The
Sam Davis Memorial Award was given to
Bob Cousy for this season, making him the unofficial 1953 MVP.
A truly brilliant season from Bob Cousy. His name was now starting to be placed alongside the likes of George Mikan, Nat Holman, Hank Luisetti, and Bobby McDermott. He finished 3rd in minutes, 4th in points, 1st in assists, and 1st in field goal attempts. The Celtics have the #1 offense in the league.
The playoffs roll around and the Celtics upset the 2nd seed Nationals, who have the 3rd highest SRS in the league that season. Cousy scores 20 points in a foul heavy game one that the Celtics win through their 22 straight free throws to end the game.
Then came game two--a magical night in Boston. Cousy has a ridiculous
50 points (breaking Mikan's single-game scoring record) and goes
30-32(!) from the free throw line (still a record for free throws made in a game) in
66 minutes. Integration-era historian Josh Elias (TringlePringle) considers it
one of the most impressive things in the history of the sport:
And I'm not entirely sure where within this grouping Bob Cousy's 50-point game to send the Nats home in '53 belongs, since he had four overtimes' worth of extra time to do it in, but scoring 25 points in overtimes alone in pre-shot clock basketball would be one of the most impressive things in the history of the sport even if it wasn't in the playoffs to complete a series upset.
66 minutes played.
30 free throws.
25 points in overtime alone.
A playoff upset as the underdog.
Elimination game.
It was a player rising to the occasion under exhausting and dire circumstances.
Cousy made a free throw at the end of regulation to take the game into overtime. He scored six points in the 1st overtime, including a free throw to send it into a 2nd overtime.
In the 3rd overtime, he scored 7 of 9 points for the Celtics and tied the game with 18 seconds left on two free throws. With three seconds remaining, he dropped in a one-hand push shot from 25 feet to send the game into the 4th overtime.
In the 4th overtime, he scored 9 of 12 points for the Celtics, and erased a five-point deficit in the last three minutes.
Down 104-99, in these last three minutes he:
Sank a free throw
Tipped-in a rebound
Stole a pass and scored off a left hand layup
Drew a foul on Red Rocha, making one of two free throws
Drew a foul on Al Cervi, making both free throws
Scored off a technical foul free throw
Cousy played through five fouls in the last two overtimes and sank 18 straight free throws until he missed one with two minutes left in the 4th overtime.
Here are some quotes from after the game:
A woman fan, tears streaming down her face, held onto her young son and kept saying: “It’s impossible. He did it all by himself.”
A Syracuse writer, too jittery to light a cigarette, kept insisting: “He’s the greatest thing anybody ever will see any place. He beat this league all by himself. He’ll bring the championship back to Boston for you guys. He is the one who can do it.”
The Cooz, drawn and pale and operating on a leg that threatened to buckle under him any second, put on the greatest one-man show ever seen in Boston Garden or any other place in this town during the 3-hour, 11-minute stretch that seemed an eternity to 11,053 limp fans.
His great floor play and foul shooting kept the sagging Celts in the ballgame through the regulation periods, his last three free throws sending the game into the first overtime. He bailed the team through that session with two of the four points. In the third hectic extra round, he scored seven of the nine points, including a basket with three seconds left to preserve the tie, and he got nine of the 12 points in the wild windup.
“He did it, just that one kid,” Al Cervi, Syracuse player-coach, agreed. “We should be going back to play the third game now. Instead, we’re going home for the year. What a ballplayer! He’s the best.”
Even the players were shot. Bob Donham, who fouled out with little more than a minute to play, could hardly talk in the dressing room. “Greatest thing anybody ever saw.”
Bob Harris, who doesn’t say much anytime, just murmured, “He’s the best. Nothing like him.”
Cousy led the playoffs in points, field goal attempts, and free throw attempts, and finished 2nd in assists and minutes. He was 6th in TS% on 20 FGA per game.
Bob Cousy is, unequivocally, my
1953 Player of the Year and
1953 Offensive Player of the Year.