Basketball Legends Revealed #2
This is the second in a series of examinations of basketball-related legends and whether they are true or false.
This installment is a re-format edition, so these legends have already been posted on this site, just not in this format.
Let’s begin!
BASKETBALL LEGEND: The Celtics were once forced to play a game at midnight due to the Ice Capades!
STATUS: True
Sometimes, it is interesting to note just how “current” of a phenomenon that professional basketball is. It is only a little over sixty years old. And only since the 1980s has it been a MAJOR sport, attention-wise. During the early years of the National Basketball Association, things were a lot different.
Walter A. Brown took over the management of the Boston Garden from his father in the late 1930s. The Boston Garden was originally developed as a boxing forum, but by the time Brown took over, their main tenants were the Boston Bruins. Brown was a huge fan of ice hockey, and had actually coached the US National team to a Gold Medal in the Ice Hockey World Championships in 1933.

After taking over the Garden, Brown became a bit obsessed with figuring out other uses for the space, and in 1940, he came across one, as Brown and a group of eight other Stadium owners known as the Arena Managers Association created the Ice Capades, the popular ice skating/vaudeville show (based on the popularity of the similar-themed Ice Follies).
Those stadiums and owners were (in alphabetical order by name of city):
Buffalo Memorial Auditorium (Louis Jacobs)
Cleveland Arena (Al Sutphin)
Hershey Sports Arena (John Sollenberger)
New Haven Arena (Nathan Podoloff)
Philadelphia Arena (Peter A. Tyrrell)
Pittsburgh Gardens (John Harris)
Rhode Island Auditorium (Louis Pieri)
Springfield Coliseum (Eddie Shore)

After a few years, the group would team up with the Ice Follies to create so-called “Ice Cycles,” which they would farm out to other cities needing something to fill their stadiums. Eventually, by the end of the 1940s, these touring companies would be known as the Ice Capades.
In 1946, while still looking for another use for the Garden, Brown helped create the second professional basketball league, the Basketball Association of America, of which Brown’s new basketball team, the Boston Celtics, would be a part of. The BAA soon merged with another earlier pro basketball league to form the National Basketball Association in 1949.

In 1951, Brown bought the Bruins, as well.
In 1952, the NBA was not that popular, and Brown was losing money every season with the Celtics, but he was committed to the team, and kept it alive out of his own pocket for many years. Meanwhile, the Ice Capades were going strong all over the country. Brown actually kept the team afloat by selling off some of his Ice Capades stock and constantly re-mortgaging his property. At this point, his interests were directly tied in with the Celtics – they HAD to succeed or he was going to go bust.
In 1952, his two interest co-mingled when Brown accidentally booked the Ice Capades on a day that the Celtics were due to play a home game.
So the enterprising Brown came up with a plan – the Celtics would play at midnight after the Ice Capades were done! They called it the “Milkman’s Special”!
Sadly, the Celtics, led by the great Bob Cousy, drew less than 3,000 fans to the midnight special.
Later in the decade, though, with the advent of televising games, the Celtics began to draw more and more fans and by the end of the decade (coupled with the advent of the 24 second shot clock), Brown’s gambit had paid off, and in the next decade, it would REALLY pay off!
BASKETBALL LEGEND: The Celtics swapped the Ice Capades for future Celtic legend, Bill Russell.
STATUS: False enough for a False
The events that conspired to result in the Boston Celtics acquiring the second draft pick in the 1956 NBA Draft are quite complex, and not all of it is agreed upon today, but what we know for sure is quite interesting.
Reader Jesse wrote in to ask about the following legend:
I believe it involved the owner of the New York Knicks and him trading the player for the rights to host the Ice Capades at the NY Stadium that he owned.
I could not find anything on that specific story, but since Jesse himself mentioned that he is unsure of the specifics, I think he is most likely thinking of the 1956 NBA Draft.
First off, the Boston Celtics waived their first round pick by using their territorial pick. Back in the old days of the NBA Draft, the NBA would allow teams to waive their first round pick before the draft and select any one player who played college ball within a 50-mile radius of the NBA team (this practice ended in 1965). As you might imagine, if a great player was within that radius, teams would snatch them up, so a lot of legendary basketball players were taken as territorial picks, including Wilt Chamberlain (who stretched the rule, as he went to Kansas for college ball, but the Philadelphia Warriors successfully argued that Chamberlain should be eligible as he grew up in Philadelphia and played high school ball there), Oscar Robertson, Jerry Lucas (also a slight stretch, as Ohio State was slightly more than 50 miles from Cincinnati, but since Cincinnati was the only NBA team in Ohio, it was considered close enough), Gail Goodrich, Bill Bradley, Dave DeBusschere and, in the 1956 draft, the Celtics chose Holy Cross star Tom Heinsohn.

So the Celtics did not have a first round draft pick in the 1956 NBA draft of college players, but even if they did, they would be towards the back of the pack, as the Celtics had the second-best record in the league in the 1955-56 season. So they would seemingly not have a chance at getting a center from San Francisco named Bill Rusell, who was just coming off of back to back NCAA Tournament championships.

Russell was born in Lousiana and moved to Oakland when he was a boy, so no NBA team could use their territorial picks on him in 1956. But the Celtics wanted him, and they were going to try to do whatever they could to get him!
Although Russell was well-regarded coming out of college, he was not as highly thought of as you would think for such a great player. Still, under normal circumstances, he would have gone #1 in the draft. The circumstances, though, were NOT normal in 1956. As mentioned in today’s other legend, the NBA was going through some tough times in the mid-50s, and although some of the teams were doing all right, the team picking #1, the Rochester Royals, was most certainly not.
Russell was drawing great interest from the Harlem Globetrotters, the exhibition team that, at the time, was a real threat to the NBA in terms of talent-grabbing, as the Globetrotters were making more money and therefore had more money to spend on talent. What no one knew (but the Celtics had some idea of at the time) was that there was no way that Russell was ever going to play for the Globetrotters, as he was greatly offended when he first met the owner of the Globetrotters (apparently, Abe Saperstein, owner of the Globetrotters, came out to visit Russell in San Francisco before Russell’s graduation and told Russell to bring his college coach along with him for the meeting. Saperstein then apparently spent the whole meeting talking to the coach and had one of his aides pal around with Russell. Russell was not happy). So when Russell came out of college, teams were worried about the Globetrotters sneaking in and stealing Russell with an offer of $50,000, which was more than twice what NBA teams would figure on paying a #1 overall draft pick.
Meanwhile, other events also came together to lower Russell’s marketability. Here are a few…
1. At the time, he was known for defense (the same as he was in the NBA), and defense was not as high of a priority from centers back in the 1950s, when centers were mostly seen as offensive players (The Celtics, though, had a very good offense and a poor defense, so they were most certainly looking for defense).
2. There was no television coverage of college basketball back then, so little was known about college players, especially those who played on the West Coast like Russell.
3. What little scouting there WAS usually took place after the college East vs. West Game at Madison Square Garden, which usually served as the main place where college players burst on to the scene. Russell played poorly in that game (later, some would suggest he was intentionally playing poorly because he did not want to be drafted by the Rochester Royals).
4. Adding to the whole “Russell did not want to be drafted by Rochester” theory, Russell actually told the Royals owner, Les Harrison, that he preferred not to play for them, stating that if they did want him, they’d have to pay him $25,000 (a very large sum at the time).
5. Russell made it clear that he would not sign with any team until the beginning of 1957, because he wanted to represent the United States on the 1956 Olympic Basketball team, and you had to stay an amateur to compete, so he would have to wait to sign until after the games in November.
As you can see, there was a whole pile of reasons why a team would want to steer clear of Russell. But even WITH these reasons, Russell was probably regarded highly enough that the Royals likely WOULD have drafted him ANYways, except that they already HAD a good center named Maurice Stokes. They had a greater need at guard than center.
If you asked Les Harrison, he’d tell you that his main factors were:
1. Russell’s cost
2. Russell did not look good when he saw him.
3. They had a good center already.
So the Royals drafted a cheaper player, a well-regarded Eastern guard (so they knew more about him) named Sihugo Green.
Later on, Harrison would posit that he was suckered by Russell and Celtics GM Auerbach, who he felt conspired to make Russell look unappealing so Auerbach would be able to acquire him.
We’ll get back to the Royals later.
Now on to the SECOND pick, which suddenly looked like it could be used to get Russell.
The St. Louis Hawks owned the second pick, and the Celtics offered them a seemingly great deal – the Celtics’ All-Star Center, Ed Macauley, for the #2 pick. Macauley was a very talented scorer and was only 27 years old, but he was a bit small for center, which is why Auerbach wanted to beef up with a better defender at the position. Even better, Macauley LIVED in St. Louis! Other historians have also pointed out that at the time, the NBA only had seven black players, and three of them played in New York. St. Louis, meanwhile, had an all-white team and some historians have suggested that a black star would not have gone over that well in St. Louis in 1956. I can’t speak to that, but for whatever reason, the Hawks were willing to part with the #2 pick.
At the last moment, the Hawks insisted that the Celtics throw in the rights to the very well-regarded rookie, Cliff Hagan, in as well. Do note that both Macauley and Hagan are in the Basketball Hall of Fame today, so they were very good players – this was quite a risk by the Celtics, but they believed in Russell that much, so they agreed to throw in Hagan.
In the years since, the Hawks general manager, Marty Blake, suggested that they felt that they were trading Sihugo Green, the guard who the Royals would ultimately take with the #1 pick. But that seems unlikely, as there’s no way that the Celtics would be offering up Macauley and Hagan, two very good players, for a guard like Green, who while a fine prospect was not in the same league as Russell. In addition, obtaining a guard would not have matched up with a trade for the Celtics’ star center. It is pretty clear that the Celtics were looking to get Russell with #2.
Okay, so how do the Ice Capades factor in?
As the story goes, the Royals (as noted before) were not doing very well. The basketball team was not drawing a lot of fans, and would, in fact, end up moving the team to Cincinnati in a year or so. One thing that WAS doing well was the Ice Capades, who were controlled by Walter Brown, the owner of the Boston Celtics. In 1956, the city of Rochester, who owned the Edgerton Park Sports Arena (where the Royals played) were giving Les Harrison a hard time over hosting the Ice Capades there. Walter Brown stepped in and smoothed things over, allowing Harrison to make some money. Remember, this was a guy who did not feel that he could pay Russell $25,000 – he needed the money badly. Brown then arranged for Harrison to get a two-week run of the Ice Capades.
So the general manager of the Boston Celtics, Red Auerbach has always claimed that Brown did this as a bit of a quid pro quo, a little extra incentive for Harrison to pass on Russell.
Harrison, though, claims that that was not connected to the draft, but rather just a friend doing a favor for another friend (Brown and Harrison WERE friends).
So, who do we believe?
The timing is awfully convenient, isn’t it? But at the same time, as expressed above, Harrison had plenty of “good” reasons not to draft Russell, so…hmmmm…this is a tough one.
I am going to go with false as presented, although it likely was a factor in the decision of the Royals not to draft Russell.
Russell, of course, led the Celtics to the NBA championship in his first season over, of all teams, the Hawks, who did not do too shabby with their end of the deal.

The Hawks, in fact, came back to beat the Celtics the very next season. And, as I mentioned before, both Macauley and Hagan are in the Basketball Hall of Fame. Amusingly enough, the Hawks picked up Sihugo Green from the Royals a few years later, and he had a decent career with the Hawks, as well.
Still, though, when the Celtics were in the midst of winning eight championships in a row in the 60s, I think they were pleased with their drafting of Russell, who was every bit the defensive dynamo he was cracked up to be.

(by the way, in the second round of the 56 Draft, the Celtics took Russell’s San Francisco teammate, KC Jones. Jones, Heinsohn and Russell are all Hall of Famers. So the Celtics drafted three Hall of Famers in the same draft!!!).
BASKETBALL LEGEND: An owner accidentally backed his way into the NBA due to another team refusing to have an exhibition with him.
STATUS: True
Danny Biasone came to the United States from Italy in 1919 when he was 10 years old. He and his family settled in Syracuse, New York.
Biasone was a star quarterback in high school, and after graduating, eventually opened up a restaurant with a friend. In 1941, he opened up a bowling alley that he would operate until he died in 1992.
Biasone owned a semi-pro football team before World War II, but after the war, he was unable to put together enough men to form a team. Undeterred, Biasone decided he would put together a semi-pro BASKETBALL team, instead, as that took less players.
Figuring his team would need someone to play (naturally), Biasone challenged a local professional basketball team in Rochester, the Rochester Royals (of the National Basketball League, a pro basketball league that formed in 1937) to an exhibition game.
The Royals turned him down.
He offered them $500 to play his team in a game.
The Royals turned him down.
He offered them $1000 to play his team in a game.
The Royals turned him down.
Not one to be deterred from his goals, Biasone called up the offices for the National Basketball League. They said, for $1000, his team could be IN the National Basketball League, and then the Royals would HAVE to play them!
So in 1946, Danny Biasone’s Syracuse Nationals joined the NBL…

Here is Biasone with his team…

The Nationals, along with the Royals and a few other NBL teams ended up joining up with the Basketball Association of America in 1949 to form what is now the National Basketball Association.
A few years later, with the league in tatters due to low scores and boring games (over half of the 17 founding NBA teams had folded), Biasone helped revolutionize the game of basketball when he pushed his fellow owners to adopt the 24 second game clock.
They did, and in 1954-55, the NBA began a new chapter in their history, and the Nationals, by the way, won their first (and only) championship.
During the 1960s, Biasone sold the team, and the Nationals eventually moved to Philadelphia to become the 76ers, who remain a member of the NBA to this day.

Biasone died in 1992 (above is a picture taken soon before his death) so he was not alive to see himself inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2000.
Thanks to Chris Creamer’s Sports Logo site for the Nationals logo.
Okay, that’s it for this week!
Feel free (heck, I implore you!) to write in with your suggestions for future installments! My e-mail address is bcronin@legendsrevealed.com



[...] mentioned in an earlier legend, Saperstein’s only intention with the Globetrotters was to make as much money as possible, [...]
As a lifelong Bostonian, your piece on Bill Russell and the Celtics brought back memories of the ’50s when the team did struggle prior to Russell’s arrival. I recall that the Boston Garden hardly ever sold out, even for the NBA Finals games in the ’50s and ’60s. One other piece of Celtics lore. Red Auerbach had a chance to draft Gus Johnson in 1963, but thought Gus to be “too flashy”, and instead drafted Bill Green, who Auerbach didn’t know was afraid of flying, which effected his play, and curtailed his NBA career. Even as a Bostonian, my all-time favorite player was Gus Johnson, he might be a good subject for a future story, he was inducted into the Hall of Fame this year posthumously, he died in 1989.
Thanks, Allen! Johnson definitely does sound like a good topic for a future piece. You might also get a kick out of a series I do on the Knick blog, Knickerblogger, about unsung Knick history. There was a recent one involving the 1950 Celtics. Here it is – http://knickerblogger.net/2010/09/unsung-knick-history-when-the-knicks-pulled-the-wrong-name-in-a-lottery/
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