1 00:00:11,177 --> 00:00:12,929 [Larry Bird] If it weren't for Bill Russell 2 00:00:13,013 --> 00:00:14,639 winning all them championships, 3 00:00:14,723 --> 00:00:18,184 would anybody be talking about the Boston Celtics? No. 4 00:00:18,268 --> 00:00:20,812 Are you kidding? It's no conversation. 5 00:00:20,895 --> 00:00:23,982 He was the greatest and most dominant winner 6 00:00:24,065 --> 00:00:26,401 we've ever seen in the history of basketball. 7 00:00:26,985 --> 00:00:30,739 And you know what's on his hands? More rings than fingers. 8 00:00:31,406 --> 00:00:35,410 Eleven rings, that's… [laughs] Who else can live up to that? 9 00:00:35,493 --> 00:00:37,370 We're never gonna see a winner like that again. 10 00:00:37,454 --> 00:00:40,165 He would beat God. He's the Big Bang. 11 00:00:40,790 --> 00:00:44,919 [Corey Stoll] He won 11 championships, two as a player-coach. 12 00:00:45,003 --> 00:00:49,299 Five times, he was voted the Most Valuable Player in the NBA. 13 00:00:49,799 --> 00:00:53,470 Bill Russell's legacy, pioneer of the game. 14 00:00:54,304 --> 00:00:58,808 He created the most awesome American sports dynasty 15 00:00:58,892 --> 00:01:00,018 that's ever existed. 16 00:01:00,810 --> 00:01:03,730 Everybody in the league, when they think of Bill Russell, 17 00:01:03,813 --> 00:01:04,898 they think about winning. 18 00:01:04,981 --> 00:01:08,193 He could win a game without scoring. Nobody else could do that. 19 00:01:08,276 --> 00:01:11,362 He's the smartest player that ever played the game. 20 00:01:11,446 --> 00:01:15,283 Bill terrorized anybody that tried to come in the lane and shoot. 21 00:01:15,366 --> 00:01:19,329 [Walt Frazier] Because of Russell, I don't like green, Boston clam chowder… 22 00:01:19,412 --> 00:01:21,623 [laughs] …I don't like anything Boston. 23 00:01:21,706 --> 00:01:25,085 [Stoll] Every team and every player in the league 24 00:01:25,168 --> 00:01:27,128 tried to bring down the dynasty. 25 00:01:27,212 --> 00:01:29,422 Only one ever came close. 26 00:01:30,048 --> 00:01:32,801 It was a great duel and a great matchup. 27 00:01:32,884 --> 00:01:37,472 These were two mythical beasts, like big titans fighting for the ring. 28 00:01:37,555 --> 00:01:40,517 [Chris Paul] They were epic battles, and that's what we came to see. 29 00:01:40,600 --> 00:01:41,684 Chamberlain towers over him, 30 00:01:41,768 --> 00:01:46,147 Chamberlain dominates every single player he comes across, anywhere. 31 00:01:46,231 --> 00:01:50,985 But he didn't have the numbers that count, and that was winning championships. 32 00:01:51,069 --> 00:01:53,071 [crowd applauding] 33 00:01:53,154 --> 00:01:55,240 [Barack Obama] This year's Medal of Freedom recipients 34 00:01:55,323 --> 00:01:56,950 reveal the best of who we are 35 00:01:57,033 --> 00:01:58,827 and who we aspire to be. 36 00:01:59,577 --> 00:02:01,788 More than any athlete of his era, 37 00:02:01,871 --> 00:02:04,415 Bill Russell came to define the word "winner." 38 00:02:04,499 --> 00:02:07,168 Bill Russell, the man, is someone who stood up 39 00:02:07,252 --> 00:02:09,420 for the rights and dignity of all men. 40 00:02:09,921 --> 00:02:11,256 He marched with King. 41 00:02:11,756 --> 00:02:13,091 He stood by Ali. 42 00:02:13,174 --> 00:02:16,219 He made possible the success of so many who would follow. 43 00:02:16,302 --> 00:02:19,139 A good thing about leaders is they lead by example. 44 00:02:19,222 --> 00:02:22,517 He changed a lot of rules, and it broke a lot of barriers. 45 00:02:22,600 --> 00:02:25,895 Bill was fighting for something much bigger, 46 00:02:25,979 --> 00:02:30,150 and that was to belong on an equal playing field 47 00:02:30,233 --> 00:02:31,609 as white America. 48 00:02:34,445 --> 00:02:36,447 [rousing music playing] 49 00:03:26,247 --> 00:03:28,917 [soft music playing] 50 00:03:29,000 --> 00:03:30,627 [reporter] Earlier today, it was announced 51 00:03:30,710 --> 00:03:35,381 that Boston Celtics basketball legend Bill Russell died at the age of 88. 52 00:03:37,008 --> 00:03:38,676 [reporter 2] Tonight, he is being remembered 53 00:03:38,760 --> 00:03:40,929 as an athlete and activist. 54 00:03:41,554 --> 00:03:43,932 [reporter 3] Bill's actions on and off the court 55 00:03:44,015 --> 00:03:45,266 through the course of his life 56 00:03:45,350 --> 00:03:47,435 helped to shape generations of players for the better, 57 00:03:47,518 --> 00:03:49,938 and for that, we are forever grateful. 58 00:03:50,021 --> 00:03:52,774 [reporter 4] We're at the statue which was unveiled in 2013. 59 00:03:52,857 --> 00:03:56,361 People have been stopping by here today, sharing stories, 60 00:03:56,444 --> 00:03:59,072 really helping paint a picture of Russell's impact. 61 00:04:02,033 --> 00:04:04,452 [Oscar Robertson] When Bill passed, I couldn't believe it. 62 00:04:04,535 --> 00:04:07,997 But I thought back on all the great things he's done in his life 63 00:04:08,539 --> 00:04:10,917 and the contributions he's made to mankind. 64 00:04:11,000 --> 00:04:12,752 That's what it was all about. 65 00:04:13,253 --> 00:04:15,588 [Stoll] Seven months before his passing, 66 00:04:15,672 --> 00:04:18,216 Russell auctioned off his collection of memorabilia. 67 00:04:18,299 --> 00:04:20,301 [auctioneer chattering faintly] 68 00:04:21,511 --> 00:04:24,138 [reporter] They're all part of the 87-year-old's personal collection, 69 00:04:24,222 --> 00:04:28,476 including championship rings, MVP trophies, and game-worn jerseys. 70 00:04:28,559 --> 00:04:32,188 [reporter 2] A portion of the proceeds will go to Russell's charity MENTOR, 71 00:04:32,272 --> 00:04:35,608 an organization dedicated to his lifelong commitment 72 00:04:35,692 --> 00:04:38,569 to ensuring opportunity for all young people. 73 00:04:40,113 --> 00:04:44,701 I'd like some of that collection. He's been great to me all these years. 74 00:04:44,784 --> 00:04:45,618 He's a-- 75 00:04:45,702 --> 00:04:49,622 What he's done for civil rights in this country is unmatched. 76 00:04:51,874 --> 00:04:56,546 To be able to have all 11 of his rings, nobody's outbidding me on that one. 77 00:04:56,629 --> 00:05:00,842 I'd probably actually want a manuscript of one of his books, though, 78 00:05:00,925 --> 00:05:03,845 like an original rough draft of Second Wind. 79 00:05:03,928 --> 00:05:06,014 That'd be something special too. 80 00:05:06,097 --> 00:05:08,182 950,000, online buyer. 81 00:05:08,266 --> 00:05:09,559 Third and last call. 82 00:05:10,977 --> 00:05:14,814 -[gavel bangs] -Sold, $950,000, online buyer. 83 00:05:14,897 --> 00:05:16,691 [chuckling] 84 00:05:21,279 --> 00:05:24,115 [Jeffrey Wright] A basketball game starts and ends with a clock, 85 00:05:24,198 --> 00:05:25,950 and so does a basketball career. 86 00:05:26,034 --> 00:05:28,161 [intriguing music playing] 87 00:05:30,913 --> 00:05:32,457 [Wright] Outside of games, however, 88 00:05:32,540 --> 00:05:34,667 you don't often find handy reference points 89 00:05:34,751 --> 00:05:37,045 to tell you where events begin and end. 90 00:05:40,048 --> 00:05:42,425 Usually, it depends on where you started from 91 00:05:42,508 --> 00:05:43,968 and your point of view. 92 00:05:46,346 --> 00:05:48,181 [music fades] 93 00:05:49,766 --> 00:05:52,727 ["Little Bitty Pretty One" by Thurston Harris playing] 94 00:05:53,436 --> 00:05:55,563 [Stoll] In December 1956, 95 00:05:55,646 --> 00:05:58,733 Bill and Rose Russell landed at Boston's Logan Airport. 96 00:05:58,816 --> 00:06:02,111 They'd been married less than two weeks. 97 00:06:02,195 --> 00:06:04,989 [Bill Russell] When I joined the Celtics, I'd never been to Boston, 98 00:06:05,782 --> 00:06:09,786 ever, until I arrived there to sign with them. 99 00:06:09,869 --> 00:06:12,497 [Stoll] Bill was a national champion in college 100 00:06:12,580 --> 00:06:14,582 and an Olympic gold medal winner. 101 00:06:15,541 --> 00:06:19,629 Now, Celtics fans hoped Bill could bring a championship to their city. 102 00:06:19,712 --> 00:06:22,048 ["Little Bitty Pretty One" continues] 103 00:06:22,131 --> 00:06:27,720 ♪ Little bitty pretty one Come on and talk-a to me ♪ 104 00:06:27,804 --> 00:06:32,558 ♪ Lovey dovey lovey one Come sit down on my knee… ♪ 105 00:06:33,726 --> 00:06:37,855 [Russell] I was 22 years old, and I had not started to shave, 106 00:06:37,939 --> 00:06:40,733 so I had this little goatee, we called it. 107 00:06:41,984 --> 00:06:45,405 And so the first thing they asked me at the first press conference, 108 00:06:45,488 --> 00:06:47,240 "When you gonna shave the beard?" 109 00:06:47,782 --> 00:06:51,119 I'd never thought about it. Finally, I said, "Okay, tell you what." 110 00:06:51,619 --> 00:06:53,704 "After the Celtics win their first championship, 111 00:06:53,788 --> 00:06:55,164 then I'll shave the beard." 112 00:06:55,832 --> 00:06:57,834 [expectant music playing] 113 00:07:02,171 --> 00:07:03,881 [Auerbach] People thought, from the Olympics, 114 00:07:03,965 --> 00:07:06,175 he would be in great shape, but he was in miserable shape. 115 00:07:06,259 --> 00:07:10,388 He said, "I never knew this pro ball would be like that. It's really rough." 116 00:07:11,764 --> 00:07:13,975 [Russell] I'd missed the first third of the season, 117 00:07:14,058 --> 00:07:15,309 and I was basically out of shape 118 00:07:15,393 --> 00:07:18,312 because it had been a month since I'd touched a basketball. 119 00:07:19,981 --> 00:07:23,901 [Wright] I came into the league without much confidence as a shooter. 120 00:07:23,985 --> 00:07:27,280 Many of my detractors said I could never make it in pro ball 121 00:07:27,363 --> 00:07:30,074 because I was a bad shot from more than three feet out. 122 00:07:31,033 --> 00:07:35,538 So naturally, the one thing I wanted to do was to stand outside and shoot. 123 00:07:36,330 --> 00:07:40,793 I missed almost all of them, of course. When I did, people shook their heads 124 00:07:40,877 --> 00:07:43,504 and said, "See what I mean? He can't play." 125 00:07:44,297 --> 00:07:45,339 [spectators] Aw! 126 00:07:46,632 --> 00:07:50,094 [Stoll] The Boston press questioned Russell's value to the team, 127 00:07:50,178 --> 00:07:52,972 comparing his early production to another rookie, 128 00:07:53,055 --> 00:07:56,767 the all-time leading scorer at Holy Cross, Tommy Heinsohn. 129 00:07:57,810 --> 00:08:00,354 [Tom Heinsohn] The press didn't know what Russell was about. 130 00:08:00,938 --> 00:08:04,317 People didn't think Bill Russell was gonna be a factor in the NBA. 131 00:08:04,400 --> 00:08:07,695 He'd shoot a layup over the backboard. He was so inept offensively 132 00:08:08,446 --> 00:08:12,158 that you could never picture what Russell could bring to a ball club. 133 00:08:14,035 --> 00:08:17,079 [Stoll] There would be no respite for Russell on road games. 134 00:08:18,122 --> 00:08:20,458 [Wright] There was a full house in Kiel Auditorium 135 00:08:20,541 --> 00:08:22,960 on that night in December 1956. 136 00:08:23,753 --> 00:08:27,006 The ball went up, and Bob Pettit of the Hawks and I jumped for it. 137 00:08:27,507 --> 00:08:30,801 "Coon!" "Go back to Africa, you baboon!" 138 00:08:30,885 --> 00:08:33,638 "Watch out, Pettit, you'll get covered with chocolate." 139 00:08:34,138 --> 00:08:36,349 There was no doubt who the fans were yelling at. 140 00:08:36,849 --> 00:08:39,101 I was the only Negro athlete on either team. 141 00:08:39,185 --> 00:08:41,521 [unsettling music playing] 142 00:08:41,604 --> 00:08:46,025 [Russell] After about five games, I really and seriously doubted my ability. 143 00:08:46,901 --> 00:08:51,781 And I came home, and I told Rose, "I think we better get our bags ready, 144 00:08:51,864 --> 00:08:53,824 'cause we won't be here very long." 145 00:08:59,372 --> 00:09:01,374 [music fades] 146 00:09:03,459 --> 00:09:06,212 [Stoll] Russell had moved to Boston from the Bay Area. 147 00:09:07,213 --> 00:09:09,465 He went to high school in West Oakland 148 00:09:09,549 --> 00:09:11,634 and attended the University of San Francisco, 149 00:09:12,385 --> 00:09:15,471 the only college to offer him a basketball scholarship. 150 00:09:15,555 --> 00:09:17,056 [rhythmic music playing] 151 00:09:17,139 --> 00:09:19,308 [Wright] To those of us in West Oakland, 152 00:09:19,392 --> 00:09:21,561 San Francisco was an exotic land. 153 00:09:22,728 --> 00:09:25,481 The Bay Bridge spanned a cultural gap so wide 154 00:09:25,565 --> 00:09:28,067 that the two sides had a language barrier. 155 00:09:28,150 --> 00:09:31,529 I joked that I never knew the word "mother" could be used by itself 156 00:09:31,612 --> 00:09:33,739 until I got to San Francisco. 157 00:09:34,657 --> 00:09:37,994 And instantly, I found myself in a sea of white people. 158 00:09:39,745 --> 00:09:42,832 [Russell] I walked into the rec hall. One of the freshmen walks up and says, 159 00:09:42,915 --> 00:09:44,959 "Hey, boy, what do they call you?" 160 00:09:45,876 --> 00:09:50,047 I said, "My name is William Russell." He said, "I'll give you a nickname." 161 00:09:50,131 --> 00:09:52,508 I said, "If you do, I'll knock the hell out of you." 162 00:09:53,593 --> 00:09:57,096 When I went to USF, you got maybe five Black students, 163 00:09:58,097 --> 00:09:58,931 period. 164 00:10:00,057 --> 00:10:03,686 And my roommate was a guy named K.C. Jones. 165 00:10:03,769 --> 00:10:05,229 [music fades] 166 00:10:05,313 --> 00:10:07,898 [Stoll] Bill and K.C. bonded over basketball 167 00:10:07,982 --> 00:10:10,318 and helped each other make ends meet off the court. 168 00:10:10,401 --> 00:10:14,780 [K.C. Jones] We didn't have that much to wear in college, the two of us. 169 00:10:14,864 --> 00:10:18,200 You know, I was making $30 a month, right? 170 00:10:18,284 --> 00:10:22,455 For cutting the grass or whatever it was. And Russell had nothing. 171 00:10:22,538 --> 00:10:26,334 Now, we would use-- We would wear each other's underwear. 172 00:10:27,251 --> 00:10:30,087 Right? That was the only thing that could fit both of us. 173 00:10:30,171 --> 00:10:31,255 [funk music playing] 174 00:10:31,339 --> 00:10:33,758 [Stoll] Russell decided to test his athleticism 175 00:10:33,841 --> 00:10:35,968 in another sport as a walk-on. 176 00:10:36,677 --> 00:10:39,722 [Wright] During the summer, I decided to go out for track. 177 00:10:40,348 --> 00:10:42,683 Actually, I decided for a dual reason. 178 00:10:43,267 --> 00:10:46,604 Only varsity lettermen received a button-down sweater. 179 00:10:46,687 --> 00:10:48,648 I needed a button-down sweater. 180 00:10:49,315 --> 00:10:52,151 Second reason was that I like to run and jump. 181 00:10:53,361 --> 00:10:55,571 He decided to go for track almost as a lark, 182 00:10:55,655 --> 00:10:58,699 and he just started high-jumping. He had awkward form, 183 00:10:58,783 --> 00:11:01,327 jumping face-first over the bar. 184 00:11:02,161 --> 00:11:04,080 [K.C. Jones] He did it different than anyone else. 185 00:11:04,163 --> 00:11:06,165 He'd go back 50 yards. 186 00:11:06,248 --> 00:11:08,376 And he'd take off slow and build up speed. 187 00:11:08,459 --> 00:11:11,629 Now he's doing 100 miles an hour and make the jump. 188 00:11:11,712 --> 00:11:13,881 [Goudsouzian] He found himself jumping 6'7", 6'8". 189 00:11:13,964 --> 00:11:17,468 Turns out he was almost a world-class high jumper from the get-go. 190 00:11:18,844 --> 00:11:21,722 [Stoll] When he tried to bring that high-jumping prowess 191 00:11:21,806 --> 00:11:24,725 to the basketball court, his coaches were not having it. 192 00:11:24,809 --> 00:11:25,935 [music fades] 193 00:11:27,311 --> 00:11:29,438 [Russell] We would play at Cal Berkeley. 194 00:11:29,522 --> 00:11:32,358 Their center was a preseason All-American. 195 00:11:33,192 --> 00:11:35,611 The first five shots he took, I blocked. 196 00:11:37,279 --> 00:11:40,241 Nobody in the building had ever seen anything like that. 197 00:11:40,324 --> 00:11:43,327 So they called time-out, so we get into our huddle, 198 00:11:43,411 --> 00:11:46,163 and my coach says, "You can't play defense like that." 199 00:11:47,665 --> 00:11:50,042 "A good defensive player never leaves his feet." 200 00:11:50,126 --> 00:11:52,628 "You're jumping to block shots." I can't play that way. 201 00:11:53,963 --> 00:11:55,965 So I go back out, and I try it, 202 00:11:56,048 --> 00:11:58,884 and the guy shoots layups three times in a row. 203 00:11:58,968 --> 00:12:01,011 So I went back to playing the way I knew how. 204 00:12:01,095 --> 00:12:03,472 [exciting music playing] 205 00:12:04,348 --> 00:12:07,226 [commentator] Russell, 6'10", bats it away just like that. 206 00:12:08,728 --> 00:12:12,440 [Bob Ryan] Bill Russell literally invented modern defensive basketball. 207 00:12:12,940 --> 00:12:16,110 He changed the game from a horizontal game, 208 00:12:16,193 --> 00:12:20,614 played by mostly landlocked Caucasians, into the game that we know today. 209 00:12:20,698 --> 00:12:23,117 The thing that Bill did, and you see a lot on tape, 210 00:12:23,200 --> 00:12:26,537 is he didn't just swat it to embarrass the guy out of bounds. 211 00:12:26,620 --> 00:12:29,832 He tried to keep it in play because it's just like a rebound. 212 00:12:29,915 --> 00:12:32,251 The offense is on the outside, defense is on in. 213 00:12:32,334 --> 00:12:35,171 If he could get his hand on it, one of his teammates 214 00:12:35,254 --> 00:12:38,591 could get to the ball faster. That's what led to fast breaks. 215 00:12:38,674 --> 00:12:41,135 [Earvin Johnson] His anticipation was off the charts. 216 00:12:41,635 --> 00:12:43,721 He would go up to block it, 217 00:12:43,804 --> 00:12:46,557 and either he's going to block the shot, 218 00:12:46,640 --> 00:12:49,059 or he's gonna make you shoot a crazy shot 219 00:12:49,143 --> 00:12:52,229 or an off-balance shot or a shot that you can't make. 220 00:12:53,481 --> 00:12:57,401 [Stoll] Russell's defensive play made the USF Dons unbeatable. 221 00:12:59,361 --> 00:13:01,822 [commentator] He's up for a shot. Brother, it's good. 222 00:13:01,906 --> 00:13:03,324 The Dons take it away. 223 00:13:04,074 --> 00:13:07,536 [Stoll] Bill Russell's Dons won 55 games in a row 224 00:13:08,037 --> 00:13:10,790 and back-to-back NCAA championships. 225 00:13:10,873 --> 00:13:13,793 [commentator] Bill Russell is cited as the Most Valuable Player. 226 00:13:13,876 --> 00:13:17,004 -[people cheering and whistling] -[music fades] 227 00:13:17,087 --> 00:13:18,798 Just watching him play 228 00:13:18,881 --> 00:13:22,426 and watching him intimidate whole teams of guys in college, 229 00:13:22,510 --> 00:13:23,761 it was so special. 230 00:13:23,844 --> 00:13:27,515 And he was the only reason why… [laughing] 231 00:13:27,598 --> 00:13:29,391 …why that team won. 232 00:13:29,475 --> 00:13:34,146 But the kinds of awards and things that should have gone his way 233 00:13:34,230 --> 00:13:35,189 did not. 234 00:13:35,898 --> 00:13:37,775 [Russell] My junior year in college, 235 00:13:38,400 --> 00:13:41,195 I averaged over 20 points and 20 rebounds a game. 236 00:13:41,278 --> 00:13:43,656 I was blocking at least 15 shots a game. 237 00:13:44,240 --> 00:13:46,534 I was the MVP at the championships. 238 00:13:46,617 --> 00:13:50,454 I went home, to the Northern California banquet, 239 00:13:50,538 --> 00:13:53,249 and they picked another player as player of the year. 240 00:13:53,332 --> 00:13:56,293 As far as I could see, his only qualification was he was blond. 241 00:13:56,377 --> 00:13:58,087 They knew how shaky it was. 242 00:13:58,170 --> 00:14:02,299 So they told my coach to tell me, "Get up and say a couple of remarks 243 00:14:02,383 --> 00:14:06,512 about 'Congratulations to this kid. I hope I can win it next year.'" 244 00:14:06,595 --> 00:14:08,472 I said, "I'm not doing anything like that." 245 00:14:08,556 --> 00:14:11,767 ["Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Around" by The Roots playing] 246 00:14:11,851 --> 00:14:14,770 [William Rhoden] To win the National Championship back-to-back 247 00:14:14,854 --> 00:14:15,938 was phenomenal. 248 00:14:16,981 --> 00:14:19,191 But I think that people did not like the fact 249 00:14:19,275 --> 00:14:24,154 that there were three Black folks starting at San Francisco. 250 00:14:24,238 --> 00:14:26,782 They'd go places and would not be allowed 251 00:14:26,866 --> 00:14:29,785 to check into hotels and eat in restaurants. 252 00:14:32,329 --> 00:14:35,374 What actually happened was, I left the hotel, 253 00:14:35,457 --> 00:14:38,043 and I went to a restaurant down the street. 254 00:14:38,127 --> 00:14:40,379 I said, "Let me get something to eat." 255 00:14:42,131 --> 00:14:45,342 He said I could, but I'd have to eat in the kitchen. 256 00:14:45,426 --> 00:14:49,179 So I refused, and I went back to the hotel and went to sleep. 257 00:14:50,598 --> 00:14:55,185 [Wright] In 1955, two events occurred that made a lifelong impression on me. 258 00:14:55,269 --> 00:14:59,982 A 14-year-old boy named Emmett Till was murdered by two white men 259 00:15:00,065 --> 00:15:02,443 for a supposed affront to a white woman. 260 00:15:02,985 --> 00:15:06,280 His mother insisted that his casket be open at the funeral, 261 00:15:06,363 --> 00:15:10,075 so the world could see the brutality of what had been done to her son. 262 00:15:11,577 --> 00:15:15,039 That same year, Rosa Parks, a Black seamstress, 263 00:15:15,122 --> 00:15:18,292 was arrested for refusing to give up her seat to a white rider 264 00:15:18,375 --> 00:15:20,711 on a public bus in Montgomery, Alabama. 265 00:15:21,879 --> 00:15:24,465 The time had come to not take it anymore. 266 00:15:24,548 --> 00:15:27,718 I had had enough, and this was truly the end. 267 00:15:30,137 --> 00:15:33,474 [Isiah Thomas] Being a Black teenager in the '50s, 268 00:15:34,350 --> 00:15:38,896 you know, those times had to be extremely, extremely difficult. 269 00:15:38,979 --> 00:15:39,980 But yet, 270 00:15:41,315 --> 00:15:43,359 you put all that aside, 271 00:15:43,442 --> 00:15:49,198 and you still go out on the floor and perform at a very, very high level. 272 00:15:50,532 --> 00:15:53,911 [Wright] I decided that I was going to be a great basketball player. 273 00:15:54,536 --> 00:15:58,040 Everything inside me poured itself into that decision. 274 00:15:58,123 --> 00:16:01,961 All the anger and wonder joined together with one purpose. 275 00:16:02,044 --> 00:16:05,089 [blues music playing] 276 00:16:14,807 --> 00:16:17,142 [Goudsouzian] Bill Russell grew up in the Jim Crow South. 277 00:16:17,226 --> 00:16:20,562 He was a child in the 1930s in Monroe, Louisiana. 278 00:16:20,646 --> 00:16:24,942 The patterns of the Jim Crow South included disenfranchising Black people, 279 00:16:25,025 --> 00:16:29,488 stripping them of the right to vote, the physical segregation of spaces. 280 00:16:29,571 --> 00:16:31,865 It included violence, including lynching. 281 00:16:34,702 --> 00:16:37,705 Jim Crow was constantly trying to reinforce to African Americans 282 00:16:37,788 --> 00:16:39,248 that they were second-class citizens. 283 00:16:39,832 --> 00:16:44,211 [Russell] I was aware that I lived in a totally, completely segregated place. 284 00:16:45,087 --> 00:16:48,841 I think of my life, especially when I was young, 285 00:16:48,924 --> 00:16:50,467 as a very sheltered life. 286 00:16:51,802 --> 00:16:54,638 My folks always made sure they kept me out of harm's way. 287 00:16:56,974 --> 00:17:00,144 My father knew firsthand about slavery. 288 00:17:01,020 --> 00:17:02,855 I mean, he's one generation removed. 289 00:17:02,938 --> 00:17:04,898 People in his family were slaves. 290 00:17:04,982 --> 00:17:07,651 Slavery is the ultimate form of disrespect, 291 00:17:07,735 --> 00:17:11,030 and so my father made sure that he was never treated 292 00:17:11,113 --> 00:17:12,990 in any way like a slave. 293 00:17:13,574 --> 00:17:17,828 One of the things that was vitally important to him 294 00:17:17,911 --> 00:17:20,122 was to live a life of dignity 295 00:17:20,205 --> 00:17:22,624 so that his kids would be proud of him. 296 00:17:28,088 --> 00:17:32,259 My father was working in this factory, and he asked for a raise. 297 00:17:33,635 --> 00:17:36,346 The boss said, "We can't give you a raise, Charlie." 298 00:17:37,765 --> 00:17:40,726 "If I give you a raise, you'd make as much as the white fellows, 299 00:17:40,809 --> 00:17:44,229 and I can't pay you boys as much as I pay the white guys." 300 00:17:45,731 --> 00:17:48,275 And he used the N-word to my father. 301 00:17:49,443 --> 00:17:52,196 Just like it was… nothing. 302 00:17:53,489 --> 00:17:55,949 So my father was at home that night, 303 00:17:56,033 --> 00:17:58,702 and he was talking out loud, he says, 304 00:18:00,079 --> 00:18:03,457 "You know, I'm gonna have to leave here because if I stay here… 305 00:18:05,959 --> 00:18:08,879 either I'll kill one of them, or one of them will kill me." 306 00:18:08,962 --> 00:18:10,047 [car engine starts] 307 00:18:13,509 --> 00:18:14,676 [horn toots] 308 00:18:14,760 --> 00:18:16,845 ["Hill Stomp" by Robert Belfour playing] 309 00:18:20,432 --> 00:18:23,727 [Russell] We migrated when I was nine years old. 310 00:18:24,311 --> 00:18:25,729 We moved to California. 311 00:18:31,151 --> 00:18:33,612 Remember, this is a nine-year-old kid. 312 00:18:34,571 --> 00:18:37,449 This is the greatest adventure he could ever imagine. 313 00:18:39,034 --> 00:18:40,244 Getting on a train. 314 00:18:41,662 --> 00:18:45,290 Going someplace that you have no idea what it's gonna be like. 315 00:18:45,999 --> 00:18:48,001 ["Hill Stomp" continues playing] 316 00:18:50,671 --> 00:18:54,299 [Wright] The whole idea of moving was a shock to my brother and me. 317 00:18:54,383 --> 00:18:56,051 We weren't well-traveled. 318 00:18:56,135 --> 00:18:58,637 I sat next to my mother in the colored section of the train 319 00:18:58,720 --> 00:19:00,222 all the way to St. Louis. 320 00:19:02,141 --> 00:19:04,726 And then, for the first time in our lives, 321 00:19:05,394 --> 00:19:06,728 we could sit anywhere. 322 00:19:07,354 --> 00:19:09,857 ["Nitpickin'" by John Williams playing] 323 00:19:14,862 --> 00:19:17,739 [Stoll] The Russells' move was part of a Great Migration 324 00:19:17,823 --> 00:19:20,784 of Black Americans who left the Jim Crow South 325 00:19:20,868 --> 00:19:23,829 to seek better opportunities during World War II. 326 00:19:29,168 --> 00:19:30,335 [music fades] 327 00:19:30,419 --> 00:19:35,841 [Lawrence O'Donnell] You know, Bill talks about arriving in California as immigrants 328 00:19:35,924 --> 00:19:38,468 'cause they were coming from a different country, 329 00:19:38,969 --> 00:19:44,016 and they had to learn the customs of this new country, 330 00:19:44,099 --> 00:19:47,519 where you could drink out of the same water fountain, 331 00:19:48,020 --> 00:19:51,106 you could sit anywhere you wanted to on the bus. 332 00:19:52,649 --> 00:19:55,611 [Russell] My father and mother both worked in the shipyards. 333 00:19:57,321 --> 00:20:01,241 The schools were integrated, and that was a real change. 334 00:20:03,160 --> 00:20:07,039 I'd never seen a basketball or heard-- I didn't even know it existed. 335 00:20:07,539 --> 00:20:11,376 The kids had gotten a backboard and hoop from somewhere. 336 00:20:11,460 --> 00:20:16,131 I don't know where. I'm sure they didn't buy it. [chuckles] 337 00:20:16,924 --> 00:20:19,426 So, I saw these guys playing basketball. 338 00:20:19,509 --> 00:20:23,889 So I joined in. I was really, really not good. 339 00:20:24,556 --> 00:20:30,520 When Bill got to Oakland, his mom took him by this building. 340 00:20:30,604 --> 00:20:32,898 Um, Bill said it was a funny-looking building. 341 00:20:32,981 --> 00:20:35,150 She said, "You're gonna spend a lot of time in there." 342 00:20:35,234 --> 00:20:39,821 Bill said, "What are you talking about?" And she was pointing at a library. 343 00:20:39,905 --> 00:20:44,409 They'd never had access to a library in Louisiana. 344 00:20:44,493 --> 00:20:46,870 Black people weren't supposed to be reading. 345 00:20:46,954 --> 00:20:50,832 [Russell] I'd go to the library and read. And I'd read this history book. 346 00:20:51,541 --> 00:20:53,627 And this one passage said, 347 00:20:55,212 --> 00:20:59,925 "The slaves in America were better off than they were as free people 348 00:21:00,008 --> 00:21:01,468 where they came from." 349 00:21:03,428 --> 00:21:05,138 And I found that astounding. 350 00:21:05,222 --> 00:21:09,017 I was ten years old, and I said, "That cannot be." 351 00:21:09,101 --> 00:21:13,981 Because every person on this planet wants to be free. 352 00:21:15,774 --> 00:21:16,775 [gentle music playing] 353 00:21:16,858 --> 00:21:21,071 [Wright] I had my own private world, and my most prized possession 354 00:21:21,154 --> 00:21:24,157 was my library card from the Oakland Public Library. 355 00:21:24,741 --> 00:21:26,410 I went there almost every day. 356 00:21:26,493 --> 00:21:30,706 I'd check out reproductions of paintings and take them home with me. 357 00:21:30,789 --> 00:21:33,292 Prints of da Vinci and Michelangelo. 358 00:21:34,668 --> 00:21:36,586 Those paintings held me spellbound. 359 00:21:36,670 --> 00:21:41,300 I would study a Michelangelo for hours, trying to memorize each little detail. 360 00:21:41,883 --> 00:21:45,429 It took me weeks before I was satisfied that I could close my eyes 361 00:21:45,512 --> 00:21:49,016 and recreate anything resembling what I saw in the reproduction. 362 00:21:49,516 --> 00:21:52,436 Then I would psych myself up for an acid test, 363 00:21:52,519 --> 00:21:54,521 drawing the painting from memory. 364 00:21:55,022 --> 00:21:57,774 -The result always frustrated me. -[music fades] 365 00:22:00,819 --> 00:22:03,780 [Wright] School was just beginning in the fall of 1946 366 00:22:03,864 --> 00:22:08,076 when I came home one day to find that my mother had gone into the hospital. 367 00:22:08,160 --> 00:22:10,704 It was the flu, they said, nothing serious. 368 00:22:11,496 --> 00:22:14,624 For the next two weeks whenever we went to visit her, she'd laugh 369 00:22:14,708 --> 00:22:17,544 and talk about how she'd had the doctors all confused. 370 00:22:18,128 --> 00:22:21,757 After one of those visits, Mr. Charlie woke us out of a sound sleep 371 00:22:21,840 --> 00:22:24,468 and said, "Your mother died tonight." 372 00:22:26,011 --> 00:22:29,556 I was 12, and she was gone. 373 00:22:29,639 --> 00:22:31,683 [melancholy music playing] 374 00:22:32,517 --> 00:22:35,645 [Jeannine Russell] When his mother passed, back in those days, 375 00:22:35,729 --> 00:22:39,691 the natural thing was that their aunts 376 00:22:39,775 --> 00:22:42,819 would take and raise the children. 377 00:22:42,903 --> 00:22:46,990 His father said, "No, I'm taking them with me." 378 00:22:47,074 --> 00:22:49,951 "I promised their mom," number one. And number two, 379 00:22:50,035 --> 00:22:53,330 he was not going to let anyone else raise his children. 380 00:22:53,413 --> 00:22:56,249 But for Bill, it was a hard time. 381 00:22:57,876 --> 00:23:00,295 [Wright] I wasn't quite the same person. 382 00:23:00,379 --> 00:23:02,422 I became a loner and an introvert. 383 00:23:03,256 --> 00:23:05,175 I was held back by serious doubts 384 00:23:05,258 --> 00:23:08,178 that I could ever become anything without my mother. 385 00:23:10,430 --> 00:23:14,226 Everybody I encountered felt that there was something wrong with me. 386 00:23:14,309 --> 00:23:16,269 Worse, I agreed with them. 387 00:23:18,021 --> 00:23:19,856 I was clumsy at everything. 388 00:23:23,276 --> 00:23:24,569 [music fades] 389 00:23:24,653 --> 00:23:27,864 [Russell] When I got to junior high school, 390 00:23:27,948 --> 00:23:29,658 we used to have a homeroom league, 391 00:23:29,741 --> 00:23:33,203 where each homeroom would play a 15-minute game at lunchtime, 392 00:23:33,286 --> 00:23:35,997 and I was a substitute on the homeroom team. 393 00:23:36,081 --> 00:23:38,083 [Russell laughs] 394 00:23:38,959 --> 00:23:42,212 [Stephen Curry] I don't think anybody knew what type of player he was gonna be. 395 00:23:42,295 --> 00:23:44,798 I don't even think he knew what type of player he was gonna be. 396 00:23:44,881 --> 00:23:50,095 He was blessed with physical attributes that he didn't understand what he had 397 00:23:50,178 --> 00:23:51,513 and how to harness it all. 398 00:23:53,598 --> 00:23:58,437 [Russell] I got cut from the junior varsity in the 11th grade. 399 00:23:58,520 --> 00:24:01,606 The varsity coach, who had been my homeroom teacher 400 00:24:01,690 --> 00:24:04,651 in junior high school, says, "I'm glad you got cut, 401 00:24:05,819 --> 00:24:08,321 'cause today, you can come out for the varsity." 402 00:24:08,905 --> 00:24:12,242 [Stoll] Coach George Powles saw promise in Bill's playing, 403 00:24:12,325 --> 00:24:13,660 even before Bill did. 404 00:24:15,620 --> 00:24:17,789 I can remember telling Bill 405 00:24:17,873 --> 00:24:20,834 to try to play all the ball he could during the summer, 406 00:24:20,917 --> 00:24:24,880 because he was going to be first-string center the following season, 407 00:24:24,963 --> 00:24:26,214 starting in October. 408 00:24:26,298 --> 00:24:27,382 [expectant music playing] 409 00:24:27,466 --> 00:24:30,385 He said, "Maybe I could play at the Boys Club." 410 00:24:31,136 --> 00:24:33,388 And I… I gave him a silver dollar, 411 00:24:33,472 --> 00:24:36,475 and it had to be the best dollar a guy ever spent 412 00:24:36,558 --> 00:24:40,103 because he got in that Boys Club for the summer for a dollar 413 00:24:40,187 --> 00:24:42,397 and played basketball all the time. 414 00:24:44,524 --> 00:24:48,987 [Russell] The game turned serious, I guess, my senior year in high school. 415 00:24:50,155 --> 00:24:51,865 About halfway through the season, 416 00:24:51,948 --> 00:24:54,284 I started to see things and notice things. 417 00:24:57,287 --> 00:25:00,207 [Wright] I suddenly knew I could do on the basketball court 418 00:25:00,290 --> 00:25:02,542 what I had not been able to do with paintings. 419 00:25:02,626 --> 00:25:03,960 [intriguing music playing] 420 00:25:04,044 --> 00:25:07,797 I was sitting with my eyes closed watching plays in my head. 421 00:25:10,258 --> 00:25:12,928 I was in my own private basketball laboratory, 422 00:25:13,011 --> 00:25:14,804 making blueprints for myself. 423 00:25:17,599 --> 00:25:19,017 I blocked a lot of shots. 424 00:25:19,100 --> 00:25:22,521 It was fun to carry out some of the designs I had made up. 425 00:25:23,063 --> 00:25:25,774 Occasionally, I'd get it right on the first go. 426 00:25:25,857 --> 00:25:30,487 To me, that was like being able to slap a Michelangelo right on the canvas. 427 00:25:31,112 --> 00:25:33,573 I'd say to myself, "I've got it!" 428 00:25:34,324 --> 00:25:36,117 [Curry] It's such a cool concept to think about 429 00:25:36,201 --> 00:25:39,120 because he could just see a play one time 430 00:25:39,746 --> 00:25:42,624 and visualize it in his head over and over and over again 431 00:25:42,707 --> 00:25:44,834 before he actually went out and tried it, 432 00:25:44,918 --> 00:25:48,213 and it became second nature before he put the work in. 433 00:25:51,758 --> 00:25:53,927 [Stoll] Russell turned those defensive designs 434 00:25:54,010 --> 00:25:56,763 into blueprints for college championships 435 00:25:56,846 --> 00:25:59,307 and then rolled them out on the world stage 436 00:25:59,391 --> 00:26:03,019 with the 1956 US men's Olympic team. 437 00:26:03,728 --> 00:26:05,605 [presenter] Here is everybody's All-American. 438 00:26:05,689 --> 00:26:07,357 You went through the season undefeated, 439 00:26:07,440 --> 00:26:09,734 and now you've been picked for the Olympic squad. 440 00:26:09,818 --> 00:26:12,362 Are you looking forward to the Olympic trip if you make the team? 441 00:26:12,445 --> 00:26:15,490 [Russell] I've been looking forward to it as long as I can remember. 442 00:26:15,574 --> 00:26:17,534 [exciting music playing] 443 00:26:18,910 --> 00:26:22,247 [Russell] At that time, the Olympic movement was about competing. 444 00:26:23,415 --> 00:26:27,043 And it didn't make a difference where the athlete was from. 445 00:26:29,296 --> 00:26:34,050 [Stoll] Russell's dynamic defense led the Americans to a gold medal victory 446 00:26:34,134 --> 00:26:35,969 over the Soviet team. 447 00:26:36,052 --> 00:26:40,098 One of the really big thrills of winning a gold medal, 448 00:26:41,433 --> 00:26:42,976 for that one brief moment, 449 00:26:43,893 --> 00:26:46,605 you know that you're the best on the planet. 450 00:26:46,688 --> 00:26:50,525 And that's… that's something that you can… can really be proud of. 451 00:26:53,528 --> 00:26:56,656 [Stoll] With two college championships and a gold medal, 452 00:26:56,740 --> 00:26:58,450 Bill was ready to go pro. 453 00:27:00,744 --> 00:27:06,207 [Rhoden] People don't realize that now, man, but the NBA was virtually lily-white. 454 00:27:06,291 --> 00:27:10,420 If you look at those early pictures, it was a predominantly white league. 455 00:27:11,880 --> 00:27:14,924 [Bill McSweeny] The unwritten quota system was you could have one Black player. 456 00:27:15,008 --> 00:27:18,428 Then as the league went on, you could have two Black players. 457 00:27:18,511 --> 00:27:22,015 One, because they had to room together anyway, but no more. 458 00:27:22,599 --> 00:27:26,645 [Russell] The first Black player drafted in the NBA 459 00:27:26,728 --> 00:27:29,147 was a guy named Chuck Cooper from Duquesne, 460 00:27:29,648 --> 00:27:35,111 and that decision came from the coach of the Boston Celtics, Red Auerbach. 461 00:27:36,571 --> 00:27:40,367 [Sanders] Auerbach did not care about the color situation. 462 00:27:40,450 --> 00:27:44,537 He knew that the name of the game is to win, 463 00:27:44,621 --> 00:27:48,166 and he had to make the necessary moves in order to win the games. 464 00:27:48,249 --> 00:27:52,879 That means putting together the right team with the best players. 465 00:27:52,962 --> 00:27:55,715 [upbeat music playing] 466 00:27:55,799 --> 00:27:59,260 [Ryan] The Boston Celtics in the '50s were a perennial bridesmaids team. 467 00:27:59,344 --> 00:28:01,137 They were a good offensive team 468 00:28:01,221 --> 00:28:04,766 with the likes of Bill Sharman and Bob Cousy, 469 00:28:04,849 --> 00:28:07,185 the preeminent backcourt of the '50s, 470 00:28:07,268 --> 00:28:09,479 but still it didn't translate into winning a championship. 471 00:28:09,562 --> 00:28:13,024 [Stoll] Bob Cousy was one of the first NBA superstars. 472 00:28:13,108 --> 00:28:16,194 [Ryan] If you stopped the average man on the street in America in the '50s, 473 00:28:16,861 --> 00:28:20,323 and you said, "Okay, here's a spot quiz. Name a basketball player," 474 00:28:20,407 --> 00:28:23,952 more people would say Bob Cousy than anybody else. 475 00:28:24,035 --> 00:28:27,247 [commentator] Cousy moves off the screen. The shot is sensational. 476 00:28:28,623 --> 00:28:31,835 [Bob Cousy] I was able to do some unorthodox things, 477 00:28:31,918 --> 00:28:36,131 and I guess I had the imagination to complement that, 478 00:28:36,214 --> 00:28:39,426 to do stuff that wasn't being done by anyone else. 479 00:28:40,260 --> 00:28:44,013 They called me "Mr. Basketball," "the Houdini of the Hardwood." 480 00:28:44,973 --> 00:28:47,517 [Stoll] The Celtics had an electrifying offense, 481 00:28:48,017 --> 00:28:51,521 but the team played weak defense and struggled on the glass. 482 00:28:52,063 --> 00:28:54,023 [Sanders] Possession was the key. 483 00:28:54,107 --> 00:28:56,025 If you could get the rebounds, 484 00:28:56,109 --> 00:28:58,778 you could run just about anything out there on the court. 485 00:28:58,862 --> 00:29:03,241 [Cousy] Arnold had come to me a year before, the only time he did that, 486 00:29:03,324 --> 00:29:06,828 and said, "There's a guy out in California. If we can get him, 487 00:29:07,370 --> 00:29:09,998 -he's the answer to all our problems." -[music fades] 488 00:29:11,541 --> 00:29:15,587 There was no question in my mind that we needed Bill Russell. 489 00:29:15,670 --> 00:29:18,840 He had this quick reaction, this great reflex, 490 00:29:18,923 --> 00:29:21,217 and the long arms. It was awesome. 491 00:29:21,301 --> 00:29:23,887 -[intriguing music playing] -[Stoll] Getting Russell wasn't easy. 492 00:29:23,970 --> 00:29:27,098 The first draft pick belonged to the Rochester Royals. 493 00:29:28,600 --> 00:29:31,102 The Celtics had the seventh draft pick, 494 00:29:31,186 --> 00:29:34,564 so Red used some trades to move up to the second spot. 495 00:29:36,441 --> 00:29:37,609 But he wasn't done. 496 00:29:39,194 --> 00:29:43,323 Red Auerbach, always finding an angle, a way to get what he wanted, 497 00:29:43,406 --> 00:29:45,992 he went to the owner of the Celtics, Walter Brown, 498 00:29:46,075 --> 00:29:48,828 who was a major stockholder in the Ice Capades, 499 00:29:48,912 --> 00:29:52,332 which was an incredibly successful form of entertainment 500 00:29:52,415 --> 00:29:55,001 that could sell out an arena anywhere. 501 00:29:55,084 --> 00:29:59,756 Walter Brown, nudged by Red Auerbach, went to the owner of the Rochester Royals 502 00:29:59,839 --> 00:30:02,133 and said, "I tell you what I'm gonna do for you." 503 00:30:02,217 --> 00:30:05,970 "We'll send you the Ice Capades for as many shows as you want. 504 00:30:06,054 --> 00:30:08,807 All you have to do is agree not to draft Bill Russell 505 00:30:08,890 --> 00:30:10,058 with the number one pick." 506 00:30:10,141 --> 00:30:13,019 And Bill Russell was traded for the Ice Capades. 507 00:30:13,102 --> 00:30:14,938 And that was all Red Auerbach's doing. 508 00:30:17,774 --> 00:30:20,193 [Stoll] Red had managed to acquire Russell, 509 00:30:20,276 --> 00:30:22,821 but as the rookie struggled to meet expectations, 510 00:30:22,904 --> 00:30:26,324 Russell himself started to question his fit with the team, 511 00:30:26,950 --> 00:30:29,202 until one pregame meeting with Red. 512 00:30:30,453 --> 00:30:32,372 [Russell] He says to me, "Come to the game early." 513 00:30:32,455 --> 00:30:34,040 "I want to talk to you about something." 514 00:30:34,123 --> 00:30:36,042 So, we're sitting in Boston Garden, 515 00:30:36,125 --> 00:30:40,255 and the guys are out putting the floor up and the baskets up and all that, 516 00:30:40,338 --> 00:30:42,799 and he says, "I want to tell you something." 517 00:30:42,882 --> 00:30:45,927 "I don't have any idea and don't care how many points you make." 518 00:30:46,010 --> 00:30:48,096 "I just want you to help us win ball games." 519 00:30:49,472 --> 00:30:54,018 "Well," I said, "Your salary is going to be determined by these two eyes." 520 00:30:54,102 --> 00:30:56,563 Not that you should give up a shot or anything like that, 521 00:30:56,646 --> 00:30:58,731 but don't worry about any stats. 522 00:30:58,815 --> 00:31:01,609 Just worry, "Did we win, or did we lose?" 523 00:31:01,693 --> 00:31:03,152 That's where it's at. 524 00:31:04,654 --> 00:31:07,323 [Russell] Now, that relieved a lot of pressure 525 00:31:07,407 --> 00:31:09,450 off of he and I, and after that, 526 00:31:09,534 --> 00:31:12,453 Red began to see what kind of impact I could have 527 00:31:12,537 --> 00:31:14,539 with rebounding and defense. 528 00:31:15,123 --> 00:31:17,125 [exciting music playing] 529 00:31:18,251 --> 00:31:23,006 In the transition game, you need someone to control your defensive board, 530 00:31:23,089 --> 00:31:26,009 to rebound effectively, and that's what Russ did. 531 00:31:27,218 --> 00:31:31,431 [Russell] See, the key to fast break, is defensive rebounding and outlet pass. 532 00:31:33,600 --> 00:31:37,103 [Cousy] When the ball would go up, I'd position myself off to one side, 533 00:31:37,186 --> 00:31:40,064 the closest side, waiting to get his pass, 534 00:31:40,148 --> 00:31:43,568 so I could get my ass downcourt and start the fast break 535 00:31:43,651 --> 00:31:46,154 because I knew he was gonna get every rebound. 536 00:31:47,363 --> 00:31:50,408 [Russell] The other team would shoot. By the time the jump shooter landed, 537 00:31:50,491 --> 00:31:53,077 we were shooting a layup going the other way. 538 00:31:53,161 --> 00:31:55,163 [exciting music continues] 539 00:31:59,334 --> 00:32:01,878 [Bill Walton] His job was, get the rebound, 540 00:32:01,961 --> 00:32:03,880 block the shots, deflect the passes, 541 00:32:03,963 --> 00:32:07,675 and then turning it right around in the other direction 542 00:32:07,759 --> 00:32:11,679 and letting the rest of the guys rush up the court 543 00:32:11,763 --> 00:32:13,348 like the oncoming tide. 544 00:32:17,226 --> 00:32:19,228 [spectators cheering] 545 00:32:19,312 --> 00:32:20,855 Well, Bob, it must feel good, 546 00:32:20,939 --> 00:32:23,858 being the greatest ballplayer in the game today, 547 00:32:23,942 --> 00:32:27,403 to have a guy you know can get the ball. How does that feel to you? 548 00:32:27,487 --> 00:32:30,782 Well, of course, most of the basketball fans 549 00:32:30,865 --> 00:32:33,576 that have watched the Celtics play know our offense 550 00:32:33,660 --> 00:32:35,578 has always been predicated on the fast break, 551 00:32:35,662 --> 00:32:38,081 and we've never had a really big man to get that. 552 00:32:38,164 --> 00:32:43,419 Even at this point, I think as far as rebounding, passing, defense, 553 00:32:43,503 --> 00:32:46,673 there's no question as to the superiority of Russell. 554 00:32:48,341 --> 00:32:50,343 [gentle music playing] 555 00:32:51,511 --> 00:32:53,388 [Wright] I owe it all to my wife. 556 00:32:54,138 --> 00:32:58,309 There were times I wondered, but not Rose. She never stopped talking to me. 557 00:32:58,393 --> 00:33:01,187 After practice and even during practice breaks, 558 00:33:01,270 --> 00:33:02,438 she'd encourage me. 559 00:33:02,522 --> 00:33:04,691 She'd do the same thing after games at home. 560 00:33:04,774 --> 00:33:07,652 The only time she couldn't was when we were on the road. 561 00:33:08,194 --> 00:33:10,029 I really missed her pep talks then. 562 00:33:10,113 --> 00:33:12,824 [church bells ringing] 563 00:33:12,907 --> 00:33:17,996 [Wright] When I married Rose in 1956, I was 22, fresh from the Olympics, 564 00:33:18,079 --> 00:33:21,165 and didn't have the slightest idea what I was doing. 565 00:33:21,249 --> 00:33:24,419 I knew only that Rose accepted and cared about me, 566 00:33:25,169 --> 00:33:29,048 apart from the basketball, which was a great breakthrough for me. 567 00:33:31,843 --> 00:33:34,595 [Stoll] The Celtics finished on top in the Eastern Division 568 00:33:34,679 --> 00:33:36,597 for the first time in team history. 569 00:33:36,681 --> 00:33:38,433 [crowd cheering] 570 00:33:40,518 --> 00:33:43,896 Now they would face the St. Louis Hawks for the championship. 571 00:33:45,732 --> 00:33:47,734 [music fades] 572 00:33:48,818 --> 00:33:52,280 [commentator] In Boston, a capacity crowd sees the NBA championship struggle 573 00:33:52,363 --> 00:33:55,366 between the St. Louis Hawks and the Boston Celtics. 574 00:33:55,450 --> 00:33:56,576 [exciting music playing] 575 00:33:57,201 --> 00:33:58,453 Russell in the pivot. 576 00:33:59,620 --> 00:34:01,039 It was a great series. 577 00:34:01,122 --> 00:34:04,083 Bill Russell… the tougher the game, the better he played. 578 00:34:04,167 --> 00:34:07,253 I went in for four layups. He blocked the first two, 579 00:34:07,336 --> 00:34:09,255 and I missed the next two looking for him. 580 00:34:09,839 --> 00:34:11,799 [music fades] 581 00:34:11,883 --> 00:34:14,385 [Stoll] The series, and Russell's rookie year, 582 00:34:14,469 --> 00:34:17,472 came down to the final minutes of game seven. 583 00:34:18,097 --> 00:34:20,349 [Johnny Most] Late in the fourth quarter, game is tied up. 584 00:34:20,433 --> 00:34:24,145 Russell drives right to left, lays it in. That breaks the tie! 585 00:34:24,228 --> 00:34:26,731 Now Macauley with the ball, top of the circle. 586 00:34:26,814 --> 00:34:29,901 Down low to Pettit, he drives, gets fouled by Russell. 587 00:34:29,984 --> 00:34:33,488 He'll go to the line with a chance to tie up the ball game. 588 00:34:34,906 --> 00:34:38,618 He's ready. He dips, he shoots. It's around the rim and in! 589 00:34:38,701 --> 00:34:42,038 In that game, there were two of the greatest plays I've ever seen. 590 00:34:42,121 --> 00:34:43,456 The first one, Russell made. 591 00:34:43,539 --> 00:34:45,833 [Most] The game is tied, time is running out, 592 00:34:45,917 --> 00:34:48,461 and downcourt come the Celtics. On the left, Cousy. 593 00:34:48,544 --> 00:34:50,254 [Heinsohn] Cousy threw him a long court pass. 594 00:34:50,338 --> 00:34:52,215 He had to catch it and stuff it 595 00:34:52,298 --> 00:34:55,968 all at the same motion. He wasn't able to make the basket. 596 00:34:56,052 --> 00:34:59,680 [Most] No good! Rebound to Martin. Martin up the middle of the court. 597 00:34:59,764 --> 00:35:01,516 Now, they've got the ball, St. Louis, 598 00:35:01,599 --> 00:35:04,519 and in one pass, got it to a guy who, in one dribble, 599 00:35:04,602 --> 00:35:06,813 was gonna go for a layup and win the ball game. 600 00:35:07,396 --> 00:35:10,399 And this guy Coleman was out in front of everybody. 601 00:35:10,483 --> 00:35:12,777 [Most] Jack Coleman bruising down the lane, 602 00:35:12,860 --> 00:35:14,320 and it's gonna be a breakaway. 603 00:35:14,403 --> 00:35:17,198 I put my head down, and I was digging as hard as I could. 604 00:35:17,281 --> 00:35:19,534 [commentator 1] Bill Russell coming down the floor. 605 00:35:20,034 --> 00:35:22,203 [Heinsohn] And Russell went by me like a blur. 606 00:35:22,286 --> 00:35:24,664 [Most] He lays it up. It's blocked by Russell! 607 00:35:24,747 --> 00:35:26,624 What a play by Bill Russell! 608 00:35:28,459 --> 00:35:30,169 [Russell] That would have given them the lead 609 00:35:30,253 --> 00:35:32,463 with three or four seconds to go. 610 00:35:32,547 --> 00:35:36,259 [Most] All right, it's 113-113 after one overtime of play… 611 00:35:36,843 --> 00:35:39,762 The next great play was Alex Hannum. 612 00:35:39,846 --> 00:35:42,223 With one second left, they called time-out. 613 00:35:42,306 --> 00:35:43,933 [commentator 2] Jim Loscutoff sinks a foul. 614 00:35:44,016 --> 00:35:47,770 The Celts lead by two, but the Hawks have time for one shot. 615 00:35:47,854 --> 00:35:50,815 [Most] The Hawks huddle around player-coach Alex Hannum. 616 00:35:50,898 --> 00:35:54,318 [Pettit] Hannum said, "I'll throw the ball the length of the court." 617 00:35:54,402 --> 00:35:55,653 "I'll hit the backboard." 618 00:35:55,736 --> 00:35:58,948 "Pettit, you go up and catch it and put it in. Make the…" 619 00:36:01,534 --> 00:36:03,578 Well, he threw a perfect pass. 620 00:36:04,704 --> 00:36:08,583 [Pettit] I went up and never came down. Just caught it and shot it in the air. 621 00:36:09,709 --> 00:36:12,378 Son of a gun worked. Except I missed the shot. 622 00:36:13,296 --> 00:36:15,464 [Most] And the ball game ends on that note! 623 00:36:16,299 --> 00:36:19,552 And the Celtics win their first World Championship. 624 00:36:19,635 --> 00:36:23,264 And for yours truly, the first one I've ever announced. 625 00:36:23,848 --> 00:36:27,351 -[cheering] -[thrilling music playing] 626 00:36:28,895 --> 00:36:30,855 [Russell] We were happy, our first championship. 627 00:36:31,522 --> 00:36:35,067 The Red Sox hadn't won in years and years. The Bruins hadn't won. 628 00:36:35,693 --> 00:36:37,820 The Patriots did not exist then. 629 00:36:43,618 --> 00:36:45,161 And so after the game, 630 00:36:46,829 --> 00:36:49,707 Red says, "Let's say we shave the beard off." 631 00:36:50,541 --> 00:36:52,877 I'd forgotten about it till we got in the locker room, 632 00:36:52,960 --> 00:36:56,714 and the trainer brought out the razor and shaving cream. 633 00:36:57,548 --> 00:37:00,551 That night, I really became part of the team. 634 00:37:04,347 --> 00:37:05,765 [music fades] 635 00:37:08,643 --> 00:37:10,895 [cars honking] 636 00:37:13,064 --> 00:37:15,399 [Stoll] Coming off a triumphant rookie year, 637 00:37:15,483 --> 00:37:19,695 Bill and Rose decided it might be safe to put down roots in the Boston area. 638 00:37:20,738 --> 00:37:22,573 They bought a house in the town of Reading. 639 00:37:24,116 --> 00:37:28,162 Reading is a suburb of the city, relatively working-class, conservative. 640 00:37:28,246 --> 00:37:31,540 Russell lived in Reading throughout his Celtics career, 641 00:37:31,624 --> 00:37:34,877 but he never felt entirely settled and welcome there. 642 00:37:37,004 --> 00:37:40,633 Sometimes he would complain about harassment from some locals. 643 00:37:40,716 --> 00:37:42,843 They might be followed around town. 644 00:37:42,927 --> 00:37:44,971 Vandals would tip trash cans around his home. 645 00:37:45,054 --> 00:37:45,930 [tense music playing] 646 00:37:46,013 --> 00:37:48,391 [Karen Russell] When I first moved to Reading, Massachusetts, 647 00:37:48,474 --> 00:37:50,726 we were the first Black family in town. 648 00:37:50,810 --> 00:37:53,145 Every time my dad would leave town, 649 00:37:53,229 --> 00:37:57,275 the "raccoons" would come and knock over the garbage. 650 00:37:57,358 --> 00:38:00,444 My mom would wake up in the morning, and there'd be garbage all over the yard. 651 00:38:00,528 --> 00:38:03,656 My dad went to the police station and said, "When I'm out of town, 652 00:38:03,739 --> 00:38:07,618 somebody's messing with my wife, knocking our garbage cans over." 653 00:38:07,702 --> 00:38:11,122 They're like, "Well, we can't do anything about the 'raccoons.'" 654 00:38:11,956 --> 00:38:15,835 [Russell] So, I went to the state government 655 00:38:15,918 --> 00:38:17,753 and got a gun permit. 656 00:38:21,799 --> 00:38:24,593 [Karen] And suddenly, the raccoons never came back. 657 00:38:27,346 --> 00:38:29,974 [Goudsouzian] Boston was supposed to be a racially liberal city. 658 00:38:30,057 --> 00:38:32,518 It had the reputation dating back to the 19th century 659 00:38:32,601 --> 00:38:34,145 as the "Athens of America." 660 00:38:34,228 --> 00:38:36,731 But what Russell found was this provincial culture, 661 00:38:36,814 --> 00:38:40,443 where many working-class whites resented any Black presence. 662 00:38:41,277 --> 00:38:42,570 Boston was 663 00:38:43,821 --> 00:38:45,156 the least 664 00:38:46,240 --> 00:38:49,660 liberal city in the NBA when I got there. 665 00:38:49,744 --> 00:38:51,871 Not that he needed to go to Boston to experience racism. 666 00:38:51,954 --> 00:38:54,373 This was the '50s in America. 667 00:38:54,457 --> 00:38:57,835 [all chanting] …four, six, eight, we don't want to integrate! 668 00:38:57,918 --> 00:39:01,172 Two, four, six, eight, we don't want to integrate! 669 00:39:01,756 --> 00:39:05,343 Two, four, six, eight, we don't want to integrate! 670 00:39:05,426 --> 00:39:09,597 [Stoll] Russell tried to find solace from the nation's violent racial fissures, 671 00:39:09,680 --> 00:39:13,809 not simply in playing the game, but in ritualizing winning. 672 00:39:13,893 --> 00:39:15,895 [triumphant music playing] 673 00:39:19,899 --> 00:39:23,903 [Stoll] The Celtics marched through the 1957-'58 season, 674 00:39:23,986 --> 00:39:27,990 turning Russell's 22 rebounds per game into easy points. 675 00:39:29,492 --> 00:39:32,119 They seemed poised to land another NBA title. 676 00:39:33,037 --> 00:39:34,288 [music fades] 677 00:39:35,581 --> 00:39:36,999 [spectators cheering] 678 00:39:37,083 --> 00:39:39,960 Hi, basketball fans. It's Johnny Most high above courtside, 679 00:39:40,044 --> 00:39:43,005 and welcome to the 1958 World Championship series 680 00:39:43,089 --> 00:39:45,132 between the Hawks and the Celtics. 681 00:39:46,384 --> 00:39:49,595 [Stoll] In the second half of game three, with the series tied, 682 00:39:49,678 --> 00:39:52,473 Russell jumped to block a shot and fell wrong, 683 00:39:52,556 --> 00:39:55,601 tearing tendons and chipping a bone in his ankle. 684 00:39:57,395 --> 00:39:59,146 [tense music playing] 685 00:39:59,897 --> 00:40:02,108 We didn't wish Bill any bad luck, 686 00:40:02,191 --> 00:40:05,986 but I'm certain that we were not unhappy that he'd sprained his ankle. [laughs] 687 00:40:06,070 --> 00:40:10,032 [Russell] I got a severe sprain, and I couldn't play in a couple of games. 688 00:40:10,574 --> 00:40:13,369 [Stoll] Russell made it back for game six in St. Louis, 689 00:40:13,452 --> 00:40:16,288 with the Celtics trailing three games to two, 690 00:40:16,831 --> 00:40:19,250 but he was still hobbled by that bad ankle. 691 00:40:19,750 --> 00:40:20,918 [commentator] Pettit in low. 692 00:40:21,001 --> 00:40:22,962 Over Tom Heinsohn, good for two. 693 00:40:23,045 --> 00:40:26,006 Pettit on a drive, and even Bill Russell can't stop him. 694 00:40:27,800 --> 00:40:30,636 Macauley with the basketball. And it's all over! 695 00:40:31,512 --> 00:40:33,889 The championship belongs to the St. Louis Hawks 696 00:40:33,973 --> 00:40:36,016 behind Bob Pettit's 50 points. 697 00:40:37,309 --> 00:40:38,936 [Russell] We lost in six games. 698 00:40:39,019 --> 00:40:43,274 But we knew that was the difference between being poor and being broke. 699 00:40:43,357 --> 00:40:47,736 See, being poor is a state of mind. Being broke is a temporary situation. 700 00:40:48,696 --> 00:40:51,490 And we knew that was a very temporary situation. 701 00:40:52,241 --> 00:40:57,329 So the next year, we've just got to go out and try to win as many games as possible. 702 00:40:57,413 --> 00:41:00,082 We were all competitors, starting with Arnold. 703 00:41:00,166 --> 00:41:02,751 [yelling] …carry the ball, Mendy! One time, huh? 704 00:41:04,503 --> 00:41:06,005 [groans] 705 00:41:06,088 --> 00:41:07,506 [Russell] Red was pretty intense. 706 00:41:08,382 --> 00:41:12,595 [Cousy] He didn't want us to shake hands with the opponent before the game. 707 00:41:12,678 --> 00:41:14,847 [laughs] We hated them! 708 00:41:14,930 --> 00:41:17,766 Arnold maybe took it to the next level, 709 00:41:17,850 --> 00:41:20,269 but he didn't want us to coexist, 710 00:41:20,352 --> 00:41:22,146 other than to beat their ass. 711 00:41:22,897 --> 00:41:26,442 [Stoll] That next year, in the 1958-'59 season, 712 00:41:26,525 --> 00:41:29,528 the Celtics finished with the league's best record. 713 00:41:29,612 --> 00:41:32,656 [Russell] We could play any style of basketball. 714 00:41:32,740 --> 00:41:34,283 We could run with anybody. 715 00:41:35,034 --> 00:41:37,703 We could pound it down in the half-court with anybody, 716 00:41:38,787 --> 00:41:40,206 all with equal facility. 717 00:41:41,540 --> 00:41:43,834 [music fades] 718 00:41:43,918 --> 00:41:46,170 [Stoll] Red filled out the squad with a young team 719 00:41:46,253 --> 00:41:48,464 that he hoped would build together. 720 00:41:48,547 --> 00:41:51,550 ["Money (That's What I Want)" by Barrett Strong playing] 721 00:41:52,801 --> 00:41:56,222 [Wright] After the '57 draft, Red called me up and announced, 722 00:41:56,305 --> 00:42:00,059 "I drafted Sam Jones out of North Carolina Central University." 723 00:42:00,142 --> 00:42:03,145 "How about this guy, Russ? You think he can he do good for us?" 724 00:42:04,146 --> 00:42:08,442 I said, "Who the hell is Sam Jones?" "He's a Schvartze." 725 00:42:08,526 --> 00:42:10,736 That was colloquial Yiddish for a Black person. 726 00:42:10,819 --> 00:42:12,530 "I thought you'd know about him." 727 00:42:13,030 --> 00:42:15,282 I said, "Listen, Red, I don't know all of them." 728 00:42:16,450 --> 00:42:19,328 Know him or not, though, there was no doubt that Sam Jones 729 00:42:19,411 --> 00:42:21,997 was going to be a big-league basketball player. 730 00:42:23,290 --> 00:42:26,502 [laughs] Sam just always seemed like an old man to me. 731 00:42:27,127 --> 00:42:31,048 Sam Jones doesn't get the recognition that he deserves as a player. 732 00:42:31,131 --> 00:42:34,218 Guys who understand the game know Sam was just clutch. 733 00:42:34,301 --> 00:42:35,803 You don't know where he's going to go, 734 00:42:35,886 --> 00:42:38,639 but you know he's gonna find a bank shot for you. 735 00:42:40,015 --> 00:42:42,851 You didn't want to go up against him at all. [laughs] 736 00:42:42,935 --> 00:42:46,772 [Russell] He'd never hesitate to take the shot, and he'd never miss. 737 00:42:48,857 --> 00:42:50,234 [music fades] 738 00:42:50,317 --> 00:42:51,527 [spectators cheering] 739 00:42:51,610 --> 00:42:52,903 [Stoll] Red also made a move 740 00:42:52,987 --> 00:42:55,656 to reunite Bill with his college roommate, K.C. Jones. 741 00:42:55,739 --> 00:42:57,658 ["Melting Pot" by The Roots playing] 742 00:42:57,741 --> 00:43:01,161 [Walton] Reporters were always on Red's case about playing K.C. 743 00:43:01,245 --> 00:43:05,124 They'd say, "What do you put him in for? He doesn't do anything for the team." 744 00:43:05,207 --> 00:43:08,627 Red would hit on his cigar, blow the green smoke out, 745 00:43:08,711 --> 00:43:11,880 and say, "Hey, K.C. Jones, the only thing I know 746 00:43:11,964 --> 00:43:15,092 is that every time I put him in, our team goes ahead." 747 00:43:16,260 --> 00:43:19,638 [commentator] Interception by K.C. Jones, and here come the Celtics. 748 00:43:20,139 --> 00:43:23,601 [Russell] K.C., I think, was the best defensive guard I've ever seen. 749 00:43:24,351 --> 00:43:26,812 ["Melting Pot" continues] 750 00:43:27,438 --> 00:43:30,941 [Stoll] Red fostered a team culture around players' quirks, 751 00:43:31,025 --> 00:43:33,152 allowing them to be themselves. 752 00:43:33,235 --> 00:43:36,322 He was building more than a winning franchise. 753 00:43:36,405 --> 00:43:38,407 This was a band of brothers. 754 00:43:38,490 --> 00:43:41,035 We were family, and we were fortunate enough 755 00:43:41,118 --> 00:43:43,287 to keep that nucleus together. 756 00:43:43,370 --> 00:43:46,123 [Russell] We rooted for each other, and we pulled for each other, 757 00:43:46,206 --> 00:43:49,752 and we did everything we could to make each other successful. 758 00:43:51,045 --> 00:43:52,379 He loved his teammates, 759 00:43:52,463 --> 00:43:55,257 and in a lot of ways, they were a second family. 760 00:43:55,924 --> 00:43:58,427 [Russell] We were affectionate towards each other. 761 00:43:58,510 --> 00:44:01,430 The best way to be affectionate is to be humorous. 762 00:44:02,640 --> 00:44:04,975 [Ryan] If you talk to people who know Bill Russell, 763 00:44:05,059 --> 00:44:09,521 the first thing you think about is the cackle. It's a cackle. 764 00:44:09,605 --> 00:44:10,939 [cackling] 765 00:44:11,023 --> 00:44:12,691 [comical music playing] 766 00:44:14,026 --> 00:44:16,153 [Monroe] You know, he's arrogant as can be. 767 00:44:16,236 --> 00:44:17,988 You know, he's Bill Russell! 768 00:44:18,072 --> 00:44:22,159 But he could also be that crazy guy who laughs and jokes with you 769 00:44:22,242 --> 00:44:23,827 and has fun. 770 00:44:23,911 --> 00:44:27,956 You could hear him cackling with that famous laugh of his. 771 00:44:28,040 --> 00:44:31,710 His laugh was infectious, unique. 772 00:44:31,794 --> 00:44:32,753 Genuine. 773 00:44:32,836 --> 00:44:34,838 [all laughing] 774 00:44:36,840 --> 00:44:39,635 It was like a… [mimics Russell cackling] 775 00:44:42,388 --> 00:44:44,765 When I first heard that cackle, I said, 776 00:44:44,848 --> 00:44:47,226 "Wha… Is he laughing at me or…" 777 00:44:47,309 --> 00:44:48,394 "What's he doing?" 778 00:44:48,477 --> 00:44:50,104 [cackling] 779 00:44:52,064 --> 00:44:54,775 When you get him to laugh, you know you're in good shape. 780 00:44:54,858 --> 00:44:56,485 [cackling] 781 00:44:58,946 --> 00:45:01,323 [Russell] Between my laugh and my throwing up, Red used to say 782 00:45:01,407 --> 00:45:03,075 I was gonna drive him out of basketball. 783 00:45:03,158 --> 00:45:04,243 [music fades] 784 00:45:05,119 --> 00:45:08,664 [Russell] Sometimes, I got to the game, and I just threw up. 785 00:45:08,747 --> 00:45:10,916 For me, it was essential that I get nervous. 786 00:45:11,417 --> 00:45:14,962 Certain people are so intense 787 00:45:16,338 --> 00:45:19,091 that they have to find a way to release that intensity 788 00:45:19,174 --> 00:45:22,386 in order for them to relax and perform. 789 00:45:23,053 --> 00:45:26,265 After I did it, I was okay, and it looked worse than it sounded. 790 00:45:26,348 --> 00:45:28,392 [cackling] 791 00:45:28,475 --> 00:45:29,935 [funk music playing] 792 00:45:30,018 --> 00:45:32,688 I remember one game we were warming up. 793 00:45:32,771 --> 00:45:34,314 I said, "Gee, you know, 794 00:45:34,398 --> 00:45:38,402 Russell forgot to vomit." So I called the team off the court. 795 00:45:38,485 --> 00:45:41,196 I said, "Everyone back in the locker room." 796 00:45:41,280 --> 00:45:44,074 I turned around, I said, "Russell, go vomit." 797 00:45:44,783 --> 00:45:47,411 He went and vomited, and we went out, and we won. 798 00:45:47,494 --> 00:45:52,040 We'd hear him go in, and we thought, "Thank God he went and threw up!" 799 00:45:52,124 --> 00:45:55,878 Because we knew he was ready. He was going to have a giant game. 800 00:45:55,961 --> 00:45:57,546 [music fades] 801 00:45:58,922 --> 00:46:01,175 [Stoll] At the end of the '58-'59 season, 802 00:46:01,258 --> 00:46:03,969 the Celtics had another shot at the championship. 803 00:46:05,471 --> 00:46:08,182 [Springer] The first confrontation between the Celtics and Lakers 804 00:46:08,265 --> 00:46:09,558 occurred in 1959 805 00:46:09,641 --> 00:46:12,644 when the Lakers were still in Minneapolis, so that one's kind of forgotten, 806 00:46:12,728 --> 00:46:15,856 but that was the beginning of the Celtic reign over the Lakers. 807 00:46:15,939 --> 00:46:17,858 [commentator] Boston has won three in a row, 808 00:46:17,941 --> 00:46:20,360 so this is do-or-die for the Lakers. 809 00:46:21,361 --> 00:46:25,073 [Stoll] In game four, Russell kept everyone else off the glass, 810 00:46:25,157 --> 00:46:27,117 securing 30 rebounds. 811 00:46:27,826 --> 00:46:29,787 [commentator] Bob Cousy is off for the basket 812 00:46:29,870 --> 00:46:31,872 as Boston puts on more pressure. 813 00:46:31,955 --> 00:46:34,500 Celtics win 118 to 113. 814 00:46:34,583 --> 00:46:38,253 Auerbach's team first to clean sweep the title playoffs. 815 00:46:38,337 --> 00:46:41,423 [Stoll] The Celtics domination in the 1959 Finals 816 00:46:41,507 --> 00:46:43,759 proved the team had truly arrived 817 00:46:43,842 --> 00:46:46,428 and put Bill back on top as a champion. 818 00:46:46,512 --> 00:46:48,514 [triumphant music playing] 819 00:46:51,892 --> 00:46:54,728 [Russell] At that time, I was in love with my career. 820 00:46:54,812 --> 00:46:58,607 I just loved it, absolutely every minute of it. 821 00:46:58,690 --> 00:47:01,443 ["I Love the Way You Love Me" by Marv Johnson playing] 822 00:47:01,527 --> 00:47:06,949 ♪ The sweet things you do to me Like holding my hand 823 00:47:07,032 --> 00:47:10,452 [Russell] That was a marvelous, wonderful time for me. 824 00:47:12,120 --> 00:47:14,665 ♪ You always understand ♪ 825 00:47:14,748 --> 00:47:19,378 -♪ And I love the way you love ♪ -♪ I love the way you love ♪ 826 00:47:19,461 --> 00:47:22,214 ♪ It makes me feel so fine ♪ 827 00:47:23,340 --> 00:47:25,843 ♪ I love the way you love ♪ 828 00:47:25,926 --> 00:47:28,720 ♪ Because I know you're mine, all mine ♪ 829 00:47:30,389 --> 00:47:36,645 ♪ I'll never do you wrong I'll never make you cry ♪ 830 00:47:37,521 --> 00:47:43,193 ♪ If you stop loving me I know that I'll just die ♪ 831 00:47:43,277 --> 00:47:44,528 ♪ Because I love ♪ 832 00:47:44,611 --> 00:47:48,031 -♪ I love the way you love ♪ -♪ Yeah, it makes me feel ♪ 833 00:47:48,115 --> 00:47:50,534 -♪ It makes me feel so fine ♪ -♪ So fine ♪ 834 00:47:50,617 --> 00:47:54,538 -♪ And I love the way you love ♪ -♪ I love the way you love ♪ 835 00:47:54,621 --> 00:47:57,207 ♪ Because I know you're mine, all mine ♪ 836 00:47:58,792 --> 00:48:01,211 ♪ Folks tell me now and then… ♪ 837 00:48:03,088 --> 00:48:07,217 [Stoll] That year, the NBA's MVP award went not to Russell 838 00:48:07,301 --> 00:48:09,303 but to Bob Pettit of the Hawks. 839 00:48:10,178 --> 00:48:11,054 But in Boston, 840 00:48:11,138 --> 00:48:14,600 it was becoming clear that Bill Russell was the most valuable Celtic. 841 00:48:14,683 --> 00:48:15,893 [pensive music playing] 842 00:48:15,976 --> 00:48:19,271 I always knew he was a good rebounder. I knew he was a good passer, 843 00:48:19,354 --> 00:48:21,398 but I didn't know he was a leader. 844 00:48:22,274 --> 00:48:25,652 A lot of people didn't know this, but he was so dedicated to winning 845 00:48:26,236 --> 00:48:29,156 and to the team structure. 846 00:48:29,823 --> 00:48:32,200 The bottom line was he was a winner. 847 00:48:32,284 --> 00:48:36,622 And so, he felt that he should get a certain amount of respect 848 00:48:36,705 --> 00:48:40,250 just based on what they were able to accomplish as a team. 849 00:48:40,334 --> 00:48:43,712 Bob Cousy had been a leader, but there's no question who became the leader. 850 00:48:44,212 --> 00:48:47,007 [Russell] Bob came there, you know, he was the star of the team. 851 00:48:47,090 --> 00:48:49,468 He could have said, "Hey, listen, I'm the star." 852 00:48:50,052 --> 00:48:52,304 But what he said was, "Let's do it." 853 00:48:52,387 --> 00:48:54,014 -[interviewer] Together? -[Russell] Yeah. 854 00:48:54,097 --> 00:48:56,808 [Cousy] I was the man when he got to Boston, 855 00:48:56,892 --> 00:48:58,894 and then he became the man, 856 00:48:58,977 --> 00:49:03,148 but the media didn't really give him the credit for being the man. 857 00:49:04,524 --> 00:49:08,028 [Stoll] Before a road trip, Bob Cousy suffered a sprained ankle. 858 00:49:09,404 --> 00:49:12,574 We go on a road trip. We play five games in a row. 859 00:49:13,867 --> 00:49:16,203 Russell wanted to show he could do it without Cousy. 860 00:49:16,286 --> 00:49:19,581 He must've blocked 9,000 shots. It was unbelievable. 861 00:49:19,665 --> 00:49:21,875 [commentator] LaRusso goes up, and Russell blocked it! 862 00:49:22,501 --> 00:49:23,961 [Auerbach] We win all five. 863 00:49:25,212 --> 00:49:29,591 We come back into Boston. The headlines, "Will Cousy play tonight?" 864 00:49:30,717 --> 00:49:33,220 ["Dirty Water" by The Standells playing] 865 00:49:33,303 --> 00:49:35,180 ♪ I'm gonna tell you a story ♪ 866 00:49:36,556 --> 00:49:38,809 ♪ I'm gonna tell you about my town ♪ 867 00:49:38,892 --> 00:49:40,560 [O'Donnell] Growing up in Boston, 868 00:49:40,644 --> 00:49:43,105 this Russell-Cousy team 869 00:49:43,188 --> 00:49:46,233 was the only winning professional sports 870 00:49:46,316 --> 00:49:48,568 in my neighborhood. 871 00:49:50,696 --> 00:49:54,783 ♪ 'Cause I love that dirty water ♪ 872 00:49:54,866 --> 00:49:57,744 ♪ Oh, Boston, you're my home… ♪ 873 00:49:57,828 --> 00:50:01,832 [Stoll] Celtic fandom grew, but appreciation of Bill did not. 874 00:50:04,459 --> 00:50:07,754 [Ryan] Bill Russell did not get the full… uh, total approbation 875 00:50:07,838 --> 00:50:11,133 he deserved in this town for the simple reason that he was Black. 876 00:50:11,216 --> 00:50:12,926 It was just that simple. 877 00:50:13,010 --> 00:50:16,346 [Russell] The writers were totally and completely disrespectful. 878 00:50:16,430 --> 00:50:18,849 [Rhoden] When you had this all-white press, 879 00:50:18,932 --> 00:50:20,767 with all its biases, 880 00:50:20,851 --> 00:50:25,063 dealing with, particularly, this first and second wave of Black men, 881 00:50:25,564 --> 00:50:27,441 it was… it was awful. 882 00:50:28,358 --> 00:50:32,195 [Leigh Montville] There were some hardcore all-white guys 883 00:50:32,279 --> 00:50:35,073 who used a lot those words in private. 884 00:50:35,157 --> 00:50:39,536 And I'm sure that affected their writing in public. And it was nasty. 885 00:50:40,078 --> 00:50:43,331 [Rhoden] "Black athletes were ignorant. Only thing they could do was play." 886 00:50:43,415 --> 00:50:46,918 "They weren't intellectual. They could run and jump." 887 00:50:47,002 --> 00:50:48,253 [tense music playing] 888 00:50:48,336 --> 00:50:51,173 They referred to the balcony, 889 00:50:51,256 --> 00:50:54,051 for instance, in Boston Garden as "N-word heaven." 890 00:50:54,134 --> 00:50:56,219 You'd hear these things in the press box. 891 00:50:56,303 --> 00:50:59,014 [Ryan] There aren't many Black players in the league yet. 892 00:50:59,097 --> 00:51:02,309 It was a game of white guys and white writers and white audiences. 893 00:51:02,392 --> 00:51:05,020 And this town was not "ready" for Bill. 894 00:51:06,021 --> 00:51:09,608 His car broke down in a rainstorm, and people drove by. 895 00:51:09,691 --> 00:51:13,612 Obviously, they knew who he was. He's Bill Russell, for goodness' sakes. 896 00:51:13,695 --> 00:51:17,908 People were driving by and heckling him rather than stop to help him. 897 00:51:17,991 --> 00:51:20,077 Imagine if Larry Bird's car broke down. 898 00:51:20,160 --> 00:51:23,914 There would be a parking lot of people begging to help Larry. 899 00:51:23,997 --> 00:51:25,749 [music fades] 900 00:51:25,832 --> 00:51:29,211 [Stoll] If Russell encountered headwinds in the streets of Boston, 901 00:51:29,294 --> 00:51:31,880 he was about to face a tempest on the court. 902 00:51:33,256 --> 00:51:36,843 [reporter] Last season, the Celts won their second NBA championship, 903 00:51:36,927 --> 00:51:38,720 but trouble is brewing for them. 904 00:51:38,804 --> 00:51:40,305 [spectators cheering] 905 00:51:40,388 --> 00:51:42,808 [reporter] Trouble in the form of Wilt Chamberlain, 906 00:51:42,891 --> 00:51:46,812 who makes even Russell look short. Wilt the Stilt is 7'2". 907 00:51:46,895 --> 00:51:50,190 [tense music playing] 908 00:51:50,273 --> 00:51:51,650 Well, I was fortunate. 909 00:51:51,733 --> 00:51:54,277 I started playing against those guys you call pros 910 00:51:54,361 --> 00:51:58,281 back when I was in late junior high school and early high school. 911 00:51:58,782 --> 00:52:01,159 So I used to try to beat them to death. 912 00:52:02,160 --> 00:52:05,664 So I knew that I could probably do fairly well in the pros, 913 00:52:05,747 --> 00:52:07,499 even at that early age. 914 00:52:07,582 --> 00:52:10,836 [Dominique Wilkins] Wilt Chamberlain, probably one of the greatest athletes 915 00:52:10,919 --> 00:52:12,754 that ever lived, in any sport. 916 00:52:13,880 --> 00:52:16,800 This man was a super athlete 917 00:52:16,883 --> 00:52:20,428 in a 7'2" body and 270 pounds. 918 00:52:21,346 --> 00:52:25,225 [Zirin] Wilt Chamberlain was basically Shaq before Shaq, 919 00:52:25,308 --> 00:52:28,436 if Shaq was also an Olympic-level athlete. 920 00:52:28,520 --> 00:52:31,314 When you're seven foot, over 250 pounds, 921 00:52:31,398 --> 00:52:34,067 I expect to see you in the post dominating. 922 00:52:34,151 --> 00:52:35,694 [Paul] If there's no Wilt, 923 00:52:35,777 --> 00:52:39,156 there's no Magic, no Bird, no MJ. There's none of that. 924 00:52:39,239 --> 00:52:40,907 [music fades] 925 00:52:40,991 --> 00:52:45,245 [Stoll] Wilt's first basketball job offer, though, wasn't with the NBA. 926 00:52:45,328 --> 00:52:47,831 -["Sweet Georgia Brown" playing] -[man] With their new attraction, 927 00:52:47,914 --> 00:52:51,501 the Harlem Globetrotters draw 20% more fans in 1958. 928 00:52:51,585 --> 00:52:54,880 [man 2] The colorful famous troupe, founded by Abe Saperstein, 929 00:52:54,963 --> 00:52:57,424 claims countless fans all over the earth. 930 00:52:58,717 --> 00:53:01,845 [Chamberlain] When you're a kid, I mean a Black kid at that, 931 00:53:01,928 --> 00:53:04,431 the Harlem Globetrotters are like heaven. 932 00:53:05,223 --> 00:53:09,144 [Stoll] Wilt accepted his role as straight man to the Globetrotters antics. 933 00:53:09,769 --> 00:53:13,148 [Chamberlain] They sent me a photostat copy of a check for $100,000. 934 00:53:13,231 --> 00:53:17,402 They were offering me $100,000 to play with them on tour for six months. 935 00:53:17,485 --> 00:53:20,572 Guys like yourself make that all the time, but me? Hey. 936 00:53:20,655 --> 00:53:24,159 $100,000, I would have jumped off the Empire State Building. 937 00:53:24,242 --> 00:53:26,828 ["Sweet Georgia Brown" continues] 938 00:53:26,912 --> 00:53:29,372 For my grandfather and his generation, 939 00:53:29,456 --> 00:53:32,542 the Harlem Globetrotters were something to be proud of. 940 00:53:32,626 --> 00:53:36,838 They came around. They toured the country. They always beat the Washington Generals. 941 00:53:37,589 --> 00:53:41,176 But there's a critique among, especially, intellectual Black people 942 00:53:41,259 --> 00:53:43,178 that these guys are clowns. 943 00:53:43,261 --> 00:53:46,681 That, in fact, they're an extension of Mantan Moreland 944 00:53:46,765 --> 00:53:49,809 and the other Black Sambo characters. 945 00:53:50,560 --> 00:53:53,563 For a percentage of the Black audience, they go from being heroes 946 00:53:53,647 --> 00:53:55,690 to actually undercutting Black achievement. 947 00:53:56,441 --> 00:54:00,111 [Stoll] In 1956, Bill Russell had gotten his own lucrative offer 948 00:54:00,195 --> 00:54:02,906 from the Globetrotters while he was still in college. 949 00:54:02,989 --> 00:54:04,741 [George] The Trotters approached Bill Russell, 950 00:54:04,824 --> 00:54:06,618 "You want to make money, come with us!" 951 00:54:06,701 --> 00:54:09,537 Russell being Russell's like, "Oh, hell, no." 952 00:54:10,121 --> 00:54:14,334 [Russell] My father said, "My son will never play for the Globetrotters." 953 00:54:14,417 --> 00:54:17,379 "Because he's the best basketball player in the world." 954 00:54:17,462 --> 00:54:18,922 "He is not a clown." 955 00:54:19,005 --> 00:54:22,884 [George] "Why am I going to sign up when I'm an Olympic athlete?" 956 00:54:22,968 --> 00:54:23,885 "I'm a winner." 957 00:54:23,969 --> 00:54:26,972 "I don't need to do this to validate myself." 958 00:54:28,723 --> 00:54:31,476 [Stoll] Wilt wasn't looking for validation either. 959 00:54:31,559 --> 00:54:34,062 After Wilt's year with the Globetrotters was up, 960 00:54:34,145 --> 00:54:38,566 he entered the NBA in 1959 with the Philadelphia Warriors. 961 00:54:39,276 --> 00:54:42,988 [reporter] Basketball fans are waiting to see how you're going to do, 962 00:54:43,071 --> 00:54:46,241 especially against, uh, players like Bill Russell. 963 00:54:46,324 --> 00:54:48,285 Do you feel that you are ready for this? 964 00:54:48,368 --> 00:54:50,704 I think, in the long run, I'll be able to handle myself 965 00:54:50,787 --> 00:54:53,039 man-to-man with almost anyone in the league. 966 00:54:53,123 --> 00:54:55,125 [dramatic music playing] 967 00:54:56,626 --> 00:54:59,504 [Stoll] The Warriors were coming off a losing season, 968 00:54:59,587 --> 00:55:01,798 but Wilt gave them the winning edge. 969 00:55:04,384 --> 00:55:06,344 [Russell] When Wilt first came into the league, 970 00:55:06,428 --> 00:55:09,723 he came in and made these fantastic numbers. 971 00:55:11,016 --> 00:55:14,978 [Stoll] He averaged 37 points and 27 rebounds a game, 972 00:55:15,061 --> 00:55:18,356 and Philadelphia was suddenly a contender. 973 00:55:18,440 --> 00:55:20,734 [commentator] Wilt the Stilt is all fired up. 974 00:55:24,571 --> 00:55:26,323 [Baylor] Could score every time he wanted to. 975 00:55:26,406 --> 00:55:29,576 He was the strongest guy in the league, jumped higher than anyone in the league. 976 00:55:29,659 --> 00:55:32,954 Once he got the ball going to the basket, no one could defend him. 977 00:55:33,038 --> 00:55:34,205 It was impossible. 978 00:55:36,708 --> 00:55:40,378 [Russell] I first encountered him in the regular season. It was in Boston. 979 00:55:41,880 --> 00:55:44,841 [Stoll] The Garden sold out months before the game, 980 00:55:44,924 --> 00:55:47,510 and the stands filled up before warm-ups. 981 00:55:48,053 --> 00:55:50,764 [dramatic musical flourish plays] 982 00:55:50,847 --> 00:55:52,891 [spectators cheering] 983 00:55:55,727 --> 00:55:58,229 [Sam Jones] When Philadelphia went out on the floor, 984 00:55:58,313 --> 00:55:59,522 excitement just went up. 985 00:55:59,606 --> 00:56:00,857 [spectators cheer loudly] 986 00:56:00,940 --> 00:56:04,486 It was deafening. I looked at his hands, and I knew. 987 00:56:04,569 --> 00:56:07,489 I said, "This guy can hold a basketball like a baseball." 988 00:56:08,615 --> 00:56:12,535 We knew we were gonna have a problem, and Russell was gonna have a problem. 989 00:56:12,619 --> 00:56:15,330 [expectant music playing] 990 00:56:15,413 --> 00:56:17,874 [Russell] I thought he was at least five inches taller. 991 00:56:19,125 --> 00:56:23,213 And I'm wondering now, "Do I look him in the eye, or do I not look up?" 992 00:56:25,590 --> 00:56:28,385 So I said, "Well, I'll just look straight ahead." 993 00:56:29,803 --> 00:56:31,471 So I'm looking at his chest. 994 00:56:32,514 --> 00:56:35,266 That ain't gonna cut it. [cackles] 995 00:56:39,396 --> 00:56:42,232 You got two of the greatest guys in the same era 996 00:56:42,315 --> 00:56:45,902 going up against each other for the first time. 997 00:56:46,611 --> 00:56:48,613 [tense music playing] 998 00:57:08,133 --> 00:57:09,759 [Stoll] Chamberlain got his points, 999 00:57:09,843 --> 00:57:13,096 treating Russell like he treated every other center in the league, 1000 00:57:13,179 --> 00:57:14,722 but Russell held his own. 1001 00:57:16,641 --> 00:57:19,811 [Steve Smith] In our era, you double-team somebody that big. 1002 00:57:19,894 --> 00:57:24,399 All the clips I saw, I saw Mr. Russell guarding him one-on-one, by himself, 1003 00:57:24,482 --> 00:57:26,985 so he had to use angles, he has to use physics. 1004 00:57:28,361 --> 00:57:32,031 Uh, I think Russell recognized that he was not going to be able 1005 00:57:32,115 --> 00:57:35,785 to stop Chamberlain unless he did some unusual things. 1006 00:57:36,995 --> 00:57:39,038 You see Bill positioning himself, 1007 00:57:39,122 --> 00:57:41,541 you know, trying to deny the ball. 1008 00:57:41,624 --> 00:57:46,921 And at the same time, you see the calculations in Wilt's mind, 1009 00:57:47,005 --> 00:57:49,299 trying to counter what Bill is doing. 1010 00:57:50,216 --> 00:57:52,469 [Russell] I knew that I could not stop him. 1011 00:57:54,012 --> 00:57:58,349 But I could put some speed bumps. That's the best I could come up with. 1012 00:58:00,018 --> 00:58:04,105 I think I had over 20 points and over 20 rebounds. 1013 00:58:05,315 --> 00:58:09,694 And I thought he had a really good game, well over 20 rebounds and 30 points. 1014 00:58:11,070 --> 00:58:13,615 And we both got a lot of blocks and things. 1015 00:58:15,909 --> 00:58:18,745 I think, that game, Chamberlain had all the numbers, 1016 00:58:20,121 --> 00:58:22,248 except one, winning. 1017 00:58:27,170 --> 00:58:28,254 [spectators cheering] 1018 00:58:32,258 --> 00:58:33,801 [music fades] 1019 00:58:36,304 --> 00:58:39,307 [upbeat music playing] 1020 00:58:50,443 --> 00:58:53,696 [Stoll] In the early '60s, the NBA hoped to attract more fans 1021 00:58:53,780 --> 00:58:56,616 with preseason tours of exhibition games. 1022 00:58:56,699 --> 00:58:59,452 In 1961, the Celtics and the Hawks 1023 00:58:59,536 --> 00:59:01,913 agreed to a matchup in Lexington, Kentucky. 1024 00:59:03,164 --> 00:59:05,041 And it was sold out! 1025 00:59:05,124 --> 00:59:08,419 First time they'd ever put 10,000 people in that stadium. 1026 00:59:08,503 --> 00:59:10,338 -[music fades] -[Stoll] The morning of the game, 1027 00:59:10,421 --> 00:59:12,549 the Celtics checked into the Phoenix Hotel. 1028 00:59:13,299 --> 00:59:17,512 But Lexington, like most cities in the South, was still a segregated city. 1029 00:59:18,263 --> 00:59:20,473 [Sanders] We went downstairs in the hotel, 1030 00:59:20,557 --> 00:59:23,476 and people behind the counter told us, 1031 00:59:23,560 --> 00:59:25,645 "We don't serve Negroes in here." 1032 00:59:25,728 --> 00:59:28,690 [Russell] We were in the same hotel. Just couldn't get the same thing to eat. 1033 00:59:28,773 --> 00:59:30,149 So I decided, 1034 00:59:30,233 --> 00:59:33,736 and the other guys decided to go along with me, not to play. 1035 00:59:33,820 --> 00:59:36,072 So, I told Red we were leaving. 1036 00:59:36,155 --> 00:59:39,284 He says, "Well, wait a minute. Let me see what's going on." 1037 00:59:40,410 --> 00:59:41,828 [Cousy] Arnold gets on the phone, 1038 00:59:41,911 --> 00:59:45,623 calls the manager of the coffee shop, and says, "Hey, they're guests!" 1039 00:59:45,707 --> 00:59:48,126 "You've got to serve everyone who's a guest." 1040 00:59:48,209 --> 00:59:53,381 So we went back down, and they said, "We've been authorized to serve you." 1041 00:59:54,507 --> 00:59:59,095 Russ said, "We're just kidding. We don't really stay in the hotel." 1042 00:59:59,178 --> 01:00:01,764 [laughs] That's when they said, "Well, then we can't serve you!" 1043 01:00:01,848 --> 01:00:04,475 "We don't serve Negroes in the hotel." 1044 01:00:04,559 --> 01:00:09,397 So we ended up just packing and leaving. 1045 01:00:09,897 --> 01:00:11,983 -[somber music playing] -[Russell] I told Red 1046 01:00:12,066 --> 01:00:15,820 I wanted the Celtics to play the game, and to understand clearly, 1047 01:00:15,903 --> 01:00:19,407 the Black guys said, "We're not gonna play under these conditions." 1048 01:00:19,490 --> 01:00:21,701 I called the guys on the other team 1049 01:00:21,784 --> 01:00:25,038 and said the Black guys on the Celtics are not gonna play tonight. 1050 01:00:25,538 --> 01:00:30,001 And so, the Black guys on the other team, they decided not to play also. 1051 01:00:31,586 --> 01:00:34,464 [Stoll] An all-white version of the Celtics vs. Hawks 1052 01:00:34,547 --> 01:00:36,090 played in Lexington that night. 1053 01:00:36,633 --> 01:00:39,093 [Harry Edwards] There were those in the media who were screaming 1054 01:00:39,177 --> 01:00:41,346 that they should be suspended, that they should be fined, 1055 01:00:41,429 --> 01:00:44,599 that they had let their teammates down, that they were stealing money 1056 01:00:44,682 --> 01:00:47,268 because they were picking up a paycheck for a game they didn't play. 1057 01:00:47,352 --> 01:00:49,020 And Bill made it very clear. 1058 01:00:49,103 --> 01:00:52,273 "And if it happens again, we're gonna do the same thing again." 1059 01:00:52,357 --> 01:00:56,694 He's still part of this first wave of Black players. 1060 01:00:56,778 --> 01:01:01,491 He's aware of the racial weight, you know, that's on his shoulders 1061 01:01:01,574 --> 01:01:05,328 about representing not just himself but a community. 1062 01:01:06,579 --> 01:01:09,874 [Renee Montgomery] Athletes now have taken that torch and are carrying it. 1063 01:01:09,957 --> 01:01:11,793 We have our own platforms now. 1064 01:01:11,876 --> 01:01:13,753 We would have tweeted it there at the restaurant. 1065 01:01:13,836 --> 01:01:16,881 Like, "Wait, y'all ain't trying to serve us? Wait a minute." 1066 01:01:16,964 --> 01:01:19,884 We would have got it right out there to Twitter right away. 1067 01:01:19,967 --> 01:01:20,968 I'm a spoiled brat. 1068 01:01:21,052 --> 01:01:24,430 I don't know what it means to go to a hotel, and they say, 1069 01:01:24,514 --> 01:01:27,433 "Oh, you can't sleep here. You gotta sleep in the back." 1070 01:01:27,517 --> 01:01:29,602 I don't know what it means to go to the water fountain, 1071 01:01:29,686 --> 01:01:31,020 and it says "whites only." 1072 01:01:31,104 --> 01:01:33,648 Most of the guys, especially ones playing now, 1073 01:01:33,731 --> 01:01:37,402 can't even go through one-tenth of what he went through. 1074 01:01:40,363 --> 01:01:46,786 The irony is that at the same time they're experiencing racism off the court, 1075 01:01:46,869 --> 01:01:50,498 Black players are getting more prominent in the world of basketball. 1076 01:01:51,624 --> 01:01:52,917 [Goudsouzian] By the early 1960s, 1077 01:01:53,000 --> 01:01:56,129 the NBA is arriving in the American sports mainstream. 1078 01:01:56,212 --> 01:01:59,132 It's about to usher in this era of great commercial growth. 1079 01:01:59,632 --> 01:02:01,926 One of the key factors for that is the arrival 1080 01:02:02,009 --> 01:02:04,637 of these great African American superstars. 1081 01:02:04,721 --> 01:02:07,932 -[funk music playing] -[Russell] Oscar Robertson, Elgin Baylor. 1082 01:02:08,015 --> 01:02:11,102 These guys were really great basketball players. 1083 01:02:11,894 --> 01:02:15,398 The addition of so many great Black athletes coming into the league 1084 01:02:15,481 --> 01:02:17,358 continued to make it just flourish. 1085 01:02:18,651 --> 01:02:21,821 [George] These guys are bringing elevation to basketball. 1086 01:02:22,363 --> 01:02:26,826 I call it the Black athletic aesthetic. "How do I express myself within the game?" 1087 01:02:26,909 --> 01:02:28,536 [funk music continues] 1088 01:02:32,290 --> 01:02:34,709 [Goudsouzian] At the same time, there's this public fascination 1089 01:02:34,792 --> 01:02:37,503 with this new rivalry between the two great Black centers. 1090 01:02:37,587 --> 01:02:40,715 The papers and the fans and everyone played this up. 1091 01:02:40,798 --> 01:02:42,258 And it was a great matchup. 1092 01:02:46,053 --> 01:02:49,849 [George] The NBA used Russell and Wilt to market the game, and it worked. 1093 01:02:51,934 --> 01:02:54,312 They brought people into the games. 1094 01:02:54,395 --> 01:02:58,357 You call it hype, we call it publicity, in order to get crowds. 1095 01:02:59,150 --> 01:03:01,235 Both cities were sold out automatically. 1096 01:03:02,612 --> 01:03:04,405 Well, it was good for the press. 1097 01:03:04,489 --> 01:03:07,700 It was good to draw people. But we didn't care what they wrote. 1098 01:03:07,784 --> 01:03:09,869 All we wanted to do was win. 1099 01:03:10,703 --> 01:03:12,872 Playing Chamberlain wasn't easy. 1100 01:03:15,374 --> 01:03:20,671 Wilt had only played a couple of years, but he was the most dominant player ever. 1101 01:03:20,755 --> 01:03:22,381 [rhythmic music playing] 1102 01:03:22,465 --> 01:03:24,675 [Erickson] He would just take over games. 1103 01:03:25,802 --> 01:03:27,845 [Russell] He averaged 50 points a game that season. 1104 01:03:27,929 --> 01:03:30,473 That's his average, 50, every game. 1105 01:03:31,849 --> 01:03:34,018 [Cousy] Can you imagine averaging 50? 1106 01:03:34,101 --> 01:03:39,232 I did that once in my entire 13 years, and it took me four overtimes to do it! 1107 01:03:40,316 --> 01:03:44,320 [Stoll] And in a game against the New York Knicks in March 1962, 1108 01:03:44,403 --> 01:03:45,696 Wilt outdid himself, 1109 01:03:46,447 --> 01:03:49,325 setting a record that most agree will never be broken. 1110 01:03:50,159 --> 01:03:52,119 He scored 100 points. 1111 01:03:53,412 --> 01:03:56,624 After that game, every night, they were looking for 100 points. 1112 01:03:56,707 --> 01:03:57,959 [music fades] 1113 01:03:58,042 --> 01:04:00,169 [Stoll] As far as the public was concerned, 1114 01:04:00,920 --> 01:04:03,339 Wilt's only challenger was Bill Russell. 1115 01:04:05,216 --> 01:04:07,176 The media played up that narrative, 1116 01:04:07,760 --> 01:04:10,972 and the pressure was on the two titans to deliver. 1117 01:04:11,055 --> 01:04:12,348 [tense music playing] 1118 01:04:12,431 --> 01:04:15,017 [Russell] It seemed to me, every Sunday, 1119 01:04:16,394 --> 01:04:19,522 we'd be on national TV, exposed. 1120 01:04:19,605 --> 01:04:23,943 And so that if I went out and I had an ordinary game, I'd get killed. 1121 01:04:24,026 --> 01:04:26,404 I mean, he'd go for 60 or 65. 1122 01:04:27,363 --> 01:04:30,241 [Paul] Wilt and Bill had that rivalry. 1123 01:04:30,324 --> 01:04:34,579 You can't compare that against guys in today's game. It was a different time. 1124 01:04:34,662 --> 01:04:38,624 [Rhoden] People couldn't decide who was the good guy, who was the bad guy, 1125 01:04:38,708 --> 01:04:41,627 because Chamberlain was much more gregarious. 1126 01:04:41,711 --> 01:04:43,629 He was much more accessible. 1127 01:04:43,713 --> 01:04:46,757 More kind of, "What we like with our Negroes." 1128 01:04:46,841 --> 01:04:48,217 Then in this corner, 1129 01:04:48,301 --> 01:04:51,596 you've got Bill Russell, kind of a more ominous Negro. 1130 01:04:51,679 --> 01:04:54,807 "We don't kind of know even if he likes us." [laughs] You know? 1131 01:04:54,891 --> 01:04:56,309 [tense music continues] 1132 01:04:56,392 --> 01:04:59,812 [Stoll] At the end of the 1961-'62 season, 1133 01:04:59,896 --> 01:05:01,439 Wilt tried once again to prove 1134 01:05:01,522 --> 01:05:04,358 that he could pull the Warriors over the finish line 1135 01:05:04,442 --> 01:05:06,152 and dethrone the Celtics. 1136 01:05:09,697 --> 01:05:12,533 [Springer] Bill may have been the superstar of his time, 1137 01:05:12,617 --> 01:05:16,287 but he approached it as if he was just one of five guys on that court. 1138 01:05:16,370 --> 01:05:20,249 Wilt was just, "I'm Wilt Chamberlain. I'm here. I'll score 100 points." 1139 01:05:20,333 --> 01:05:22,627 "You guys do what you want. I'll win it for you." 1140 01:05:22,710 --> 01:05:24,128 It was a different approach. 1141 01:05:24,837 --> 01:05:27,340 [Stoll] Both strategies were effective. 1142 01:05:27,423 --> 01:05:30,927 Bill's team ran the Warriors off the floor in the opener, 1143 01:05:31,010 --> 01:05:32,178 but in game two, 1144 01:05:32,261 --> 01:05:35,389 Wilt's unstoppable scoring evened the series. 1145 01:05:35,473 --> 01:05:37,975 [Russell] What I had to do was discipline myself 1146 01:05:38,059 --> 01:05:40,728 to never get into a numbers game with him. 1147 01:05:41,562 --> 01:05:44,649 [Sanders] In that series, Russell would come in the dressing room. 1148 01:05:44,732 --> 01:05:48,152 He'd say, "I'm really gonna deal with Wilt." 1149 01:05:48,235 --> 01:05:51,364 "Now, it's going to take a lot out of me to do this, 1150 01:05:51,447 --> 01:05:54,951 but what… [chuckles] …what you guys better do is get a lead." 1151 01:05:55,034 --> 01:05:56,202 [tense music playing] 1152 01:05:56,285 --> 01:06:00,373 [Sanders] After trying to steal the ball from Wilt, jump in front of him, 1153 01:06:00,456 --> 01:06:03,042 play behind him, pull the chair out from him, 1154 01:06:03,125 --> 01:06:05,586 and trying to force himself to the basket, 1155 01:06:05,670 --> 01:06:09,632 there was not much left that he could do on the court. 1156 01:06:09,715 --> 01:06:13,135 But let me just say this. After Russell had done his magic, 1157 01:06:13,970 --> 01:06:16,555 Wilt was like an angry man. 1158 01:06:17,139 --> 01:06:20,017 [commentator] Little fight going on. Chamberlain in the middle right there. 1159 01:06:20,101 --> 01:06:23,896 [Sanders] And he would end up scoring 35 points, 1160 01:06:23,980 --> 01:06:26,357 but half of those games, we would win. 1161 01:06:28,901 --> 01:06:33,489 [Karen] His individual statistics may not shine in comparison with Wilt. 1162 01:06:33,572 --> 01:06:35,783 But at the end of the day, 1163 01:06:35,866 --> 01:06:40,496 he always thought that it didn't matter how you played the game, 1164 01:06:40,579 --> 01:06:41,872 how many points you got, 1165 01:06:41,956 --> 01:06:45,084 as long as, the end, you could say, "We won." 1166 01:06:47,086 --> 01:06:49,130 [Russell] When it got to be three and three, 1167 01:06:49,755 --> 01:06:51,298 it's anybody's ball game. 1168 01:06:51,382 --> 01:06:52,508 [dramatic music playing] 1169 01:06:52,591 --> 01:06:55,636 [Stoll] With the 1962 Eastern Division series tied, 1170 01:06:55,720 --> 01:06:59,724 game seven would sharpen the contrast between Chamberlain and Russell. 1171 01:07:00,725 --> 01:07:02,643 [Heinsohn] Chamberlain was awesome. 1172 01:07:03,936 --> 01:07:07,773 But Russell had the competitiveness of a lion. 1173 01:07:07,857 --> 01:07:11,610 Whatever it took to win, this man could pull out of himself. 1174 01:07:11,694 --> 01:07:16,198 It would come down to one or two plays at the very end. 1175 01:07:17,575 --> 01:07:19,744 [O'Donnell] And here's the ridiculous thing. 1176 01:07:20,244 --> 01:07:21,412 In Boston, 1177 01:07:21,495 --> 01:07:24,290 we were completely confident in Bill Russell. [laughs] 1178 01:07:24,373 --> 01:07:26,959 [Most] Man, what a ball game this is so far! 1179 01:07:27,043 --> 01:07:29,879 [Stoll] With 13 seconds left and the ball game tied, 1180 01:07:29,962 --> 01:07:32,256 the Celtics had a chance to end it. 1181 01:07:32,339 --> 01:07:35,926 [Most] Cousy drives to the right, comes back out towards the middle. 1182 01:07:36,594 --> 01:07:39,680 Heinsohn, he goes baseline. The shot is no good. 1183 01:07:39,764 --> 01:07:42,892 [O'Donnell] The shot wouldn't fall. Philadelphia gets the ball. 1184 01:07:43,476 --> 01:07:45,478 [Stoll] Now it was the Warriors' chance. 1185 01:07:45,978 --> 01:07:49,982 And they had only one plan. Get the ball into Wilt's hands. 1186 01:07:51,025 --> 01:07:52,735 [Most] What a play by Russell! 1187 01:07:52,818 --> 01:07:55,821 [commentator] And that was a mark of how much he wants to win it. 1188 01:07:55,905 --> 01:07:57,281 It'll be Boston ball. 1189 01:07:59,450 --> 01:08:01,452 [Stoll] With the series on the line, 1190 01:08:01,535 --> 01:08:03,996 Bill knew who to trust with the final shot. 1191 01:08:05,998 --> 01:08:08,459 [Most] Sam Jones taking a long shot. 1192 01:08:09,710 --> 01:08:10,544 Wowee! 1193 01:08:10,628 --> 01:08:14,131 [commentator] Time has run out, and the Boston Celtics have done it again! 1194 01:08:14,215 --> 01:08:15,883 [cheering] 1195 01:08:16,884 --> 01:08:21,514 Bill Russell used to say, "If you want to be a champion by yourself, 1196 01:08:22,014 --> 01:08:23,849 son, go play tennis." 1197 01:08:23,933 --> 01:08:28,104 "But if you want to win as a family, you need to associate yourself 1198 01:08:28,187 --> 01:08:29,480 with your teammates." 1199 01:08:29,563 --> 01:08:31,565 ["Last Night" by The Mar-Keys playing] 1200 01:08:35,027 --> 01:08:36,529 [Stoll] To hang their next banner, 1201 01:08:36,612 --> 01:08:39,907 the Celtics had to defeat a familiar but improved foe. 1202 01:08:42,451 --> 01:08:45,663 The Lakers relocated to Los Angeles from Minneapolis 1203 01:08:45,746 --> 01:08:48,791 and boasted a pair of rising stars. 1204 01:08:52,461 --> 01:08:54,088 Well, my name is Jerry West, 1205 01:08:54,171 --> 01:08:56,841 and, uh, what I used to do was, um… 1206 01:08:57,800 --> 01:09:00,386 What's that crazy sport where you dribble the ball? 1207 01:09:00,469 --> 01:09:01,595 Basketball, yeah. 1208 01:09:02,596 --> 01:09:04,056 [commentator] Hot Rod Hundley 1209 01:09:04,140 --> 01:09:06,267 behind his back to the trailer, Jerry West. 1210 01:09:06,350 --> 01:09:08,894 West up for the shot, and he's got another one. 1211 01:09:10,479 --> 01:09:14,817 [Russell] Jerry was a great player. One of the great offensive players 1212 01:09:14,900 --> 01:09:17,278 that was equally good as a defensive player. 1213 01:09:17,778 --> 01:09:19,613 Jerry West was the number one draft choice, 1214 01:09:19,697 --> 01:09:23,701 one of the greatest shooters of all time, one of the hardest players of all time. 1215 01:09:24,785 --> 01:09:27,454 He was known in Los Angeles as Mr. Clutch. 1216 01:09:27,538 --> 01:09:31,625 At the end of the game, you get the ball to Jerry, and it was as good as gold. 1217 01:09:31,709 --> 01:09:32,835 [spectators cheering] 1218 01:09:34,003 --> 01:09:36,422 [percussive music playing] 1219 01:09:37,339 --> 01:09:40,509 [West] Playing against the Celtics did not concern me at all. 1220 01:09:41,635 --> 01:09:44,096 I felt that they had to compete with me for a change. 1221 01:09:44,180 --> 01:09:47,850 We also had Elgin Baylor, who was really fun to watch. 1222 01:09:47,933 --> 01:09:50,895 [Russell] There's never been a better forward than Elgin Baylor. 1223 01:09:50,978 --> 01:09:54,231 People don't remember how great Elgin was. He was unstoppable. 1224 01:09:54,315 --> 01:09:58,736 Elgin was Dr. J before Dr. J. He was Michael before Michael. 1225 01:10:01,280 --> 01:10:03,908 [Stoll] In game five of the '62 NBA Finals, 1226 01:10:04,575 --> 01:10:06,327 Baylor carried his team, 1227 01:10:06,410 --> 01:10:09,747 scoring 61 points, a Finals record. 1228 01:10:10,456 --> 01:10:13,542 You have confidence in yourself that you can pull it off, get it done. 1229 01:10:13,626 --> 01:10:16,545 And I think all the great players had that confidence. 1230 01:10:17,838 --> 01:10:21,258 [Stoll] The decisive seventh game drew a sellout crowd at the Garden. 1231 01:10:21,342 --> 01:10:24,178 [tense music playing] 1232 01:10:24,261 --> 01:10:29,433 The 1962 seventh game against the Lakers is always referred to as the Selvy game. 1233 01:10:29,516 --> 01:10:32,937 [Stoll] With five seconds remaining and the score tied at 100, 1234 01:10:33,020 --> 01:10:34,647 the Lakers had possession. 1235 01:10:35,648 --> 01:10:38,067 [Ryan] Selvy was the other guard with Jerry West. 1236 01:10:38,150 --> 01:10:40,110 And I'm guarding Selvy at half-court, 1237 01:10:40,194 --> 01:10:43,447 and Selvy whips away from me into the corner. 1238 01:10:45,324 --> 01:10:47,826 He'll make that shot nine out of ten times. 1239 01:10:47,910 --> 01:10:50,412 [commentator] Three seconds, two, Selvy shoots! 1240 01:10:50,913 --> 01:10:53,749 -It is no good, rebound… Overtime! -[spectators exclaim] 1241 01:10:55,167 --> 01:10:57,962 [commentator] Bill Russell has gone down on his knees on the floor 1242 01:10:58,045 --> 01:10:59,588 from the emotion. 1243 01:10:59,672 --> 01:11:01,799 [Stoll] In overtime, an exhausted Russell 1244 01:11:01,882 --> 01:11:03,467 managed to score six points 1245 01:11:03,550 --> 01:11:05,469 to give the Celtics a slim lead. 1246 01:11:08,347 --> 01:11:11,850 [commentator] Now, Baylor. And the foul, I think, is on Frank Ramsey. 1247 01:11:12,643 --> 01:11:16,397 He leaves the game with 23 points. Gene Guarilia comes in. 1248 01:11:17,523 --> 01:11:20,859 [Russell] We had this guy Gene Guarilia, who never got in the game. 1249 01:11:20,943 --> 01:11:22,236 Never got to play. 1250 01:11:22,861 --> 01:11:26,156 So, Red's got no choice. He puts Guarilia on Elgin. 1251 01:11:26,240 --> 01:11:28,033 [commentator] Baylor. Guarilia guarding him. 1252 01:11:28,117 --> 01:11:30,828 Baylor turning, shooting, missing. Rebound, Russell! 1253 01:11:31,912 --> 01:11:35,040 Baylor with Guarilia guarding him. A tip-in attempt by Selvy. 1254 01:11:35,124 --> 01:11:36,583 Rebound, Sam Jones! 1255 01:11:39,378 --> 01:11:42,798 [Russell] What happened was, the guy was so scared he couldn't move. 1256 01:11:42,881 --> 01:11:46,385 When Elgin faked, he didn't move, he didn't react. He just stood there. 1257 01:11:46,885 --> 01:11:48,804 Completely shuts Elgin down. 1258 01:11:48,887 --> 01:11:51,765 [commentator] Out, no good. Rebound action. Foul called. 1259 01:11:52,933 --> 01:11:55,686 Foul's on Baylor. That's all for Elgin Baylor. 1260 01:11:56,186 --> 01:11:59,523 A standing ovation at Boston Garden for Elgin Baylor. 1261 01:11:59,606 --> 01:12:00,941 [spectators whistling] 1262 01:12:01,025 --> 01:12:03,235 [commentator] Bill Russell will go over and shake the hand 1263 01:12:03,319 --> 01:12:05,154 of a great basketball player, 1264 01:12:05,237 --> 01:12:06,238 Elgin Baylor. 1265 01:12:06,947 --> 01:12:10,242 [Stoll] With the game under control, Cousy ran out the clock 1266 01:12:10,326 --> 01:12:12,536 with his iconic right-handed dribble. 1267 01:12:13,996 --> 01:12:16,540 [commentator 2] He's eating up the clock, time ticking away, 1268 01:12:16,623 --> 01:12:18,959 and the ball game is over! 1269 01:12:24,631 --> 01:12:27,343 For big Bill Russell, 30 points 1270 01:12:27,426 --> 01:12:30,971 and 40, I repeat, 40 rebounds. 1271 01:12:31,597 --> 01:12:33,932 A tremendous basketball game. 1272 01:12:35,351 --> 01:12:38,687 [Stoll] In the locker room, there was the traditional beer-soaked celebration. 1273 01:12:39,521 --> 01:12:41,940 The fifth championship for Russell, 1274 01:12:42,441 --> 01:12:44,818 and the Celtics had become the dynasty. 1275 01:12:50,699 --> 01:12:53,118 [mellow music playing] 1276 01:12:54,578 --> 01:12:59,875 On one level, for Russell, by the 1960s, he's kind of living the American dream. 1277 01:12:59,958 --> 01:13:01,335 A home in the suburbs, 1278 01:13:01,418 --> 01:13:04,254 he's got three young children, he's got a doting wife, 1279 01:13:04,338 --> 01:13:06,840 he's got a good job, he's got a nice car. 1280 01:13:06,924 --> 01:13:11,053 All these sort of accoutrements of sort of a life of general prosperity. 1281 01:13:13,931 --> 01:13:16,392 [Stoll] Bill and Rose were starting to feel more at home 1282 01:13:16,475 --> 01:13:18,268 in the white suburb of Reading, 1283 01:13:18,352 --> 01:13:21,688 and Reading was rightfully proud of its most famous citizen. 1284 01:13:22,189 --> 01:13:25,734 In the spring of 1963, the town threw the Russells 1285 01:13:25,818 --> 01:13:28,695 a testimonial banquet to show their appreciation. 1286 01:13:29,321 --> 01:13:30,906 [Kenneth Latham] Be it resolved 1287 01:13:30,989 --> 01:13:33,450 that this annual town meeting of March 1963 1288 01:13:33,534 --> 01:13:37,454 decrees that a day be designated as Bill Russell Day. 1289 01:13:37,538 --> 01:13:40,916 Bill, we're honoring you and Rose and your family tonight 1290 01:13:40,999 --> 01:13:45,295 here in Reading for what you are, not just a basketball player, 1291 01:13:45,796 --> 01:13:51,301 but as a sportsman, as an athlete, as a father, as a family man… 1292 01:13:51,802 --> 01:13:54,805 [Newt Morton] As a lifelong resident of this town, 1293 01:13:54,888 --> 01:13:58,642 I like to think that one of its outstanding characteristics 1294 01:13:58,725 --> 01:13:59,852 is neighborliness… 1295 01:13:59,935 --> 01:14:03,689 Mrs. Russell, it has been an extreme pleasure, 1296 01:14:03,772 --> 01:14:05,149 and I deem it an honor… 1297 01:14:05,232 --> 01:14:08,235 A credit to his race, the human race. 1298 01:14:08,318 --> 01:14:11,238 [Curtis] …and break bread with both you and Mrs. Russell. 1299 01:14:11,321 --> 01:14:13,949 [Latham] And now it's your turn at the mic. 1300 01:14:14,032 --> 01:14:16,285 [Russell clears throat] Thank you very much. 1301 01:14:17,494 --> 01:14:20,747 Yes, I'm nervous again tonight. I'm really nervous. 1302 01:14:20,831 --> 01:14:23,834 I think I'd rather play Chamberlain ten times than face this once. 1303 01:14:23,917 --> 01:14:24,918 [guests chuckle] 1304 01:14:25,002 --> 01:14:27,045 [Russell] I don't even know where to start. 1305 01:14:27,129 --> 01:14:29,840 But I say that, in all sincerity, 1306 01:14:29,923 --> 01:14:31,925 it's a little bit too much for me 1307 01:14:32,509 --> 01:14:35,846 to see so many wonderful people here tonight. 1308 01:14:35,929 --> 01:14:39,808 It makes me feel like my life hasn't been a complete waste. 1309 01:14:39,892 --> 01:14:45,481 I honestly thought that no one even noticed that I was here. [laughs] 1310 01:14:45,564 --> 01:14:49,610 And this is something I'll always remember, 1311 01:14:50,444 --> 01:14:53,071 and I only hope I can lead a life 1312 01:14:53,655 --> 01:14:56,742 that will make you always feel this way about me. 1313 01:14:56,825 --> 01:14:59,495 And I appreciate it very much. Thank you. 1314 01:14:59,578 --> 01:15:01,705 [guests applauding] 1315 01:15:01,788 --> 01:15:03,165 [Goudsouzian] Russell was touched. 1316 01:15:03,248 --> 01:15:06,710 He felt, "I'm finally being welcomed in my hometown." 1317 01:15:06,793 --> 01:15:09,630 Weeks later, he decides, "We're committing to Reading." 1318 01:15:09,713 --> 01:15:13,342 "We've outgrown our home. It's time to look for another home in Reading." 1319 01:15:13,425 --> 01:15:16,428 He's looking at some of these statelier homes on the west side. 1320 01:15:16,929 --> 01:15:18,305 [Wright] Less than a month later, 1321 01:15:18,388 --> 01:15:22,518 a rumor got out that I wanted to buy a house in another part of this town. 1322 01:15:22,601 --> 01:15:24,853 And the neighbors objected like hell. 1323 01:15:24,937 --> 01:15:27,064 As an athlete, a celebrity even, 1324 01:15:27,147 --> 01:15:31,818 you're a great guy to have in the town, as long as you don't stay close to me. 1325 01:15:32,486 --> 01:15:34,571 My wife Rose came home in tears 1326 01:15:34,655 --> 01:15:37,783 as she watched residents sign a petition against the sale. 1327 01:15:37,866 --> 01:15:40,953 "We better forget that house," Rose said to me. 1328 01:15:41,036 --> 01:15:42,621 "They don't want us here." 1329 01:15:42,704 --> 01:15:45,832 "I bought that house, and I'm the one making the mortgage payments." 1330 01:15:45,916 --> 01:15:48,835 "I don't care what anyone else thinks," I said. 1331 01:15:48,919 --> 01:15:51,547 "What about our children? Who will play with them?" 1332 01:15:51,630 --> 01:15:54,007 "What will our white neighbors say to them?" Rose said. 1333 01:15:54,091 --> 01:15:56,009 [somber music playing] 1334 01:15:56,510 --> 01:15:58,595 "I'm thinking about our kids." 1335 01:15:58,679 --> 01:16:02,182 "I couldn't look them in the face if I put up with that kind of behavior." 1336 01:16:02,266 --> 01:16:05,102 I wouldn't let anyone tell me where I'm going to live. 1337 01:16:06,061 --> 01:16:10,065 As Russell's winning these titles and he's getting more prominent, 1338 01:16:10,148 --> 01:16:14,403 he knows that his winning wasn't about to protect him from racism. 1339 01:16:15,153 --> 01:16:18,740 ["Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Around" by The Roots playing] 1340 01:16:20,117 --> 01:16:22,619 [Wright] I had been reacting to white cultural bias 1341 01:16:22,703 --> 01:16:24,037 virtually all my life. 1342 01:16:24,121 --> 01:16:25,664 It was everywhere. 1343 01:16:25,747 --> 01:16:27,874 It's a whole new way of life. 1344 01:16:27,958 --> 01:16:31,253 [Wright] In libraries, on television shows, on people's faces. 1345 01:16:32,504 --> 01:16:34,881 [man] We have a good chance of success. 1346 01:16:36,133 --> 01:16:38,302 [woman] You feel just as good as you look. 1347 01:16:39,928 --> 01:16:42,472 [man 2] Can't be popular unless you know how to dress. 1348 01:16:44,766 --> 01:16:47,102 [woman 2] And that's the real beauty of it. 1349 01:16:50,689 --> 01:16:52,733 [Wright] There were few things white people could do 1350 01:16:52,816 --> 01:16:55,485 without revealing prejudice that was offensive to me. 1351 01:16:57,279 --> 01:17:01,116 I spent a lot of time trying to combat bias in all forms. 1352 01:17:02,159 --> 01:17:05,287 I was always on defense, just like in basketball. 1353 01:17:06,580 --> 01:17:08,206 I ached for some offense. 1354 01:17:10,584 --> 01:17:13,045 The evolution Russell went through is very typical 1355 01:17:13,128 --> 01:17:15,339 of a lot of striving Black people 1356 01:17:15,422 --> 01:17:18,091 who worked hard, who then had to begin to think, 1357 01:17:18,175 --> 01:17:19,801 "I should use the platform I have 1358 01:17:19,885 --> 01:17:22,721 to protest against what's happening to my people and to me." 1359 01:17:24,139 --> 01:17:27,851 "Is there more for me to say about this than me just achieving?" 1360 01:17:31,021 --> 01:17:37,110 This is the beginning of a full-scale attack 1361 01:17:37,778 --> 01:17:41,657 on the system of segregation and discrimination. 1362 01:17:42,366 --> 01:17:44,076 [Stoll] By 1963, 1363 01:17:44,159 --> 01:17:46,453 as the Civil Rights Movement gained strength, 1364 01:17:46,536 --> 01:17:48,955 Russell deepened his commitment to the struggle. 1365 01:17:49,039 --> 01:17:51,291 ["Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Around" continues] 1366 01:17:51,375 --> 01:17:54,461 [Goudsouzian] There's a big rally, and Russell leads a march 1367 01:17:54,544 --> 01:17:57,798 from Roxbury, a Black neighborhood, to Boston Common. 1368 01:17:58,674 --> 01:18:03,095 ♪ Ain't gonna let nobody turn me around ♪ 1369 01:18:03,178 --> 01:18:06,515 ♪ Turn me around, turn me around ♪ 1370 01:18:06,598 --> 01:18:10,644 ♪ Ain't gonna let nobody turn me around ♪ 1371 01:18:10,727 --> 01:18:15,065 ♪ I just keep on walkin' Keep on talkin' ♪ 1372 01:18:15,148 --> 01:18:19,027 ♪ Marching on to freedom land ♪ 1373 01:18:19,111 --> 01:18:21,613 [Stoll] A few months later, the Mall in Washington, DC, 1374 01:18:21,697 --> 01:18:24,783 would be the site of the biggest march in the nation's history. 1375 01:18:24,866 --> 01:18:27,035 [faint singing and chatter] 1376 01:18:27,119 --> 01:18:28,787 [reporter] They came with white sympathizers 1377 01:18:28,870 --> 01:18:30,789 from every point on the compass. 1378 01:18:30,872 --> 01:18:34,543 Their primary aim, a full program of civil rights. 1379 01:18:35,877 --> 01:18:39,923 There will be neither rest nor tranquility in America 1380 01:18:40,882 --> 01:18:43,885 until the Negro is granted his citizenship rights. 1381 01:18:45,178 --> 01:18:48,849 [Russell] The March on Washington, I stayed in the same hotel 1382 01:18:48,932 --> 01:18:51,059 as Reverend Martin Luther King. 1383 01:18:51,143 --> 01:18:53,895 And so we met in the lobby and had a brief conversation. 1384 01:18:53,979 --> 01:18:57,357 He invited me to go on stage when he made the big speech. 1385 01:18:57,441 --> 01:18:59,484 And I respectfully declined. 1386 01:19:01,319 --> 01:19:05,949 And the reason I declined was they had worked for a couple of years 1387 01:19:06,032 --> 01:19:09,870 to put that thing together, and I hadn't done anything. 1388 01:19:09,953 --> 01:19:12,956 And it would not be right for me to go on stage 1389 01:19:13,039 --> 01:19:15,834 and say, "Hey, listen. This is what we've done." 1390 01:19:16,334 --> 01:19:17,753 So I sat in the first row. 1391 01:19:18,920 --> 01:19:22,174 We remember it as a picnic, but at the time, it terrified people. 1392 01:19:22,924 --> 01:19:25,552 They had paratroopers surrounding the city. 1393 01:19:25,635 --> 01:19:29,222 They stockpiled plasma. They thought it was gonna be a bloodbath. 1394 01:19:29,306 --> 01:19:32,017 To go to the March on Washington took a little bit of courage. 1395 01:19:33,894 --> 01:19:37,439 I think that the era that Russell played basketball, 1396 01:19:38,106 --> 01:19:40,275 the world is in a different type of turmoil. 1397 01:19:40,358 --> 01:19:44,821 It wasn't "lose your job." It wasn't "lose your career." 1398 01:19:44,905 --> 01:19:46,406 It was "lose your life." 1399 01:19:46,907 --> 01:19:49,284 I've had threatening calls, people calling me, 1400 01:19:49,367 --> 01:19:53,288 saying that they were gonna kill me, saying they were gonna blow my home up. 1401 01:19:54,498 --> 01:19:57,375 I said, "Well, whenever my time comes, I'm ready." 1402 01:20:01,004 --> 01:20:05,675 Medgar Evers had dedicated nine years of his life to the war against racism. 1403 01:20:05,759 --> 01:20:07,761 Now, he is dead in battle. 1404 01:20:07,844 --> 01:20:11,181 Thirty-seven years old, a veteran of World War II, 1405 01:20:11,264 --> 01:20:14,601 a martyr now to the Negro struggle to end segregation. 1406 01:20:14,684 --> 01:20:16,645 [protestors chanting indistinctly] 1407 01:20:18,522 --> 01:20:20,941 [Russell] When Medgar Evers got shot, 1408 01:20:21,525 --> 01:20:26,154 we had a memorial service for him in Boston, at the Boston Common. 1409 01:20:26,238 --> 01:20:27,239 [faint singing] 1410 01:20:27,322 --> 01:20:30,033 [Russell] And I sat next to Charlie Evers, his brother. 1411 01:20:30,116 --> 01:20:33,537 I told him, "If there's anything I can do, here's my home number." 1412 01:20:34,246 --> 01:20:39,793 He calls me the next summer and says, "We've taken a hit, morale-wise." 1413 01:20:39,876 --> 01:20:43,630 "Why don't you do some basketball clinics in Jackson, Mississippi, 1414 01:20:43,713 --> 01:20:46,675 to show somebody from outside cares?" 1415 01:20:46,758 --> 01:20:49,052 [pensive music playing] 1416 01:20:49,135 --> 01:20:51,513 [protestors chanting indistinctly] 1417 01:20:53,932 --> 01:20:57,894 In Mississippi in 1964, we're still talking about bloodshed. 1418 01:20:57,978 --> 01:21:01,731 We're talking about… I mean, it was awful. Awful. 1419 01:21:01,815 --> 01:21:05,527 If the White Citizens' Council, the Ku Klux Klan, 1420 01:21:05,610 --> 01:21:10,115 and the… some group for the preservation of the white race. 1421 01:21:10,198 --> 01:21:14,327 I forget the name of it exactly. They didn't want no part of this. 1422 01:21:14,411 --> 01:21:16,079 And if they have their way, 1423 01:21:16,580 --> 01:21:19,374 you know, they said they don't mind killing a few people. 1424 01:21:19,457 --> 01:21:21,293 And Charlie says to me, 1425 01:21:22,919 --> 01:21:25,589 "You know we're not gonna let anything happen to you." 1426 01:21:26,965 --> 01:21:28,091 I was like, "Okay." 1427 01:21:29,342 --> 01:21:33,471 He had announced to members of the team 1428 01:21:33,555 --> 01:21:36,266 that he was going to go down to Mississippi. 1429 01:21:36,349 --> 01:21:39,561 Somebody said, "Well, that's a pretty dangerous place." 1430 01:21:40,145 --> 01:21:43,148 Somebody… Cousy or Sharman or somebody spoke up and said, 1431 01:21:43,231 --> 01:21:46,109 "Bill, you'll be okay. Just keep a low profile." 1432 01:21:46,192 --> 01:21:52,532 [laughing] You know, here's a guy who had just won an NBA championship, 1433 01:21:53,033 --> 01:21:56,369 MVP, all this kind of stuff, 6'9", Black, with a goatee, 1434 01:21:56,453 --> 01:22:00,165 go to Mississippi during Freedom Summer and keep a low profile. 1435 01:22:00,248 --> 01:22:03,043 He said, "That's when I really knew I was in trouble." 1436 01:22:03,126 --> 01:22:05,170 [pensive music continues] 1437 01:22:06,755 --> 01:22:09,507 Mr. Russell, what brings you to Mississippi? 1438 01:22:09,591 --> 01:22:13,136 Well, Mr. Evers here asked me to come down a few days ago, 1439 01:22:13,219 --> 01:22:17,807 and I've known him for quite some time, so I was very glad to come down. 1440 01:22:17,891 --> 01:22:21,227 I've been following what's been happening here, 1441 01:22:21,311 --> 01:22:24,314 and this is very much a part of my life. 1442 01:22:24,940 --> 01:22:27,901 Uh, one of the purposes for me to come, 1443 01:22:27,984 --> 01:22:30,362 I'm going to conduct basketball clinics. 1444 01:22:30,862 --> 01:22:34,407 Do you think your presence here will help alleviate the trouble? 1445 01:22:34,491 --> 01:22:37,285 I'm hoping. I'm not, uh, hoping to make things worse. 1446 01:22:37,911 --> 01:22:41,998 Do you think you'll get some white kids to play basketball with Negro kids? 1447 01:22:42,540 --> 01:22:44,459 I think so. I don't see why not. 1448 01:22:45,126 --> 01:22:46,962 My kids play with white kids. 1449 01:22:47,045 --> 01:22:48,838 -Ain't nobody got hurt yet. -Not yet. 1450 01:22:50,048 --> 01:22:51,549 -Nice to meet you. -Thank you. 1451 01:22:52,550 --> 01:22:55,053 [Stoll] Russell conducted his clinics in Jackson 1452 01:22:55,136 --> 01:22:56,930 despite threats on his life. 1453 01:22:57,013 --> 01:23:00,058 Since it was too dangerous to travel outside the city, 1454 01:23:00,141 --> 01:23:03,228 Russell was forced to cut his Mississippi trip short. 1455 01:23:03,311 --> 01:23:06,147 Still, he had walked into the belly of the beast 1456 01:23:06,231 --> 01:23:09,526 and taken a very public stand against racial terror. 1457 01:23:11,111 --> 01:23:12,862 [melancholy music playing] 1458 01:23:14,656 --> 01:23:18,201 [Wright] The civil rights movement of today has become stagnant. 1459 01:23:18,284 --> 01:23:21,538 We all overlook the fact that the responsibility is on us 1460 01:23:21,621 --> 01:23:26,710 to undo within the next two or three years what it took three centuries to create. 1461 01:23:26,793 --> 01:23:29,754 We must undo a whole thinking process, 1462 01:23:29,838 --> 01:23:33,383 and we have only two or three years to accomplish that goal. 1463 01:23:33,466 --> 01:23:37,345 There must be more understanding of the ones who really fight the battle. 1464 01:23:37,429 --> 01:23:38,430 It is the people, 1465 01:23:38,513 --> 01:23:41,808 the whites and the Negroes, who inhabit the battleground 1466 01:23:41,891 --> 01:23:45,979 day after day and night after night, who are the true warriors. 1467 01:23:46,062 --> 01:23:49,566 Human rights is just as complex as any other political problem. 1468 01:23:49,649 --> 01:23:51,985 The only element on which we can all agree 1469 01:23:52,068 --> 01:23:54,279 is that the problem must be solved. 1470 01:24:02,871 --> 01:24:05,373 [Stoll] Amidst America's cultural turmoil, 1471 01:24:05,457 --> 01:24:07,959 the Celtics faced a seismic shift. 1472 01:24:09,169 --> 01:24:12,130 Bob Cousy, the Houdini of the Hardwood, 1473 01:24:12,213 --> 01:24:14,966 the team's captain and its most popular player, 1474 01:24:15,050 --> 01:24:17,260 was suiting up for his last season. 1475 01:24:18,845 --> 01:24:21,056 [tense, dramatic music playing] 1476 01:24:21,139 --> 01:24:23,099 [Russell] The year that Cousy was gonna retire, 1477 01:24:23,183 --> 01:24:25,226 he told us, "This is my last year." 1478 01:24:25,727 --> 01:24:28,730 We wanted to make sure his last year was a championship year. 1479 01:24:29,606 --> 01:24:34,861 [Stoll] The 1962-1963 season was a celebration of Bob Cousy, 1480 01:24:34,944 --> 01:24:37,697 with tributes in every city the Celtics played. 1481 01:24:38,406 --> 01:24:40,241 [Sam Jones] Signs were all up over the Garden, 1482 01:24:40,325 --> 01:24:43,453 "We love you, Cousy." "We're going to miss you, Cous." 1483 01:24:44,245 --> 01:24:47,165 We were hoping that Cousy could go out a winner. 1484 01:24:47,248 --> 01:24:51,252 I perhaps had wanted the championship as badly as I wanted the first. 1485 01:24:52,504 --> 01:24:54,297 [Stoll] The team did everything that season 1486 01:24:54,380 --> 01:24:56,841 to deliver one more championship for Cousy. 1487 01:24:57,342 --> 01:24:58,968 They made it to the Finals, 1488 01:24:59,052 --> 01:25:01,721 where a familiar and angry foe awaited them. 1489 01:25:03,014 --> 01:25:04,516 [commentator] The Celtics are gunning 1490 01:25:04,599 --> 01:25:08,269 for an unprecedented fifth World Championship in a row. 1491 01:25:08,353 --> 01:25:11,648 [Stoll] The Celtics failed to sew up the series in Boston. 1492 01:25:11,731 --> 01:25:16,027 Now they carried a three-two series lead to Los Angeles for game six. 1493 01:25:17,153 --> 01:25:19,823 [Cousy] Well, it was only dramatic because of the circumstances, 1494 01:25:19,906 --> 01:25:24,327 my last year, the end of a career, the World Championship on the line. 1495 01:25:25,620 --> 01:25:28,873 [Stoll] If Cousy was nervous about the last game of his career, 1496 01:25:28,957 --> 01:25:30,333 he didn't play like it. 1497 01:25:31,501 --> 01:25:33,253 [commentator] Cousy knocks it to Russell. 1498 01:25:33,753 --> 01:25:34,629 [man exclaims] 1499 01:25:34,712 --> 01:25:37,715 [commentator] Long pass to Sanders. Look at that play! 1500 01:25:38,716 --> 01:25:40,468 [Stoll] Cousy played a strong first half, 1501 01:25:40,552 --> 01:25:43,304 propelling the Celtics to a commanding lead. 1502 01:25:44,514 --> 01:25:47,851 [commentator] So that's the end of the first half of play with the score… 1503 01:25:47,934 --> 01:25:50,937 [Stoll] The Celtics machine, perfected by Cousy and Russell 1504 01:25:51,020 --> 01:25:54,274 over the past seven years, was working without a hitch. 1505 01:25:55,191 --> 01:25:57,610 [commentator] Krebs guarding Russell, and Baylor… 1506 01:25:57,694 --> 01:26:01,990 [Stoll] Then, early in the fourth quarter with Boston ahead 92 to 83, 1507 01:26:02,073 --> 01:26:03,158 Cousy went down. 1508 01:26:04,784 --> 01:26:06,035 [commentator] Cousy is hurt! 1509 01:26:06,119 --> 01:26:09,622 Coming from one side to the other, looks like he hurt his left ankle. 1510 01:26:09,706 --> 01:26:12,709 That'll be a crushing blow to the Boston Celtics. 1511 01:26:13,251 --> 01:26:15,920 [Cousy] First time I was hurt seriously in 13 years. 1512 01:26:16,004 --> 01:26:19,090 I wanted to end it, if at all possible, on the floor. 1513 01:26:19,174 --> 01:26:22,010 [commentator] It certainly appears to be a most serious injury, 1514 01:26:22,093 --> 01:26:23,469 the way he's going off… 1515 01:26:23,553 --> 01:26:27,557 We all recognized that without Cousy, we're gonna have some problems. 1516 01:26:27,640 --> 01:26:29,017 [tense music playing] 1517 01:26:29,100 --> 01:26:31,686 [commentator] West goes down the middle and gets it! 1518 01:26:33,688 --> 01:26:36,232 Russell guarding Baylor, but Baylor made it! 1519 01:26:38,109 --> 01:26:41,779 [Russell] Without Bob Cousy, we started losing our rhythm, 1520 01:26:41,863 --> 01:26:43,531 and we got killed. 1521 01:26:44,949 --> 01:26:47,493 We knew we were playing the best team, the better team, 1522 01:26:47,577 --> 01:26:50,663 but we thought we were going to win. We had an opportunity. 1523 01:26:53,833 --> 01:26:56,628 [commentator] Red Auerbach pacing along the sideline. 1524 01:26:57,962 --> 01:27:02,258 [Stoll] With only four minutes remaining, the Celtics were ahead by just one point 1525 01:27:02,342 --> 01:27:04,219 when the unbelievable happened. 1526 01:27:04,719 --> 01:27:06,346 [dramatic music playing] 1527 01:27:06,429 --> 01:27:08,431 [commentator] Bob Cousy is coming back! 1528 01:27:08,932 --> 01:27:12,393 [Cousy] Buddy LeRoux, our famous trainer, iced it down to the point 1529 01:27:12,477 --> 01:27:16,522 where I felt I could go back into the game and finish it out. 1530 01:27:16,606 --> 01:27:19,025 [dramatic music continues] 1531 01:27:19,108 --> 01:27:21,736 [Stoll] The reenergized Celtics cemented their lead. 1532 01:27:24,572 --> 01:27:27,951 And in the final seconds, the ball was in Cousy's hands. 1533 01:27:28,034 --> 01:27:29,786 -[commentator] A second to go. -[siren blares] 1534 01:27:29,869 --> 01:27:31,621 [commentator] Cousy throws it high in the air, 1535 01:27:31,704 --> 01:27:34,415 and the Boston Celtics are World Champions! 1536 01:27:34,499 --> 01:27:36,125 That's the end of the game. 1537 01:27:36,209 --> 01:27:39,212 [cheering and whistling] 1538 01:27:41,798 --> 01:27:44,509 [Stoll] Their sixth championship in seven seasons. 1539 01:27:45,009 --> 01:27:47,845 [Cousy] I'm very, very fortunate in my 13 years, 1540 01:27:47,929 --> 01:27:50,265 and God certainly granted my last wish. 1541 01:27:50,765 --> 01:27:53,810 -Well, I'll say-- -What a way to go out. Oh my God! 1542 01:27:53,893 --> 01:27:55,228 I love it, wonderful. 1543 01:27:55,895 --> 01:28:00,483 [Russell] I have always considered Cousy a near-perfect teammate. 1544 01:28:01,442 --> 01:28:02,986 [Cousy] Grabbing Russ and hugging him, 1545 01:28:03,069 --> 01:28:05,780 you want to share your joy with someone that's close to you. 1546 01:28:05,863 --> 01:28:07,573 [dramatic music continues] 1547 01:28:09,742 --> 01:28:13,246 [Cousy] In this regard, I can only say, if I had it to do over again… 1548 01:28:13,329 --> 01:28:16,916 [sniffles] …I just couldn't imagine playing anywhere but Boston. 1549 01:28:17,000 --> 01:28:19,002 [applause] 1550 01:28:25,383 --> 01:28:27,343 I've been asked many times this year 1551 01:28:27,427 --> 01:28:30,346 what I will miss most about no longer playing. [sniffles] 1552 01:28:30,847 --> 01:28:34,684 [Russell] When Cous retired, and he's giving his speech, breaking up, 1553 01:28:34,767 --> 01:28:36,519 and then everybody starts crying… 1554 01:28:37,520 --> 01:28:38,771 [man] We love you, Cous! 1555 01:28:39,939 --> 01:28:42,692 [spectators applauding and cheering] 1556 01:28:44,152 --> 01:28:46,988 [Russell] Somebody yelled out, says, "We love you, Cous." 1557 01:28:47,071 --> 01:28:51,409 I thought it was a great moment. I said to Red, he was standing next to me, 1558 01:28:51,492 --> 01:28:53,536 "I'd never go through that shit." 1559 01:28:53,619 --> 01:28:55,747 [cackles] 1560 01:28:55,830 --> 01:28:58,541 ["Turiya and Ramakrishna" by Alice Coltrane playing] 1561 01:28:58,624 --> 01:29:01,961 [Wright] We were special friends but limited ones, 1562 01:29:02,045 --> 01:29:03,629 and I had too much respect for him 1563 01:29:03,713 --> 01:29:07,759 ever to get sucked into the jealousy others tried to promote between us. 1564 01:29:08,343 --> 01:29:11,471 Still, I can't say that I was ever close to Cousy. 1565 01:29:11,554 --> 01:29:13,765 There is simply too much competitive pressure 1566 01:29:13,848 --> 01:29:16,934 in professional sports to share your hope and fears 1567 01:29:17,018 --> 01:29:19,228 with somebody in the same business. 1568 01:29:20,980 --> 01:29:24,901 [Stoll] For Russell, the fears were starting to outweigh the hopes. 1569 01:29:24,984 --> 01:29:28,071 He was frustrated by the lack of progress in civil rights 1570 01:29:28,154 --> 01:29:30,782 and wondered if the game had any value. 1571 01:29:31,824 --> 01:29:34,952 [Wright] Through it all, I was confronted with the never-ending search 1572 01:29:35,036 --> 01:29:38,915 all Negro males must go through for their manhood. 1573 01:29:42,210 --> 01:29:43,961 But I was the world champion. 1574 01:29:46,130 --> 01:29:47,632 The pressure continued. 1575 01:29:47,715 --> 01:29:49,467 The games had to be played. 1576 01:29:49,550 --> 01:29:51,427 The opponents had to be faced. 1577 01:29:53,012 --> 01:29:55,223 A guy walks up to me. I was in Boston. The guy says, 1578 01:29:55,306 --> 01:29:58,643 "What are you guys gonna do now you don't have Cousy to carry you?" 1579 01:30:00,478 --> 01:30:01,687 So, I said, "Well, 1580 01:30:03,231 --> 01:30:06,025 it'll be difficult. We got to make an adjustment." 1581 01:30:06,109 --> 01:30:07,944 "But do yourself a favor 1582 01:30:08,027 --> 01:30:11,155 and call the Boston Globe or WBZ 1583 01:30:11,656 --> 01:30:15,576 and find out who the MVP of this league was the last three years." 1584 01:30:16,077 --> 01:30:18,121 [Russell cackles] 1585 01:30:19,747 --> 01:30:22,208 [projector whirs and clicks] 1586 01:30:23,960 --> 01:30:27,880 [dramatic music playing]