Chris Herring and Dan Shaughnessy: Pat Riley’s Punishing Practices, the Basketball Symphony of Bill Walton and Larry Bird, and the Toughness of the 80s Celtics and 90s Knicks
What would happen if a current NBA coach ran players until they threw up or fell over in pre-season training camp? How would today’s All-Stars react to a “no layups” policy that left them on the ground during drills? There’d be big trouble now, but back in the 90s, Pat Riley made New York Knicks practices look like Navy SEAL Hell Week, and opponents feared playing in Madison Square Garden.
This toughness is not only traced back to Riley’s upbringing in gritty Schenectady, but also to his own playing days for Kentucky and in the NBA. Then there was the roughing up that the Boston Celtics gave Riley’s Lakers in their seesaw battle for mid-80s supremacy. All three came to bear when Riley left the Showtime Lakers and molded the Knicks into the toughest team in pro basketball history. Not merely tough guys, the Knicks made it to the Finals twice, pushed Jordan’s Bulls to seven games, and had legendary rivalries with Reggie Miller’s Indiana Pacers and Miami Heat.
A decade before, it was the Celtics who ruled the East, with a combination of front-line toughness and the unparalleled skill of Larry Bird. When Bill Walton joined the team and was finally able to put in a full injury-free season, Bird, McHale, and co made it to the top of the NBA mountain one last time. Chris Herring and Dan Shaughnessy chronicled these eras in their fascinating books Blood in the Garden and Wish It Lasted Forever.
In this episode, they share:
Read the full stories of the 90s Knicks in Chris’s book Blood in the Garden and follow him on Twitter. Relive the Celtics’ 80s glory days in Dan’s book Wish It Lasted Forever and check out his Twitter feed.
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free