One guy even told me he started using Junior to create custom images for Instagram ads without touching Canva or Photoshop. That's the kind of 'off-label' use I love. In e-commerce, time is money. Junior's Shopify integration means you edit right where your products live — no exporting, no zip files, no nonsense. Upload → Pick an action → Done. You can: Upscale resolution for marketplaces like Amazon Create quick mockups for new products Maintain consistent branding across every listing Junior's not done. We're already working on: Faster AI processing speeds Even cleaner background removal for tricky products (think jewelry or transparent bottles) Direct integration with ad platforms so your edited images can go straight into campaigns Basically — less clicking around, more selling. And if you want to follow updates or my thoughts on content creation tools, you can check my LinkedIn profile. Junior didn't start as a 'startup idea.' It started as a fun challenge. That's why it's so seller-focused — every feature exists to actually solve a pain point. From a one-day caffeine-fueled code sprint to a growing AI tool used by Shopify stores worldwide… it's proof that you don't need 6 months and a giant team to create something that changes the game. Final thought? If you're still editing photos manually in 2025… you're wasting time you could be using to make sales. Let AI handle the boring work — from photo effects online to complete visual content creation — so you can focus on growing your business. TIME BUSINESS NEWS


New York Times
a few seconds ago
- New York Times
Do the Knicks need to make NBA Finals and other New York fan survey results
The people have spoken. Over 3,000 fans voiced their opinion on the New York Knicks' upcoming season and the state of the franchise. And, as was the case last year, the expectations are sky high from both the organization and the fans. New York finished last year two wins short of the NBA Finals, fired its coach, hired a new one and has put together the bulk of next year's roster with a little over a month until training camp begins. Based on the survey results, it feels as if Knicks fans are anticipating yet another season that sees the franchise ending a long drought. Advertisement With all that said, let's get into the results for each question and my thoughts on everything. Progress doesn't always have to be linear, but in the case of the Knicks, who are months removed from their first Eastern Conference finals appearance in 25 years and firing their winningest coach this century, it does. Over 70 percent of the votes suggest that fans believe New York has to, at least, make the finals. I figured that would be the case. Not only were the Knicks, possibly, a Tyrese Haliburton prayer shot from making it this past season, but the core will have another year under its belt in an Eastern Conference with less legitimate NBA title contenders (in large part due to injuries). Winning an NBA title is hard. Getting to the finals is difficult, too. Too many factors outside of which team is the best plays into accomplishments of that magnitude. However, as things stand, the Knicks have a lot of things in their favor to be the last team standing in the East. I'm actually surprised that 'very confident' came in third place. Maybe decades of heartbreak has fans controlling their emotions. That's understandable. As we sit here in August, the only team that appears to be on the same level as the Knicks in the East is the Cleveland Cavaliers, who, after an Eastern Conference-leading 64 wins last season, fell short in the second round of the NBA playoffs to the Indiana Pacers. Cleveland did dominate New York during the regular season last year, and maybe that is where some of the cautiousness comes from for Knicks fans. The Cavaliers have more continuity than the Knicks, and I could see that leading to a better regular-season record if New York takes a bit to find its footing under a new head coach. That said, one of the Cavaliers or Knicks will be the No. 1 seed in the East (barring injuries of course). We'll see how these two teams match up against one another relatively soon, as they open the season against one another and then play again on Christmas. Advertisement Of all the questions on this survey, this result was the one I was most curious about. When talking to fans in-person and online, there seems to be a healthy split when it comes to this question. The results somewhat show the same thing. Ultimately, I think fans grew tired of Thibodeau's reliance upon his starters, his lack of experimentation until the Knicks were deep in the playoffs and, well, after five years, people just like change. Do I think Thibodeau deserved to be fired? I don't. I thought he deserved one more year after all he's done to help turn New York back into a respectable organization on the court. Do I understand why he got fired? I do. The decision to fire Thibodeau could be one that either makes the decision-makers look like geniuses or, potentially, sets the franchise back a bit. We'll find out soon enough. This is somewhat how I thought the result of this question would shake out. Brown has had a long coaching career that has been met with both highs and lows. He's respected around the NBA but doesn't come with the championship pedigree (as a head coach) that I'm sure some fans would have liked after what transpired last season. Brown has a lot of the credentials you'd want from someone running the show, but I'm not sure he'd be considered a 'splashy' hire. Brown and the front office will absorb all of the pressure this coming season. Brown is the only major change from a team that went far last season, and the front office made the decision to change bodies in that first chair. The owner will face pressure, too, but he owns the team. So, is it really pressure? He won't fire himself. The veteran coach deserves the benefit of the doubt out of the gate. Brown has accomplished enough in this league to make you believe that, with this team, he could be the voice needed to help the Knicks reach the mountaintop. Advertisement Another split across the board for the most part, and I believe this is the proper reaction to this question. Not everyone was on the same page. And, no, this wasn't the best cycle to fire an accomplished coach and look for a new head coach. Yet, with those two things said, the Knicks did their due diligence, no matter how funky the process looked. Now, one could say they were forced to do their due diligence because of how and when Thibodeau was let go. Those people wouldn't be incorrect. However, given the circumstances, I did think New York turned over a lot of stones to make sure it found what it believes to be the best candidate available. We'll find out soon enough if the Knicks' process led to the results they were looking for. If the survey was done before the playoffs, I wonder if the results would have had a little more blue… After being traded for a handful of draft picks last summer, Bridges' introduction to Manhattan was met with mixed reviews. He struggled at times as the team's primary point-of-attack defender, and his offensive success was largely reliant upon midrange shooting. Individually, Bridges had a good regular season, but he certainly had pockets where he left fans wanting more. However, in the playoffs, Bridges made some of the biggest defensive stops in more than one series and hit some big shots here and there, as well. He was always consistent from quarter to quarter during the postseason, but his highs were key in helping the Knicks make the Eastern Conference finals. Ultimately, New York made the trade for Bridges because it believed he was the missing piece to help the franchise be legitimate title contenders. The Knicks were two wins away from making the finals and Bridges played every game. That's something. Advertisement The Knicks didn't give up too much to acquire Towns and his lengthy contract, so the results here make sense. He was one of the 15 best players in the NBA last season, had his most efficient shooting season in three years and, like Bridges, played a big part in the Knicks making the Eastern Conference finals. Towns has his limitations defensively, but everyone knew that when the trade happened. His offense popped despite optimal spacing, and there's more there for Brown to try and unlock. As it pertains to Towns, the Knicks need to find out if they can win at the highest level with him playing center primarily or if he needs another traditional, rim-protecting center alongside him. The Timberwolves thought they answered that question and now New York must do it sooner rather than later. The fan response here is correlated to what I was talking about above. Fans, too, feel like pairing Towns with a more traditional, defensive-minded center like Mitchell Robinson is the best way to go in order to maximize this team's ceiling. Thibodeau switched to the Brunson-Bridges-Anunoby-Towns-Robinson starting lineup halfway through the postseason and while the results weren't great, they were better than the previous starting lineup. The former lineup played 65 minutes together in the playoffs (which was the 15th most-used lineup in the entire playoffs) and posted a -3.7 net rating. The Brunson-Bridges-Anunoby-Hart-Towns lineup played 335 minutes together (which was the most-used lineup in the entire playoffs) and had a -6.2 net rating. The starting lineup with Robinson wasn't used much during the regular season, largely because Robinson missed most of the regular season due to injury. Maybe there is more to unlock there with more time together. After that, fans appear to prioritize the shooting of Miles McBride as opposed to the connectivity of Josh Hart. Advertisement Out of curiosity, if you voted 'other' let me know in the comments which starting lineup you want to see. I won't spend too much time on this result. It makes sense. Brown and Co. get two years to figure it out from the viewpoint of the fans. That seems reasonable. Of all the questions on this survey, this was the one result I was most sure of. Brunson, yet again, was one of the best 10 players in the NBA. He was the most clutch player in basketball. He had ridiculously good playoff performances. Brunson is the best player on the team and has, maybe more than anyone, been critical to the Knicks' on-court resurgence in recent years. The fans love Brunson. Brunson loves the fans. This is a perfect marriage. Maybe Brunson never brings a title to New York. There are too many factors that impact that result outside of Brunson's control. And even if he never does, Brunson has proven that, year after year, he is one of the best players in the game. The case could be made that a team with two limited defenders playing major minutes can't win a title. That's understandable. However, to me, that says more about mildly flawed team-building than it does Brunson. Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle


USA Today
28 minutes ago
- USA Today
Sixers legend Moses Malone ranked No. 6 center in history of the NBA
Hall of Famer Moses Malone is one of the basketball legends in the game. After starting his career in the ABA for two seasons, Malone began his NBA career with the Houston Rockets and made a big impact with them before the Sixers acquired him in 1982. In Malone's first season in Philadelphia, he averaged 24.5 points and 15.3 rebounds on his way to winning MVP honors and then leading the Sixers on a championship run. He famously said the Sixers would "Fo', Fo', Fo'" their way to a title meaning they would sweep everybody. Unfortunately for Malone, the Sixers lost one game to the Milwaukee Bucks so it was almost a clean sweep. HoopsHype ranked the top 20 centers in the history of the NBA and Malone came in ranked No. 6 on the list: Perhaps the most underappreciated superstar ever, Moses Malone was as dominant as it gets at the center spot with physical toughness as a rebounder, leading the league in nightly boards an astounding six times, including once at 17.6 rebounds per game. Malone was also a monster scorer in the paint, using his brute strength to batter smaller foes down low. Many consider Malone the greatest offensive rebounder the league has ever seen, as his timing and instincts to chase boards on offense were second to none. Malone's No. 2 uniform is hanging from the rafters of what is now called the Xfinity Mobile Arena as the Sixers make sure they honor one of the franchise's all-time great players.