1 00:00:10,010 --> 00:00:11,761 [dramatic music playing] 2 00:00:15,390 --> 00:00:16,975 [crowd chanting indistinctly] 3 00:00:30,321 --> 00:00:34,909 [Wright] Some athletes try to figure out what role sports fulfills in the world. 4 00:00:35,744 --> 00:00:36,703 Where it fits. 5 00:00:36,786 --> 00:00:38,621 [spectators cheering] 6 00:00:38,705 --> 00:00:41,624 [Wright] Think of it. You wake up and find yourself 7 00:00:41,708 --> 00:00:44,669 about to run out on the floor of the Boston Garden 8 00:00:45,253 --> 00:00:48,298 for a championship game on national television. 9 00:00:48,381 --> 00:00:49,591 [man] Here come the Celtics. 10 00:00:49,674 --> 00:00:52,052 [spectators cheering] 11 00:00:52,135 --> 00:00:55,430 [Wright] Your teammates have a dazed look in their eyes, 12 00:00:56,139 --> 00:00:59,350 as if they realize they're about to be run over by a car. 13 00:00:59,434 --> 00:01:02,312 ["Nobody Knows" by Pastor T.L. Barrett & The Youth for Christ Choir] 14 00:01:02,395 --> 00:01:07,025 I used to joke that if you could bottle all the emotion in a basketball game, 15 00:01:07,108 --> 00:01:12,155 you'd have enough hate to fight a war and enough joy to prevent one. 16 00:01:14,032 --> 00:01:15,700 [chanting indistinctly] 17 00:01:17,827 --> 00:01:19,871 [Wright] The President of the United States 18 00:01:19,954 --> 00:01:22,624 has expressed interest in the outcome of a game. 19 00:01:28,546 --> 00:01:32,092 And while you're trying to rest there in your own private cocoon 20 00:01:32,175 --> 00:01:33,676 before the action starts, 21 00:01:33,760 --> 00:01:37,055 there's generally a moment when you find yourself wondering 22 00:01:37,138 --> 00:01:38,973 how it all came together. 23 00:01:41,935 --> 00:01:43,937 [rousing music playing] 24 00:02:32,569 --> 00:02:33,862 [gentle music playing] 25 00:02:33,945 --> 00:02:36,781 [Russell] One of the great thrills of my career as a Celtic 26 00:02:37,282 --> 00:02:39,492 was when we came out of the locker room. 27 00:02:39,576 --> 00:02:42,704 We had a guy named Weldon Haire, who did the public address, 28 00:02:42,787 --> 00:02:43,872 and he would say… 29 00:02:43,955 --> 00:02:48,751 [Haire] Here come the world champions, the Boston Celtics! 30 00:02:50,170 --> 00:02:53,590 [Russell] And every single time I heard that, I'd get goosebumps. 31 00:02:54,382 --> 00:02:56,092 I absolutely loved that. 32 00:02:59,012 --> 00:03:01,472 [Stoll] By the fall of 1963, 33 00:03:01,556 --> 00:03:04,976 the Boston Celtics had won six NBA titles 34 00:03:05,518 --> 00:03:07,770 but none without Bob Cousy. 35 00:03:08,521 --> 00:03:11,691 It was a challenge to all of us to win it without Cousy. 36 00:03:11,774 --> 00:03:15,945 Not that we resented his fame or anything else, but it was, 37 00:03:16,029 --> 00:03:18,740 "Hey, we'd like to be recognized that we can win this thing, 38 00:03:18,823 --> 00:03:21,701 and we still can win this thing without Cousy, all right?" 39 00:03:22,202 --> 00:03:23,995 [Russell] We knew how to play together. 40 00:03:24,495 --> 00:03:29,417 I actively, and with thought and planning, helped make these guys better players. 41 00:03:32,253 --> 00:03:34,297 [Stoll] In the '63-'64 season, 42 00:03:34,380 --> 00:03:38,384 Russell earned career highs in rebounds and assists, 43 00:03:38,468 --> 00:03:40,511 and despite the absence of Cousy, 44 00:03:40,595 --> 00:03:44,891 the Celtics finished the regular season with the best record in the NBA. 45 00:03:54,108 --> 00:03:57,987 In the Finals, Boston met the Warriors, who moved to San Francisco 46 00:03:58,071 --> 00:04:00,365 from Philadelphia the previous year. 47 00:04:01,074 --> 00:04:03,660 With Wilt's Warriors in the Western Conference, 48 00:04:03,743 --> 00:04:07,455 Chamberlain, for the first time, stood between Bill Russell 49 00:04:07,538 --> 00:04:08,539 and another ring. 50 00:04:08,623 --> 00:04:09,707 [music fades] 51 00:04:10,208 --> 00:04:12,210 [dramatic music playing] 52 00:04:12,293 --> 00:04:15,505 [Wright] Almost any argument people wanted to have could be carried on 53 00:04:15,588 --> 00:04:17,757 in the Russell vs. Chamberlain debate. 54 00:04:19,133 --> 00:04:23,429 If we weren't a metaphor for something, we were at least a symbol of it. 55 00:04:24,722 --> 00:04:29,769 It was fascinating because they were totally different personalities. 56 00:04:30,603 --> 00:04:33,898 Wilt was a combination of 57 00:04:35,525 --> 00:04:37,777 Magic Johnson and Santa Claus. 58 00:04:37,860 --> 00:04:44,242 Bill Russell, serious, focused, rugged, disciplined, tough. 59 00:04:44,325 --> 00:04:47,704 The opposite of how Wilt Chamberlain was perceived. 60 00:04:47,787 --> 00:04:50,748 They always had them as fierce competitors, 61 00:04:51,958 --> 00:04:54,294 but off the court, they used to fraternize. 62 00:04:55,670 --> 00:04:58,840 [Karen] Back then, it was a much more intimate endeavor. 63 00:04:58,923 --> 00:05:02,969 In fact, he used to, sometimes, when he would go and play in Philly, 64 00:05:03,052 --> 00:05:05,513 stay with Wilt and Wilt's family. 65 00:05:05,596 --> 00:05:09,851 Bill and Wilt's relationship really was a true bromance. 66 00:05:09,934 --> 00:05:13,896 Wilt would invite him to come over and have Thanksgiving dinner 67 00:05:13,980 --> 00:05:16,357 with his family, and his mom would cook. 68 00:05:16,441 --> 00:05:19,736 When he'd get ready to leave, they'd leave together, 69 00:05:19,819 --> 00:05:23,364 and she'd always tell Bill, "You be nice to my boy Norman." 70 00:05:23,448 --> 00:05:25,867 "Don't you beat him up too bad." [laughs] 71 00:05:25,950 --> 00:05:28,119 I would have never done that, okay? [chuckles] 72 00:05:28,202 --> 00:05:31,414 If you're my rival, I don't like you. I don't like you. 73 00:05:31,497 --> 00:05:33,916 I'm gonna try to embarrass you before you try to embarrass me. 74 00:05:34,000 --> 00:05:38,338 On the court, it's one thing. Off the court, it's another thing. 75 00:05:38,421 --> 00:05:40,757 When we get in between them lines, we gonna get to it. 76 00:05:42,800 --> 00:05:48,431 I thought Russell used his intelligence with Wilt in a very skillful way, 77 00:05:48,514 --> 00:05:52,685 even to the point of being with him for dinner the night before they played. 78 00:05:52,769 --> 00:05:54,103 Just kind of soften him up, 79 00:05:54,187 --> 00:05:57,273 so when he goes up and his hands happen to be over the rim, 80 00:05:57,357 --> 00:05:59,817 Wilt doesn't break his arm, but he just lays it in. 81 00:06:00,860 --> 00:06:06,240 [chuckles] These subtleties are what was Bill Russell's genius. 82 00:06:06,324 --> 00:06:09,911 I have some close friends of mine who told me a number of times, 83 00:06:09,994 --> 00:06:13,623 "Wilt, go up there and break Bill Russell's hand." 84 00:06:13,706 --> 00:06:17,210 "Stop being so nice to these guys. You can destroy them." 85 00:06:18,628 --> 00:06:21,714 [Sanders] Their relationship was based on respect. 86 00:06:22,757 --> 00:06:25,301 They always played hard against each other. 87 00:06:25,385 --> 00:06:27,887 They're friends, but they're competitors. 88 00:06:27,970 --> 00:06:28,846 When you compete, 89 00:06:28,930 --> 00:06:31,933 you compete at the highest level, no matter who you're playing against. 90 00:06:32,016 --> 00:06:34,060 [dramatic music continues] 91 00:06:39,148 --> 00:06:40,942 [spectators exclaiming] 92 00:06:44,612 --> 00:06:45,988 [somber music playing] 93 00:06:46,072 --> 00:06:49,325 [Wright] I think of all sports as a mixture of art and war. 94 00:06:49,992 --> 00:06:52,870 It is possible to change the mixture of art and war 95 00:06:52,954 --> 00:06:55,832 in any sport by changing its sacred rules. 96 00:06:56,666 --> 00:06:59,460 Let's imagine that in another time, in another world, 97 00:06:59,544 --> 00:07:01,337 the commissioner of the NBA, 98 00:07:01,421 --> 00:07:05,716 to eliminate all violence from basketball and to reward artistry, 99 00:07:05,800 --> 00:07:08,469 installed a panel of judges to award points 100 00:07:08,553 --> 00:07:11,889 based on the beauty of each particular basket scored. 101 00:07:11,973 --> 00:07:16,394 All beautiful plays in basketball should be appreciated on their own merits. 102 00:07:17,145 --> 00:07:21,732 As a result, players were motivated only by their love of the art. 103 00:07:21,816 --> 00:07:23,818 [uplifting music playing] 104 00:07:34,287 --> 00:07:36,956 [Wright] With all its warlike elements removed, 105 00:07:37,039 --> 00:07:39,876 the sport soon became a form of dance. 106 00:07:41,794 --> 00:07:43,754 More of a ballet than a brawl. 107 00:07:46,090 --> 00:07:49,969 When we see Julius "Dr. J" Irving fly through the air, 108 00:07:50,470 --> 00:07:53,556 his back arched, his arms stretched, 109 00:07:54,891 --> 00:07:59,520 we'd say, "That was a beautiful move," in the same way a painting is beautiful. 110 00:08:00,813 --> 00:08:04,775 The form inspires wonder, and the motion has something to say. 111 00:08:12,575 --> 00:08:18,164 [Stoll] In 1964, Russell greeted Chamberlain in their first ever NBA Finals 112 00:08:18,247 --> 00:08:21,334 with a near-perfect balance of art and war. 113 00:08:21,417 --> 00:08:23,544 [thrilling music playing] 114 00:08:23,628 --> 00:08:26,339 [Stoll] He ignited the Celtics when they needed energy 115 00:08:26,422 --> 00:08:28,799 and guided them when they needed poise. 116 00:08:31,511 --> 00:08:34,263 The Celtics went up three games to one, 117 00:08:34,347 --> 00:08:36,599 and in the last seconds of game five, 118 00:08:36,682 --> 00:08:39,685 Russell delivered a statement to end the season. 119 00:08:39,769 --> 00:08:42,396 [commentator] The rebound is stuffed in by big Bill Russell 120 00:08:42,480 --> 00:08:44,649 with ten seconds to go. That clinches it. 121 00:08:44,732 --> 00:08:48,569 Boston fans have already started to carry Coach Red Auerbach off the court. 122 00:08:48,653 --> 00:08:52,949 [Stoll] The win proved Bill could lead a championship team without Cousy. 123 00:08:53,616 --> 00:08:56,994 For the Celtics, it was their sixth straight Finals win, 124 00:08:58,454 --> 00:09:01,415 their seventh since Bill Russell arrived in Boston, 125 00:09:01,499 --> 00:09:04,043 and Bill's first without the Cous. 126 00:09:07,088 --> 00:09:11,342 Guiding this team of champions was their larger-than-life coach. 127 00:09:11,425 --> 00:09:15,429 The team Red built was crafted to work in perfect harmony. 128 00:09:15,513 --> 00:09:20,685 After Cousy left, the starting lineup consisted of K.C. Jones, Bill Russell, 129 00:09:20,768 --> 00:09:24,313 Tom Heinsohn, Satch Sanders, and Sam Jones. 130 00:09:24,397 --> 00:09:28,150 But before a game against St. Louis in December 1964, 131 00:09:28,234 --> 00:09:30,319 Heinsohn was out with a foot injury. 132 00:09:30,403 --> 00:09:34,198 Red Auerbach could have substituted sixth man John Havlicek. 133 00:09:34,282 --> 00:09:38,202 Instead, he turned to the more experienced Willie Naulls. 134 00:09:38,286 --> 00:09:40,663 So, you had Bill Russell at center, 135 00:09:40,746 --> 00:09:43,958 Tom Sanders as one forward, 136 00:09:44,041 --> 00:09:46,627 Willie Naulls as the other forward, 137 00:09:46,711 --> 00:09:48,504 Sam and K.C. Jones. 138 00:09:49,297 --> 00:09:52,091 [Bradley] When the Celtics started five African Americans, 139 00:09:52,174 --> 00:09:54,093 that was a powerful signal. 140 00:09:54,760 --> 00:09:57,972 [Wright] It was a routine ABC equation for us. 141 00:09:58,055 --> 00:10:00,016 We were only interested in winning. 142 00:10:00,099 --> 00:10:03,894 "This is our best team today. This is who we're putting on the floor." 143 00:10:03,978 --> 00:10:08,399 Five Black guys on the court at once? Really? We didn't notice. 144 00:10:08,482 --> 00:10:11,986 He wanted to win, and you win with the best players. 145 00:10:12,069 --> 00:10:16,657 Auerbach did what he was supposed to do, not what he was pressured to do 146 00:10:16,741 --> 00:10:19,702 or that he was trying to make a mark. 147 00:10:19,785 --> 00:10:22,121 [Wright] But the writers pressed for a comment. 148 00:10:22,204 --> 00:10:23,789 We had just made history. 149 00:10:23,873 --> 00:10:27,877 History, like Red would have said, can kiss my ass in Macy's window. 150 00:10:30,254 --> 00:10:32,715 [Stoll] It's undeniable that the Celtics broke tradition 151 00:10:32,798 --> 00:10:35,009 with their all-Black starting lineup. 152 00:10:35,676 --> 00:10:39,972 But Bill demanded that first be put in its proper historical context. 153 00:10:40,056 --> 00:10:41,599 [pensive music playing] 154 00:10:41,682 --> 00:10:45,019 [Wright] There used to be a lot of emphasis on the first Negro to do this, 155 00:10:45,102 --> 00:10:47,021 the first Negro to do that. 156 00:10:47,104 --> 00:10:49,940 It's unimportant who was the first and who was the last. 157 00:10:50,024 --> 00:10:53,486 The important thing is how many. The rest is tokenism. 158 00:10:54,028 --> 00:10:57,448 I don't consider anything I've done as contributing to society. 159 00:10:57,531 --> 00:11:00,951 I consider professional basketball as marking time, 160 00:11:01,035 --> 00:11:03,245 the most shallow thing in the world. 161 00:11:03,996 --> 00:11:05,539 Of course, I'm practical. 162 00:11:05,623 --> 00:11:08,626 Where else but in basketball could I command this salary? 163 00:11:08,709 --> 00:11:10,544 A man does what he has to do. 164 00:11:10,628 --> 00:11:13,381 But the contribution I'd like to make as a person, 165 00:11:13,464 --> 00:11:16,676 to my kids and little Black kids all over the world, 166 00:11:16,759 --> 00:11:18,219 is to make life better, 167 00:11:18,302 --> 00:11:21,764 so their ambitions aren't stilted when they face the world. 168 00:11:21,847 --> 00:11:25,601 To give them the opportunity to do what they're most skilled at. 169 00:11:25,685 --> 00:11:29,188 I could have a burning ambition to get my kids a million dollars. 170 00:11:29,271 --> 00:11:32,483 If I gave them that alone, I'd be giving them nothing. 171 00:11:32,566 --> 00:11:34,443 [pensive music continues] 172 00:11:34,527 --> 00:11:35,945 [Stoll] For some young fans, 173 00:11:36,028 --> 00:11:39,323 Russell and his teammates provided more than inspiration. 174 00:11:39,824 --> 00:11:42,910 They created a spectacular model of collaborative action. 175 00:11:44,286 --> 00:11:46,414 [O'Donnell] I'm in a white neighborhood. 176 00:11:46,497 --> 00:11:49,917 A white, segregated, as all of Boston was, 177 00:11:50,000 --> 00:11:51,669 rife with racism. 178 00:11:52,837 --> 00:11:58,092 And little white boys were running around the basketball court 179 00:11:58,175 --> 00:12:01,971 at age five and six and seven, trying to throw it up there, 180 00:12:02,054 --> 00:12:04,598 and saying, "I'm K.C. Jones." 181 00:12:04,682 --> 00:12:06,016 "I'm Sam Jones." 182 00:12:06,100 --> 00:12:07,435 "I'm Bill Russell." 183 00:12:07,518 --> 00:12:09,103 When the Celtics came to town, 184 00:12:09,186 --> 00:12:11,856 everybody was there, hanging from the rafters, 185 00:12:11,939 --> 00:12:16,527 because they always wanted to see, not only Russell, just a great team. 186 00:12:16,610 --> 00:12:18,529 [cheering] 187 00:12:22,324 --> 00:12:25,453 [Stoll] The Celtics finished the 1964-'65 season 188 00:12:25,536 --> 00:12:28,873 with a league-best record of 62 and 18. 189 00:12:28,956 --> 00:12:33,002 In the playoffs, the Celtics faced the Philadelphia 76ers, 190 00:12:33,085 --> 00:12:34,670 who added a familiar face. 191 00:12:34,754 --> 00:12:36,964 [tense music playing] 192 00:12:37,047 --> 00:12:41,135 Wilt's previous team, the Warriors, dealt with his high salary demands, 193 00:12:41,218 --> 00:12:43,679 and their losing record, by trading him. 194 00:12:44,722 --> 00:12:48,392 Back home, Chamberlain made the Sixers a viable contender. 195 00:12:50,978 --> 00:12:52,772 The two teams swapped wins 196 00:12:52,855 --> 00:12:55,900 as they faced hostile fans in each other's hometowns. 197 00:12:56,901 --> 00:12:59,820 [commentator] Chamberlain swings at an imaginary object. 198 00:12:59,904 --> 00:13:01,238 [spectators exclaim] 199 00:13:03,574 --> 00:13:05,284 [music fades] 200 00:13:09,747 --> 00:13:11,999 [Wright] We were playing the Philadelphia 76ers 201 00:13:12,082 --> 00:13:13,584 for the Eastern Championships. 202 00:13:13,667 --> 00:13:15,669 It was the seventh and final game. 203 00:13:15,753 --> 00:13:17,755 [dramatic music playing] 204 00:13:19,548 --> 00:13:20,925 [spectators cheering] 205 00:13:21,509 --> 00:13:23,677 [Wright] All through the game, we made runs forward, 206 00:13:23,761 --> 00:13:26,347 and every time, Chamberlain and Greer and the rest of them 207 00:13:26,430 --> 00:13:28,098 closed in on us again. 208 00:13:28,182 --> 00:13:29,558 We couldn't shake them. 209 00:13:31,560 --> 00:13:35,439 [Stoll] The Celtics built a seven-point lead with 1:45 remaining. 210 00:13:35,523 --> 00:13:37,691 Once again, Philly fought back, 211 00:13:37,775 --> 00:13:39,777 and with only a few seconds left, 212 00:13:39,860 --> 00:13:43,697 it looked like Boston would survive and advance to the NBA Finals. 213 00:13:43,781 --> 00:13:45,699 [Most] Chamberlain turns and stuffs the ball. 214 00:13:45,783 --> 00:13:47,701 There are five seconds left. 215 00:13:48,244 --> 00:13:50,913 We figured we'd inbound the ball, and the game would be over. 216 00:13:51,997 --> 00:13:55,876 [Russell] I did not trust anybody else to take it out but me. 217 00:13:55,960 --> 00:13:58,712 I wanted to take it out 'cause I'd make sure I could make a good pass. 218 00:13:58,796 --> 00:14:02,258 We have a chance to ice the game, and Russell is gonna take the ball 219 00:14:02,341 --> 00:14:03,467 out of bounds. 220 00:14:03,551 --> 00:14:06,095 But unbeknownst to him, he was underneath a wire 221 00:14:06,178 --> 00:14:10,057 that attached to the balcony that used to stabilize the basket. 222 00:14:10,140 --> 00:14:12,101 [Most] Now, Russell is… 223 00:14:12,184 --> 00:14:15,354 -[spectators exclaim] -[Most] He loses the ball off the support! 224 00:14:16,021 --> 00:14:20,526 Russell lost the ball off the support! Boston's only leading by one point. 225 00:14:21,277 --> 00:14:24,363 And the ball goes to Philadelphia with five seconds left. 226 00:14:24,446 --> 00:14:26,407 Boston only has a one-point lead. 227 00:14:26,949 --> 00:14:30,578 [O'Donnell] I mean, I heard it on the radio in the car. 228 00:14:31,245 --> 00:14:33,289 And I was too young to drive, 229 00:14:33,873 --> 00:14:37,751 but I'm telling you… [laughs] …nobody with a car radio on 230 00:14:37,835 --> 00:14:40,129 should have been moving at the time. 231 00:14:40,212 --> 00:14:44,174 [commentator 1] 110 to 109. Now, the tension is really there. 232 00:14:44,258 --> 00:14:49,471 We go in a huddle. All I could say was, "Guys, we got to do something." [cackles] 233 00:14:51,015 --> 00:14:55,519 "You gotta bail me out of this." I was beside myself. I… I was embarrassed. 234 00:14:55,603 --> 00:14:59,273 Russell said, "Hey, will someone take these goat horns off of me?" 235 00:14:59,356 --> 00:15:01,108 "Because I'm wearing the horns." 236 00:15:01,191 --> 00:15:05,529 [Russell] I don't think that my teammates had ever heard me say anything like that. 237 00:15:06,155 --> 00:15:08,657 "I screwed up. Get me off the hook." 238 00:15:08,741 --> 00:15:11,869 Other guys would have made excuses, not Russell. 239 00:15:11,952 --> 00:15:15,289 It exhibited to me humility and a belief in his teammates. 240 00:15:16,081 --> 00:15:18,918 [commentator 2] This is a bad situation. This is the ball game. 241 00:15:19,001 --> 00:15:23,005 Five seconds. Philadelphia has the ball directly under the Celtics basket. 242 00:15:23,088 --> 00:15:25,341 [commentator 1] Greer is going to throw the ball in. 243 00:15:26,550 --> 00:15:29,345 [Wright] The whole sequence of all the World Championships 244 00:15:29,428 --> 00:15:32,598 and the Eastern Championships and the record and everything else 245 00:15:32,681 --> 00:15:34,892 had come down to the final second. 246 00:15:35,935 --> 00:15:38,145 [Havlicek] When the official hands the ball over, 247 00:15:38,228 --> 00:15:40,606 he has five seconds to put it in play. 248 00:15:40,689 --> 00:15:43,651 I start counting to myself, one thousand, one, 249 00:15:43,734 --> 00:15:45,152 one thousand, two, 250 00:15:45,235 --> 00:15:46,779 one thousand, three. 251 00:15:46,862 --> 00:15:49,698 I got to "one thousand, four," and nothing had happened yet. 252 00:15:49,782 --> 00:15:53,744 Well, at that time, I was able to, for a very split second, 253 00:15:53,827 --> 00:15:55,079 take a peek. 254 00:15:55,162 --> 00:15:57,498 I saw the ball released. 255 00:15:57,581 --> 00:15:59,458 [Most] Greer is putting the ball into play. 256 00:15:59,541 --> 00:16:01,752 He gets it out deep, and Havlicek steals it! 257 00:16:01,835 --> 00:16:05,547 Over to Sam Jones. Havlicek stole the ball! 258 00:16:05,631 --> 00:16:08,217 It's all over! It's all over! 259 00:16:08,926 --> 00:16:12,012 Johnny Havlicek is being mobbed by the fans. 260 00:16:12,096 --> 00:16:14,056 It's all over! 261 00:16:14,139 --> 00:16:16,684 Johnny Havlicek stole the ball! 262 00:16:16,767 --> 00:16:20,646 Johnny Most screams, "Havlicek stole the ball…" [laughs] 263 00:16:21,397 --> 00:16:25,901 …into that radio in a way that went right through your body. 264 00:16:25,985 --> 00:16:28,946 [cheering] 265 00:16:29,029 --> 00:16:32,574 [Most] Bill Russell wants to grab Havlicek. He hugs him. 266 00:16:32,658 --> 00:16:34,827 He squeezes John Havlicek. 267 00:16:34,910 --> 00:16:37,246 Havlicek saved this ball game, 268 00:16:37,788 --> 00:16:38,956 believe that! 269 00:16:39,039 --> 00:16:41,625 Johnny Havlicek saved this ball game. 270 00:16:41,709 --> 00:16:44,086 [Russell] I tell Havlicek, "I made you famous." 271 00:16:44,169 --> 00:16:46,463 "Havlicek stole the ball! Havlicek stole the ball!" 272 00:16:46,547 --> 00:16:50,426 I said, "If I didn't mess up, nobody would have heard of you." 273 00:16:50,509 --> 00:16:52,428 [cackles] 274 00:16:54,096 --> 00:16:56,724 [Stoll] Having finally disposed of the 76ers, 275 00:16:56,807 --> 00:17:00,644 the Celtics moved on to their perennial rivals in Los Angeles. 276 00:17:01,437 --> 00:17:05,774 Boston made short work of the Lakers, winning the title in five games. 277 00:17:05,858 --> 00:17:08,193 [dramatic music playing] 278 00:17:11,572 --> 00:17:12,823 [spectators roaring] 279 00:17:18,162 --> 00:17:21,999 [Stoll] It was their eighth championship since Bill Russell joined the team. 280 00:17:28,130 --> 00:17:30,007 [music fades] 281 00:17:31,717 --> 00:17:33,969 [Stoll] For the public, the only rivalry that mattered 282 00:17:34,053 --> 00:17:37,181 was the one between Bill Russell and Wilt Chamberlain. 283 00:17:37,681 --> 00:17:39,475 Bill was open and consistent 284 00:17:39,558 --> 00:17:42,853 about his hopes for Black children and Black communities. 285 00:17:42,936 --> 00:17:46,857 For Wilt, dominating the game was rooted in a radical demand 286 00:17:46,940 --> 00:17:49,485 for compensation based on talent. 287 00:17:49,568 --> 00:17:51,195 [upbeat music playing] 288 00:17:51,278 --> 00:17:53,614 Actually, we're out here to make money. 289 00:17:53,697 --> 00:17:55,741 We're playing something we love to do, 290 00:17:55,824 --> 00:17:58,744 but the primary interest really is how much you can make. 291 00:17:58,827 --> 00:18:01,955 [Abdul-Jabbar] Bill Russell was involved in the civil rights movement 292 00:18:02,039 --> 00:18:05,876 and encouraging people to effect change. 293 00:18:05,959 --> 00:18:09,004 Wilt, you know, lived very well, 294 00:18:09,088 --> 00:18:11,840 but he didn't really care about anything else 295 00:18:11,924 --> 00:18:14,676 other than his own comfort and his life. 296 00:18:14,760 --> 00:18:18,138 I mean, Wilt had a racehorse and, you know, a Rolls-Royce. 297 00:18:18,639 --> 00:18:21,100 [hesitates] He lived very well. 298 00:18:21,183 --> 00:18:23,393 [Russell] He kept getting these good salaries. 299 00:18:23,477 --> 00:18:27,189 So, "Wait. If money's there for him, it's gotta be there for me too." 300 00:18:27,272 --> 00:18:29,399 I remember, over the radio or something, 301 00:18:29,483 --> 00:18:33,445 that Wilt had just signed a contract for $100,000. 302 00:18:34,363 --> 00:18:36,156 [Stoll] It wasn't just a rumor. 303 00:18:36,240 --> 00:18:39,785 Chamberlain had signed a three-year contract with the 76ers 304 00:18:39,868 --> 00:18:43,664 for a record annual salary of $100,000, 305 00:18:43,747 --> 00:18:46,458 the equivalent of one million today. 306 00:18:46,542 --> 00:18:49,586 [Russell] When we heard this, I was talking to Red Auerbach. 307 00:18:50,587 --> 00:18:52,798 We're talking about my contract for the next year. 308 00:18:52,881 --> 00:18:55,467 I said, "Well, that does it. I know what I want." 309 00:18:55,551 --> 00:18:56,510 He says, "What?" 310 00:18:56,593 --> 00:18:58,846 I said, "I want $100,001." 311 00:19:00,514 --> 00:19:01,849 He just turned white. 312 00:19:03,100 --> 00:19:04,434 "Whiter," I'm sorry. 313 00:19:05,144 --> 00:19:07,146 [cackles] 314 00:19:08,355 --> 00:19:11,191 That's petty in a great way. That's petty in a great way. 315 00:19:11,275 --> 00:19:13,819 If it's one dollar, that means I'm better than him. 316 00:19:13,902 --> 00:19:16,280 It just shows you the competitor in him. 317 00:19:16,363 --> 00:19:18,740 That's him. That's him to the core. 318 00:19:18,824 --> 00:19:20,868 You weren't kidding about that extra buck, were you? 319 00:19:20,951 --> 00:19:22,327 Every little bit helps. 320 00:19:22,411 --> 00:19:24,496 [all laughing] 321 00:19:24,580 --> 00:19:26,498 We'll get you one dollar for doing the show. 322 00:19:27,457 --> 00:19:29,168 [reporter] Is there any truth to these rumors 323 00:19:29,251 --> 00:19:31,253 that you're asking for astronomical sums? 324 00:19:31,336 --> 00:19:35,007 Uh, "astronomical," that… that sounds high. 325 00:19:35,090 --> 00:19:38,927 [Kenny Smith] He can get you 20 points on pick-and-rolls and rim runs. 326 00:19:39,011 --> 00:19:42,598 He can block five shots, and he can get you 20 rebounds. 327 00:19:42,681 --> 00:19:47,060 He's not a $100,000 man. He's a $500 million player today. 328 00:19:47,144 --> 00:19:50,189 [Russell] I said, "I just won the MVP in this league." 329 00:19:51,148 --> 00:19:52,357 "I should be the highest paid." 330 00:19:53,025 --> 00:19:54,818 I called my dad on the phone, 331 00:19:54,902 --> 00:19:58,113 and I said, "You won't believe this. I got this deal." 332 00:19:58,197 --> 00:20:00,157 "You don't have to work anymore." 333 00:20:00,240 --> 00:20:03,577 He says, "Well, son, I can't quit working." 334 00:20:03,660 --> 00:20:05,162 I said, "Why not?" 335 00:20:05,245 --> 00:20:08,415 He says, "I've been working this foundry 25 years." 336 00:20:09,333 --> 00:20:12,753 I said, "A foundry, 25-- That's a great reason to quit." 337 00:20:12,836 --> 00:20:14,796 He said, "Oh no." 338 00:20:14,880 --> 00:20:18,133 He said, "Listen, son, I've given these people 339 00:20:18,217 --> 00:20:20,636 25 of the best years of my life." 340 00:20:20,719 --> 00:20:22,888 "Now, I'll give them a few of the bad ones." 341 00:20:22,971 --> 00:20:25,474 [all laughing] 342 00:20:29,728 --> 00:20:30,979 That's great. 343 00:20:32,314 --> 00:20:34,316 [chanting indistinctly] 344 00:20:37,778 --> 00:20:41,365 [Stoll] While Russell played a game of one-upmanship with Chamberlain, 345 00:20:41,865 --> 00:20:44,409 he took a sharper stance against the economic treatment 346 00:20:44,493 --> 00:20:46,745 of Black people in the United States. 347 00:20:47,287 --> 00:20:50,499 [Lyndon Johnson] There are other answers that are still to be found. 348 00:20:50,582 --> 00:20:52,542 [somber music playing] 349 00:20:53,168 --> 00:20:57,256 I intend to call a White House conference 350 00:20:57,339 --> 00:21:03,387 of scholars and experts and outstanding Negro leaders 351 00:21:03,470 --> 00:21:08,767 of both races to fulfill these rights. 352 00:21:08,850 --> 00:21:12,479 Its object will be to help the American Negro 353 00:21:13,730 --> 00:21:15,565 fulfill the rights, 354 00:21:16,108 --> 00:21:19,486 which after the long time of injustice, 355 00:21:20,279 --> 00:21:24,032 he is finally about to secure. 356 00:21:24,825 --> 00:21:28,120 [Stoll] Bill Russell was one of 2,400 invited delegates, 357 00:21:28,203 --> 00:21:32,374 including entertainers, business leaders, and prominent activists. 358 00:21:33,875 --> 00:21:37,671 But in the end, he felt the meeting produced only empty promises. 359 00:21:38,922 --> 00:21:42,718 Russell believed real change depended on economic opportunity. 360 00:21:45,137 --> 00:21:48,265 [Wright] What good is education without jobs? 361 00:21:49,266 --> 00:21:51,310 There prevails a lack of leadership 362 00:21:51,393 --> 00:21:54,271 in helping to create a more favorable atmosphere 363 00:21:54,354 --> 00:21:57,649 to break down the economic barriers that the Negro faces 364 00:21:57,733 --> 00:22:01,194 in becoming part of the mainstream of the American economy. 365 00:22:02,779 --> 00:22:04,197 The blood of this nation 366 00:22:04,281 --> 00:22:07,034 flows through the veins of commerce and industry. 367 00:22:07,117 --> 00:22:09,661 If the resources of big business are called upon 368 00:22:09,745 --> 00:22:13,665 by the president of the nation and mobilized for concerted action, 369 00:22:13,749 --> 00:22:17,544 we will greatly accelerate the achievement of the goals we seek. 370 00:22:20,380 --> 00:22:22,007 [Stoll] In Boston that spring, 371 00:22:22,090 --> 00:22:27,304 the uproar over school desegregation boiled over, and Russell joined the fight. 372 00:22:27,387 --> 00:22:31,767 For three years, the city school committee had dug in its heels on the issue, 373 00:22:31,850 --> 00:22:35,812 and so had its controversial former chair, Louise Day Hicks. 374 00:22:35,896 --> 00:22:39,149 …stated as his policy that a racially imbalanced school 375 00:22:39,232 --> 00:22:41,401 is not educationally harmful. 376 00:22:42,027 --> 00:22:44,071 -[attendees scoff] -[Betty Johnson] Well… 377 00:22:44,154 --> 00:22:47,699 Superintendent Ohrenberger and yourself do not have children 378 00:22:47,783 --> 00:22:49,701 in a racially imbalanced school, 379 00:22:49,785 --> 00:22:52,996 so you do not know what the effect is on our children. 380 00:22:53,080 --> 00:22:55,332 [applause] 381 00:22:55,415 --> 00:22:56,666 [solemn music playing] 382 00:22:56,750 --> 00:22:59,294 [Wright] One day, she came to give a graduation talk 383 00:22:59,378 --> 00:23:01,588 at Roxbury Junior High School. 384 00:23:01,671 --> 00:23:04,424 When the preacher and a little ad hoc committee of activists 385 00:23:04,508 --> 00:23:06,802 made a fuss, she had him arrested. 386 00:23:08,095 --> 00:23:10,680 Meanwhile, those kids didn't have their graduation, 387 00:23:10,764 --> 00:23:14,309 so we hosted a special ceremony for them at a local church, 388 00:23:14,393 --> 00:23:16,561 and I gave the commencement speech. 389 00:23:21,608 --> 00:23:26,613 [Russell] I ask myself, "Where are the other voices crying out for change?" 390 00:23:26,696 --> 00:23:30,075 And there are small fires all over the United States, 391 00:23:30,158 --> 00:23:32,244 and there's a fire here in Roxbury. 392 00:23:33,161 --> 00:23:36,164 And nobody's listening. There's nobody listening. 393 00:23:36,248 --> 00:23:38,667 What the people don't realize is 394 00:23:38,750 --> 00:23:42,796 that a fire that consumes Roxbury consumes Boston. The fire will spread. 395 00:23:42,879 --> 00:23:44,464 ["Turiya and Ramakrishna" playing] 396 00:23:44,548 --> 00:23:47,884 [Wright] To me, Boston itself was the flea market of racism 397 00:23:47,968 --> 00:23:50,053 in all the varieties, old and new. 398 00:23:50,971 --> 00:23:54,057 The city had corrupt City Hall crony racists, 399 00:23:54,141 --> 00:23:57,227 brick-throwing "send them back to Africa" racists, 400 00:23:57,310 --> 00:24:01,148 and in the university area, phony radical chic racists. 401 00:24:02,107 --> 00:24:06,319 Nevertheless, everybody in Boston used to speak in favor of Dr. King. 402 00:24:06,820 --> 00:24:08,029 I was mystified. 403 00:24:09,239 --> 00:24:13,076 Perhaps, Dr. King's dream of a color-blind society based on love 404 00:24:13,160 --> 00:24:15,787 was being misinterpreted by Bostonians. 405 00:24:16,538 --> 00:24:20,167 To them, "color-blind" meant that Blacks would be invisible, 406 00:24:20,250 --> 00:24:24,463 which would be fine with them and not much different from reality. 407 00:24:27,048 --> 00:24:28,842 Bill Russell is gonna make it known 408 00:24:28,925 --> 00:24:31,553 that this is what's happening, and people need to know about it. 409 00:24:31,636 --> 00:24:36,057 Why do we march? Why are we protesting? What is that actually doing? 410 00:24:36,141 --> 00:24:38,435 People were afraid to speak out. 411 00:24:38,518 --> 00:24:40,896 He knew his platform. 412 00:24:40,979 --> 00:24:43,690 He knew how strong and powerful his voice was. 413 00:24:43,773 --> 00:24:47,694 Opening doors, opening avenues for the younger generation. 414 00:24:47,777 --> 00:24:51,615 When we take action and when we come together and we speak, 415 00:24:51,698 --> 00:24:52,699 people do listen. 416 00:24:53,450 --> 00:24:57,496 [Russell] Big, high-profile athlete, there was a forum there for me 417 00:24:58,038 --> 00:24:59,414 if I choose to use it. 418 00:24:59,498 --> 00:25:00,373 [music fades] 419 00:25:00,457 --> 00:25:03,752 [Stoll] Russell was never reluctant to voice his opinions, 420 00:25:03,835 --> 00:25:05,629 but there were plenty of basketball fans 421 00:25:05,712 --> 00:25:08,507 who preferred that he would just "shut up and play." 422 00:25:09,049 --> 00:25:13,595 [Russell] It developed through my career that, uh, I really didn't want a lot to do 423 00:25:13,678 --> 00:25:15,805 with the people outside of the Celtics. 424 00:25:15,889 --> 00:25:18,975 I played for the Celtics. I didn't play for Boston. 425 00:25:19,976 --> 00:25:24,940 [Rhoden] So I think that he was kind of jarring to a lot of white people, 426 00:25:25,023 --> 00:25:29,152 who just expected you to be genuflecting because you were there. 427 00:25:29,236 --> 00:25:31,071 Bill Russell did not genuflect. 428 00:25:31,154 --> 00:25:32,239 [tense music playing] 429 00:25:32,822 --> 00:25:34,199 [Stoll] At home in Reading, 430 00:25:34,282 --> 00:25:37,661 he and his family were often treated as unwelcomed invaders. 431 00:25:39,829 --> 00:25:41,831 I don't think anyone knew the sort of things 432 00:25:41,915 --> 00:25:45,001 that were going on behind the scenes to my dad and my parents. 433 00:25:45,502 --> 00:25:48,630 [Stoll] When the Russells returned home after a weekend trip, 434 00:25:48,713 --> 00:25:52,425 they found that vandals broke in and ransacked the house. 435 00:25:53,468 --> 00:25:57,806 They come home, and it's… it's… The place is trashed and everything. 436 00:25:57,889 --> 00:26:02,310 It's crystal clear that it was someone who objected to, uh, 437 00:26:02,394 --> 00:26:05,272 not just him living in the neighborhood but him being him. 438 00:26:05,355 --> 00:26:07,190 Wrote all kinds of things on the wall. 439 00:26:07,274 --> 00:26:09,901 You know, racial slurs and threats. 440 00:26:10,986 --> 00:26:15,031 [Wright] Returning to our home after a vacation, we found it trashed. 441 00:26:15,115 --> 00:26:17,742 "Nigger" was painted on the wall with excrement, 442 00:26:17,826 --> 00:26:21,162 and the pool table had been ripped up and covered with beer. 443 00:26:21,246 --> 00:26:26,293 People, uh, smashed his trophies. They defecated in my parents' bed. 444 00:26:26,376 --> 00:26:31,590 I was shocked. I didn't… I didn't know… I didn't know how racist the town was. 445 00:26:31,673 --> 00:26:34,926 That Bill and the family had to go through it, it's heartbreaking. 446 00:26:35,010 --> 00:26:36,553 Just heartbreaking. 447 00:26:37,178 --> 00:26:40,932 [Wright] The local police were unable to come up with any suspects. 448 00:26:41,016 --> 00:26:45,937 Some argue that my "arrogant attitude" may have contributed to the home invasion. 449 00:26:46,730 --> 00:26:48,356 [Sanders] When you talk about Russell, 450 00:26:48,440 --> 00:26:51,818 you're talking about a guy who was already, um, pissed off 451 00:26:51,901 --> 00:26:57,157 all the time, anyway, about the way Blacks were being treated. 452 00:26:57,240 --> 00:27:01,202 He never did talk about those things publicly. 453 00:27:01,703 --> 00:27:04,873 That sort of goes back to, "Well, he's misunderstood." 454 00:27:04,956 --> 00:27:07,667 He could've easily held a press conference and said, 455 00:27:07,751 --> 00:27:10,045 "These animals broke into my house, 456 00:27:10,128 --> 00:27:14,174 and this is why you people might think I have a bad attitude." 457 00:27:14,257 --> 00:27:16,426 [tense music continues] 458 00:27:16,509 --> 00:27:19,012 Bill was defined as an angry Black man 459 00:27:19,095 --> 00:27:21,765 because he wasn't going to let people forget 460 00:27:21,848 --> 00:27:23,808 the reality of life in America. 461 00:27:24,392 --> 00:27:28,063 I mean, people have to admit to the truth before we can move on. 462 00:27:28,563 --> 00:27:32,150 Every single time he had an opportunity to play, 463 00:27:32,984 --> 00:27:38,448 he was able to take all of that and focus and put it into the game. 464 00:27:38,531 --> 00:27:44,371 I had never run across anyone with such a singular attitude and focus. 465 00:27:45,747 --> 00:27:49,376 [Russell] Always look for an edge. That's one thing I got from Auerbach. 466 00:27:49,459 --> 00:27:53,046 Do everything you can to turn the percentages in your favor, 467 00:27:53,713 --> 00:27:56,299 intellectually, emotionally, and physically. 468 00:27:57,300 --> 00:27:58,968 I did talk a little trash. 469 00:27:59,052 --> 00:28:00,804 [cackles] 470 00:28:01,721 --> 00:28:04,516 Most guys talk trash just to be talking trash. 471 00:28:04,599 --> 00:28:06,976 Bill Russell was not that type of guy. 472 00:28:07,060 --> 00:28:08,687 Bill did it in a way 473 00:28:08,770 --> 00:28:13,108 that it was going to directly affect the game. 474 00:28:13,191 --> 00:28:16,528 He's gonna say something 475 00:28:16,611 --> 00:28:19,447 because he knows that it's gonna get up under your skin. 476 00:28:19,531 --> 00:28:23,034 And sure enough, it helped the Celtics to win. 477 00:28:24,119 --> 00:28:26,079 [pensive music playing] 478 00:28:26,162 --> 00:28:28,081 [Wright] Part of my responsibility to the team 479 00:28:28,164 --> 00:28:31,751 was to divert an extra portion of the opponent's attack on myself. 480 00:28:31,835 --> 00:28:34,796 Sometimes I'd make a speech out of the jump circle. 481 00:28:34,879 --> 00:28:37,507 "All right, guys," I'd say to the other team. 482 00:28:37,590 --> 00:28:39,092 "Ain't no layups out here tonight." 483 00:28:39,175 --> 00:28:42,971 "I ain't gonna bother you with 15-footers because I don't feel like it tonight, 484 00:28:43,054 --> 00:28:44,597 but I ain't gonna have no layups." 485 00:28:45,306 --> 00:28:48,977 Or I'd lean over to one of the forwards and say, "If you shoot a layup, 486 00:28:49,060 --> 00:28:52,897 you better bring your salt and pepper because you'll be eating basketballs." 487 00:28:53,565 --> 00:28:55,275 Of course, I wouldn't say anything like that 488 00:28:55,358 --> 00:28:57,485 to Oscar Robertson or Jerry West. 489 00:28:57,569 --> 00:28:59,863 There are some guys you don't do that to. 490 00:29:00,363 --> 00:29:02,907 [Robertson] Bill didn't trash-talk against me or anything like that 491 00:29:02,991 --> 00:29:04,909 when he went into the basket 492 00:29:04,993 --> 00:29:07,787 to make a layup because it might've backfired on him. 493 00:29:09,080 --> 00:29:11,583 -[upbeat music playing] -[Bradley] I think my rookie year, 494 00:29:11,666 --> 00:29:14,961 Russell was over here, and Satch and I were over here. 495 00:29:15,044 --> 00:29:17,505 And Russell looks at Satch 496 00:29:18,089 --> 00:29:19,716 and then looks at me 497 00:29:19,799 --> 00:29:22,135 and then looks at Satch and says… 498 00:29:22,218 --> 00:29:24,012 Can you guard that motherfucker? 499 00:29:24,679 --> 00:29:26,514 Well, that shocked Bradley. 500 00:29:27,348 --> 00:29:30,560 He'd never been called that before. [cackles] 501 00:29:33,605 --> 00:29:36,941 [Bradley] That thought made me start thinking, "What did he mean?" 502 00:29:37,025 --> 00:29:38,651 "What is that about?" [laughs] 503 00:29:38,735 --> 00:29:42,530 [Horry] A person with a high intellect that talks trash, that's the worst. 504 00:29:42,614 --> 00:29:45,575 Because they're thinking about you and not the game. 505 00:29:45,658 --> 00:29:47,535 [upbeat music continues] 506 00:29:50,079 --> 00:29:52,582 [Sanders] Russ had that little game within a game. 507 00:29:52,665 --> 00:29:56,961 He goaltended about two shots a game, on purpose. 508 00:29:57,045 --> 00:29:59,005 Sure, the baskets counted, 509 00:29:59,088 --> 00:30:01,591 but what it did was send a message to the players, 510 00:30:01,674 --> 00:30:04,719 "Look how close I came to blocking your shot." 511 00:30:04,803 --> 00:30:06,095 He was a master. 512 00:30:06,179 --> 00:30:10,016 [Most] Out to Baylor, driving the lane. He lays it up. It's blocked by Russell. 513 00:30:11,017 --> 00:30:14,062 Blocked by Russell. What a play by Bill Russell! 514 00:30:14,729 --> 00:30:17,607 [Frazier] Russell was definitely arrogant, an intimidator. 515 00:30:17,690 --> 00:30:20,944 Off the court, he intimidated people who'd come up to him. 516 00:30:22,737 --> 00:30:25,824 [laughs] He'd just stand like that and stare at them. 517 00:30:25,907 --> 00:30:27,408 Wouldn't say anything. 518 00:30:27,492 --> 00:30:30,787 He was this interesting mix of athlete and thinker. 519 00:30:30,870 --> 00:30:34,666 He always could pick a certain move and visualize it in his head 520 00:30:34,749 --> 00:30:38,461 over and over and over again before he actually went out and tried it. 521 00:30:38,545 --> 00:30:41,214 He studied the game so diligently. 522 00:30:41,297 --> 00:30:47,053 [George] The idea that you could calculate the angle of the player coming at you, 523 00:30:47,637 --> 00:30:51,558 know their abilities, how they like to go, 524 00:30:51,641 --> 00:30:53,643 and then also see the rest of the court 525 00:30:53,726 --> 00:30:57,897 to know that, "If I do this, the angle of trajectory will take it there." 526 00:30:57,981 --> 00:30:59,691 This guy's a mathematician. 527 00:31:00,275 --> 00:31:03,403 [Stoll] Bill's on-court mastery had always involved math. 528 00:31:04,028 --> 00:31:05,947 Back in college at USF, 529 00:31:06,030 --> 00:31:09,158 along with his Celtics teammate K.C. Jones, 530 00:31:09,242 --> 00:31:11,369 Bill pioneered alternative ways to think 531 00:31:11,452 --> 00:31:14,539 about the role of angles and equations in basketball. 532 00:31:14,622 --> 00:31:16,082 [intriguing music playing] 533 00:31:16,165 --> 00:31:19,669 [Wright] We decided that basketball is basically a game of geometry, 534 00:31:19,752 --> 00:31:22,171 of lines, points, and distances. 535 00:31:23,590 --> 00:31:28,136 I had been daydreaming about solo moves, but he liked to work out strategies. 536 00:31:28,219 --> 00:31:32,265 K.C. had an original basketball mind, and he taught me how to scheme 537 00:31:32,348 --> 00:31:34,976 to make things happen, particularly on defense. 538 00:31:35,059 --> 00:31:38,855 In those days, almost every player and coach thought of defense 539 00:31:38,938 --> 00:31:40,231 as pure reaction. 540 00:31:40,315 --> 00:31:42,108 K.C. thought differently. 541 00:31:42,191 --> 00:31:44,861 He was always figuring out ways to make the opponent 542 00:31:44,944 --> 00:31:49,574 take the shot he wanted him to take from the place he wanted the man to shoot. 543 00:31:50,283 --> 00:31:52,035 He'd let a man have an outside shot 544 00:31:52,118 --> 00:31:54,829 just beyond the perimeter of his effectiveness, 545 00:31:54,913 --> 00:31:58,750 and instead of harassing the player, would take off down the court, 546 00:31:58,833 --> 00:32:03,212 figuring I'd get the rebound and throw him a long pass for an easy basket. 547 00:32:03,713 --> 00:32:06,466 He and I dreamed dozens of plays like these 548 00:32:06,549 --> 00:32:11,012 and fed into our equations what we knew about the weaknesses of our opponents. 549 00:32:11,095 --> 00:32:15,224 Gradually, K.C. and I created a little basketball world of our own. 550 00:32:15,725 --> 00:32:17,226 We were inspired. 551 00:32:17,310 --> 00:32:19,354 Rocket scientists in sneakers. 552 00:32:19,896 --> 00:32:21,356 [music fades] 553 00:32:21,439 --> 00:32:24,776 He always had this regal being about himself. 554 00:32:24,859 --> 00:32:28,488 I look at pictures of him. There's one particular picture of him. 555 00:32:28,571 --> 00:32:32,367 It's him standing at half-court with both hands on his hips, 556 00:32:33,284 --> 00:32:35,578 in a sold-out Boston Garden. 557 00:32:36,496 --> 00:32:39,916 And when I look at that, it was like 558 00:32:41,376 --> 00:32:45,004 a king overlooking his fiefdom. 559 00:32:47,090 --> 00:32:50,468 [Stoll] But as much as Russell was considered a genius on the court, 560 00:32:50,551 --> 00:32:53,054 fans and sportswriters often criticized him 561 00:32:53,137 --> 00:32:55,807 for being moody, aloof, and arrogant. 562 00:32:56,432 --> 00:32:59,018 [Russell] I am arrogant. I'll admit that. 563 00:32:59,519 --> 00:33:02,355 But it's in whose definition of arrogant? 564 00:33:03,481 --> 00:33:05,149 If a white athlete had done the same thing, 565 00:33:05,233 --> 00:33:09,028 they wouldn't call it arrogant. They'd call it competitive, high-strung. 566 00:33:09,737 --> 00:33:11,614 When you're Bill Russell, 567 00:33:11,698 --> 00:33:14,617 and you live in a country that ostracizes you, 568 00:33:14,701 --> 00:33:17,370 that only celebrates you for your athleticism, 569 00:33:17,453 --> 00:33:20,999 "Here's what I'm going to do. Y'all get me in the arena." 570 00:33:21,749 --> 00:33:25,837 "Outside of the arena, allow me to live my life." 571 00:33:25,920 --> 00:33:28,506 [Stoll] As proof of Russell's perceived arrogance, 572 00:33:28,589 --> 00:33:31,217 critics cited his refusal to sign autographs. 573 00:33:32,635 --> 00:33:35,513 As a player, after 1964, he never signed them. 574 00:33:35,596 --> 00:33:37,098 [intriguing music playing] 575 00:33:37,181 --> 00:33:39,600 [Wright] I always felt funny about autographs, 576 00:33:39,684 --> 00:33:42,311 even as a recognized basketball player in college. 577 00:33:42,395 --> 00:33:44,647 At first, I didn't pay much attention to the feeling. 578 00:33:44,731 --> 00:33:47,692 I just signed my name because it was what everyone did. 579 00:33:48,359 --> 00:33:50,236 But in the early 1960s, 580 00:33:50,319 --> 00:33:53,865 I noticed that after a session of signing 50 or 60 autographs, 581 00:33:53,948 --> 00:33:57,035 I felt strange about it for two or three days. 582 00:34:00,329 --> 00:34:03,374 [Rose] The public and the media was really upset. 583 00:34:04,333 --> 00:34:05,793 And took it personal 584 00:34:05,877 --> 00:34:10,423 that he chose not to share his personal space 585 00:34:11,007 --> 00:34:12,759 and sign autographs. 586 00:34:12,842 --> 00:34:16,763 You can't let the fans own you or dictate what it is that you do. 587 00:34:17,805 --> 00:34:22,060 [Wright] I cannot imagine the value of a scribbled name on a piece of paper. 588 00:34:22,143 --> 00:34:24,312 What value can my signature possibly have, 589 00:34:24,395 --> 00:34:26,064 and why should I have to sign it? 590 00:34:26,731 --> 00:34:29,817 I give my money's worth on the playing court, period. 591 00:34:29,901 --> 00:34:32,153 I am a public property when I play. 592 00:34:32,236 --> 00:34:34,739 I'm a private property when I'm not playing. 593 00:34:34,822 --> 00:34:36,616 If I want to sign, I will, 594 00:34:36,699 --> 00:34:39,410 but no one has ever forced me to do anything. 595 00:34:39,494 --> 00:34:42,747 You either buy me as Bill Russell the man, or you don't. 596 00:34:42,830 --> 00:34:45,333 My signature isn't going to make any difference. 597 00:34:45,416 --> 00:34:49,045 And the fact that I'm a basketball player is just an accident. 598 00:34:51,255 --> 00:34:53,800 I love the fact that he was his own man. 599 00:34:53,883 --> 00:34:57,178 He decided he was going to just play the game and… 600 00:34:57,261 --> 00:35:00,306 and, uh, interact with his teammates. 601 00:35:00,389 --> 00:35:03,184 He was always in control. That's what I want to say. 602 00:35:03,267 --> 00:35:05,645 He'd rather be in a deep conversation 603 00:35:05,728 --> 00:35:08,773 or maybe shake a gentleman's hand or a lady's hand. 604 00:35:08,856 --> 00:35:09,690 That's fine. 605 00:35:09,774 --> 00:35:12,777 If you know Bill Russell don't sign autographs, don't ask him. 606 00:35:12,860 --> 00:35:15,363 He had his own convictions that he wouldn't change. 607 00:35:15,446 --> 00:35:16,614 I like that about him. 608 00:35:16,697 --> 00:35:19,659 President of the United States, he wouldn't sign an autograph. 609 00:35:19,742 --> 00:35:22,995 I went up and asked him for his autograph, and guess what he said? 610 00:35:23,496 --> 00:35:24,497 No. 611 00:35:24,580 --> 00:35:28,376 And I started laughing, like, "Yeah, that's funny." 612 00:35:28,459 --> 00:35:30,253 "Here you go. Go ahead and sign this." 613 00:35:30,336 --> 00:35:32,380 [laughs] He said no again, and he meant it. 614 00:35:33,047 --> 00:35:36,425 [Sanders] I was trying to get all the players who I had played with 615 00:35:36,509 --> 00:35:38,219 to sign their pictures, 616 00:35:38,302 --> 00:35:41,556 so I could have them as a memento or whatever, 617 00:35:41,639 --> 00:35:43,599 and Russell refused. 618 00:35:44,100 --> 00:35:45,393 [laughs] His statement was, 619 00:35:45,476 --> 00:35:48,646 "Satch, we spend a lot of time together. We go out together." 620 00:35:48,729 --> 00:35:51,023 "You know I don't sign autographs." 621 00:35:51,107 --> 00:35:54,569 I said, "I'll kill this guy. You gotta be kidding me, Russ." 622 00:35:54,652 --> 00:36:01,200 These are two of my non-autographed Bill Russell books, 623 00:36:01,284 --> 00:36:05,121 that I keep right there between H. Rap Brown and James Baldwin. 624 00:36:05,204 --> 00:36:09,375 I wouldn't have it any other way. They were personally non-autographed, 625 00:36:09,458 --> 00:36:12,879 uh, for me by, uh, Mr. Bill Russell. 626 00:36:12,962 --> 00:36:17,925 I saw him about three years ago when he was in town. [chuckles] 627 00:36:18,009 --> 00:36:21,429 He said, "Hey, Satch, what's going on?" We started talking. 628 00:36:21,512 --> 00:36:25,016 He said, "And I'm still not gonna sign an autograph!" [laughing] 629 00:36:27,018 --> 00:36:30,521 I think, in a lot of ways, my dad was ahead of his time. 630 00:36:30,605 --> 00:36:35,443 And I think if you look at our celebrity-obsessed culture today, 631 00:36:35,526 --> 00:36:39,572 you can recognize the pitfalls and perils of being a famous person. 632 00:36:39,655 --> 00:36:42,783 I think he was criticized for not playing along or going along 633 00:36:42,867 --> 00:36:44,118 and being more open, 634 00:36:44,202 --> 00:36:48,956 and he also, unlike some other stars, I don't think ever needed that. 635 00:36:49,040 --> 00:36:53,836 He was unapologetically himself at all times, 636 00:36:53,920 --> 00:36:57,798 and if you can't respect that, then you got something wrong with you. 637 00:36:59,592 --> 00:37:05,097 [Wright] 1963 through 1965, the glow had worn off basketball. 638 00:37:05,181 --> 00:37:08,226 I thought it was a child's game and said so publicly. 639 00:37:08,309 --> 00:37:12,605 How can I play basketball as a grown man in the same way I played it as a kid 640 00:37:12,688 --> 00:37:15,441 when there are so many more important things going on? 641 00:37:15,524 --> 00:37:19,570 I wanted to help change the world, and I was looking for a way to do it. 642 00:37:19,654 --> 00:37:23,741 The Black revolution was beginning, and many other tides were turning. 643 00:37:24,742 --> 00:37:27,161 You're a Black man playing this game. 644 00:37:27,245 --> 00:37:30,957 It's riddled with racism, number one. You still can't go places. 645 00:37:31,040 --> 00:37:35,586 And Black folks are catching hell. They're getting beaten, being attacked, 646 00:37:35,670 --> 00:37:38,714 and here you are playing basketball for the Boston Celtics. 647 00:37:38,798 --> 00:37:42,635 I think when you step back, you probably feel survivor's remorse. 648 00:37:42,718 --> 00:37:45,554 Like, "What am I doing playing in front of all these white people… 649 00:37:45,638 --> 00:37:47,640 -[clapping] -…having them cheer for me?" 650 00:37:47,723 --> 00:37:50,309 "And they don't want me to live in their neighborhood." 651 00:37:50,393 --> 00:37:53,020 You look at a television, you're seeing this abuse, 652 00:37:53,104 --> 00:37:55,439 and you have a heart and a sense of consciousness. 653 00:37:55,523 --> 00:37:58,985 You probably feel terrible. "Whatever I'm doing is not enough." 654 00:37:59,068 --> 00:38:01,362 [Wright] There are two societies in this country, 655 00:38:01,445 --> 00:38:03,447 and I have to recognize it. 656 00:38:03,531 --> 00:38:07,201 To see life for what it is and not go stark raving mad. 657 00:38:08,119 --> 00:38:10,746 [Goudsouzian] He gives interviews to Sports Illustrated, 658 00:38:10,830 --> 00:38:12,290 to the Saturday Evening Post, 659 00:38:12,373 --> 00:38:15,835 that speak to his emerging sense of disillusion with America. 660 00:38:15,918 --> 00:38:17,128 In these articles, 661 00:38:17,211 --> 00:38:20,089 he questions Martin Luther King's strategy of nonviolence. 662 00:38:20,172 --> 00:38:22,925 He defends Malcolm X and the Nation of Islam, 663 00:38:23,009 --> 00:38:26,095 which is anathema to most white Americans at the time. 664 00:38:26,178 --> 00:38:29,974 He says sports isn't an area of racial enlightenment. 665 00:38:30,057 --> 00:38:33,894 Sports reflects the larger racist patterns in American society. 666 00:38:33,978 --> 00:38:38,482 What happens when you're that self-aware about what you're doing? 667 00:38:39,233 --> 00:38:42,194 What does that do to your enjoyment of doing it? 668 00:38:42,278 --> 00:38:43,863 [Stoll] As Bill Russell struggled 669 00:38:43,946 --> 00:38:47,325 with his role and responsibility as a Black public athlete, 670 00:38:47,408 --> 00:38:50,161 his team was about to face a turning point. 671 00:38:50,786 --> 00:38:54,665 Coach Red Auerbach decided it was time to step down. 672 00:38:54,749 --> 00:38:58,627 The '65-'66 season would be his last as coach. 673 00:38:59,462 --> 00:39:02,423 I didn't want to go into the season, 674 00:39:02,506 --> 00:39:04,800 and then if we win it, say, "Now, I retire." 675 00:39:05,509 --> 00:39:07,470 They'd say, "Oh, you're just quitting a winner." 676 00:39:07,553 --> 00:39:10,639 I said, "I'll quit at the end of this year regardless of what happens." 677 00:39:10,723 --> 00:39:14,101 [Stoll] The question that mattered was who would take Red's place. 678 00:39:15,019 --> 00:39:18,606 Red's first choice was team captain and star, Bill Russell. 679 00:39:19,857 --> 00:39:23,277 [Auerbach] What better way to motivate Bill Russell the player 680 00:39:23,361 --> 00:39:25,363 than Bill Russell the coach? 681 00:39:26,989 --> 00:39:31,243 [Russell] I was the first guy he asked, and I told him I didn't want the job. 682 00:39:32,203 --> 00:39:36,248 [Stoll] If not Bill, then who? That decision would have to wait. 683 00:39:36,332 --> 00:39:39,043 In the meantime, there was a season to finish, 684 00:39:39,126 --> 00:39:43,297 and with Red's impending retirement, a little extra incentive to win. 685 00:39:43,381 --> 00:39:44,840 [exciting music playing] 686 00:39:44,924 --> 00:39:48,052 [Russell] We wanted to make sure, when Red retired as coach, 687 00:39:48,135 --> 00:39:50,429 that we won the championship his last year. 688 00:39:50,930 --> 00:39:54,600 We felt that was gonna be the definition of his career as a coach, 689 00:39:55,309 --> 00:39:56,894 was, "How did he finish?" 690 00:39:57,853 --> 00:40:01,982 [Stoll] Giving Red a championship send-off would depend on the postseason. 691 00:40:02,066 --> 00:40:04,860 After beating Philadelphia for the second year in a row 692 00:40:04,944 --> 00:40:07,405 and claiming the Eastern Division title… 693 00:40:07,488 --> 00:40:11,700 [commentator] Boston has beaten Philadelphia 121 to 117. 694 00:40:12,493 --> 00:40:15,371 [Stoll] …the Celtics faced the Lakers for the fifth time. 695 00:40:16,622 --> 00:40:20,668 And as often happened, the series came down to the closing seconds 696 00:40:20,751 --> 00:40:24,505 of a decisive seventh game, with the Celtics ahead by four. 697 00:40:24,588 --> 00:40:27,883 [Most] Six seconds left, and suddenly, the Lakers have a chance. 698 00:40:28,384 --> 00:40:31,679 Now it goes to Ellis. A quick jump shot, Ellis, is good! 699 00:40:31,762 --> 00:40:35,516 Four seconds left, and the lead is down to two points. 700 00:40:35,599 --> 00:40:38,727 All right, K.C. with the ball, gets surrounded. One second. 701 00:40:38,811 --> 00:40:40,438 That's it. It's all over! 702 00:40:41,105 --> 00:40:43,858 Havlicek got the pass, and he gets mobbed. 703 00:40:44,358 --> 00:40:45,609 It's all over. 704 00:40:46,360 --> 00:40:47,695 The Boston Celtics… 705 00:40:49,697 --> 00:40:54,243 beat the Los Angeles Lakers 95 to 93. 706 00:40:54,743 --> 00:40:57,913 And this crowd has surged out onto the floor. 707 00:40:57,997 --> 00:40:59,165 [heroic music playing] 708 00:40:59,248 --> 00:41:04,628 [Russell] Red and I both really wanted that game so that he could go out winning. 709 00:41:06,672 --> 00:41:10,217 [Stoll] Red planned to stay with the Celtics as the general manager, 710 00:41:11,135 --> 00:41:13,345 so he had to name his own successor. 711 00:41:15,222 --> 00:41:18,434 He knew Russell needed a coach who would inspire him 712 00:41:18,517 --> 00:41:20,686 and keep him interested in the game. 713 00:41:21,270 --> 00:41:24,231 Who better than a current or former Celtic? 714 00:41:24,315 --> 00:41:29,278 [Russell] We both made out a list, and my first choice was Frank Ramsey. 715 00:41:29,361 --> 00:41:32,907 Frank was retired down in Kentucky, and Frank could not leave. 716 00:41:32,990 --> 00:41:35,159 We went to about three or four other guys, 717 00:41:35,242 --> 00:41:37,578 and none of them were suitable to both of us. 718 00:41:39,205 --> 00:41:42,541 And he told me, "I have to hire somebody." 719 00:41:43,876 --> 00:41:47,213 He says, "I'm gonna go look outside the organization." 720 00:41:48,339 --> 00:41:49,548 [Stoll] In desperation, 721 00:41:49,632 --> 00:41:53,427 Red called Alex Hannum, the coach of the San Francisco Warriors, 722 00:41:53,511 --> 00:41:56,222 formerly the player-coach for the St. Louis Hawks, 723 00:41:56,305 --> 00:41:59,141 and an old rival Russell did not care for. 724 00:41:59,642 --> 00:42:03,229 [Russell] I says, "If you hire him, Red, I'm gonna retire with you." 725 00:42:03,312 --> 00:42:04,396 [tense music playing] 726 00:42:04,480 --> 00:42:07,983 [McSweeny] Sitting with Russell, I said, "Who's gonna coach when Red retires?" 727 00:42:08,067 --> 00:42:09,693 He said, "Alex Hannum," 728 00:42:10,361 --> 00:42:12,655 one of Russell's bitterest enemies. 729 00:42:12,738 --> 00:42:14,615 I said, "You can't play for Alex Hannum." 730 00:42:14,698 --> 00:42:16,909 "He's the one guy in the league you despise." 731 00:42:16,992 --> 00:42:22,206 I said, "Listen, for Christ's sake, you're going to coach the goddamn team." 732 00:42:22,289 --> 00:42:24,291 "You want to coach it, don't you?" "Yeah." 733 00:42:24,375 --> 00:42:26,544 "So why don't you go tell Red you'll coach the team." 734 00:42:27,753 --> 00:42:30,631 Now, about 25 minutes later, 735 00:42:30,714 --> 00:42:33,050 I'm sitting in my hotel room, 736 00:42:33,717 --> 00:42:34,885 the phone rings. 737 00:42:35,594 --> 00:42:39,723 And it's Red Auerbach, and he says, "McSweeny, you son of a bitch." 738 00:42:39,807 --> 00:42:41,600 I said, "Red, what happened?" 739 00:42:41,684 --> 00:42:43,143 Bang, the phone hangs up. 740 00:42:43,227 --> 00:42:47,064 A few minutes later, the door knocks. It's Russell. He said, "I'm the coach." 741 00:42:47,147 --> 00:42:48,023 [claps] 742 00:42:48,107 --> 00:42:52,403 I thought I was somewhere-- I just hugged him, and I kissed him, 743 00:42:52,486 --> 00:42:55,281 and I just tugged his beard. 744 00:42:55,364 --> 00:42:57,116 And… [exclaiming] 745 00:42:57,199 --> 00:42:59,535 "It's the… It's the most wonderful thing in the world." 746 00:42:59,618 --> 00:43:01,620 [thrilling music playing] 747 00:43:03,122 --> 00:43:05,666 [reporter] They had Cousy. They had Auerbach before him, 748 00:43:05,749 --> 00:43:07,376 but they didn't have the World Championship 749 00:43:07,459 --> 00:43:10,379 until they got Bill Russell, and now he's the player-coach. 750 00:43:13,215 --> 00:43:15,551 [Russell] I thought that if I could try coaching, 751 00:43:15,634 --> 00:43:19,054 it would reenergize my relationship with the game. 752 00:43:19,555 --> 00:43:22,266 It's basically what he should have gotten 753 00:43:23,183 --> 00:43:24,810 based on what he had done. 754 00:43:26,687 --> 00:43:29,773 Here he is, the new coach of the Celtics. The best to you. 755 00:43:29,857 --> 00:43:32,276 -Thank you. -[applause] 756 00:43:32,359 --> 00:43:35,571 [reporter] Bill, are you gonna be a carbon copy of Red Auerbach, 757 00:43:35,654 --> 00:43:37,489 or will you be your own coach? 758 00:43:37,573 --> 00:43:40,367 Nobody could be a carbon copy of Red Auerbach. 759 00:43:41,035 --> 00:43:43,037 [all laughing] 760 00:43:44,830 --> 00:43:47,625 I'll have to do it my way. I'm a brick head too. 761 00:43:48,459 --> 00:43:52,004 That's where I'll follow Red. I'll be a hardhead just like he is. 762 00:43:52,838 --> 00:43:54,757 [somber music playing] 763 00:43:55,341 --> 00:43:58,594 [Stoll] At the Celtics' annual end-of-season breakup dinner, 764 00:43:58,677 --> 00:44:01,221 Russell signaled that his role might have changed, 765 00:44:01,305 --> 00:44:05,392 but his feelings and expectations for his teammates remained the same. 766 00:44:06,393 --> 00:44:09,313 [Wright] I expect a lot out of this team next season. 767 00:44:09,396 --> 00:44:13,233 I've never been associated with a team with more heart than this one. 768 00:44:13,317 --> 00:44:16,987 I don't get close to many people, but you guys made me love you. 769 00:44:17,071 --> 00:44:20,032 You treated me nicer than I've been treated in my life. 770 00:44:20,115 --> 00:44:22,242 You guys are really my family. 771 00:44:22,326 --> 00:44:24,995 The Celtics are more than a name or a team. 772 00:44:25,079 --> 00:44:26,622 They are a way of life. 773 00:44:27,289 --> 00:44:30,376 [Stoll] The announcement was momentous for the Celtics, 774 00:44:30,459 --> 00:44:33,462 for all of sports, and, really, for the nation. 775 00:44:33,545 --> 00:44:35,631 Russell would be the first Black head coach 776 00:44:35,714 --> 00:44:38,717 of any professional team in North America. 777 00:44:38,801 --> 00:44:41,762 But the press wasn't quite sure what to make of it. 778 00:44:45,974 --> 00:44:51,146 [reporter] Can you do the job impartially, without any racial prejudice in reverse? 779 00:44:51,939 --> 00:44:52,856 Yes. 780 00:44:54,692 --> 00:44:56,026 [tense music playing] 781 00:44:56,110 --> 00:44:57,695 [reporter 2] Now, you are, of course, 782 00:44:57,778 --> 00:45:01,407 the first Negro to occupy a major coaching position. 783 00:45:01,490 --> 00:45:03,951 Do you feel it puts extra pressure on you? 784 00:45:04,034 --> 00:45:07,663 No, not at all. Other people put more emphasis on it than I do 785 00:45:07,746 --> 00:45:12,292 because this is just, I think, a natural thing that I would get the job 786 00:45:12,376 --> 00:45:13,711 or be offered the job. 787 00:45:15,045 --> 00:45:18,549 [George] Russell becoming the coach of the Celtics, a team that has won 788 00:45:18,632 --> 00:45:20,175 umpteen titles already, 789 00:45:20,259 --> 00:45:23,887 is a major event in American history, in terms of American sporting history. 790 00:45:25,305 --> 00:45:26,932 [Monroe] I remember when I heard 791 00:45:27,015 --> 00:45:29,852 that Bill Russell was gonna be the coach of the Celtics. 792 00:45:29,935 --> 00:45:32,604 I was very, very happy about that. 793 00:45:32,688 --> 00:45:38,110 And, you know, we're just talking about just five years from the quota system. 794 00:45:38,610 --> 00:45:42,030 [Edwards] He became not just the face of the Celtics. 795 00:45:42,114 --> 00:45:45,033 He became the part of the front office 796 00:45:45,117 --> 00:45:47,786 that is most visible to the rest of the world. 797 00:45:49,204 --> 00:45:51,331 [Curry] I can't imagine what that's like, 798 00:45:51,415 --> 00:45:55,335 trying to be great at both roles because they're so different 799 00:45:55,419 --> 00:45:58,130 and require so much energy and perspective and thought. 800 00:45:58,213 --> 00:46:00,883 So he's a better man than me. 801 00:46:03,969 --> 00:46:06,805 [Stoll] Russell and the Celtics started the season strong, 802 00:46:06,889 --> 00:46:09,266 winning ten of their first 12 games. 803 00:46:12,519 --> 00:46:14,605 But more than any wins or losses, 804 00:46:14,688 --> 00:46:17,733 one event deeply impacted Coach Bill Russell. 805 00:46:18,400 --> 00:46:21,820 When the Celtics played an exhibition game in Louisiana, 806 00:46:21,904 --> 00:46:25,991 Bill's father brought his grandfather to his first basketball game. 807 00:46:26,658 --> 00:46:30,078 [Wright] Mr. Charlie came into the dressing room with the old man. 808 00:46:30,162 --> 00:46:33,248 After a few minutes, panic shot through both of us. 809 00:46:33,332 --> 00:46:37,002 The old man was crying. I thought he was having a heart attack. 810 00:46:37,711 --> 00:46:40,339 Then we both saw that he was not in pain. 811 00:46:40,839 --> 00:46:42,841 He was staring as if stunned, 812 00:46:42,925 --> 00:46:47,721 transfixed by the sight of Sam Jones and John Havlicek in the shower nearby. 813 00:46:49,139 --> 00:46:52,059 My two teammates were busily lathering up and talking, 814 00:46:52,142 --> 00:46:54,228 oblivious to the old man's emotion. 815 00:46:55,813 --> 00:46:59,149 The old man looked up at us and made a slow pronouncement. 816 00:47:00,734 --> 00:47:02,653 "I never thought I'd live to see the day 817 00:47:02,736 --> 00:47:06,323 when water would run off of a Black man onto a white man." 818 00:47:06,406 --> 00:47:08,033 He kept shaking his head. 819 00:47:08,700 --> 00:47:12,454 "You know, I can tell those two men like each other." 820 00:47:13,997 --> 00:47:17,251 [reporter] You're in a position of taking over for the first time. 821 00:47:17,334 --> 00:47:20,796 A long string of victories. Do you want to make any predictions? 822 00:47:20,879 --> 00:47:24,299 If we don't have any key injuries, I think we'll go all the way. 823 00:47:25,342 --> 00:47:27,344 [spectators cheering] 824 00:47:30,514 --> 00:47:34,434 He may have taken on more than he was ready to at that point. 825 00:47:34,518 --> 00:47:37,604 He's playing an average of about 45 minutes a game 826 00:47:37,688 --> 00:47:40,065 as well as coaching 827 00:47:40,148 --> 00:47:43,819 and making sure we get to the spots we had to get to, 828 00:47:43,902 --> 00:47:45,696 that the offense was running right, 829 00:47:45,779 --> 00:47:48,240 and the defense was where it's supposed to be. 830 00:47:49,032 --> 00:47:52,035 [George] I bet you when he took on the job, he didn't realize 831 00:47:52,911 --> 00:47:57,416 how much more it would take out of him to do that. 832 00:47:57,499 --> 00:48:02,296 And it just happened to be that was the year that Wilt finally got it together 833 00:48:02,379 --> 00:48:04,131 and had a tremendous squad in Philly. 834 00:48:04,214 --> 00:48:06,216 [intense music playing] 835 00:48:08,719 --> 00:48:13,724 [man] Official pregame program, just 35. The official lineup in the program. 836 00:48:15,058 --> 00:48:19,021 Wilt Chamberlain, read all about it in the official program lineup. 837 00:48:19,104 --> 00:48:21,857 [Stoll] Over the last two years, the 76ers had evolved 838 00:48:21,940 --> 00:48:24,735 from a team with promise into a powerhouse. 839 00:48:28,822 --> 00:48:30,908 ["Twist and Shout" playing on speaker] 840 00:48:30,991 --> 00:48:33,493 [Stoll] They boasted the best record in the NBA, 841 00:48:34,244 --> 00:48:37,497 and Wilt finally found a team he could bond with. 842 00:48:37,581 --> 00:48:39,625 Rejection's able to hurt you. 843 00:48:39,708 --> 00:48:41,752 [reporter] In the past ten years, the Celtics have won 844 00:48:41,835 --> 00:48:43,670 nine of ten World Championships. 845 00:48:43,754 --> 00:48:46,715 Last year, the 76ers were the "almost team" of the NBA. 846 00:48:46,798 --> 00:48:49,384 The past cries out, "Beat Boston." 847 00:48:49,468 --> 00:48:50,469 [dramatic music playing] 848 00:48:50,552 --> 00:48:53,513 [Most] Back out to Greer. Greer wants to shoot. He does. It's good. 849 00:48:54,139 --> 00:48:56,767 Boy, I tell you, these two clubs want at each other. 850 00:48:58,393 --> 00:49:01,063 Greer on the left. He fires. It is no good. 851 00:49:01,146 --> 00:49:04,983 The rebound by Chamberlain. Lays it in, and he was fouled on the play. 852 00:49:05,651 --> 00:49:10,280 [Stoll] The Sixers dominated the first three games in the 1967 playoff series. 853 00:49:10,364 --> 00:49:11,823 [spectators cheering] 854 00:49:11,907 --> 00:49:14,868 Wilt, now a veteran, had adjusted his game, 855 00:49:14,952 --> 00:49:17,746 passing more and committing to team defense. 856 00:49:24,378 --> 00:49:26,338 [commentator] Beautiful block, Chamberlain! 857 00:49:26,421 --> 00:49:27,881 Beautiful block, Chamberlain. 858 00:49:28,465 --> 00:49:31,718 [reporter] In his first year as player-coach in the NBA, 859 00:49:31,802 --> 00:49:34,846 Russell inherited a solid organization, but it's leaking. 860 00:49:34,930 --> 00:49:36,932 [cheering] 861 00:49:37,891 --> 00:49:44,398 Went to the Garden, and all the ugly fans and the malicious attitude that they had. 862 00:49:44,481 --> 00:49:47,150 It was not competition. It was confrontation. 863 00:49:47,734 --> 00:49:49,361 [spectators booing] 864 00:49:50,112 --> 00:49:52,155 [commentator] A fan joins the melee. 865 00:49:54,408 --> 00:49:57,285 [Stoll] The Celtics managed to win game four in Boston, 866 00:49:57,369 --> 00:49:59,204 only to return to Philly, 867 00:49:59,287 --> 00:50:02,791 where the fans were demanding the end of the Celtics dynasty. 868 00:50:02,874 --> 00:50:04,084 [intense music playing] 869 00:50:04,167 --> 00:50:05,919 [Most] Walker drives, lays it in. 870 00:50:06,003 --> 00:50:09,297 This has been, I mean, just a tremendous ball club all year. 871 00:50:09,381 --> 00:50:11,967 To Greer, he's being chased. He lays it in. 872 00:50:14,720 --> 00:50:17,014 Philadelphia fans were chanting, 873 00:50:17,097 --> 00:50:20,559 "The Celtics are dead. The Celtics are dead. Finally dead." 874 00:50:25,147 --> 00:50:28,066 [commentator] Bill Russell watches a dynasty crumble around him. 875 00:50:28,150 --> 00:50:32,779 [fans chanting] Five, four, three, two, one! 876 00:50:32,863 --> 00:50:35,032 [cheering] 877 00:50:39,453 --> 00:50:43,457 [Wright] Wilt and the Philadelphia 76ers beat us because they were better. 878 00:50:43,540 --> 00:50:44,958 [melancholy music playing] 879 00:50:45,042 --> 00:50:47,002 They almost ran us off the court, 880 00:50:47,711 --> 00:50:50,714 and I got an instant taste of the loser syndrome. 881 00:50:52,174 --> 00:50:54,885 Though the Celtics had run off an unprecedented string 882 00:50:54,968 --> 00:50:59,014 of eight consecutive championships, the fans in Boston hooted me. 883 00:50:59,097 --> 00:51:01,016 "All washed up, huh?" 884 00:51:01,099 --> 00:51:04,311 "I knew it couldn't last. You guys don't have it anymore." 885 00:51:04,936 --> 00:51:06,480 I had to blink my eyes. 886 00:51:09,232 --> 00:51:12,194 [Stoll] The Sixers went on to win the NBA Finals that year, 887 00:51:13,612 --> 00:51:15,697 giving Wilt his first championship. 888 00:51:17,199 --> 00:51:21,369 Meanwhile, in Boston, the postmortems on the Celtics' bitter defeat 889 00:51:21,453 --> 00:51:23,163 focused on one man. 890 00:51:24,456 --> 00:51:26,541 [Sanders] We had gotten in the habit of winning, 891 00:51:26,625 --> 00:51:30,712 and as long as we were able to rely on Russell as the anchor… 892 00:51:30,796 --> 00:51:33,840 [chuckles] …we thought that we would win 'em all. 893 00:51:33,924 --> 00:51:35,550 Russ, being a man of pride, 894 00:51:35,634 --> 00:51:37,844 was really hurt 895 00:51:37,928 --> 00:51:40,472 over the fact that we did not win. 896 00:51:41,139 --> 00:51:42,766 And he was embarrassed. 897 00:51:42,849 --> 00:51:45,977 He was very quiet, didn't want to talk about the season at all. 898 00:51:46,061 --> 00:51:48,271 That was the kind of guy he was. 899 00:51:48,355 --> 00:51:51,274 He said, "Hey, we'll see what happens next year." 900 00:51:52,609 --> 00:51:53,985 In case you haven't noticed 901 00:51:54,069 --> 00:51:56,613 with all of the excitement of the World Series, 902 00:51:56,696 --> 00:52:00,033 the National Basketball Association is about to start its season 903 00:52:00,117 --> 00:52:01,576 on Saturday night. 904 00:52:01,660 --> 00:52:02,994 Here at the Boston Garden, 905 00:52:03,078 --> 00:52:05,455 all of the veterans will be back for the Celts, 906 00:52:05,539 --> 00:52:08,375 and they'll be trying once again to get that crown back 907 00:52:08,458 --> 00:52:11,253 that the Philadelphia 76ers took away from them. 908 00:52:11,878 --> 00:52:13,547 I never made a prediction before. 909 00:52:13,630 --> 00:52:16,758 All the years I was here, they'd say, "How you gonna do?" 910 00:52:16,842 --> 00:52:19,678 I'd say, "I don't know. I don't have anything to say." 911 00:52:19,761 --> 00:52:22,139 Last year, during the playoffs, they said, "How you gonna do?" 912 00:52:22,222 --> 00:52:24,933 I said, "We're going to win it," and we didn't. 913 00:52:25,016 --> 00:52:28,812 So I'm not going to say anything else anymore, ever. 914 00:52:28,895 --> 00:52:31,189 [laughing] 915 00:52:32,399 --> 00:52:35,610 [Stoll] Russell faced a dual threat his second season as coach. 916 00:52:36,444 --> 00:52:39,865 One was to prove he could bring his team back to the championship 917 00:52:39,948 --> 00:52:42,450 after their loss to the Philadelphia 76ers. 918 00:52:44,411 --> 00:52:47,622 The other would grow out of a brutal war that would tear America 919 00:52:47,706 --> 00:52:49,332 and the sports world apart. 920 00:52:51,126 --> 00:52:55,046 [Wright] I developed strong convictions about Vietnam very early in the war. 921 00:52:55,714 --> 00:52:58,383 It seemed to me a continuation of the colonial wars 922 00:52:58,466 --> 00:53:02,262 about which, as a Black man who opposed the colonies in Africa, 923 00:53:02,345 --> 00:53:03,388 I felt sensitive. 924 00:53:04,431 --> 00:53:06,474 In effect, the Vietnamese were saying 925 00:53:06,558 --> 00:53:09,519 they didn't want Occidentals running their country. 926 00:53:10,270 --> 00:53:12,981 We Americans didn't see it that way, of course. 927 00:53:13,064 --> 00:53:15,609 As an empire, we insisted on defining the war 928 00:53:15,692 --> 00:53:18,570 as a matter of communism versus democracy. 929 00:53:19,321 --> 00:53:23,200 The bombs in Vietnam explode at home. 930 00:53:23,283 --> 00:53:26,786 They destroy the dream and possibility 931 00:53:26,870 --> 00:53:28,371 for a decent America. 932 00:53:28,455 --> 00:53:32,542 [chanting] Hey, hey, LBJ, how many kids did you kill today? 933 00:53:32,626 --> 00:53:34,753 The fucking commies run this place! 934 00:53:34,836 --> 00:53:36,046 [chanting indistinctly] 935 00:53:36,755 --> 00:53:41,051 [Stoll] The war had sparked anger and bitterness and polarized the nation. 936 00:53:41,134 --> 00:53:43,470 -[man] What do we want? -[all] Peace. 937 00:53:43,553 --> 00:53:45,513 -[man] When do we get it? -[all] Now. 938 00:53:45,597 --> 00:53:47,265 [clamoring] 939 00:53:50,560 --> 00:53:52,354 [Stoll] Among those opposed to the fight 940 00:53:52,437 --> 00:53:55,774 was 25-year-old heavyweight champion Cassius Clay, 941 00:53:55,857 --> 00:53:59,611 who had converted to Islam and taken the name Muhammad Ali. 942 00:53:59,694 --> 00:54:02,489 Ali argued that his religious and ethical convictions 943 00:54:02,572 --> 00:54:05,700 prevented him from fighting and killing people he didn't know. 944 00:54:05,784 --> 00:54:07,869 [Muhammad Ali] I don't think I should go to Vietnam 945 00:54:07,953 --> 00:54:10,372 and shoot people that never called me "nigger," 946 00:54:10,455 --> 00:54:13,667 never lynched me, never put dogs on me, never raped my mama. 947 00:54:13,750 --> 00:54:16,378 [Stoll] Ali was facing the loss of his title, 948 00:54:16,461 --> 00:54:17,837 federal prosecution, 949 00:54:17,921 --> 00:54:19,631 a five-year prison sentence, 950 00:54:19,714 --> 00:54:21,508 and a $10,000 fine. 951 00:54:22,425 --> 00:54:24,636 What Muhammad Ali was doing 952 00:54:25,262 --> 00:54:28,598 could bring an end to his career as a boxer. 953 00:54:28,682 --> 00:54:34,187 He didn't mind losing millions of dollars. He was certainly very courageous. 954 00:54:34,271 --> 00:54:36,982 He made us proud to be Black athletes 955 00:54:37,065 --> 00:54:40,235 because he was showing me, through his actions, 956 00:54:40,735 --> 00:54:42,028 what was important. 957 00:54:42,112 --> 00:54:44,322 I don't know too many individual athletes 958 00:54:44,406 --> 00:54:47,367 who would take the kind of course that he's taking. 959 00:54:47,450 --> 00:54:52,205 This takes a tremendous amount of willpower and fortitude, etc. 960 00:54:52,289 --> 00:54:53,164 A real belief. 961 00:54:56,001 --> 00:54:59,629 The Cleveland Summit was basically a response by Black athletes 962 00:54:59,713 --> 00:55:03,383 to the fact that Ali was refusing to go into the US military. 963 00:55:03,466 --> 00:55:06,553 They wanted to show their support for their brother. 964 00:55:07,137 --> 00:55:11,099 [Wright] We never went to Cleveland to persuade Muhammad to join the Army. 965 00:55:11,182 --> 00:55:13,018 We went to offer him our help. 966 00:55:13,560 --> 00:55:16,354 There's nothing that says the heavyweight champion of the world 967 00:55:16,438 --> 00:55:21,359 must belong to a particular religion or not be a conscientious objector to war. 968 00:55:23,486 --> 00:55:27,032 We came out of friendship to Muhammad Ali. 969 00:55:28,700 --> 00:55:32,329 And I know that we wanted to find out from him… 970 00:55:32,954 --> 00:55:36,291 You read the papers, you see on television, all this kind of stuff. 971 00:55:36,374 --> 00:55:37,542 …what is going on. 972 00:55:37,625 --> 00:55:42,047 He stood up under many very difficult questions, 973 00:55:42,130 --> 00:55:45,633 and, in essence, gentlemen, convinced us 974 00:55:45,717 --> 00:55:49,179 that it is, basically, a religious matter with him. 975 00:55:49,262 --> 00:55:51,181 He believes in his religion 976 00:55:51,264 --> 00:55:53,975 and that his stand is based wholly on that. 977 00:55:54,517 --> 00:55:56,728 The things that he has gone through 978 00:55:57,354 --> 00:56:00,648 has had to make him a very lonely man. 979 00:56:03,568 --> 00:56:06,321 This is the famous picture. 980 00:56:06,404 --> 00:56:12,660 Probably one of the most iconic photos of the 20th century. 981 00:56:12,744 --> 00:56:15,997 Seeing these Black men, these stars, 982 00:56:16,081 --> 00:56:19,876 step out of their role as stars for the Cleveland Browns, 983 00:56:19,959 --> 00:56:23,004 or stars for the Celtics, or stars for the Packers, 984 00:56:23,088 --> 00:56:25,215 come out and say, "No, we're Black men first." 985 00:56:25,298 --> 00:56:28,218 They felt a sense of accountability and responsibility 986 00:56:28,301 --> 00:56:31,346 to leveraging their platform, their voice, 987 00:56:31,429 --> 00:56:35,016 their wants and desires for the changes that need to be made in this country, 988 00:56:35,100 --> 00:56:37,143 and what it means to be a Black athlete even. 989 00:56:37,227 --> 00:56:39,145 I think what Bill and I had in common 990 00:56:39,229 --> 00:56:42,482 is that we refused to give up our individuality 991 00:56:42,565 --> 00:56:45,443 and deal with prejudice 992 00:56:46,694 --> 00:56:48,113 and discrimination 993 00:56:49,197 --> 00:56:51,783 and unfair practices. 994 00:56:51,866 --> 00:56:53,284 If you're a star, 995 00:56:53,368 --> 00:56:57,163 and if you say the right things and act the right way, 996 00:56:57,247 --> 00:56:58,832 you'll make some money. 997 00:56:58,915 --> 00:57:02,293 And if you're gonna be an activist, you have to give that up. 998 00:57:02,377 --> 00:57:04,254 Bill was a special individual. 999 00:57:04,337 --> 00:57:06,965 He, uh, could be counted on 1000 00:57:07,799 --> 00:57:12,095 to challenge things that were not correct. 1001 00:57:12,887 --> 00:57:15,723 [Edwards] Bill Russell captured the essence, 1002 00:57:15,807 --> 00:57:21,479 the soul and heart of what Ali was saying. 1003 00:57:21,563 --> 00:57:23,648 When a reporter asked Bill, 1004 00:57:25,191 --> 00:57:29,612 "What is going to happen to Muhammad Ali?" 1005 00:57:29,696 --> 00:57:31,865 Bill's response was, 1006 00:57:33,783 --> 00:57:37,120 "I'm not worried about Muhammad Ali." 1007 00:57:37,203 --> 00:57:39,622 "He's done something I haven't even been able to, 1008 00:57:39,706 --> 00:57:42,834 to find something I'm so committed to as a matter of faith, 1009 00:57:42,917 --> 00:57:44,836 I'm willing to put my life on the line." 1010 00:57:44,919 --> 00:57:48,548 "I'm not worried about Ali. I'm worried about the rest of us." 1011 00:57:48,631 --> 00:57:51,217 [reporter] This is a CBS News special report. 1012 00:57:51,301 --> 00:57:53,511 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., 1013 00:57:53,595 --> 00:57:56,473 civil rights leader and Nobel Prize winner, 1014 00:57:56,556 --> 00:57:59,267 was shot and killed tonight in Memphis, Tennessee. 1015 00:57:59,350 --> 00:58:03,521 He was standing on the balcony of the Lorraine Hotel, on the second floor, 1016 00:58:03,605 --> 00:58:06,107 when a single shot came from across the street. 1017 00:58:06,191 --> 00:58:08,193 It apparently hit him in the neck. 1018 00:58:08,276 --> 00:58:11,613 The dream of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. 1019 00:58:12,489 --> 00:58:14,199 has not died with him. 1020 00:58:15,992 --> 00:58:19,412 America shall not be ruled by the bullet 1021 00:58:19,496 --> 00:58:24,250 but only by the ballot of free and of just men. 1022 00:58:25,418 --> 00:58:29,214 I think everybody on every team, regardless of race or religion 1023 00:58:29,297 --> 00:58:30,131 or whatever, 1024 00:58:31,674 --> 00:58:32,509 felt a loss. 1025 00:58:33,593 --> 00:58:35,553 And it has impact on all of us. 1026 00:58:37,639 --> 00:58:41,351 [reporter] Riots broke out in more than 150 American cities. 1027 00:58:41,935 --> 00:58:46,314 A rampage of arson and looting unmatched in the history of this nation. 1028 00:58:46,397 --> 00:58:48,900 [sirens wailing] 1029 00:58:48,983 --> 00:58:53,404 [Johnson] It is the fiber and the fabric of the republic that's being tested. 1030 00:58:57,909 --> 00:58:59,410 [somber music playing] 1031 00:58:59,494 --> 00:59:03,206 [Stoll] Grief and anger exploded in cities across the country. 1032 00:59:03,831 --> 00:59:06,292 In Philadelphia, the Celtics were scheduled 1033 00:59:06,376 --> 00:59:09,128 to play the first game of the Eastern Division finals 1034 00:59:09,212 --> 00:59:11,422 against the 76ers the following day. 1035 00:59:12,131 --> 00:59:17,637 No longer are we going to stand around and wait while our leaders are killed. 1036 00:59:19,180 --> 00:59:21,683 [Wright] I know I was in a state of shock all day. 1037 00:59:22,308 --> 00:59:26,854 I just sat around for four or five hours before I could speak of anything else. 1038 00:59:27,480 --> 00:59:30,900 Then I thought maybe I shouldn't play. I called Wilt. 1039 00:59:31,859 --> 00:59:36,155 Even athletes of the stature, of the celebrity 1040 00:59:37,031 --> 00:59:39,909 of Bill Russell and Wilt Chamberlain 1041 00:59:40,535 --> 00:59:45,206 couldn't get the NBA to say, "In honor of this great man, 1042 00:59:45,290 --> 00:59:47,500 we're gonna pause. We're not gonna play the game." 1043 00:59:48,251 --> 00:59:50,753 [Stoll] With the stadium already filling with fans, 1044 00:59:51,254 --> 00:59:53,840 Chamberlain demanded a vote in the locker room 1045 00:59:53,923 --> 00:59:56,175 whether they wanted to play or not. 1046 00:59:58,678 --> 01:00:03,016 [Wright] We agreed it wouldn't be good to call off the game at that late date. 1047 01:00:03,099 --> 01:00:06,853 You got 10,000 to 12,000 people, and to call it off could be trouble. 1048 01:00:08,938 --> 01:00:11,816 [Stoll] In the end, the two teams decided to play. 1049 01:00:14,319 --> 01:00:17,614 Fans watched a stoic but unfocused performance, 1050 01:00:19,157 --> 01:00:22,577 even by the two great rivals, Russell and Chamberlain. 1051 01:00:22,660 --> 01:00:24,662 [somber music continues playing] 1052 01:00:28,750 --> 01:00:30,043 [whistle blowing] 1053 01:00:37,675 --> 01:00:39,135 There's an eerie atmosphere. 1054 01:00:39,218 --> 01:00:42,055 There isn't the same sense of joy and thrill 1055 01:00:42,138 --> 01:00:44,307 that's associated with playoff basketball. 1056 01:00:45,975 --> 01:00:49,520 [Stoll] The Celtics managed to win 127 to 118. 1057 01:00:53,191 --> 01:00:56,152 [Stoll] Four days later, King was laid to rest in Atlanta. 1058 01:00:56,235 --> 01:00:57,570 ["If I Can Help Somebody" playing] 1059 01:00:57,654 --> 01:01:00,948 King's funeral was attended by luminaries from politics, 1060 01:01:01,032 --> 01:01:04,619 the entertainment industry, and superstars of the NBA. 1061 01:01:05,411 --> 01:01:08,247 Many feared that his dream had died with him. 1062 01:01:10,041 --> 01:01:12,960 [Wright] I had a great deal of respect for Dr. King. 1063 01:01:13,044 --> 01:01:15,004 He was the last buffer, you know. 1064 01:01:15,505 --> 01:01:17,548 Stuff I had said ten years ago, 1065 01:01:17,632 --> 01:01:20,385 that everybody dismissed as "an angry Negro talking," 1066 01:01:20,468 --> 01:01:23,805 is coming out today, and that's what is so sad. 1067 01:01:25,056 --> 01:01:27,850 Nothing constructive ever comes out of violence. 1068 01:01:27,934 --> 01:01:30,436 Here's a man that believed in nonviolence, 1069 01:01:30,520 --> 01:01:32,271 and someone cuts him down. 1070 01:01:32,980 --> 01:01:34,273 It's a real tragedy. 1071 01:01:35,316 --> 01:01:38,569 [Stoll] On April 10th, the day after King's funeral, 1072 01:01:38,653 --> 01:01:41,447 the playoff series resumed at Boston Garden. 1073 01:01:42,573 --> 01:01:44,575 [dramatic music playing] 1074 01:01:52,417 --> 01:01:54,419 [spectators cheering] 1075 01:02:01,509 --> 01:02:05,263 [Stoll] The 76ers outplayed and outscored their opponents, 1076 01:02:05,346 --> 01:02:08,516 and the Celtics lost 115 to 106. 1077 01:02:09,934 --> 01:02:12,520 Philadelphia won the next two games as well. 1078 01:02:15,189 --> 01:02:18,151 No team, not even the Celtics, had ever recovered 1079 01:02:18,234 --> 01:02:20,236 from a three-to-one deficit in a series. 1080 01:02:23,865 --> 01:02:27,201 The fat lady hasn't sung, yet. 1081 01:02:28,327 --> 01:02:31,205 And until the fat lady starts singing, it's not over. 1082 01:02:32,165 --> 01:02:34,167 [dramatic music playing] 1083 01:02:37,420 --> 01:02:40,173 [Stoll] The Celtics came roaring back in game five, 1084 01:02:40,256 --> 01:02:43,301 pummeling Philadelphia 122 to 104. 1085 01:02:46,512 --> 01:02:48,306 Now, the momentum had shifted, 1086 01:02:48,389 --> 01:02:50,933 and the Celtics won the next game at the Garden. 1087 01:02:56,981 --> 01:03:00,193 With relentless blocking and solid coaching by Russell, 1088 01:03:00,276 --> 01:03:02,779 they took the series finale in Philadelphia 1089 01:03:02,862 --> 01:03:04,989 to prove they were still champions. 1090 01:03:05,656 --> 01:03:08,576 Russell called it his most satisfying victory. 1091 01:03:09,076 --> 01:03:12,455 The Celtics would go on to beat the Lakers in the Finals, 1092 01:03:12,538 --> 01:03:16,584 Russell's tenth championship, and his first as head coach. 1093 01:03:17,084 --> 01:03:19,670 [reporter] Bill Russell, congratulations on a great game and season. 1094 01:03:19,754 --> 01:03:20,588 [Russell] Thank you. 1095 01:03:20,671 --> 01:03:25,384 Did operating as the coach and player take any more out of you this season 1096 01:03:25,468 --> 01:03:26,761 than in past seasons? 1097 01:03:26,844 --> 01:03:27,845 I don't think so. 1098 01:03:27,929 --> 01:03:29,931 [players chatting indistinctly] 1099 01:03:30,431 --> 01:03:32,141 [reporter] Do you think the new Black athlete 1100 01:03:32,225 --> 01:03:35,269 can collectively bring about any social or political change? 1101 01:03:35,353 --> 01:03:37,897 I can say things that I did… I said over the years, 1102 01:03:37,980 --> 01:03:41,484 it's because I had a position of power, and that I was very good. 1103 01:03:42,401 --> 01:03:45,363 But conversely, that made me have more to lose, 1104 01:03:46,697 --> 01:03:49,534 in the sense of what they were talking about. 1105 01:03:49,617 --> 01:03:53,037 But it was nothing to lose to me because if I don't have my manhood, 1106 01:03:53,120 --> 01:03:54,288 I don't have anything. 1107 01:03:54,372 --> 01:03:57,041 Athletes are products rather than people. 1108 01:03:57,542 --> 01:03:59,627 ["Use Me" by Bill Withers playing] 1109 01:04:01,254 --> 01:04:05,007 I've been constantly harassed. I've been in solitary confinement 1110 01:04:05,091 --> 01:04:07,176 for approximately three months now. 1111 01:04:07,260 --> 01:04:09,178 -What are you? -[all] Black Panthers! 1112 01:04:10,638 --> 01:04:12,765 Nothing's more important than stopping fascism, 1113 01:04:12,849 --> 01:04:14,350 because fascism will stop us all. 1114 01:04:17,812 --> 01:04:20,857 ♪ Talkin' 'bout you usin' people ♪ 1115 01:04:20,940 --> 01:04:23,901 ♪ It all depends on what you do ♪ 1116 01:04:23,985 --> 01:04:26,612 ♪ It ain't too bad The way you're usin' me ♪ 1117 01:04:26,696 --> 01:04:29,031 ♪ 'Cause I sure am usin' you to do… ♪ 1118 01:04:29,115 --> 01:04:31,367 [Russell] I tell you, I really feel totally inadequate. 1119 01:04:35,121 --> 01:04:38,457 Because after I've seen what the people are going through, 1120 01:04:39,834 --> 01:04:42,587 that my contribution is very, very minute. 1121 01:04:44,797 --> 01:04:50,136 [Sanders] Russ had threatened to retire the last three, four years. 1122 01:04:50,219 --> 01:04:53,389 [laughs] I said, "Russ, you can't retire, man." 1123 01:04:53,472 --> 01:04:59,270 I said, "We need you to keep playing so that we can keep winning championships 1124 01:04:59,353 --> 01:05:03,566 and keep those championship checks coming in, okay?" 1125 01:05:03,649 --> 01:05:05,276 "We can't win without you." 1126 01:05:06,110 --> 01:05:08,446 [Stoll] On March 15th 1969, 1127 01:05:08,529 --> 01:05:11,073 during a game against the Baltimore Bullets, 1128 01:05:11,157 --> 01:05:14,118 the Celtics tied the score in the final seconds. 1129 01:05:15,119 --> 01:05:18,748 After gaining possession, Coach Russell called a timeout. 1130 01:05:19,707 --> 01:05:23,336 [Wright] I was yelling, "We got them by the gym shoes! Let's kill 'em!" 1131 01:05:24,295 --> 01:05:27,548 Suddenly, I burst out laughing, and I couldn't stop. 1132 01:05:27,632 --> 01:05:29,592 The players thought I was crazy. 1133 01:05:29,675 --> 01:05:31,761 I was saying, "This is really something." 1134 01:05:31,844 --> 01:05:34,764 "Here I am, a grown man running around seminude 1135 01:05:34,847 --> 01:05:37,433 in front of thousands of people, playing a game 1136 01:05:37,516 --> 01:05:39,310 and yelling about killing people." 1137 01:05:39,393 --> 01:05:41,354 [unsettling music playing] 1138 01:05:42,563 --> 01:05:46,484 [Wright] I looked at my teammates as if I had really said something profound. 1139 01:05:46,984 --> 01:05:50,196 They looked back blankly as if I hadn't said anything. 1140 01:05:50,821 --> 01:05:52,990 We threw the ball away, and the Bullets won. 1141 01:05:53,783 --> 01:05:56,577 In all my years of laughs in pro basketball, 1142 01:05:56,661 --> 01:05:58,829 I had never mocked the game itself. 1143 01:05:59,705 --> 01:06:01,791 [melancholy music playing] 1144 01:06:01,874 --> 01:06:04,293 You can't give out what a game requires 1145 01:06:04,377 --> 01:06:07,546 if you start focusing on its ridiculous aspects. 1146 01:06:08,631 --> 01:06:12,593 I already knew that there are no final victories in sports. 1147 01:06:12,677 --> 01:06:14,136 The games just keep going, 1148 01:06:14,220 --> 01:06:17,181 and the only final victory you can have is to walk away 1149 01:06:17,264 --> 01:06:19,141 from that last game intact. 1150 01:06:19,725 --> 01:06:22,269 I told myself, and no one else, 1151 01:06:22,853 --> 01:06:24,897 that I was playing my last season. 1152 01:06:26,273 --> 01:06:28,818 [Stoll] It was a brutal season for the Celtics, 1153 01:06:28,901 --> 01:06:30,861 who, in the eyes of the rest of the league, 1154 01:06:30,945 --> 01:06:32,905 seemed to be losing their edge. 1155 01:06:33,864 --> 01:06:37,743 [Wright] The spells of inspired basketball became less frequent. 1156 01:06:37,827 --> 01:06:42,373 I knew that sometimes this happened because I was coaching as well as playing, 1157 01:06:42,456 --> 01:06:45,418 but a lot of it was that I just couldn't keep up. 1158 01:06:46,711 --> 01:06:49,213 [Frazier] Russell was obviously in his twilight. 1159 01:06:49,296 --> 01:06:52,633 Sam Jones, Satch Sanders were up in age, you know. 1160 01:06:52,717 --> 01:06:54,760 We used to call them geriatric. [laughs] 1161 01:06:55,553 --> 01:06:59,473 When you start the game, these guys got bandages all over their knees. 1162 01:06:59,557 --> 01:07:01,225 They look like they're from the '40s. 1163 01:07:01,308 --> 01:07:03,686 They got the old black high-top sneakers on. 1164 01:07:03,769 --> 01:07:05,855 You're actually feeling sorry for them. 1165 01:07:05,938 --> 01:07:11,068 I'm at a stage in my career where each season is punishment. 1166 01:07:11,152 --> 01:07:13,779 [Ryan] The Celtics finished fourth in the Eastern Division that year. 1167 01:07:13,863 --> 01:07:15,573 It was supposed to be over. 1168 01:07:15,656 --> 01:07:17,366 No one expected them to win. 1169 01:07:17,950 --> 01:07:21,162 [Stoll] Despite their lackluster performance and the dire predictions, 1170 01:07:21,245 --> 01:07:24,206 Boston made it to the Eastern Division semifinals 1171 01:07:24,290 --> 01:07:26,000 to face the 76ers. 1172 01:07:27,460 --> 01:07:30,337 The Celtics overwhelmed Philadelphia. 1173 01:07:30,421 --> 01:07:33,799 Now, they would face the Knicks for the division title. 1174 01:07:33,883 --> 01:07:36,635 Philadelphia, we just knew we could beat Philadelphia. 1175 01:07:36,719 --> 01:07:37,720 We knew that. 1176 01:07:37,803 --> 01:07:39,472 New York, we had a problem. 1177 01:07:39,555 --> 01:07:41,557 [dramatic music playing] 1178 01:07:44,643 --> 01:07:46,562 Everything just clicked perfectly for the Knicks. 1179 01:07:46,645 --> 01:07:51,150 They had a hardworking but skilled leader at center in Willis Reed. 1180 01:07:51,233 --> 01:07:53,152 They had the cerebral forward Bill Bradley. 1181 01:07:53,235 --> 01:07:55,321 They had the dynamic guard with Walt Frazier. 1182 01:07:55,404 --> 01:07:58,032 At the start of the season, we were talking championship. 1183 01:07:58,115 --> 01:08:00,242 So now, here we are in the locker room, 1184 01:08:00,326 --> 01:08:03,329 saying, "Hey, man, this is it. This is what we talked about." 1185 01:08:03,412 --> 01:08:05,790 "This is why we play, so let's do it." 1186 01:08:05,873 --> 01:08:07,666 And we thought we could win. 1187 01:08:07,750 --> 01:08:10,586 [Russell] The Knicks, they thought they had us that year 1188 01:08:10,669 --> 01:08:14,340 'cause they won six of seven games that we played in the regular season. 1189 01:08:15,382 --> 01:08:18,469 Willis Reed was the backbone of their defense. 1190 01:08:19,178 --> 01:08:20,721 He was helping everybody out. 1191 01:08:23,599 --> 01:08:26,477 And so I started changing our offense each game. 1192 01:08:26,560 --> 01:08:30,856 When they'd adjust to the low-post game, then I would go to the high-post offense. 1193 01:08:31,690 --> 01:08:34,777 By doing that, I changed the flow of the defense. 1194 01:08:34,860 --> 01:08:36,904 But everything considered, we were just a better team. 1195 01:08:37,696 --> 01:08:39,490 [laughing] 1196 01:08:39,573 --> 01:08:41,242 They didn't want to hear that. 1197 01:08:43,119 --> 01:08:44,703 [music fades] 1198 01:08:44,787 --> 01:08:47,706 [Stoll] Russell's game-to-game adjustments worked. 1199 01:08:47,790 --> 01:08:49,667 The Knicks went down in defeat. 1200 01:08:49,750 --> 01:08:53,003 Now, an 11th championship was in sight. 1201 01:08:53,087 --> 01:08:54,713 [cheering] 1202 01:08:55,339 --> 01:09:00,386 [Stoll] The Celtics would face the Lakers in the NBA Finals for the seventh time. 1203 01:09:00,469 --> 01:09:01,846 [tense music playing] 1204 01:09:05,975 --> 01:09:08,769 Coach, you just got Wilt Chamberlain. 1205 01:09:08,853 --> 01:09:11,730 How many people did you make mad doing that? 1206 01:09:11,814 --> 01:09:14,650 No, I think I made a lot of people happy. 1207 01:09:14,733 --> 01:09:17,319 I know I made all the coaches in the Eastern Division happy 1208 01:09:17,403 --> 01:09:19,196 because they think they have a better chance. 1209 01:09:19,280 --> 01:09:21,949 [reporter] You have what amounts to a triple threat, 1210 01:09:22,032 --> 01:09:23,993 with three big players over there. 1211 01:09:24,076 --> 01:09:27,955 -What do you think you'll do this season? -I know one thing. We'd better win. 1212 01:09:28,038 --> 01:09:30,082 If we don't, then I won't have a job. 1213 01:09:30,166 --> 01:09:32,668 I've always felt that I wanted to play on a team 1214 01:09:32,751 --> 01:09:36,589 with guys like Jerry West and Elgin Baylor 1215 01:09:36,672 --> 01:09:38,465 and the other stalwart players on the Lakers. 1216 01:09:38,549 --> 01:09:41,260 I feel very, very happy that I am being traded. 1217 01:09:41,343 --> 01:09:45,222 I'm being traded to a team that I believe may stand a chance to go down 1218 01:09:45,306 --> 01:09:47,933 on the record as one of the best teams in basketball ever. 1219 01:09:52,438 --> 01:09:53,689 [music fades] 1220 01:09:54,523 --> 01:09:57,151 [Stoll] The Lakers had never beat the Celtics in the Finals, 1221 01:09:57,735 --> 01:10:01,947 but in 1969, with Chamberlain joining West and Baylor, 1222 01:10:02,031 --> 01:10:05,284 the team featured the NBA's original Big Three. 1223 01:10:05,993 --> 01:10:09,455 We were a better team, period. Period. 1224 01:10:09,538 --> 01:10:12,499 Boston was not worthy to be in the same league with us. 1225 01:10:12,583 --> 01:10:15,502 It was a team that was pulling straws. 1226 01:10:15,586 --> 01:10:19,798 [announcer] Number 13, from Kansas, Wilt Chamberlain! 1227 01:10:19,882 --> 01:10:21,050 [spectators roaring] 1228 01:10:21,133 --> 01:10:22,801 [dramatic music playing] 1229 01:10:23,677 --> 01:10:26,639 [reporter] Everybody keeps talking about, "The Celtics are so old now." 1230 01:10:26,722 --> 01:10:27,890 "They can't win again." 1231 01:10:27,973 --> 01:10:31,018 Do you, deep down in your heart, feel you can do it again? 1232 01:10:31,101 --> 01:10:31,936 Yes. 1233 01:10:33,187 --> 01:10:35,898 [commentator] This is for the World Championship of basketball, 1234 01:10:35,981 --> 01:10:38,108 ladies and gentlemen. It's all on the line. 1235 01:10:38,984 --> 01:10:40,903 [dramatic music continues] 1236 01:10:44,281 --> 01:10:46,825 [Stoll] As Russell and Wilt battled back and forth, 1237 01:10:46,909 --> 01:10:51,205 the game was decided by Jerry West, who scored 53 points 1238 01:10:51,288 --> 01:10:53,916 and led the Lakers to a game one victory. 1239 01:10:56,752 --> 01:11:01,215 Jerry West had the best game of any player that I've ever seen. 1240 01:11:01,298 --> 01:11:02,758 He was unstoppable. 1241 01:11:03,592 --> 01:11:06,720 [Stoll] The Boston Globe had asked Russell to write a daily dispatch, 1242 01:11:06,804 --> 01:11:09,348 giving readers his perspective on each game. 1243 01:11:09,431 --> 01:11:12,434 As always, he was outspoken and candid. 1244 01:11:13,852 --> 01:11:16,355 [Wright] West's scoring was a big factor in the game, 1245 01:11:16,438 --> 01:11:19,650 but it was a two-point game, and that is a loss. 1246 01:11:20,150 --> 01:11:22,861 It wouldn't make any difference if he got 100 points, 1247 01:11:22,945 --> 01:11:25,364 and we won by one or two points. 1248 01:11:25,447 --> 01:11:27,408 The win is the important thing. 1249 01:11:28,033 --> 01:11:31,120 [Stoll] In game two, West scored 41 points, 1250 01:11:31,203 --> 01:11:34,206 once again leading Los Angeles to victory. 1251 01:11:34,290 --> 01:11:37,001 The confident Lakers now had a commanding two-game lead 1252 01:11:37,084 --> 01:11:38,627 on Russell's Celtics. 1253 01:11:39,295 --> 01:11:40,713 [Ryan] The Celtics were in trouble. 1254 01:11:40,796 --> 01:11:43,966 No team had ever lost the first two games and come back to win. 1255 01:11:44,049 --> 01:11:47,386 [Wright] We allowed an average of 119 points a game. 1256 01:11:47,469 --> 01:11:50,556 We can't afford to give up that many points every game. 1257 01:11:50,639 --> 01:11:53,142 It doesn't matter who gets the points for the team. 1258 01:11:54,560 --> 01:11:57,271 [Stoll] The series moved to Boston for the next two games, 1259 01:11:57,354 --> 01:11:59,398 and the Celtics knew they had to win both 1260 01:11:59,481 --> 01:12:02,151 to give themselves a chance at an 11th title. 1261 01:12:02,901 --> 01:12:04,403 They took game three. 1262 01:12:04,486 --> 01:12:07,656 But in game four, the Lakers were ahead by one point 1263 01:12:07,740 --> 01:12:11,368 when the Celtics took possession with seven seconds remaining. 1264 01:12:13,412 --> 01:12:17,249 Sam Jones comes flying around three guys, throwing a pick. 1265 01:12:17,333 --> 01:12:18,292 Throws it up. 1266 01:12:19,293 --> 01:12:20,169 Bingo. 1267 01:12:20,836 --> 01:12:23,589 There's a second left, but the game is over. 1268 01:12:23,672 --> 01:12:25,257 [Wright] Sloppy, but I'll take it. 1269 01:12:25,341 --> 01:12:28,135 Sam, the old man, came through with the clutch basket. 1270 01:12:29,219 --> 01:12:31,889 [Stoll] As the home team won each of the first four games, 1271 01:12:31,972 --> 01:12:36,894 the trend continued when the Lakers cruised to a game five win in Los Angeles. 1272 01:12:37,978 --> 01:12:40,606 [Wright] Some things are better left unsaid. 1273 01:12:40,689 --> 01:12:42,316 So regarding Thursday night's game 1274 01:12:42,399 --> 01:12:45,402 with the Lakers, I have absolutely no comment. 1275 01:12:46,236 --> 01:12:48,030 [tense music playing] 1276 01:12:48,113 --> 01:12:51,575 [Stoll] Bill's disdain showed up on his home court the next night, 1277 01:12:51,658 --> 01:12:55,412 holding the man who once scored 100 points in a single game 1278 01:12:55,496 --> 01:12:56,663 to only eight. 1279 01:12:58,582 --> 01:13:01,377 Home court advantage had predicted the series, 1280 01:13:01,460 --> 01:13:04,046 and with Los Angeles set to host the final game, 1281 01:13:04,129 --> 01:13:06,256 the Lakers remained the favorites. 1282 01:13:06,924 --> 01:13:11,136 I can't help but wonder, how do you feel about going into another seventh game, 1283 01:13:11,220 --> 01:13:13,430 this time on somebody else's floor? 1284 01:13:13,514 --> 01:13:15,057 We've done it before. 1285 01:13:18,268 --> 01:13:20,145 ["Land of 1000 Dances" by Wilson Pickett playing] 1286 01:13:20,229 --> 01:13:21,730 ♪ One, two, three ♪ 1287 01:13:28,320 --> 01:13:33,117 [reporter] Boston trying for its 11th championship in 13 years. 1288 01:13:33,700 --> 01:13:36,453 A dynasty, and the Lakers trying to end it. 1289 01:13:37,079 --> 01:13:40,874 [Tom Hawkins] The seventh game on the Lakers' home court, 1290 01:13:40,958 --> 01:13:46,213 the Lakers were finally gonna win that championship 1291 01:13:46,296 --> 01:13:50,217 that they had never been able to gain against the Boston Celtics. 1292 01:13:50,300 --> 01:13:51,927 [reporter 2] Jerry West has summed it up. 1293 01:13:52,010 --> 01:13:53,679 He said, "We can beat this club." 1294 01:13:53,762 --> 01:13:56,181 And he said, "I may never get another chance." 1295 01:13:56,974 --> 01:13:59,226 We thought that we were gonna have problems. 1296 01:13:59,309 --> 01:14:02,563 To be frank with you, we weren't exactly as confident 1297 01:14:02,646 --> 01:14:04,481 as we had been in earlier times. 1298 01:14:04,565 --> 01:14:07,484 [reporter 2] This is the big night, the night the Lakers could take it all. 1299 01:14:07,568 --> 01:14:09,987 They could become the World Champions of basketball. 1300 01:14:12,573 --> 01:14:16,660 Jack Kent Cooke had balloons put in the rafters of the Forum 1301 01:14:16,743 --> 01:14:19,163 that were gonna be let go after the Lakers won. 1302 01:14:21,498 --> 01:14:23,167 [music fades] 1303 01:14:24,626 --> 01:14:28,005 How could anyone even think of something so stupid 1304 01:14:28,088 --> 01:14:29,798 to put those balloons up there? 1305 01:14:30,424 --> 01:14:33,635 Jack Kent Cooke put out a sheet in all the seats. 1306 01:14:34,219 --> 01:14:37,723 When the Lakers win the championship, the USC band would play, 1307 01:14:37,806 --> 01:14:40,934 the balloons in the rafters would fall down. 1308 01:14:41,894 --> 01:14:44,104 Well, I took this back to Russell. 1309 01:14:45,105 --> 01:14:48,942 Sam showed me that, and I said, "Well, it is humanly impossible 1310 01:14:49,026 --> 01:14:53,197 for the Lakers to win the game tonight. The Lakers can't beat us." 1311 01:14:53,280 --> 01:14:56,200 If somebody messes with you 1312 01:14:56,992 --> 01:14:58,744 or talks about your mama 1313 01:14:58,827 --> 01:15:01,580 or pulls on Superman's cape, you know, 1314 01:15:01,663 --> 01:15:03,665 or steps on your corns, whatever, 1315 01:15:03,749 --> 01:15:05,334 or throws sand in your face, 1316 01:15:05,417 --> 01:15:09,296 you get angry, and anger takes you to another level. 1317 01:15:10,005 --> 01:15:11,715 [Most] Russell against Chamberlain. 1318 01:15:11,798 --> 01:15:14,009 The ball is tipped by Russell to Sam Jones. 1319 01:15:14,092 --> 01:15:17,137 He gives to Havlicek, who will drive against Baylor. 1320 01:15:17,221 --> 01:15:21,433 Havlicek, 20-foot fallaway is good. Havlicek with a basket in ten seconds. 1321 01:15:21,517 --> 01:15:24,645 Russell's whole strategy of what we were gonna do in the game, 1322 01:15:25,312 --> 01:15:28,273 we said, "We're gonna run them and run them and run them." 1323 01:15:28,357 --> 01:15:30,400 [Most] Sam, down the middle, shovel shot, good. 1324 01:15:30,484 --> 01:15:34,613 Around Siegfried, underneath, puts it up. Russell blocks it! Great play. 1325 01:15:34,696 --> 01:15:38,450 [commentator] The Celtics are very fresh. The Lakers are standing around more. 1326 01:15:38,534 --> 01:15:40,827 They seem to be a little more tired than the Celtics. 1327 01:15:41,411 --> 01:15:44,998 [Stoll] The Celtics ran their way to a 17-point fourth-quarter lead. 1328 01:15:45,082 --> 01:15:47,793 [Most] The Lakers are down by 17 points. 1329 01:15:50,212 --> 01:15:53,131 [Stoll] But Jerry West and the Lakers refused to give up. 1330 01:15:53,215 --> 01:15:55,968 His shooting reinvigorated the Forum crowd 1331 01:15:56,969 --> 01:15:58,971 and brought the Lakers to within nine. 1332 01:16:02,724 --> 01:16:04,893 And all eyes shifted to Wilt. 1333 01:16:06,770 --> 01:16:09,648 [Most] Havlicek shoots, 15-footer, no good. Rebound is up. 1334 01:16:09,731 --> 01:16:13,110 Chamberlain's got it. Chamberlain is hurt. He hurt his right knee. 1335 01:16:13,193 --> 01:16:16,363 Chamberlain's at the other end, injured. He hurt his right knee. 1336 01:16:17,030 --> 01:16:19,658 [announcer] Officials' timeout. Injury-- 1337 01:16:19,741 --> 01:16:22,160 [Most] Chamberlain may have to leave the game. 1338 01:16:22,244 --> 01:16:24,705 Wilt has to leave. Wilt cannot continue. 1339 01:16:27,374 --> 01:16:29,585 [Hawkins] Van Breda Kolff was furious. 1340 01:16:29,668 --> 01:16:31,253 "That big SOB!" 1341 01:16:31,336 --> 01:16:33,380 "How can he come out of the game?" 1342 01:16:34,089 --> 01:16:35,757 [Wright] For my own selfish reasons, 1343 01:16:35,841 --> 01:16:38,635 I was offended the instant Wilt left the game. 1344 01:16:38,719 --> 01:16:40,721 I didn't think he was hurt that badly. 1345 01:16:40,804 --> 01:16:43,056 And even if he was, I wanted him in there. 1346 01:16:43,140 --> 01:16:46,768 We were close, oh, so close to finishing with a great game. 1347 01:16:46,852 --> 01:16:49,688 Wilt's leaving was like finding a misspelled word 1348 01:16:49,771 --> 01:16:51,607 at the end of a cherished book. 1349 01:16:51,690 --> 01:16:55,235 [commentator] Mel Counts is going to come in for Wilt Chamberlain. 1350 01:16:55,319 --> 01:16:57,571 Mel Counts came in. He played really well. 1351 01:16:57,654 --> 01:17:00,198 [Most] One-bounce dribble, 12-footer by Mel. Good! 1352 01:17:00,282 --> 01:17:02,159 [spectators cheering] 1353 01:17:03,201 --> 01:17:05,829 [Stoll] With Wilt out, the Lakers pushed the pace, 1354 01:17:05,912 --> 01:17:08,206 taking advantage of the aging Celtics. 1355 01:17:08,290 --> 01:17:11,043 [commentator] You can see the momentum changing here 1356 01:17:11,126 --> 01:17:13,337 as the Lakers have a renewed spirit. 1357 01:17:14,004 --> 01:17:15,922 [Stoll] And almost evened the score. 1358 01:17:17,799 --> 01:17:21,803 [Most] They see the World Championship. They want it so bad, they can taste it. 1359 01:17:22,929 --> 01:17:24,556 The Lakers trail by one. 1360 01:17:25,641 --> 01:17:27,434 [Hawkins] So Wilt says to me, 1361 01:17:27,517 --> 01:17:28,435 "Tell the man 1362 01:17:28,935 --> 01:17:31,146 I'm ready to go back in the game." 1363 01:17:33,690 --> 01:17:34,608 [laughs] 1364 01:17:35,192 --> 01:17:40,447 Van Breda Kolff, in all of his hysteria and his madness, 1365 01:17:40,530 --> 01:17:43,575 says, "Tell him, go fuck himself." 1366 01:17:43,659 --> 01:17:47,829 "We don't need him." And never put Chamberlain back in the game. 1367 01:17:50,082 --> 01:17:53,085 [Most] They've clawed back but still haven't caught them. 1368 01:17:53,168 --> 01:17:56,421 And the Lakers will come back without Wilt Chamberlain. 1369 01:17:57,589 --> 01:18:00,008 We were behind by one point, 1370 01:18:00,967 --> 01:18:03,553 with just a little over a minute to play. 1371 01:18:03,637 --> 01:18:07,349 I was guarding Havlicek, he had the ball, was dribbling around, 1372 01:18:07,891 --> 01:18:11,311 and I reach behind and knock the ball away from him, 1373 01:18:11,395 --> 01:18:13,730 right into Don Nelson's hands. 1374 01:18:13,814 --> 01:18:15,482 Standing on the free-throw line. 1375 01:18:15,565 --> 01:18:18,360 Don Nelson grabs the ball and takes the shot. 1376 01:18:18,443 --> 01:18:20,195 Quickly just pushed a shot off. 1377 01:18:20,278 --> 01:18:22,531 It hit the back of the rim and went straight up. 1378 01:18:22,614 --> 01:18:24,533 It bounced over the backboard. 1379 01:18:24,616 --> 01:18:26,493 It went about 13 feet in the air. 1380 01:18:32,541 --> 01:18:34,167 And went into the basket. 1381 01:18:35,043 --> 01:18:36,253 [commentator] Erickson… 1382 01:18:36,753 --> 01:18:38,714 Knocked away, but Nelson gets it! 1383 01:18:40,799 --> 01:18:43,301 [Erickson] The shot is like a slow-motion dagger. 1384 01:18:45,095 --> 01:18:46,346 [commentator] Don Nelson. 1385 01:18:48,306 --> 01:18:50,809 That is pure luck. Pure luck. 1386 01:18:50,892 --> 01:18:55,272 And it's like some other greater power didn't want us to win. 1387 01:18:55,355 --> 01:18:58,191 [commentator] And the Boston Celtics have done it again! 1388 01:19:01,862 --> 01:19:04,740 Sometimes, I would think that Jerry was right 1389 01:19:04,823 --> 01:19:07,242 in thinking he was cursed when they played the Celtics. 1390 01:19:07,993 --> 01:19:10,704 Some people can get over it. I never got over that stuff. 1391 01:19:10,787 --> 01:19:12,581 I still haven't today. 1392 01:19:12,664 --> 01:19:16,710 It's like there's a… there's a hole in my heart. [exhales] 1393 01:19:17,586 --> 01:19:20,172 It probably was the greatest disappointment 1394 01:19:20,255 --> 01:19:22,632 in my life as an athlete, not to beat them once. 1395 01:19:22,716 --> 01:19:25,719 The difference-maker was always gonna be Bill Russell. 1396 01:19:25,802 --> 01:19:28,764 [commentator] Many, many balloons hang in the rafters, 1397 01:19:28,847 --> 01:19:30,724 but they will not be released. 1398 01:19:31,892 --> 01:19:35,228 You say, "Well, the Celtic gods are with them in the Forum." 1399 01:19:35,312 --> 01:19:37,063 That's some Boston Garden stuff. 1400 01:19:41,109 --> 01:19:43,528 [commentator] And, of course, you'll have to say 1401 01:19:43,612 --> 01:19:46,156 that the Celtics are the greatest sports dynasty 1402 01:19:46,239 --> 01:19:48,325 in the history of professional athletics. 1403 01:19:48,408 --> 01:19:50,702 [emotional music playing] 1404 01:19:50,786 --> 01:19:54,080 [Russell] My teammates had played so hard 1405 01:19:54,581 --> 01:19:57,292 and had held up so marvelously 1406 01:19:57,375 --> 01:20:00,921 that I was just so proud of those guys and myself. 1407 01:20:01,004 --> 01:20:02,964 Bill, this must've been a great win for you. 1408 01:20:03,048 --> 01:20:03,924 Exactly. 1409 01:20:04,633 --> 01:20:07,511 [man in background] One more time! One more time! 1410 01:20:07,594 --> 01:20:08,553 [sighs] 1411 01:20:09,179 --> 01:20:11,848 I know it's hard to say what's in your mind right now. 1412 01:20:11,932 --> 01:20:13,850 It must have been a great win. 1413 01:20:13,934 --> 01:20:16,269 This is such a great bunch of guys. 1414 01:20:17,145 --> 01:20:20,649 And it's just been so fabulous the way they played for me. 1415 01:20:20,732 --> 01:20:24,152 And it sounds all corny to start talking like that, 1416 01:20:24,236 --> 01:20:28,490 but I told these guys before the game, "I don't care what happens." 1417 01:20:28,573 --> 01:20:30,992 "I wouldn't trade you for any guys in the world." 1418 01:20:31,076 --> 01:20:35,247 [Montville] After the game, I'm looking at Bill Russell to see when he's alone. 1419 01:20:35,330 --> 01:20:37,833 I'm 25 years old, red hair and freckles, 1420 01:20:37,916 --> 01:20:40,544 and I'm the whitest guy in North America. 1421 01:20:40,627 --> 01:20:41,878 And I go over. 1422 01:20:41,962 --> 01:20:45,549 And so I have to go to Bill, and I say, "Uh, Bill?" 1423 01:20:45,632 --> 01:20:48,009 And he kind of looks at me, and I said, 1424 01:20:48,718 --> 01:20:51,847 "Is there a chance that you're gonna retire now?" 1425 01:20:52,347 --> 01:20:54,391 And there's like a pause. 1426 01:20:54,474 --> 01:20:58,228 And Jim Brown, who's sitting there, he looks up at me, and he says, 1427 01:20:58,311 --> 01:21:02,983 "Retire? The man just won the World Championship." 1428 01:21:03,608 --> 01:21:06,486 "Why would you ask him if he's gonna retire?" 1429 01:21:06,570 --> 01:21:11,241 I'm not sure anybody else did realize that that was Bill Russell's last game. 1430 01:21:11,324 --> 01:21:15,245 He had interests that were broader than the game, 1431 01:21:15,871 --> 01:21:20,208 and I think his curiosity was kind of moving other places. 1432 01:21:20,292 --> 01:21:24,129 When Bill Russell told me that he was gonna retire from basketball, 1433 01:21:24,212 --> 01:21:26,965 I looked at him because I didn't believe him at first. 1434 01:21:27,048 --> 01:21:29,217 But I saw he was getting emotional about it, 1435 01:21:29,301 --> 01:21:32,262 then I started really to believe he was going to leave. 1436 01:21:32,345 --> 01:21:36,766 He ultimately announced his retirement via an article in Sports Illustrated 1437 01:21:36,850 --> 01:21:38,727 that paid him $25,000 to do so. 1438 01:21:41,104 --> 01:21:44,149 [Wright] I have a year to go on my contract for the Celtics. 1439 01:21:44,232 --> 01:21:48,403 It's one of the most lucrative in sports, and I was very happy with it. 1440 01:21:48,486 --> 01:21:52,657 I had been paid to play, of course, but I played for a lot of other reasons too. 1441 01:21:53,241 --> 01:21:56,494 I played because I was dedicated to being the best. 1442 01:21:56,578 --> 01:21:58,163 I was part of a team, 1443 01:21:58,246 --> 01:22:01,291 and I dedicated myself to making that team the best. 1444 01:22:02,250 --> 01:22:06,588 But so far as the game is concerned, I've lost my competitive urges. 1445 01:22:07,088 --> 01:22:10,926 If I went out to play now, the other guys would know I didn't really care. 1446 01:22:11,509 --> 01:22:14,596 That's no way to play. That's no way to do anything. 1447 01:22:15,096 --> 01:22:16,973 All through this past season, 1448 01:22:17,057 --> 01:22:20,644 I had the eerie feeling that I'd been through this before. 1449 01:22:20,727 --> 01:22:24,856 Every play, every situation. Setting a screen, missing a shot. 1450 01:22:25,357 --> 01:22:29,819 I'd seen and done it all before. Everything had become repetition. 1451 01:22:30,862 --> 01:22:34,240 This is not the attitude to bring to still another season. 1452 01:22:34,824 --> 01:22:37,202 After… when I heard it, I said, "Oh my gosh." 1453 01:22:37,285 --> 01:22:41,498 Uh, you know, this is… this is a pretty historic moment 1454 01:22:41,581 --> 01:22:44,793 for a guy who could still play at a championship level, 1455 01:22:45,502 --> 01:22:48,129 and for him to say, "Heck with it, I'm not playing anymore." 1456 01:22:48,797 --> 01:22:50,382 [Sanders] The career was done. 1457 01:22:51,257 --> 01:22:52,801 He wasn't coming back. 1458 01:22:52,884 --> 01:22:57,931 The most outstanding team sport dynasty, 1459 01:22:58,640 --> 01:23:01,893 after that game, it was over. 1460 01:23:01,977 --> 01:23:04,104 [sentimental music playing] 1461 01:23:38,346 --> 01:23:42,267 [Wright] Professional basketball went out of my life in 1969, 1462 01:23:42,350 --> 01:23:44,019 but it had a lot of company. 1463 01:23:45,437 --> 01:23:48,148 Everything in life seemed an encumbrance to me, 1464 01:23:49,399 --> 01:23:54,195 including my wife of 13 years, my three children, my Boston friends, 1465 01:23:54,279 --> 01:23:56,031 and my material possessions. 1466 01:23:57,198 --> 01:23:59,451 Within a few months of my retirement, 1467 01:23:59,534 --> 01:24:03,621 I also left behind my life in Boston and everything that went with it. 1468 01:24:04,122 --> 01:24:06,958 Every breath I took felt a little frosty. 1469 01:24:07,667 --> 01:24:12,338 I was venturing into the outside world after 13 years in a compression chamber. 1470 01:24:13,006 --> 01:24:16,384 I thought I owed something, but I wasn't sure what it was. 1471 01:24:16,468 --> 01:24:17,343 In my head, 1472 01:24:17,427 --> 01:24:20,930 I had known that basketball was not meant to protect me, 1473 01:24:21,014 --> 01:24:23,391 but I had never had to live without it. 1474 01:24:23,475 --> 01:24:29,689 ♪ First train to California ♪ 1475 01:24:31,524 --> 01:24:36,905 ♪ There must be something in California ♪ 1476 01:24:39,240 --> 01:24:42,535 ♪ There must be magic everywhere… ♪ 1477 01:24:42,619 --> 01:24:46,081 [Stoll] Bill Russell packed one suitcase, got into his Lamborghini, 1478 01:24:46,164 --> 01:24:47,832 and drove to Los Angeles. 1479 01:24:51,836 --> 01:24:54,881 [Russell] LA, as far as I'm concerned, that's where the action is. 1480 01:24:55,507 --> 01:24:58,426 I can promise you, nobody will have as much fun as I will. 1481 01:24:59,219 --> 01:25:02,305 [Stoll] Another stage, the entertainment business, beckoned. 1482 01:25:02,388 --> 01:25:05,892 I'd like to welcome one of the greatest basketball players of all time, 1483 01:25:05,975 --> 01:25:07,227 Mr. Bill Russell. 1484 01:25:08,103 --> 01:25:10,313 -Who wrote that introduction? -I did. 1485 01:25:10,396 --> 01:25:13,900 Well, what do you mean, "One of the greatest basketball players"? 1486 01:25:13,983 --> 01:25:15,235 Oh, excuse me, Bill. 1487 01:25:15,318 --> 01:25:17,821 The greatest basketball player of all time. 1488 01:25:17,904 --> 01:25:19,114 [audience applauds] 1489 01:25:19,197 --> 01:25:22,867 [Stoll] Bill made a few appearances on comedy shows and talk shows. 1490 01:25:24,494 --> 01:25:27,413 Good, Bill, you keep that up, they'll put you in a home. 1491 01:25:27,497 --> 01:25:28,623 [all laughing] 1492 01:25:28,706 --> 01:25:30,250 I'll show you how to do it. 1493 01:25:30,333 --> 01:25:32,127 -Yeah, sure. -All right? Like this. 1494 01:25:32,210 --> 01:25:33,419 [upbeat music playing] 1495 01:25:33,503 --> 01:25:35,046 Mr. Tillinghast? 1496 01:25:35,130 --> 01:25:35,964 Yes, sir? 1497 01:25:37,674 --> 01:25:39,884 This is Mr. Tillinghast. Uh… 1498 01:25:43,972 --> 01:25:46,182 [Stoll] He hosted a short-lived talk show of his own. 1499 01:25:46,266 --> 01:25:47,976 My name is Bill Russell. 1500 01:25:48,059 --> 01:25:49,894 My name is Bill Russell. 1501 01:25:49,978 --> 01:25:51,146 My name is Bill Russell. 1502 01:25:51,229 --> 01:25:52,897 My name is Bill Russell. 1503 01:25:52,981 --> 01:25:55,400 Will the real Bill Russell please stand up? 1504 01:25:56,609 --> 01:25:58,403 [audience applauds] 1505 01:25:59,237 --> 01:26:03,366 [Stoll] Russell even tried his hand at acting… with limited success. 1506 01:26:04,075 --> 01:26:05,326 To settle my debt. 1507 01:26:06,202 --> 01:26:07,370 [woman screaming] 1508 01:26:07,453 --> 01:26:10,331 [Stoll] And he appeared in a few TV commercials. 1509 01:26:12,458 --> 01:26:15,712 [laughing] I can't miss! I can't miss! 1510 01:26:15,795 --> 01:26:17,005 By a long distance. 1511 01:26:17,088 --> 01:26:20,049 [Stoll] He served as an NBA analyst for several networks. 1512 01:26:21,009 --> 01:26:24,053 You know how it feels because you've been here before. 1513 01:26:24,137 --> 01:26:26,347 Me, I haven't scored a point. 1514 01:26:27,265 --> 01:26:29,434 You brought the guys here that score the points. 1515 01:26:29,517 --> 01:26:30,727 So, you're overpaid. 1516 01:26:30,810 --> 01:26:32,061 [laughing] 1517 01:26:32,770 --> 01:26:36,107 [Stoll] Russell also maintained a steady schedule of lectures, 1518 01:26:36,191 --> 01:26:39,611 sharing his experiences and philosophies with young people. 1519 01:26:40,486 --> 01:26:44,240 Now, to me, really seriously, education is the foundation you use 1520 01:26:44,324 --> 01:26:45,658 to think for yourself. 1521 01:26:45,742 --> 01:26:48,494 To be willing to accept responsibility 1522 01:26:49,495 --> 01:26:51,456 of being involved in mankind. 1523 01:26:52,123 --> 01:26:54,500 I'm Rob Chamberlain. I wondered, how-- 1524 01:26:54,584 --> 01:26:57,086 -[Russell] What'd you say your name was? -Rob Chamberlain. 1525 01:26:57,170 --> 01:26:58,671 -Chamberlain?! -[Rob] Yeah. 1526 01:26:58,755 --> 01:27:00,757 [audience laughing] 1527 01:27:00,840 --> 01:27:03,843 [audience cheering and whistling] 1528 01:27:08,806 --> 01:27:12,268 -No relation. No relation. -I kind of figured you weren't related. 1529 01:27:13,228 --> 01:27:16,064 [Stoll] During one talk, Bill criticized Wilt Chamberlain 1530 01:27:16,147 --> 01:27:19,359 for leaving the '69 Finals after he was injured. 1531 01:27:19,442 --> 01:27:21,694 Let me read to you what Bill said. 1532 01:27:21,778 --> 01:27:25,406 "I think he copped out in the last series, in the last game." 1533 01:27:26,032 --> 01:27:29,077 "Any injury short of a broken leg or a broken back 1534 01:27:29,160 --> 01:27:30,745 isn't good enough." 1535 01:27:30,828 --> 01:27:34,165 [Wright] He took himself out of that final game when he hurt his knee. 1536 01:27:34,249 --> 01:27:38,419 I wouldn't have put him back in either, even though I think he's great. 1537 01:27:38,503 --> 01:27:41,214 I never said Chamberlain didn't have talent, 1538 01:27:41,297 --> 01:27:43,299 but basketball is a team game. 1539 01:27:43,383 --> 01:27:45,969 I go by the number of championships. 1540 01:27:46,052 --> 01:27:48,388 I play to bring out the best in my teammates. 1541 01:27:49,180 --> 01:27:53,017 Are you gonna tell me you brought out the best in Baylor and West? 1542 01:27:53,101 --> 01:27:55,687 He talks a lot about what he's going to do. 1543 01:27:55,770 --> 01:28:00,024 What it's all about is winning and losing, and he's done a lot of losing. 1544 01:28:00,984 --> 01:28:03,903 He thinks he's a genius, but he's not. 1545 01:28:04,529 --> 01:28:05,989 [Stoll] The remark went public, 1546 01:28:06,072 --> 01:28:09,200 and the two friends didn't speak for years after that. 1547 01:28:10,034 --> 01:28:14,414 I shouldn't have said that because he hadn't done anything to me. 1548 01:28:15,164 --> 01:28:18,751 But I'm too hardheaded to apologize. So that's the way it goes. 1549 01:28:18,835 --> 01:28:23,464 If somebody says he's hurt, in my opinion, he's hurt. 1550 01:28:23,548 --> 01:28:27,927 You don't leave a moment like that unless there's something wrong with you. 1551 01:28:28,678 --> 01:28:31,347 [reporter] What about now? Is it ever too late? 1552 01:28:32,223 --> 01:28:36,436 I don't even think about it anymore. It's something that's passed. 1553 01:28:36,519 --> 01:28:40,523 Uh, I know I shouldn't have done it. He knows I shouldn't have done it. 1554 01:28:41,482 --> 01:28:43,901 -Would it make a difference? -Not really. 1555 01:28:46,195 --> 01:28:48,406 I'm sure we're both able to live our lives 1556 01:28:48,489 --> 01:28:50,908 without that interfering with it too much. 1557 01:28:52,285 --> 01:28:54,495 [Stoll] His competitive friendship with Chamberlain 1558 01:28:54,579 --> 01:28:56,789 was just one more thing Russell left behind, 1559 01:28:57,373 --> 01:29:00,084 along with the Celtics and the city of Boston. 1560 01:29:00,960 --> 01:29:04,255 When his number was retired in 1972, 1561 01:29:04,339 --> 01:29:06,883 Russell refused a public ceremony. 1562 01:29:06,966 --> 01:29:09,427 Only his beloved teammates were present. 1563 01:29:10,553 --> 01:29:14,182 In Boston, some of the sportswriters can get, uh, 1564 01:29:15,558 --> 01:29:17,268 well, kind of tricky, you know? 1565 01:29:17,352 --> 01:29:19,020 And Bill probably resented 1566 01:29:19,103 --> 01:29:21,856 some of the things that happened in Boston 1567 01:29:21,939 --> 01:29:25,193 and probably brought it out. That was one way of doing it. 1568 01:29:25,276 --> 01:29:29,197 [Stoll] That wasn't the only time Russell shunned an individual public honor. 1569 01:29:29,280 --> 01:29:34,077 In 1974, he was chosen for induction into the Basketball Hall of Fame. 1570 01:29:34,160 --> 01:29:37,705 [Wright] When my selection was announced, I issued a statement saying 1571 01:29:37,789 --> 01:29:40,750 that, for personal reasons, I preferred not to be inducted. 1572 01:29:41,501 --> 01:29:43,920 So the sportswriters jumped all over me. 1573 01:29:44,003 --> 01:29:47,465 Most of these writers assumed I think the Hall of Fame is racist. 1574 01:29:47,548 --> 01:29:50,176 I do, but there's more to it than that. 1575 01:29:51,511 --> 01:29:53,137 [reporter] The report was that Russell, 1576 01:29:53,221 --> 01:29:55,515 and no one knows 'cause he hasn't said anything yet, 1577 01:29:55,598 --> 01:29:58,267 objected because there were no Black players. 1578 01:29:58,351 --> 01:29:59,894 And why is that? 1579 01:30:00,937 --> 01:30:04,607 Well, number one, we do have Black players. Not since 1946. 1580 01:30:04,690 --> 01:30:05,733 We would prefer, 1581 01:30:05,817 --> 01:30:10,696 if he has a legitimate question, gripe, reservation, 1582 01:30:10,780 --> 01:30:14,617 whatever it is, Bill, then we would like to know about it. But-- 1583 01:30:14,700 --> 01:30:19,580 Because, absolutely, if we are wrong in some way, 1584 01:30:19,664 --> 01:30:20,957 we want to change. 1585 01:30:21,040 --> 01:30:23,918 On the other hand, we are quite convinced 1586 01:30:24,001 --> 01:30:27,255 that we're as open-minded as society can be, 1587 01:30:27,338 --> 01:30:29,090 and maybe more so. 1588 01:30:29,173 --> 01:30:32,510 Bill Russell's a real man. He stood up for what he thought was right. 1589 01:30:33,010 --> 01:30:34,804 He was a no-BS type of guy. 1590 01:30:34,887 --> 01:30:38,307 [Wright] What it came down to was that I thought of the Hall of Fame 1591 01:30:38,391 --> 01:30:42,103 the same way I thought about autographs and having my number retired. 1592 01:30:42,645 --> 01:30:45,690 In each case, my intention was to separate myself 1593 01:30:45,773 --> 01:30:48,276 from the stars' ideas about fans 1594 01:30:48,359 --> 01:30:50,486 and fans' ideas about stars. 1595 01:30:51,070 --> 01:30:55,825 [Stoll] By 1973, Bill Russell had moved from California to Washington state 1596 01:30:55,908 --> 01:30:59,412 to be coach and general manager of the Seattle SuperSonics. 1597 01:31:00,079 --> 01:31:03,708 He brought them to the playoffs for the first time in their history. 1598 01:31:04,333 --> 01:31:06,335 [spectators cheering] 1599 01:31:09,630 --> 01:31:10,715 [Stoll] A decade later, 1600 01:31:10,798 --> 01:31:14,635 he took on another unsuccessful team, the Sacramento Kings. 1601 01:31:15,303 --> 01:31:17,221 Failing to turn the team around, 1602 01:31:17,305 --> 01:31:20,224 Russell left after little more than half a season. 1603 01:31:21,017 --> 01:31:24,145 His family worries that, by the 1990s, 1604 01:31:24,228 --> 01:31:26,022 as the decade is closing, 1605 01:31:26,105 --> 01:31:29,525 as the NBA's starting to develop sort of an appreciation of its past, 1606 01:31:29,609 --> 01:31:31,527 people will forget about Bill Russell. 1607 01:31:31,611 --> 01:31:35,656 It's at that point that Russell reaches back to the public, really, 1608 01:31:35,740 --> 01:31:37,450 at the end of the 1990s. 1609 01:31:38,075 --> 01:31:40,119 Thirty years after his final game, 1610 01:31:40,203 --> 01:31:42,997 Bill Russell and Boston have finally made up. 1611 01:31:43,080 --> 01:31:47,376 And the reluctant celebrity who first had his number retired in 1972, 1612 01:31:47,460 --> 01:31:48,961 without fanfare, 1613 01:31:49,045 --> 01:31:51,380 this time let his fans share. 1614 01:31:51,464 --> 01:31:55,635 [Ryan] It was at the Boston Garden, a night of celebration for Bill Russell, 1615 01:31:55,718 --> 01:31:59,514 and dignitaries in the basketball world came. 1616 01:31:59,597 --> 01:32:02,767 I'm here tonight representing all the men my age 1617 01:32:03,392 --> 01:32:07,897 who grew up utterly in awe of Bill Russell, the athlete. 1618 01:32:07,980 --> 01:32:12,276 All the men who also learned from him how to be a man. 1619 01:32:13,152 --> 01:32:15,154 If you don't know anything about him, 1620 01:32:15,655 --> 01:32:18,783 if you can't stand the brutal truth, 1621 01:32:18,866 --> 01:32:20,493 don't talk to Bill Russell. 1622 01:32:20,576 --> 01:32:22,870 When I grew up in the '50s and the '60s 1623 01:32:22,954 --> 01:32:25,873 and had the opportunity to read his first book, Go Up for Glory, 1624 01:32:25,957 --> 01:32:29,335 my mom was a librarian and brought it home to me that day, 1625 01:32:29,418 --> 01:32:31,629 Bill Russell became my hero for life. 1626 01:32:31,712 --> 01:32:35,925 Knowing that we played a small role 1627 01:32:36,008 --> 01:32:41,055 on the greatest professional sports team dynasty that's ever existed… 1628 01:32:41,138 --> 01:32:42,682 [audience cheering] 1629 01:32:42,765 --> 01:32:45,184 …and you are responsible for that, Russ. 1630 01:32:45,893 --> 01:32:48,980 [Goudsouzian] It's those moments that became key to understanding 1631 01:32:49,063 --> 01:32:51,566 the impact of Russell on this generation of athletes. 1632 01:32:52,483 --> 01:32:57,154 On behalf of the Celtic organization, 1633 01:32:57,905 --> 01:33:02,076 we'd be very remiss if we didn't give Bill Russell 1634 01:33:02,159 --> 01:33:03,911 a piece of the floor. 1635 01:33:03,995 --> 01:33:05,788 Upon this parquet, 1636 01:33:06,372 --> 01:33:12,503 you created the championship tradition of the Boston Celtics. 1637 01:33:12,587 --> 01:33:13,796 And he did! 1638 01:33:14,338 --> 01:33:16,424 -Bill, my pleasure. -[audience exclaims] 1639 01:33:21,095 --> 01:33:23,723 I was totally embarrassed, to tell you the truth. 1640 01:33:23,806 --> 01:33:25,933 [cackles] 1641 01:33:26,517 --> 01:33:30,688 It was enlightening to have my friends say these things. 1642 01:33:30,771 --> 01:33:32,356 One of the things, I think, 1643 01:33:32,440 --> 01:33:35,526 that is very important for every person to know 1644 01:33:35,610 --> 01:33:38,404 is that you are not alone in the universe. 1645 01:33:41,115 --> 01:33:43,200 You come here alone and you leave alone, 1646 01:33:43,284 --> 01:33:47,455 but the rest of the time, the in-between, you're… you're not alone. 1647 01:33:47,538 --> 01:33:49,540 [rousing music playing] 1648 01:33:51,167 --> 01:33:52,877 [Stoll] On that magical night, 1649 01:33:52,960 --> 01:33:56,964 one more surprise awaited Bill in the wings of the Boston Garden. 1650 01:33:57,048 --> 01:34:00,509 [announcer] Ladies and gentlemen, Wilt Chamberlain! 1651 01:34:05,765 --> 01:34:08,643 [Stoll] The NBA's first icons had reunited, 1652 01:34:09,352 --> 01:34:11,187 and after many years apart, 1653 01:34:11,270 --> 01:34:13,439 realized their bond never broke. 1654 01:34:17,443 --> 01:34:19,487 My friend Wilt Norman Chamberlain 1655 01:34:20,488 --> 01:34:23,074 was far and away the best player I've ever played against. 1656 01:34:23,157 --> 01:34:25,117 Wilt and I could talk… 1657 01:34:25,201 --> 01:34:26,202 [cackling] 1658 01:34:26,285 --> 01:34:30,081 …and neither one was asking the other for anything except friendship. 1659 01:34:32,208 --> 01:34:34,210 [somber music playing] 1660 01:34:39,965 --> 01:34:43,552 [Russell] I, uh… I thank you for this. 1661 01:34:44,512 --> 01:34:45,721 It's very humbling. 1662 01:34:45,805 --> 01:34:47,848 What I wanted to thank you for 1663 01:34:49,433 --> 01:34:52,353 is letting me come into your life. 1664 01:34:52,436 --> 01:34:56,023 And the folks that came to the Garden 1665 01:34:56,524 --> 01:34:59,902 and the fans, you were part of my life. 1666 01:35:00,403 --> 01:35:01,696 [fan] We love you, Bill! 1667 01:35:02,196 --> 01:35:03,322 I love you too. 1668 01:35:04,323 --> 01:35:06,200 [audience cheering] 1669 01:35:09,787 --> 01:35:12,790 [Stoll] Russell's basketball life was coming full circle, 1670 01:35:14,667 --> 01:35:17,211 but there would be heartbreaking losses ahead. 1671 01:35:17,294 --> 01:35:21,048 [reporter] A grim discovery this afternoon at this mansion in Bel Air, California. 1672 01:35:21,132 --> 01:35:23,551 The body of 63-year-old Wilt Chamberlain, 1673 01:35:23,634 --> 01:35:25,970 widely considered one of the greatest players 1674 01:35:26,053 --> 01:35:27,847 in the history of basketball. 1675 01:35:27,930 --> 01:35:31,267 The authorities say the cause of death, an apparent heart attack. 1676 01:35:31,350 --> 01:35:34,562 [reporter 2] Some of basketball's greatest came to Los Angeles 1677 01:35:34,645 --> 01:35:37,148 to pay their respects to one of the game's legends. 1678 01:35:37,231 --> 01:35:39,316 Former Boston Celtic Bill Russell 1679 01:35:39,400 --> 01:35:41,777 remembered his fiercest opponent on the court. 1680 01:35:41,861 --> 01:35:44,196 He sent me through hell so many nights. 1681 01:35:44,280 --> 01:35:45,698 [people laughing] 1682 01:35:48,284 --> 01:35:51,579 But it was not a rivalry. It was a competition. 1683 01:35:52,288 --> 01:35:55,374 As we got older, the more we liked each other, 1684 01:35:55,458 --> 01:36:00,463 because we knew, basically, we were joined at the hips. 1685 01:36:00,546 --> 01:36:03,048 He and I will be friends through eternity. 1686 01:36:04,383 --> 01:36:06,427 What made them both special 1687 01:36:06,510 --> 01:36:08,679 was the fact that, even today, 1688 01:36:09,680 --> 01:36:10,556 here it is, 1689 01:36:11,140 --> 01:36:13,559 we're still talking about both men. 1690 01:36:14,226 --> 01:36:16,979 [Edwards] We need to carry forth that history. 1691 01:36:17,062 --> 01:36:21,525 We'll be studying the legacy of Bill Russell 1692 01:36:22,318 --> 01:36:23,569 for years to come. 1693 01:36:25,196 --> 01:36:27,156 [Obama] This year's Medal of Freedom recipients 1694 01:36:27,239 --> 01:36:29,158 reveal the best of who we are 1695 01:36:29,241 --> 01:36:31,202 and who we aspire to be. 1696 01:36:31,702 --> 01:36:35,080 Bill Russell made possible the success of so many who would follow. 1697 01:36:36,207 --> 01:36:38,417 My daughter told me I was gonna get it. 1698 01:36:38,501 --> 01:36:40,753 [rousing music playing] 1699 01:36:40,836 --> 01:36:44,673 First thing I did was get in my car and drove down to California 1700 01:36:44,757 --> 01:36:46,550 and visited my father's grave. 1701 01:36:47,635 --> 01:36:48,677 And, uh… 1702 01:36:49,887 --> 01:36:51,597 And told him about it. 1703 01:36:54,934 --> 01:36:58,229 And, uh… it made me feel a lot better. 1704 01:36:59,855 --> 01:37:02,858 Because, uh, I… basically, I said to him, 1705 01:37:02,942 --> 01:37:04,151 "You know… 1706 01:37:06,654 --> 01:37:08,072 I have to agree with you 1707 01:37:08,906 --> 01:37:10,699 that I did okay." 1708 01:37:10,783 --> 01:37:12,785 [laughing] 1709 01:37:13,744 --> 01:37:17,456 I hope one day, in the streets of Boston, children will look up at a statue 1710 01:37:17,540 --> 01:37:21,710 built not only to Bill Russell the player but Bill Russell the man. 1711 01:37:21,794 --> 01:37:24,588 [Russell] After I got the Medal of Freedom, and Obama says, 1712 01:37:24,672 --> 01:37:28,050 "Someday, there'll be a statue in Boston of Bill Russell," 1713 01:37:28,968 --> 01:37:32,346 and I told him I'd never forgive him for that. 1714 01:37:32,429 --> 01:37:35,474 A statue sounds, to me, a lot like a tombstone. 1715 01:37:37,017 --> 01:37:40,479 He says, "It's not so much for you as it is for the city." 1716 01:37:40,563 --> 01:37:41,939 [cheering] 1717 01:37:43,190 --> 01:37:48,112 [Russell] "You've made a tremendous amount of difference 1718 01:37:49,405 --> 01:37:52,116 in community and race relations." 1719 01:37:54,743 --> 01:37:59,373 [Zirin] One of the most stirring sights after Colin Kaepernick took a knee 1720 01:37:59,999 --> 01:38:04,378 in protest of police violence and racial inequity, 1721 01:38:04,461 --> 01:38:06,922 was the sight of Bill Russell 1722 01:38:07,423 --> 01:38:08,716 taking a knee himself 1723 01:38:08,799 --> 01:38:12,052 and looking challengingly, directly into the camera 1724 01:38:12,136 --> 01:38:16,557 as if to say, "If you're going after him, then you're also going after me." 1725 01:38:17,433 --> 01:38:21,312 [Jeannine] Bill felt a certain connection with Colin because, for Bill, 1726 01:38:21,395 --> 01:38:25,566 basketball was always about what he did 1727 01:38:25,649 --> 01:38:27,443 and not who he was. 1728 01:38:27,526 --> 01:38:31,447 His legacy will be Malcolm Jenkins 1729 01:38:32,406 --> 01:38:33,782 and Anquan Boldin 1730 01:38:34,491 --> 01:38:36,285 and LeBron James 1731 01:38:36,785 --> 01:38:38,370 and CP3 1732 01:38:39,496 --> 01:38:40,789 and D Wade 1733 01:38:41,457 --> 01:38:42,875 and Renee Montgomery 1734 01:38:42,958 --> 01:38:45,586 and the women of the WNBA and so forth, 1735 01:38:45,669 --> 01:38:48,005 who are stepping up in this generation and saying, 1736 01:38:48,088 --> 01:38:53,719 "We too have a contribution to make in terms of this struggle." 1737 01:38:54,595 --> 01:38:57,514 We have, especially as a collective, 1738 01:38:57,598 --> 01:39:01,101 real power to help support change. 1739 01:39:01,185 --> 01:39:04,146 You're saying the things that need to be said. You're taking a stance. 1740 01:39:04,229 --> 01:39:07,024 You're letting people know that what is happening is not okay. 1741 01:39:07,107 --> 01:39:09,401 And Bill Russell's whole career was that. 1742 01:39:10,152 --> 01:39:13,697 Players in my generation, it's all about, "What's next? What's next?" 1743 01:39:13,781 --> 01:39:16,867 But if you don't understand your history, you won't know where you're going. 1744 01:39:16,951 --> 01:39:19,078 Understanding the power that you do have, 1745 01:39:19,161 --> 01:39:22,289 that your voice and your opinion definitely matter, 1746 01:39:22,373 --> 01:39:24,500 and it carries on and off the court. 1747 01:39:25,209 --> 01:39:26,627 [West] I love Bill Russell. 1748 01:39:27,628 --> 01:39:30,965 He had a soul. Some people have no soul. He had a soul. 1749 01:39:31,507 --> 01:39:37,429 Uh, he was just one of the most unique men I've ever met in my life. 1750 01:39:37,513 --> 01:39:40,015 And I don't say that because of his success 1751 01:39:40,099 --> 01:39:42,559 as a basketball player. He was a leader. 1752 01:39:43,519 --> 01:39:44,979 He was an activist 1753 01:39:45,521 --> 01:39:48,899 when it wasn't popular to be an activist, 1754 01:39:48,983 --> 01:39:51,902 uh, at the expense of his own career sometimes. 1755 01:39:51,986 --> 01:39:53,153 The things I knew about Bill, 1756 01:39:53,237 --> 01:39:55,614 when he thought about something he thought was right, 1757 01:39:55,698 --> 01:39:58,742 that's what he's gonna go by. That's called a stand-up man. 1758 01:39:58,826 --> 01:40:01,161 That's the way Bill was on a consistent basis. 1759 01:40:01,245 --> 01:40:03,247 [sentimental music playing] 1760 01:40:05,290 --> 01:40:09,128 [Wright] Man can only ultimately be counted if he thinks he is doing right. 1761 01:40:10,170 --> 01:40:11,380 In the end, 1762 01:40:11,463 --> 01:40:14,174 I live with the hopes that when I die, 1763 01:40:14,258 --> 01:40:16,260 it will be inscribed for me, 1764 01:40:17,261 --> 01:40:19,680 "Bill Russell, he was a man." 1765 01:40:23,684 --> 01:40:26,020 The Boston Celtics lost an absolute legend today. 1766 01:40:26,103 --> 01:40:30,149 Bill Russell passed away at the age of 88, but his legacy will live on forever. 1767 01:40:39,116 --> 01:40:42,661 [Karen] One of my dad's favorite quotes is, when he passes away, 1768 01:40:42,745 --> 01:40:46,165 he's not sure about heaven. Heaven could actually be a step down. 1769 01:40:46,248 --> 01:40:50,044 Because for him, heaven was playing for the Boston Celtics. 1770 01:40:52,004 --> 01:40:55,466 It's incredible to see the lasting impact of Bill Russell. 1771 01:40:55,549 --> 01:40:58,886 He really wanted to stand up and let people know 1772 01:40:58,969 --> 01:41:03,223 Black people should not accept the status quo. 1773 01:41:04,349 --> 01:41:07,227 And that's in sports, and that's out of sports. 1774 01:41:09,521 --> 01:41:13,776 How much he did for African Americans, what he stood for as a man, 1775 01:41:13,859 --> 01:41:16,445 what he had to endure to play the game basketball, 1776 01:41:16,528 --> 01:41:19,490 and how much he wanted to make life better for others. 1777 01:41:19,573 --> 01:41:21,950 We're still fighting these same battles. 1778 01:41:22,910 --> 01:41:27,498 Leaders and giants in society like Bill Russell 1779 01:41:28,123 --> 01:41:32,086 lay that foundation to give us that confidence that we can do it. 1780 01:41:33,128 --> 01:41:35,130 [uplifting music playing] 1781 01:41:41,345 --> 01:41:44,598 [Jeannine] The NBA announced they were gonna retire Bill's number. 1782 01:41:44,681 --> 01:41:48,060 [Paul] Nobody else in the NBA will ever be able to wear number six. 1783 01:41:48,143 --> 01:41:52,022 That's the winningest man to ever play in this league, and it's well-deserved. 1784 01:41:53,941 --> 01:41:56,318 Bill Russell had a set of convictions, 1785 01:41:56,401 --> 01:41:59,696 not just about the game but about life 1786 01:41:59,780 --> 01:42:01,824 and clearly about the country. 1787 01:42:01,907 --> 01:42:05,661 I mean, he was a patriot as an American. 1788 01:42:06,829 --> 01:42:10,666 And somebody who was never afraid to speak his mind, 1789 01:42:11,333 --> 01:42:13,544 no matter the consequences. 1790 01:42:13,627 --> 01:42:16,421 An icon, a legend, and a pioneer. 1791 01:42:16,505 --> 01:42:20,008 And he obviously embodies what being a true champion is all about. 1792 01:42:20,801 --> 01:42:24,972 Everyone should give him 5% of their contract, big guys. Seriously. 1793 01:42:25,055 --> 01:42:28,100 If it wasn't for him, we wouldn't be who we are. 1794 01:42:30,644 --> 01:42:33,147 [Walton] Contemplating, the reflection. 1795 01:42:33,856 --> 01:42:34,982 What was, 1796 01:42:36,692 --> 01:42:37,985 what could have been, 1797 01:42:39,194 --> 01:42:40,404 what will be. 1798 01:42:42,156 --> 01:42:43,407 Bill Russell, 1799 01:42:44,449 --> 01:42:45,701 you've done your job. 1800 01:42:47,119 --> 01:42:48,829 The rest is up to us. 1801 01:42:49,872 --> 01:42:53,083 [uplifting music continues] 1802 01:42:54,251 --> 01:42:58,172 [Wright] I can honestly say that I have never worked to be liked. 1803 01:42:58,255 --> 01:43:00,883 I've only worked to be respected. 1804 01:43:00,966 --> 01:43:03,218 What has my life been? Many things. 1805 01:43:03,302 --> 01:43:06,638 Many places, many conquests, many failures, 1806 01:43:06,722 --> 01:43:10,142 and a time of fierce loves and hates and issues. 1807 01:43:10,893 --> 01:43:13,312 I have fought in every way I know how. 1808 01:43:13,937 --> 01:43:17,065 I've fought because I believed it was right to fight. 1809 01:43:17,566 --> 01:43:20,611 I think that no man should fear the consequences 1810 01:43:20,694 --> 01:43:24,031 because every man must do what he believes is right. 1811 01:43:25,073 --> 01:43:29,828 I have fought for the rights of man, all men, all races, all religions. 1812 01:43:30,329 --> 01:43:33,373 Perhaps I will always march to the distant drum. 1813 01:43:33,457 --> 01:43:36,084 Perhaps I will never catch the beat of the tune. 1814 01:43:37,252 --> 01:43:38,545 But I will try. 1815 01:43:38,629 --> 01:43:40,797 [uplifting music continues] 1816 01:43:55,520 --> 01:43:59,441 [dramatic music playing]