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Gus Johnson (basketball)

Gus "Honeycomb" Johnson Jr. was an American professional basketball player in the National Basketball Association (NBA) and American Basketball Association (ABA). A 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m), 235-pound (107 kg) forward who occasionally played center, Johnson spent nine seasons with the Baltimore Bullets before he split his final campaign between the Phoenix Suns and Indiana Pacers, where he won the ABA championship in his final game. Johnson did not come into the NBA until he was almost 25-years old. He was a five-time NBA All-Star by age 33, before chronic knee issues took their toll late in his career.

Early life
Johnson was born on December 13, 1938, amid the slums of Akron, Ohio. Johnson himself stated, however, that his family did not have a lot, but he did not live in the ghetto. Johnson was one of six children. As a teenager, Johnson would frequent local bars and pool halls, but never got into any serious trouble. Johnson attended Akron Central High School, where he starred on the basketball team under coach Joe Siegferth. Siegferth never had any problems with Johnson, finding he took playing basketball seriously. Johnson was already 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) in high school and physically strong. In 1958, Johnson led the team to a city championship. He was selected an All-City and All-District basketball player. He was also selected an All-State basketball player for the 1957–58 season. He once scored 65 points in a single game. In part, Thurmond's presence accounted for the fact that, despite his own clear talent and athletic ability, Johnson had few college athletic scholarship offers. However, it is also reported that Thurmond had not yet grown to his full size in high school, was a year behind Johnson, and considered Johnson the team leader. Johnson was sought by many colleges, and letters from colleges poured in to Johnson (which Johnson ignored). In 1960, the Cleveland Plain Dealer called Johnson "the greatest high school player to come out of Akron", In 2023, Thurmond and Johnson were inducted into the Akron Public Schools Athletics Hall of Fame, one year after coach Siegferth was afforded the honor. Lucas went on to an All-American college career at Ohio State, with his team winning the 1960 NCAA championship; played with the legendary 1960 U.S. Men's Olympic Basketball Team; and had a Hall of Fame NBA career. Naismith Hall of Fame member Wayne Embry For Johnson, the high school rivalry carried into their future NBA careers, where the unknown Johnson believed he was just as good as the highly publicized Lucas. As Lucas's Cincinnati Royals' teammate, Embry saw that Johnson would play with extra ferocity whenever he faced Lucas. Johnson himself said during his and Lucas's NBA rookie season (1963–64), "'I get all psyched up when I know I'm going to play against Lucas. He's the only one I worry about. . . . And when he scores a basket, I burn up inside'". Lucas talked in more measured language about playing against Johnson. ==National Industrial League and college career==
National Industrial League and college career
After graduating high school, Johnson did not intend to go to college, and ignored recruitment letters from colleges. Among those teams, he played industrial league basketball for the Goodyear Winged Foots of the National Industrial Basketball League. Johnson eventually enrolled at hometown University of Akron, and was expected to be the school's starting center for the 1959–60 season. However, Johnson was ruled academically ineligible and left school without ever playing basketball there. In 1961, he played for the Carney Auditors in the Plain Dealer Greater Cleveland Basketball League, and subsequently for Tramonte Distributing of Akron, where one of his teammates was George Swyers. Swyers, a former AAU teammate and friend of first-year University of Idaho head coach Joe Cipriano, told Cipriano of Johnson. Swyers and Cipriano wanted Johnson to attend Boise Junior College, and then join Cirpriano at Idaho after a year. Johnson had known Swyers since he was in tenth grade, and Swyers had been a guiding light in Johnson's career. Johnson did attend Boise for one year, averaging 30 points and 20 rebounds a game for the Broncos, including a 55-point game. It has also been reported he averaged 27.1 points per game or 28.2 points per game, scoring over 30 points in a game 13 times, and setting a then school record of 43 points in a single game. Boise's game attendance went from 40 to 50 fans to 800 to 900 fans. The Vandals went 1–2 without him at the Far West Classic in late December in Portland, and the victory was a one-pointer over WSU. A week earlier with Johnson, the Vandals routed the Cougars by 37 points in Moscow. Johnson became known as "Honeycomb," a nickname Cipriano gave him because of his sweet play. As a junior, he averaged 19.0 points and 20.3 rebounds per game during the 1962–63 season, leading independent Idaho to a 20–6 record, their best in 36 years. With Johnson and leading scorer Chuck White, the Vandals were at their best in their main rivalries, 4–0 versus Oregon, 4–1 versus Palouse neighbor Washington State, and 1–1 against Washington. Idaho's primary nemesis was Seattle University, led by guard Eddie Miles, who won all three of its games with the Vandals. Idaho lost its only game with Final Four-bound Oregon State at the Far West without Johnson, but won all three with Gonzaga, for a 9–3 record against its four former PCC foes and a collective 12–6 against the six Northwest rivals. Johnson and center Paul Silas of Creighton waged a season-long battle for the NCAA rebounds lead. Silas claimed the title by a scant 0.3 rebounds with an average of 20.6 per game. Johnson also set the UI record with 31 rebounds in a game against Oregon. Ducks head coach Steve Belko, a former Vandal, called Johnson a "6' 6" Bill Russell" and "the best ball player one of my teams has ever played against..." Despite their 20–6 () record, the Vandals did not claim a post-season berth. The 1963 NCAA tournament included only 25 teams, and Oregon State and Seattle were selected from the Northwest. The 1963 NIT invited only twelve teams, none from the Mountain or Pacific time zones. If the Vandals had been invited, Johnson again would not have been eligible to participate. It only happened 23 years later when high jumper Joey Johnson, brother of basketball Hall of Fame guard Dennis Johnson, touched the nail. Both Gus Johnson and Dennis Johnson were posthumously inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2010. Johnson turned professional after his only season at Idaho, He participated in a pre-game alumni contest between former players of Idaho and Washington State. ==Professional career==
Professional career
Baltimore Bullets 1963-1967 Johnson got a late start as an NBA player, as he turned age 25 in December of his rookie season. He was selected 11th overall (second round) of the 1963 NBA draft by the Chicago Zephyrs, who were in the process of moving to Baltimore, where they became known as the Bullets in the 1963–64 season. Johnson was an immediate starter under head coach Bob "Slick" Leonard and averaged 17.3 points and 13.6 rebounds per game that season. Said Leonard about a young Johnson, "I could see Gussie developing into one of the great defensive forwards of all time."), forwards Terry Dischinger (a member of the 1962-1963 all rookie team as a Chicago Zephyr) and Johnson, and guards Rod Thorn and Kevin Loughery were nicknamed the "kiddie corps." Johnson finished as the runner-up for the Rookie of the Year honors to his rival Jerry Lucas, with Nate Thurmond third in the voting. Lucas had averaged 17.7 points and 17.4 rebounds per game for the Cincinnati Royals, and started for the East in the January 1964 NBA All-Star Game. Johnson was selected to the NBA All-Rookie Team along with Lucas, Thurmond, teammate Rod Thorn and Art Heyman. From the start, Johnson was both a lethal inside scorer and an exciting open-court player, and his presence improved the team. In 1962–63, playing as the Chicago Zephyrs, the team had finished 25–55; fifth in the Western Division. The following season, when Johnson joined the now Baltimore Bullets, the team improved to 31–49, and were fourth in the Western Division. In 1964–65, the Bullets improved to 37–43 and reached third place in the Western Division, and made the playoffs. The Bullets defeated the St. Louis Hawks in the first round of the playoffs, before losing to the Los Angeles Lakers in the Western Division Finals, four games to two. Johnson averaged approximately 16 points and 11 rebounds per game against both the Hawks and Lakers in the playoffs. Johnson was selected to play in the All-Star game for the first time, and scored 25 points in 25 minutes in the 1965 NBA All-Star Game. In the 1965–66 season, the Bullets rose to second place in the Western Division at 38–42. Johnson missed considerable time in the 1965–66 season with a navicular bone displacement injury early in the season, and torn ligaments in his right leg in an early March game, suffered while rebounding, that ended his regular season. Johnson played in only 41 games that season. In 1966–67, the Bullets regressed to 20–61, though Johnson averaged a double-double in 73 games and was 10th in the NBA in scoring average and 12th in rebounding average. From the 1964–65 season to the 1966–67 season, Johnson averaged 18.6, 16.5 and 20.7 points per game and 13, 13.3 and 11.7 rebounds per game, respectively. He was selected second-team All-NBA in both 1964–65 and 1965–66. Unseld was both the Rookie of the Year and the NBA Most Valuable Player in 1968–69, and became the keystone of the Bullets team that won the NBA Eastern Division for their very first time that season. Unseld would go on to the playoffs with the Bullets for the next 11 years (winning a championship in 1977–78). Johnson had four consecutive All-Star seasons with the Bullets from 1967 to 1971, including the Bullets' watershed basketball season of 1968–69. and was selected second-team All-NBA. Johnson was first-team NBA All-Defensive Team in 1969–70, the second year the award was given. In early 1970, the Bullets and Cincinnati Royals had agreed to trade Johnson for future Hall of Fame guard Oscar Robertson; but Robertson had a no-trade clause in his contract and rejected the deal. Johnson had mixed feelings about how the Bullets handled the situation, and the conditions he would expect in the future if he were traded. But he was almost ecstatic about the fact that he could be considered worthy of a trade for Robertson, whom he considered "the best all around basketball player the world has ever known"; and was incredulous at the idea that anyone would consider trading Oscar Robertson at all. This was his last productive season, however; as his physical decline rapidly accelerated toward the end of the season. Injuries and playoffs Johnson's career was marked by the failing heath of his knees during this later time period. In 1968–69, although an All-Star, he played in only 49 games after having left knee surgery in February 1969, missing the rest of the season. With Johnson playing in the 1969–70 season playoff rematch with the Knicks, the Bullets took the eventual NBA champion Knicks to seven games, before losing the series. Johnson played in all seven games, averaging 18.4 points and 11.4 rebounds per game in the series. By early 1970, Johnson candidly recognized the toll injuries had taken on his body over his seven-year career, and that each injury "takes something away from me" physically and in his skills. He had even considered retiring after his 1969 knee injury. He was taking pain killing injections just to play after a muscle injury in 1970, until the doctors told him he had to rest. Johnson became more cautious about using his acrobatic style of play. He only saw himself playing three more years, until he had 10 years in the league. He played in 66 games during the 1970–71 season. but he was derailed by his bad knees in the final two rounds of the playoffs in 1971. Johnson was only able to play in two games of a seven-game 1971 Eastern Conference finals against the New York Knicks. The Bullets were down three games to two in that series. Johnson chose to take the painkilling knee injections and play in Games 6 and 7 (the two games being played over a 36-hour period) to try and stop the Knicks from winning their third straight playoff series over the Bullets. The Bullets won Game 6 by a substantial margin in Baltimore. Johnson played 19 minutes, with 10 points and four rebounds. Back in New York for Game 7, he played 24 minutes with eight points and nine rebounds. Johnson grabbed the final rebound of the game after Unseld blocked Bill Bradley's shot from the corner, securing the Bullets' Game 7 victory, 93–91. After that series ended, however, he could only play for 57 total minutes in two of the four-game 1971 NBA finals. The Bullets were swept 4–0 by the Milwaukee Bucks, led by future Naismith Hall of Fame members Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Oscar Robertson and Bobby Dandridge. Overall Johnson averaged 13 points and 10.4 rebounds per playoff game that season. By 1971–72, Johnson had undergone surgery on both knees, and he could no longer perform as he once had. He played in only 39 games, averaging just 6.4 points and 5.8 rebounds in a little over 17 minutes per game. That season would be his last with the Bullets. In nine seasons with Baltimore, Johnson averaged 17.5 points, 12.9 rebounds, 2.9 assists and 35.2 minutes in 560 games. Johnson played 21 games before being waived on December 1. He averaged 7.8 points and 6.5 rebounds in 19.9 minutes under head coaches Butch van Breda Kolff (fired after seven games) and Jerry Colangelo, Johnson's former Bullets' teammate. Indiana Pacers (1972–1973) The Indiana Pacers, then of the American Basketball Association (ABA), picked up Johnson in mid-December 1972, after he was recruited to the Pacers by his original Bullets coach, Hall of Fame inductee Slick Leonard. "It doesn't hurt to have some veterans around, and Gus was great for team chemistry," Leonard said of adding Johnson to the Pacers. Johnson played his first game with the Pacers on December 16, 1972, and became a steadying veteran influence on a young team which went on to win the 1973 ABA championship. He played in 50 games with the Pacers, averaging 6.0 points and 4.9 rebounds, in 15.1 minutes per game. Johnson played alongside 22 year-old future Hall of Famer George McGinnis, Hall of Famer Mel Daniels, Hall of Famer Roger Brown, Freddie Lewis, Donnie Freeman, Darnell Hillman and Billy Keller. "Gus came to us at the end of his career when he had lost a lot of his physical abilities, but he really wanted a shot at making a run at a championship," recalled Darnell Hillman of Johnson's influence on the Pacers. "And his coming to the team made us that much more solid. He was a great, great individual. The locker room was where he was really an asset. He always knew the right things to say and he could read people. He knew who would be a little bit off or down and he could just bring you right back into focus and send you out on the floor. He was also very instrumental in being like an assistant coach to Slick on the bench. Sometimes when Slick didn't go to the assistant coach, he'd ask Gus." In the 1973 ABA playoffs, Johnson and the Pacers defeated the Denver Rockets and Ralph Simpson 4–1, and then the Utah Stars with Hall of Famer Zelmo Beaty and ironman Ron Boone 4–2, to advance to the ABA Finals against the Kentucky Colonels with Hall of Famers Artis Gilmore, Dan Issel and Louie Dampier. It was Johnson's final career game. Overall, Johnson averaged 2.7 points and 4.0 rebounds off the bench during the series against Kentucky. ==Legacy ==
Legacy
The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame entry on Johnson calls him "the model for future athletic power forwards", having "a unique blend of grace, speed, strength, and creativity rarely seen during his era". He was an all-around two-way player who could score and play defense, and had extraordinary jumping ability, becoming one of the earliest players to play above the rim on both offense and defense. Despite chronic knee problems that would limit his games played and shorten his career, Johnson was a member of the NBA All-Star Team five times, the All-NBA second-team four times and the NBA All-Defensive team twice. The award for defensive recognition did not exist during the first five years of his career. During his NBA career, Johnson averaged a double-double, 17.1 points and 12.7 rebounds per game. He scored 1,000 points and had 1,000 rebounds in the same season three times. A month later he was also honored by the two college programs he played for, Boise State and Idaho, during a conference basketball game between the two teams on January 17, 1987. A crowd of 12,225 at the BSU Pavilion in Boise set a Big Sky attendance record for a regular season game, and the visiting Vandals overcame an eight-point deficit in the second half to win by ten. That month in a ceremony in Akron, his No. 43 was retired by Idaho, the first basketball number retired in school history. Upon Johnson's death, Abe Pollin, the former owner of the Baltimore Bullets/Washington Wizards franchise said, "I first saw Gus on television...I had never seen a player dominate a game so. Gus was the Dr. J of his time and anyone that ever had the privilege to see him play will never forget what a great basketball player Gus Johnson was". Before Johnson was selected to the Naismith Hall of Fame, former teammate and Hall of Fame guard Earl Monroe said, "Gus was ahead of his time, flying through the air for slam dunks, breaking backboards and throwing full-court passes behind his back. He was spectacular, but he also did the nitty gritty jobs, defense and rebounding. With all the guys in the Hall of Fame, Gus deserves to be there already." said, "Gus Johnson was one of the greatest players I ever played with or against. . . . He was a ferocious defender and rebounder, and as a young player, I was completely in awe of his ability. He was truly a star ahead of his time". In 1969–70, they averaged a combined 30.6 rebounds per game (Unseld second in the NBA at 16.7 and Johnson fifth at 13.9); and the following year they averaged a combined 34 rebounds per game, with Johnson averaging 17.1 and Unseld 16.9. Johnson's Hall of Fame head coach Slick Leonard said of Johnson, "If he played today, ol' Gussie would be a human highlight film . . . That's what people remember the most. But there was a lot more to his game than the spectacular dunks. He was special. He could play, man". New York Knicks Hall of Fame coach Red Holzman thought Johnson was superior to Michael Jordan or Julius Erving in leaping to dunk from the foul line because Johnson did not need an extra step to generate momentum. Hall of Fame coach Alex Hannum called Johnson a "titan" and the strongest player in the NBA pound-for-pound. New York Knicks Hall of Fame forward Dave DeBusschere, who played against Johnson at forward over Johnson's entire career, said "Gus was probably one of the roughest players I have ever played against. He was not a dirty player. He was one of the most tenacious competitors ever to play the game". He and DeBusschere were on the cover of the October 25, 1971 issue of Sports Illustrated, with the caption "The Classic Confrontations". Oscar Robertson, a member of the NBA's 75th Anniversary Team that included the NBA's 76 greatest players, described Johnson as "'one of the truly great forwards of our time,' ... and one of the best rebounders I've ever seen in my life'". Paul Silas, who was Johnson' rebounding rival in college, and an NBA player and coach, was on the court for the St. Louis Hawks in 1964 when Johnson tore down the basket while dunking. Silas has described Johnson as "tremendously gifted", with great jumping ability and strength, who did not fear contact. ==Honors==
Honors
• Inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame (2010) • Inducted (with Nate Thurmond) into the Akron Public Schools Athletics Hall of Fame (2023) • $1.4 million Gus Johnson Community Center opened in Akron (1999) • Johnson's # 43 was retired by the University of Idaho as Johnson was honored during a game between Idaho and his other college, Boise State (1987) • Johnson's #25 was retired by the Washington Bullets on his birthday, December 13, 1986, months before his death (1987) • Inducted in Boise State University Athletic Hall of Fame (1987) == Death ==
Death
Reflecting on his career months before his death, Johnson expressed that his greatest fear was that he would die and his daughters "don't even know what their daddy did". Johnson died less than four months later at Akron City Hospital on April 29, 1987, at the age of 48. He is buried at Mount Peace Cemetery in Akron. He was survived by his four daughters. ==NBA/ABA career statistics==
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