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Dick Barnett, champion Knick with a singular jump shot, dies at 88

Dick Barnett, champion Knick with a singular jump shot, dies at 88

Boston Globe28-04-2025
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Playing for 14 seasons in the NBA, his last nine with the Knicks, Mr. Barnett teamed with Walt Frazier and Earl Monroe at guard, Willis Reed at center, and Bill Bradley and Dave DeBusschere at forward under coach Red Holzman.
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The Knicks won NBA championships in 1970 and 1973 with smart, unselfish play and tenacious defense that complemented their scoring power. Mr. Barnett displayed all-around court skills but was remembered most for unleashing jumpers with a form that had not been seen before or since.
When he launched his signature left-handed shot from his 6-foot-4-inch frame, his legs flew backward. Resembling a shot-putter, he put up high-arcing shots off his left ear, while telling the player guarding him 'too late' and directing his teammates to 'fall back' since there would be no need for an offensive rebound.
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When Mr. Barnett was playing with the Los Angeles Lakers, before he became a Knick, their longtime broadcaster Chick Hearn would shout, 'Fall back, baby,' when Mr. Barnett went up for his shot.
Mr. Barnett led Tennessee Agricultural & Industrial State University (now Tennessee State), one of the South's historically Black colleges and universities, to three consecutive National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics national championships, from 1957-1959, playing for future Hall of Fame coach John McLendon.
McLendon recalled in an interview with The New York Times in 1991 how Mr. Barnett 'would go up and back at a 40-degree angle' on his jumpers.
'It was an undefendable shot,' McLendon said. 'When he'd hit the floor, he was often off balance; sometimes he'd exaggerate it. One time, he fell clear up in the second row after the shot.'
That style was developed 'without rhyme or reason, something that came naturally and worked for me,' Mr. Barnett told Times sports writer Harvey Araton for his book 'When the Garden Was Eden' (2011). 'It was in the playground before I even got to high school that I learned how to execute that shot without really knowing what I was doing.'
The Syracuse Nationals selected Mr. Barnett in the first round of the 1959 NBA draft. He played two seasons for them and then one season for George Steinbrenner's Cleveland Pipers of the short-lived American Basketball League, coached by McLendon at the season's outset. After that he spent three seasons with the Lakers, playing with Jerry West and Elgin Baylor. They traded him to the Knicks for forward Bob Boozer in October 1965.
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Mr. Barnett joined with Reed, who was in his second season, as the first major building blocks for a Knick franchise that had been floundering for years. He averaged a career-high 23.1 points a game in his first season with New York and made the All-Star team for the only time in his career in 1968.
He teamed with Frazier in the backcourt when the Knicks won the 1970 NBA championship, defeating the Lakers in a seven-game final. Reed, who died in 2023, provided a memorable emotional lift for the Knicks in Game 7, playing against Wilt Chamberlain on a badly injured leg, while Frazier hit for 37 points and Mr. Barnett had 21.
When the Knicks won the championship again in 1973, defeating the Lakers in five games, Mr. Barnett was in his final full season, playing as a reserve behind Frazier, Monroe, and Dean Meminger.
He became an assistant coach to Holzman the next season, returned to play in five games as an injury fill-in, then retired for good with 15,358 career points for an average of 15.8 points a game.
Mr. Barnett was stylish off the court as well as on it.
Holzman told of the time when he was scouting for the Knicks and saw Mr. Barnett, who was with the Nationals, enter the old Madison Square Garden for the first time. 'He walked in with a Chesterfield coat, homburg, striped pants, spats and an umbrella hooked on his arm,' he recalled in his memoir, 'The Knicks' (1971, with Leonard Lewin).
Richard Barnett was born Oct. 2, 1936, in Gary, Ind., where his father was a steelworker. He starred on his high school basketball team before attending Tennessee A&I.
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From 1957 to 1959, his team won back-to-back-back championships in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics, a separate conference smaller than the National Collegiate Athletic Association. It was the first Black college basketball team to win any national championship.
The recent documentary focused on Mr. Barnett's efforts to win greater recognition for that team, which culminated in their collective induction into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 2019. When the surviving members of the team were invited to the White House last year, Mr. Barnett remarked succinctly, 'Finally.'
Mr. Barnett did not graduate, but while he was a Laker he received a bachelor's degree in physical education from Cal Poly. He obtained a master's degree in public administration from New York University while a Knick and a doctorate in education from Fordham University in 1991. He taught sports management at St. John's University and established a publishing imprint, Fall Back Baby Productions, for which he wrote poetry and commented on athletes and race.
His survivors include a sister, Jean Tibbs. He lived mostly in New York in recent decades and moved to Florida last year.
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Ranking NBA 2025 offseason for every team Nos. 20-11: Where do Knicks, Sixers, Bulls fall?
Ranking NBA 2025 offseason for every team Nos. 20-11: Where do Knicks, Sixers, Bulls fall?

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Ranking NBA 2025 offseason for every team Nos. 20-11: Where do Knicks, Sixers, Bulls fall?

After going through the bottom-10 teams in the first part of my annual recap of every NBA team's offseason, we arrive at the 10 in the middle. The top 10 will be revealed Thursday. Again, for the uninitiated: These aren't power rankings. They're just an opinion of how well each team did, or didn't, improve during the offseason. Most importantly: • If your team is ranked in the top 10, it doesn't mean I love your team. • If your team is ranked in the bottom 10, it doesn't mean I hate your team. Advertisement The one big question: Is the team better now than at the end of last season? The ranking reflects the belief on whether, and how much, that is so. In the meantime, we continue with teams 20-11. Most of these teams made significant changes to their roster, both through the draft and trades, and they either fit the direction in which the team was already going or were a welcome corrective to a philosophy that wasn't working. David Aldridge's 2025 offseason rankings: Nos. 30-21 2024-25 record: 49-33; lost in Western Conference finals to the Oklahoma City Thunder, 4-1 Added: C Joan Beringer (first round, 17th pick); C Rocco Zikarsky (draft rights acquired from Lakers via Bulls, two-way); F Enrique Freeman (two-way); Alex Rodriguez and Marc Lore approved as co-owners Lost: F Nickeil Alexander-Walker (signed with Hawks); C Luka Garza (signed with Celtics); F/C Rasheer Fleming (draft rights traded to Suns); C Jesse Edwards (waived) Retained: F Julius Randle (three years, $100M); F/C Naz Reid (five years, $125M); F Joe Ingles (one year, $3.6M) Extended: None Returning from injury: None The skinny: Another team whose success forced it to make tough second apron calls. In Minnesota's case, it couldn't bring back all of Reid, Randle and Alexander-Walker in free agency, so the Wolves are betting that second-year man Terrence Shannon Jr. can take up some of the slack from NAW's departure. Interesting that the Wolves drafted and traded for multiple bigs in the draft. Rudy Gobert is still pretty good most nights — ask the Lakers about Game 5 of their series with Minny — but he's starting to slow some at 33, and he's expensive, and …well, they got multiple bigs out of the draft. Do what you will with that information. 2024-25 record: 36-46; did not make playoffs Advertisement Added: G Damian Lillard (three years, $42M); Jrue Holiday (acquired from Celtics); G Blake Wesley (one year, $2.3M); C Yang Hansen (draft rights acquired from Grizzlies); G Caleb Love (two-way); G Sean Pedulla (Exhibit 10); F Andrew Carr (Exhibit 10); investment group led by Tom Dundon in agreement to purchase Trail Blazers Lost: G Anfernee Simons (traded to Celtics); C Deandre Ayton (waived after contract buyout via stretch provision) Retained: None Returning from injury: C Robert Williams III (arthroscopic surgery, left knee) The skinny: Whether or not Lillard, who tore his Achilles in April, plays a second this season for the Blazers doesn't matter; this is a win-win, with Lillard again being able to mentor Scoot Henderson while getting a year to rehab in familiar environs. Portland thinks Yang has a chance to be a star. But most everyone else had a second-round grade on him pre-draft. And, the Blazers had plenty of big-man depth already in Donovan Clingan, Robert Williams III and Duop Reath. Hey, go for Yang if you believe in him. But he had better pan out. Similarly, the Blazers need Holiday to help lift them to playoff level. It better work, considering they gave up the (nine years) younger Simons in the exchange. 2024-25 record: 39-43; lost in Play-In round Added: F Isaac Okoro (acquired from Cavaliers); F Noa Essengue (first round, 12th pick); C Lachlan Olbrich (two-way); F Emanuel Miller (two-way); G Yuki Kawamura (two-way); G Caleb Grill (Exhibit 10); G Wooga Poplar (Exhibit 10) Lost: G Lonzo Ball (traded to Cavaliers); C Rocco Zikarsky (draft rights traded to Timberwolves); G Jahmir Young (waived) Retained: G Tre Jones (three years, $24M) Extended: Coach Billy Donovan Returning from injury: G Ayo Dosunmu (left shoulder subluxation); Jones (left foot sprain) Advertisement The skinny: The Bulls aren't getting any points for speed, but they continued their methodical buildup by drafting Essengue, who could team up nicely with last year's first-round pick, Matas Buzelis, and form a promising young forward tandem. Coby White's big jump the last two years made Ball expendable, so getting more length and defensive versatility in Okoro for him was a decent return. Getting Josh Giddey extended before camp is the next expected step. But at some point, Chicago is going to have to be more intentional in making bigger moves that can get it out of Play-In round hell. Unless it's cool staying in Play-In round hell. 2024-25 record: 40-42; lost in Play-In round Added: G Dennis Schröder (three years, $45M); F Dario Šarić (acquired from Denver); F Doug McDermott (one year, $3.6M); F Drew Eubanks (one year, $3.1M); F Nique Clifford (draft rights acquired from Thunder); C Maxime Raynaud (second round, 42nd pick); G Daeqwon Plowden (two-way); G Isaiah Stephens (two-way); C Dylan Cardwell (two-way); F Pat McCaffery (Exhibit 10); G Isaac Nogueś Gonzalez (Exhibit 10); 2029 second-round pick (acquired from Pistons); 2029 second-round pick (acquired from Pistons) Lost: C Jonas Valančiūnas (traded to Nuggets); F Jake LaRavia (signed with Lakers); 2027 first-round pick (traded to Thunder); 2026 second-round pick (traded to Pistons) Retained: F Keon Ellis (team exercised $2.3M option for 2025-26); C Isaac Jones (team exercised $1.9 option for 2025-26) Extended: None Returning from injury: G Malik Monk (left calf strain) The skinny: Don't love the JV-Šarić swap. Yes, you save a little money (and maybe that's how Sac could afford Schröder), but you're still losing Valančiūnas's value as one of the better backup centers in the league. Schröder has been solid in most of his non-Warriors stops over the years; his toughness should help. And Sacramento did well in the draft, considering its positioning; coming away with two solid rotational pieces in Clifford and Raynaud was quality work from new GM Scott Perry and his front office. If Sac manages to snag Jonathan Kuminga from the Warriors after this is published, I'll revise the offseason … upward. Advertisement 2024-25 record: 24-58; did not make playoffs Added: F Trendon Watford (two years, $5.3M); G V.J. Edgecombe (first round, third pick); F Johni Broome (second round, 35th pick); G Hunter Sallis (two-way); F Dominick Barlow (two-way); F Jabari Walker (two-way); F/C Igor Miličić Jr. (Exhibit 10); F Izan Almanza (Exhibit 10) Lost: F Guerschon Yabusele (signed with Knicks); G Ricky Council IV (waived); F Alex Reese (waived) Retained: F Kelly Oubre (player option, $8.4M); G Eric Gordon (one year, $6.3M); C Andre Drummond (player option, $5M); G Kyle Lowry (one year, $3.6M); G Justin Edwards (three years, $7.1M) Extended: None Returning from injury: C Joel Embiid (arthroscopic surgery, left knee); F Paul George (left adductor, left knee injuries); G Tyrese Maxey (sprained right finger); G Jared McCain (torn meniscus, left knee) The skinny: You can definitely see a post-Embiid skeleton coming into shape in Philly, with McCain, Maxey and Edgecombe becoming a potentially wildly fun trio in the coming years. For now, Philly still holds out hope that the 31-year-Embiid can finally recover after getting shut down the last seven weeks of the regular season to have his meniscus repaired. But that's a hope that has fallen on deaf ears in the Philadelphia fan base, who've increasingly tuned the 76ers out. It's hard to see Philly going past next season with the big man as its lodestar if he can't show definitively that he can again handle the load of 60-plus games and get to the playoffs healthy. 2024-25 record: 51-31; lost in Eastern Conference finals to the Indiana Pacers, 4-2 Added: F Guerschon Yabusele (two years, $11.2M); G Jordan Clarkson (one year, $3.6M); F Mohamed Diawara (draft rights acquired from Clippers); F/C Luka Mitrović (draft rights acquired from Clippers); F Dink Pate (Exhibit 10); hired coach Mike Brown Advertisement Lost: G Kobe Sanders (draft rights traded to Clippers); F P.J. Tucker (team declined 2025-26 option); fired coach Tom Thibodeau Retained: C Ariel Hukporti (team exercised $1.96M 2025-26 option) Extended: F Mikal Bridges (four years, $150M) Returning from injury: None The skinny: If the Knicks hadn't fired Thibs after the franchise's most successful season in a quarter-century, they'd be ranked higher. If the Knicks hadn't brought in two quality vets in Yabusele and Clarkson to improve their middling bench, they'd be ranked lower. Brown isn't materially different from Thibodeau defensively; the hope is he can make New York a little more diverse offensively — in a different voice. He is a two-time Coach of the Year with more than 450 wins on his ledger, so it's not a bad bet on management's part. 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The bump up in offensive talent and improvement from the returning core should mean a few more wins next season, but not enough of them to jeopardize the Wizards' chief goal — holding onto their 2026 first-rounder by being a bottom-eight team. 2024-25 record: 17-65, did not make playoffs Added: F Kevin Love (acquired from Heat); F Kyle Anderson (acquired from Heat); C Jusuf Nurkić (acquired from Hornets); F Georges Niang (acquired from Celtics); F Ace Bailey (first round, fifth pick); G Walter Clayton, Jr. (draft rights acquired from Wizards); G John Tonje (second round, 53rd pick); F Oscar Tshiebwe (two-way); C Steven Crowl (Exhibit 10); G Matthew Murrell (Exhibit 10); 2027 second-round pick (acquired from Clippers); 2027 second-round pick (acquired from Celtics); 2031 second-round pick (acquired from Celtics); hired president of basketball operations Austin Ainge Advertisement Lost: G Collin Sexton (traded to Hornets); F/C John Collins (traded to Clippers); F RJ Luis Jr. (traded to Celtics); G Jordan Clarkson (waived after contract buyout; signed with Knicks); G Johnny Juzang (waived); G Jaden Springer (waived); F Will Riley (draft rights traded to Wizards); 2025 second-round pick (traded to Wizards); 2030 second-round pick (traded to Hornets) 2031 second-round pick (traded to Wizards); 2032 second-round pick (traded to Wizards) Retained: None Extended: None Returning from injury: F Cody Williams (mononucleosis); F Taylor Hendricks (fractured right fibula/dislocated right ankle) The skinny: It's all about Ace. If he's actually cool now with playing in the Wasatch, the Jazz had a great draft. He's a huge talent, and his ceiling is worth taking the big swing. But if this blows up in Utah's face in two or three years … oy. Ainges pere et fils don't blink, though, and they'll do everything needed to surround Bailey with the personal and team support needed for him to get off to a good start. Clayton is just the kind of high-character, winning player the Jazz needed more of in their building. Another lottery season awaits, but there's a Rockets-like path back to relevance through the draft to which Utah appears to be committed. (Illustration: Demetrius Robinson / The Athletic; Photos: Ryan Stetz / NBAE, Amanda Loman, Michael Reaves /Getty Images) Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

How the NBA got rid of microbets — and why it could be a blueprint for MLB
How the NBA got rid of microbets — and why it could be a blueprint for MLB

NBC News

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  • NBC News

How the NBA got rid of microbets — and why it could be a blueprint for MLB

Sixteen months after a landmark decision opened the door for legal sports gambling in the United States, a high-ranking NFL executive sat before a House committee in the fall of 2019 to ask for help banishing a particular type of bet that has drawn the ire of sports leagues across the country. Proposition bets, better known as 'prop bets,' allow wagers not on the outcomes of games but on occurrences during them. A wager could be on the result the first play of a game, the first pitch of an inning or whether a player will compile over or under a certain number of rebounds, strikeouts or rushing yards. Leagues, as the NFL indicated that day in front of lawmakers, consider such props troublesome and more easily manipulated because many hinge on the actions of just one player. 'These types of bets are significantly more susceptible to match-fixing efforts and are therefore a source of concern to sports leagues, individual teams and the athletes who compete,' NFL Executive Vice President Jocelyn Moore testified in 2019. (Moore, who has served on the board of directors of DraftKings since 2020, declined to comment.) Had you placed a bet then that prop bets would go away, you would have ended up a loser. When the NFL staged the Super Bowl between the Los Angeles Rams and the New England Patriots five months after the NFL's testimony, bettors could still choose among hundreds of prop bets. And six years later, they are still a source of headlines, concern for leagues and income for sportsbooks. In 2024, the NBA banned the Toronto Raptors' Jontay Porter for life for sports betting after an investigation found he had, among other findings, 'limited his own participation to influence the outcome of one or more bets on his performance in at least one Raptors game.' In June, reports surfaced that a federal investigation into longtime NBA guard Malik Beasley was related to activity around prop bets. 'I do think some of the bets are problematic," NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said in July, the month Major League Baseball placed a Cleveland Guardians pitcher on paid leave while it investigated unusually high wagers on the first pitches of innings on June 15 and June 27, ESPN reported. Weeks later, after MLB placed a second Guardians pitcher on leave as part of a sports gambling investigation, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred told a group of baseball writers that there were 'certain types of bets that strike me as unnecessary and particularly vulnerable, things where it's one single act [and] doesn't affect the outcome, necessarily.' Whether MLB considers prop bets 'unnecessary' enough to try to have its gambling partners restrict the kinds that are offered is unclear. But if MLB does, it might look to the NBA for a possible blueprint. During the 2024-25 NBA season, the league's gambling partners including FanDuel, DraftKings, BetMGM and several others who make up upward of 95% of the legal U.S. sportsbooks agreed to no longer offer 'under' prop bets on players either on 10-day or two-way contracts. (Porter had been on a two-way contract.) Fans could still bet on the sport's big names, like Stephen Curry's 3-pointers or LeBron James' rebounds — but legal sports betting operators in the United States were no longer offering action on the NBA's lowest-paid players. The decision wasn't a mandate handed down solely by the NBA. 'We do not have control over the specific bets that are made on our game,' Silver said in July. Years earlier, the league had sought just that type of power, but it was unsuccessful in persuading state lawmakers to pass legislation that would have given the NBA the right to approve what types of bets could be offered on the league. It also doesn't hold veto rights over what its gambling partners can and cannot offer, according to sources with knowledge of the situation. Instead, much like the NFL's attempt in its congressional testimony six years earlier, the NBA had to ask for help. Representatives for DraftKings and FanDuel didn't respond to requests for comment on their back-and-forth with the league that led to the decisions to restrict certain prop bets. Multiple people with knowledge of the situation not authorized to speak publicly on sensitive discussions said the league had to rely on making the case to its partners that prop bets on 10-day and two-way players weren't worth the relatively small amount of business they brought in. 'It's a small part of the marketplace,' a person involved in the process said, 'but had outsized integrity risks.' Such dialogue between a league and a sportsbook would have been unthinkable before the Supreme Court's 2018 decision to overturn a federal prohibition on sports gambling freed states to decide whether to permit legal sports betting. (Thirty-eight states and the District of Columbia allow sports gambling, and Missouri is set to launch its own operation in December.) Almost overnight, leagues and sportsbooks that once steered clear of one another were now in business together. Sometimes, the back-and-forth between a league and its sportsbook partners has stopped bets from appearing before they are even listed. In 2020, with leagues still months away from making a pandemic comeback, ESPN scrambled to fill programming that included NBA players' competing against one another in video games and even HORSE. As those competitions were announced, the NBA was contacted by betting operators and regulators who wanted to know whether betting odds should be offered on the unusual action, according to the sources with knowledge of the situation. The NBA strongly advised against it because the tournaments had been tape-delayed, meaning a handful of people already knew the outcomes and could benefit from that information if bets were offered. Sportsbooks agreed. The NFL recently has also found success restricting certain types of prop bets, this time through legislation. The Illinois Gaming Board in February approved the NFL's request to prohibit 10 types of what it classified as 'objectionable wagers,' including whether a kicker would miss a field goal or an extra point and whether quarterback's first pass of a game would be incomplete — the same type of 'single-actor' bets that leagues have come out against and that have reportedly sparked investigations into multiple athletes. By seeking to influence which bets are offered, leagues and their gambling partners are attempting a delicate balance of limiting bets they consider risks to the integrity of their games while still ensuring that enough betting options are offered to keep fans wagering their dollars in legal markets, rather than through offshore sportsbooks where tracking suspicious activity is much more opaque. Proponents of sports betting suggest that although the headlines about players or league staffers being investigated, or caught, for betting manipulation isn't good public relations for the sports, they're a sign that a 'complex system that detects aberrational behavior,' as Silver said in July, is working as intended. As part of their partnership agreements, leagues, betting operators and so-called integrity firms have data-sharing agreements that allow them to communicate with one another to monitor suspicious activity. "The transparency inherent with legalized sports betting has become a significant asset in protecting the integrity of athletic competition," DraftKings said in a statement. "Unlike the pre-legalization era, when threats were far more difficult to detect, the regulated industry now provides increased oversight and accountability that helps to identify potentially suspicious activity.' In the case of the pair of Cleveland Guardian pitchers, the Ohio Casino Control Commission was notified June 30 by a licensed Ohio sportsbook about suspicious wagering on Guardians games and 'was also promptly contacted by Major League Baseball regarding the events,' a commission spokesperson said in a statement. 'Under the Commission's statutory responsibilities, an independent investigation commenced.' It's why leagues and sportsbook operators consider restricting bets a fine line. 'If you have sweeping prohibitions on that type of a bet, you're taking away the ability for your league to ensure the integrity of that activity,' said Joe Maloney, a senior vice president for strategic communications at the American Gaming Association. 'You will not have the ability to work with an integrity monitor to identify any irregular betting activity on such a legal market. You will not have the collaboration of a legal operator who will share that information. You will not have the collaboration of a legal operator to say to them, 'Here's the do-not-fly list for betting activity for our league: employees, club employees, trainers, athletic officials, referees,' etc. ... 'Betting engagement on prop bets is largely a reflection of fandom. And so, by pushing that away, I think you absolutely lose the ability to properly oversee it and to root out the bad actors that would seem to exploit it. Because it will still take place.' In 2022, legal sports betting accounted for $6.8 billion in legal revenue, while illegal sports betting accounted for about $3.8 billion, according to research from the American Gaming Association, a trade association. Last year, it estimated that revenue from legal sports betting rose to $16 billion, while the illegal market grew to about $5 billion. A 2024 analysis by the International Betting Integrity Association, a nonprofit integrity firm made up of licensed gambling operators, questioned the efficacy of restricting prop bets. The IBIA reported that 59 out of 360,000 basketball games that had been offered for betting from 2017 to 2023 were 'the subject of suspicious betting.' 'There was no suspicious betting activity linked to match manipulation identified on player prop markets,' the IBIA report said. 'There is no meaningful integrity benefit from excluding such markets, which are widely available globally. Prohibiting those products will make offshore operators more attractive.' By persuading its partners to keep some prop bets off the books, the NBA nonetheless provided a precedent for how to remove bets leagues have considered, to use Manfred's term, 'unnecessary.' Would MLB, amid an ongoing investigation into two pitchers, follow? Unlike the NBA, MLB doesn't have easily defined classifications of contracts such as 10-day and two-way players. One method could instead be to target so-called first-pitch microbets. MLB is having 'ongoing conversations' related to gambling, according to a person with knowledge of the league's thinking. If baseball were to make such a push against microbets, its reasoning might mirror the NBA's last year, said Gill Alexander, a longtime sports betting commentator for VSiN. 'I think basically baseball's point would be, you know, this is the type of prop that is just begging for trouble, right?' Alexander said. Ohio, for one, would most likely agree. Last month, Gov. Mike DeWine asked the Ohio Casino Control Commission to ban prop bets on 'highly specific events within games that are completely controlled by one player," he said in a news release, while asking the NFL, MLB, NBA, NHL, WNBA and MLS commissioners to support his stance. 'The prop betting experiment in this country has failed badly,' DeWine said. Alexander said: 'I do think that we're in the era now where these leagues can exert some influence on these sports books, as long as it is of no financial pain to the sports books. This is one of these instances where, really, I don't agree with Rob Manfred every day, but I actually think he's probably going to get what he wants here.'

LOST GYMS: 'When you watch the movie Hoosiers, it was all that here and more' in Freetown
LOST GYMS: 'When you watch the movie Hoosiers, it was all that here and more' in Freetown

Indianapolis Star

time2 hours ago

  • Indianapolis Star

LOST GYMS: 'When you watch the movie Hoosiers, it was all that here and more' in Freetown

FREETOWN – The origin of the Freetown gym — how it came to be, how it was utilized and how it remains a center of this quiet community of 370 people in Jackson County — is a story of small town Indiana and the state's growing love affair with high school basketball. The year was 1930. For several years previously, the Freetown basketball teams practiced on a dirt court in the schoolyard or in a small gym that had been converted for basketball by Sherman Berry, a local businessman. Berry, the owner of flouring mill in Waymansville, hired Freetown carpenters Bill Cornett and James Huber as engineers to construct the new gymnasium, built from the materials of the old Tobrocke flour mill. In 1930 and '31, during the height of the Great Depression, Freetown children watched their fathers haul the timbers into town and stack them next to Berry's sawmill, then construct the gym, complete with dressing rooms, showers and a furnace. 'It was as loud as any gym you would go to today,' said Russell Fritz, a 1955 Freetown graduate. 'I don't think you could hold a candle to the atmosphere here. When you watch the movie 'Hoosiers', it was all that here and more.' Berry owned the gym, renting it to Freetown for games and practices, along with neighboring Houston and Van Buren Township until it turning it over the school in 1948. The gym was not only a home for basketball, though. It hosted graduation commencements, proms and senior plays. During World War II, bond rallies were held in the gym. In 1944, when Freetown's own Robert McKinney was killed in action in Italy, hundreds attended his funeral service in the gym. 'I have often wondered what our town would have been like without the gym because so many things went on there,' Irene Forgey McNiece told the Jackson County Banner in 2003. 'You could call it Freetown's hub.' The 1924-25 team won the only sectional championship in Freetown history, helping to spur the need for a gym. Fred Brock took over as coach the following year and would later be succeeded by Edgar Sprague, a 1924 Freetown graduate who would go on to coach and teach in the Freetown system for 46 years. Freetown was home to several quality teams after the gym opened in 1931. For the 1947-48 season, upgrades were for an electronic scoreboard and expanded dressing rooms with showers in the basement of the building. Previously, the wooden scoreboard reflected only the minutes remaining. The timekeeper signaled the end of the game by firing a blank pistol or blowing a horn by mouth. Sprague coached Freetown from 1932 to 1948, missing three years due to his service in World War II. He was instrumental in bringing Crispus Attucks, all-Black Indianapolis school having difficulty scheduling games, to play games at Freetown (Freetown also played at Attucks). During games against rival Vallonia and Attucks, fans climbed the roof to watch the games through the windows. 'There were quite a few of them up there, too,' 1948 graduate Dean Zike said several years ago. 'Not everybody could get in those big games.' Attucks was not well known at the time as the powerhouse program it would become during the 1950s when the Tigers won three state championships and featured one of the state's all-time great players in Oscar Robertson. Years later, after Attucks won its second state championship, Attucks coach Ray Crowe was guest speaker at Freetown's athletic banquet. Fritz was not yet in high school at the time but was in attendance the night Attucks first came to play at Freetown. 'Fred Brock (then the principal) told them they could come down here,' Fritz said of Attucks, which also played small schools like Medora, Vallonia and Clearspring. 'This place was packed. They had people standing on the roof and looking in. They continued to play for several years because of the friendship between Ray Crowe and Fred.' That Freetown team, led by left-handed post player Bill Brown, finished 18-7 but lost by 20 points to Seymour in the sectional championship game. There was intermittent success to follow for the Spartans, who won the 1957 Jackson County championship — still noted on a sign on the outskirts of town. The next year, Freetown made it to the sectional championship but lost to host Seymour, 74-58, and finished 20-4. By the late 1950s, the Freetown gym was rarely used for home games. The Spartans mostly used the larger, more modern gym at Cortland. 'It was a pretty good gym compared to what everybody else had,' said Bill Mann, a 1953 graduate, said of the Freetown gym. 'It had a good floor in it. When you bounce the ball, it would bounce back to you. This was a good gym. You couldn't seat a lot of people but it seated enough I guess.' Freetown graduated its final class of 16 seniors in 1964 before consolidating into Brownstown Central. 'Nobody wanted the school closed because it was hard on the town,' Fritz said. 'The town goes downhill a little bit when you lose your school.' The gym remained. It continued to serve as a community hub for many years, undergoing a $550,000 renovation with the aid of a grant in 2003. The grant allowed the community repair the east side of the gym, which was beginning to collapse. 'Some people complained about (the renovation) when it was done, but they were glad after it was done,' Fritz said. 'That money was available for grants and we could apply for it, so that's what we did. It was well worth it. It's a good feeling that it's still around. Everything in today's society is just thrown away. It could have been torn down just as easily when we got the grant to have it done.' When the renovation was complete, Fritz said one former player — who was originally against the idea of refurbishing the gym — sat in a corner of the gym in tears when it was complete. 'He sat down there and just cried,' Fritz said. 'It was a good thing we did it. It will be good for a lot of generations, I think.' The Freetown Elementary School was closed in 2011, another tough blow to the small community. But the gym remains a constant source of pride, still hosting annual class reunions, family reunions and community events. And, yes, the occasional basketball game. Just like Sherman Berry, Bill Cornett and James Huber would have hoped nearly 100 years later. 'They are getting a lot out of it,' Mann said. 'It did a lot of good for the community.'

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