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RIP: Dick Barnett

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RIP: Dick Barnett 

Post#1 » by Clyde_Style » Sun Apr 27, 2025 11:28 pm

Dick Barnett, Champion Knick With a Singular Jump Shot, Dies at 88

A guard, he played on New York’s two (and only) title-winning teams, in the 1970s. He was remembered for his scoring and his “fall back, baby” shooting style.

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/27/sports/basketball/dick-barnett-dead.html

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Dick Barnett of the Knicks going up against Gail Goodrich of the Los Angeles Lakers in Los Angeles in 1972. He played on the only two N.B.A. championship teams in the Knicks’ history

Dick Barnett, who helped propel the Knicks to their glory days in the 1970s with his strange jump-shooting style, and who played on the only two N.B.A. championship teams in the Knicks’ history, died in his sleep last night in Largo, Fla. He was 88.

The Knicks announced the death, at an assisted living facility, on social media on Sunday, soon after a dramatic victory in a first-round playoff series against the Detroit Pistons. Danielle Naassana, a producer of “The Dream Whisperer,” a PBS documentary about Barnett and his college career that came out last year, said he had become increasingly frail in recent years but did not appear to have a fatal illness.

Barnett was voted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in its men’s veterans category in April 2024.

Playing for 14 seasons in the N.B.A., his last nine with the Knicks, 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.

The Knicks won N.B.A. championships in 1970 and 1973 with smart, unselfish play and tenacious defense that complemented their scoring power. Barnett displayed all-around court skills but was remembered most for unleashing jumpers with a form that had not been seen before or since.

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The 1970 starting lineup of the Knicks celebrated after beating the Milwaukee Bucks to win the 1970 N.B.A. Eastern Conference title. From left: Barnett, Walt Frazier, Bill Bradley, Dave DeBusschere and Willis Reed.

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 no need for an offensive rebound.

When Barnett was playing with the Los Angeles Lakers, before he became a Knick, their longtime broadcaster Chick Hearn would shout, “Fall back, baby,” when Barnett went up for his shot.

Barnett led the historically black Tennessee A&I University (now Tennessee State) to three consecutive National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics national championships, from 1957 to 1959, playing for the future Hall of Fame coach John McLendon.

McLendon recalled in an interview with The New York Times in 1991 how 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,” Barnett told the Times sportswriter 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 Barnett in the first round of the 1959 N.B.A. 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.

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 N.B.A. 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 Barnett had 21.

When the Knicks won the championship again in 1973, defeating the Lakers in five games, 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.

Barnett was stylish off the court as well as on it.

Holzman told of the time, when he was scouting for the Knicks, when he saw 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 on Oct. 2, 1936, in Gary, Ind., where his father was a steelworker. He starred on his high school basketball team before attending Tennessee Agricultural & Industrial State University (now known as Tennessee State University), one of the South’s historically Black colleges and universities.

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 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.

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.

In March 1990, the Knicks raised a banner with Barnett’s No. 12 and another one reading “613,” representing Holzman’s victories as the Knicks’ coach.

In February 2023, Barnett joined some of his surviving former teammates from the 1972-73 championship squad for a 50th-anniversary celebration of that title during halftime of a game at the Garden. Bradley pushed a frail Barnett in a wheelchair onto the court to accept the applause of fans. The Knicks have not won a championship since 1973.

In his 1971 memoir, Holzman praised Barnett for more than his shooting.

“He has such great basketball instinct,” Holzman said. “He grasps things faster than anyone.”

The night before Barnett and Holzman were honored, Barnett recalled a long-ago road trip.

“Some of the players felt it would improve our eyesight if we went to the burlesque show at the hotel, even though we might miss curfew,’’ he said. “When we mentioned it to Red, he told us not to go because we might see something there that we shouldn’t see. But we went to the burlesque show anyway. And we did see something there that we shouldn’t have seen. We saw Red.’’
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Re: RIP: Dick Barnett 

Post#2 » by 8516knicks » Sun Apr 27, 2025 11:42 pm

Thanks for this. Should be remembered right up there with the famous Knicks. He might be considered the initial building block of those great Knick teams as everyone else of note came in after he joined them. :usa: :clap:
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Re: RIP: Dick Barnett 

Post#3 » by Clyde_Style » Sun Apr 27, 2025 11:50 pm

8516knicks wrote:Thanks for this. Should be remembered right up there with the famous Knicks. He might be considered the initial building block of those great Knick teams as everyone else of note came in after he joined them. :usa: :clap:


A true Knicks legend.

He may have gotten overshadowed by Pearl's greatness, but those Knicks roster had legit depth.

The first championship squad had two other ballers in Dave Stallworth and Cazzie Russell.

The second championship roster had guys like Jerry Lucas, Henry Bibby and Dean Meminger.
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Re: RIP: Dick Barnett 

Post#4 » by Jeff Van Gully » Mon Apr 28, 2025 12:01 am

ugh. RIP Dr. Barnett AKA tricky dick AKA FALL BACK BABY!!!

amazingly, a greater man off the court. will be dearly missed.
RIP magnumt

thanks for everything, thibs.

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Re: RIP: Dick Barnett 

Post#5 » by Jeff Van Gully » Mon Apr 28, 2025 12:03 am

Clyde_Style wrote:
8516knicks wrote:Thanks for this. Should be remembered right up there with the famous Knicks. He might be considered the initial building block of those great Knick teams as everyone else of note came in after he joined them. :usa: :clap:


A true Knicks legend.

He may have gotten overshadowed by Pearl's greatness, but those Knicks roster had legit depth.

The first championship squad had two other ballers in Dave Stallworth and Cazzie Russell.

The second championship roster had guys like Jerry Lucas, Henry Bibby and Dean Meminger.


team had hall of famers on the bench. amazing.
RIP magnumt

thanks for everything, thibs.

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Re: RIP: Dick Barnett 

Post#6 » by Kidknick! » Mon Apr 28, 2025 1:52 am

R.I.P. NY legend.
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Re: RIP: Dick Barnett 

Post#7 » by DaGawd » Mon Apr 28, 2025 2:29 am

rip legend
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Re: RIP: Dick Barnett 

Post#8 » by nykballa2k4 » Mon Apr 28, 2025 5:16 pm

Kudos to a knicks legend
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Re: RIP: Dick Barnett 

Post#9 » by Gant » Mon Apr 28, 2025 5:37 pm

That guy was a lot of fun to watch. He used to kick his feet back under himself when he shot the jumper, which he did very well. Really unique.
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Re: RIP: Dick Barnett 

Post#10 » by thebuzzardman » Mon Apr 28, 2025 5:59 pm

Gant wrote:That guy was a lot of fun to watch. He used to kick his feet back under himself when he shot the jumper, which he did very well. Really unique.


Him and Dave Bing.
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Re: RIP: Dick Barnett 

Post#11 » by Luv those Knicks » Mon Apr 28, 2025 6:10 pm

He was before my time, but a friend of mine said he was better than Earl. That might be just opinion though. I started watching in 72-73 and I probably saw him, but I don't remember. I remember Pearl and Meminger at the SG.

Jerry Lucas said that he loved playing for the Knicks because he liked playing center. Most teams fit him into the PF spot because of his size but he liked the game at center a lot more. He didn't care about minutes or stats. Lucas was also a magician in the off-season and he taught memory tricks. That was when a lot of players had a job in the off-season because the pay wasn't as good.

Bradley was a Rhodes scholar and later became a senator. Clyde was Clyde. It was a very cerebral team. Lots of skill, but they were a smart team and had great depth. I don't remember the 70 title though, just 73 and unfortunately, it was downhill from there.
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Re: RIP: Dick Barnett 

Post#12 » by Fury » Mon Apr 28, 2025 6:22 pm

Legend

RIP
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Re: RIP: Dick Barnett 

Post#13 » by Zenzibar » Mon Apr 28, 2025 6:32 pm

RIP

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Re: RIP: Dick Barnett 

Post#14 » by bballoctober » Mon Apr 28, 2025 9:00 pm

This thread needs to be stickied for a while so people can pay their tribute. R.I.P Dr. Barnett
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Fall back baby! RIP Dick Barnett 

Post#15 » by WaltFrazier » Sat May 3, 2025 2:56 pm

A fascinating character and great player. I've read so many great anecdotes about him, especially in the books Miracle on 33rd Street by Phil Berger, and Life on the Run by Bill Bradley. Both must - reads to learn the history of the last 2 Knick championship teams

]
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Re: RIP: Dick Barnett 

Post#16 » by Jeff Van Gully » Sat May 3, 2025 3:38 pm

bballoctober wrote:This thread needs to be stickied for a while so people can pay their tribute. R.I.P Dr. Barnett


good call. done.
RIP magnumt

thanks for everything, thibs.

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Re: Fall back baby! RIP Dick Barnett 

Post#17 » by Jeff Van Gully » Sat May 3, 2025 3:38 pm

WaltFrazier wrote:A fascinating character and great player. I've read so many great anecdotes about him, especially in the books Miracle on 33rd Street by Phil Berger, and Life on the Run by Bill Bradley. Both must - reads to learn the history of the last 2 Knick championship teams

]


thanks for recognizing a need for recognizing. unfortunately this had fallen to page 2. remedied for now.
RIP magnumt

thanks for everything, thibs.

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Re: RIP: Dick Barnett 

Post#18 » by WaltFrazier » Sat May 3, 2025 4:32 pm

Clyde_Style wrote:
8516knicks wrote:Thanks for this. Should be remembered right up there with the famous Knicks. He might be considered the initial building block of those great Knick teams as everyone else of note came in after he joined them. :usa: :clap:


A true Knicks legend.

He may have gotten overshadowed by Pearl's greatness, but those Knicks roster had legit depth.

The first championship squad had two other ballers in Dave Stallworth and Cazzie Russell.

The second championship roster had guys like Jerry Lucas, Henry Bibby and Dean Meminger.

Yeah on the 70 team Earl was a Bullet on the Knicks great rivals of the time. Dick started with Clyde in the backcourt and Mike Riordan backed up both guard spots.

On the 73 team Earl was the starter with Clyde, and the older Barnett was a backup.
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Re: RIP: Dick Barnett 

Post#19 » by Clyde_Style » Sat May 3, 2025 4:43 pm

WaltFrazier wrote:
Clyde_Style wrote:
8516knicks wrote:Thanks for this. Should be remembered right up there with the famous Knicks. He might be considered the initial building block of those great Knick teams as everyone else of note came in after he joined them. :usa: :clap:


A true Knicks legend.

He may have gotten overshadowed by Pearl's greatness, but those Knicks roster had legit depth.

The first championship squad had two other ballers in Dave Stallworth and Cazzie Russell.

The second championship roster had guys like Jerry Lucas, Henry Bibby and Dean Meminger.

Yeah on the 70 team Earl was a Bullet on the Knicks great rivals of the time. Dick started with Clyde in the backcourt and Mike Riordan backed up both guard spots.

On the 73 team Earl was the starter with Clyde, and the older Barnett was a backup.


Yep. Same club, different club, two championships. Clyde anchored both of them. They did make the Finals one other year as well.

Figure it would be good knowledge for younger heads here, so here's the Wikipedia portion on that period:

1967–1975: championship years

The Knicks started their 1967–68 season with a 124–122 win over the visiting Warriors. In that game, seven players on the Knicks' roster scored in double figures.[37] However, the Knicks lost their next six games, falling to a 1–6 record. They managed to stop their losing streak on November 1, 1967, when the Knicks won the road game against the Lakers, 129–113. During the game, Willis Reed scored a career-high 53 points on 21-of-29 shooting from the field.[38] On November 3, the Knicks defeated the Seattle SuperSonics 134–100 in Seattle. In that game, nine Knicks' player scored at least 10 points.[39] Head coach Dick McGuire was replaced midway through the 1967–68 season after the team began the season with a 15–22 record.[33] With the Knicks under .500, the team decided to hire coach Red Holzman, whose impact was immediate. Under his direction, the Knicks went 28–17 and finished with a 43–39 record thus salvaging a playoff berth, however, the Knicks were again vanquished in the Eastern Division semi-finals by the Philadelphia 76ers.[33] However their roster was slowly coming together piece by piece. Rookies Phil Jackson and Walt Frazier were named to the NBA All-Rookie Team while Dick Barnett and Willis Reed performed in the 1968 NBA All-Star Game.[25]

The following season, the team acquired Dave DeBusschere from the Detroit Pistons, and the team went 54–28.[33][40] In the playoffs, New York made it past the first round of contention for the first time since 1953, sweeping the Baltimore Bullets in four games, before falling to the Boston Celtics in the Eastern Division finals.[41]

In the 1969–70 season, the Knicks had a then-single-season NBA record 18 straight victories en route to a 60–22 record, which was the best regular season record in the franchise's history to that point.[42][43] After defeating the Bullets in the Eastern Division semifinals and the Milwaukee Bucks in the Eastern Division finals, the Knicks faced the Los Angeles Lakers in the NBA Finals.[42] With the series tied at 2–2, the Knicks would be tested in Game 5. Willis Reed tore a muscle in his right leg in the second quarter, and was lost for the rest of the game.[44] Despite his absence, New York went on to win the game, rallying from a 16-point deficit.[44]

Without their injured captain the Knicks lost Game 6, setting up one of the most famous moments in NBA history.[44] Reed limped onto the court before the seventh game, determined to play through the pain of his injury.[44] He scored New York's first two baskets before going scoreless for the remainder of the contest.[44] Although he was not at full strength, Reed's heroics inspired the Knicks, and they won the game by a score of 113–99, allowing New York to capture the title that had eluded them for so long.[44] Reed, who had been named the All-Star MVP and the league's MVP that season, was named MVP of the Finals, becoming the first player to attain all three awards in a single season.[44]

The Knicks' success continued for the next few years. After losing to the Bullets in the 1971 Eastern Conference finals, the team, aided by the acquisitions of Jerry Lucas and Earl "The Pearl" Monroe, returned to the Finals in 1972.[25] This time the Knicks fell to the Lakers in five games.[25] The next year, the results were reversed, as the Knicks defeated the Lakers in five games to win their second NBA title in four years.[45] The team had one more impressive season in 1973–74, as they reached the Eastern Conference finals, where they fell in five games to the Celtics.[46] It was after this season that Willis Reed announced his retirement, and the team's fortunes began to shift once more.[47]
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Re: RIP: Dick Barnett 

Post#20 » by WaltFrazier » Sat May 3, 2025 4:54 pm

^^^ After the 74 playoffs not only Willis retired but Dave Debusschere and Jerry Lucas too. The frontcourt was gone. The old magic was never the same. The rest of the 70s management tried big names Spencer Haywood and Bob McAdoo but it didn't work. Tried to sign George McGinnis from the ABA against league rules, the commissioner shut that down. Replaced Red as coach with Willis, fired Willis and brought back Holzman. It was years before the team got competitive again.
There goes my hero. Watch him as he goes.

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