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This Hall of Fame forward is the
only player to lead the NCAA, NBA,
and ABA in scoring. After playing
fourteen seasons (10 with the NBA),
Barry racked up a career total of
25, 279 points. He was a 12-time
All-Star selection, and in 1975, he
led his Golden State Warriors to the
NBA championship. He retired after
the 1979-80 season, and he was
inducted into the Naismith Memorial
Basketball Hall of Fame in 1987. In
1996, Barry was named to the NBA's
50th Anniversary All-Time Team...Book
Rick Barry for Your Event
If
you were choosing a pickup
basketball team, Rick Barry would be
one of your first choices. There
have been few players in basketball
history that played with more
passion and competitive zeal than
Rick Barry. Conversely, if Barry
played for the opposing team, one
dreaded the assignment of having to
cover him. On the court, Barry had
only one speed-turbo. He was an
aggressive force who would use any
means necessary to score and win. In
many cases, scoring and winning
meant slashing drives to the hoop
with a reckless abandon that either
landed him two points or a trip to
the free throw line. His modern
style of basketball was sharply
contrasted at the free throw line
where his unique underhanded
technique was a throwback to
basketball's early days. Barry
excelled at the charity stripe; his
underhanded tosses connected 89.3
percent of the time, second best in
NBA/ABA history.
After an All-State scholastic career
at Roselle Park (NJ) High School,
the six-foot-seven Barry
single-handedly resurrected the
University of Miami program and made
the Hurricanes a national force. At
Miami, Barry averaged 29.8 ppg in 77
games and concluded his consensus
All-America senior season by leading
the nation in scoring (37.4 ppg)
In
1965, the San Francisco Warriors
drafted Barry in the first round.
Barry wasted little time. He claimed
NBA Rookie of the Year honors (25.7
ppg, 10.6 rpg), and the next year
not only led the league in scoring
(35.6 ppg), but was named MVP of the
All-Star Game. During his 14-year
professional career, four in the ABA
(Oakland, Washington and the New
York Nets) and 10 in the NBA (San
Francisco, Golden State and
Houston), Barry was a 12-time
All-Star. His dead-eye outside jump
shot was one of basketball's
deadliest weapons, and enabled him
to become the only player in history
to lead the NCAA, ABA and NBA in
scoring. In 1975, Barry was named
the NBA championship series MVP
after leading the underdog and
undermanned Warriors to a four-game
sweep of the Washington Bullets. In
a combined ABA/NBA career, Barry
tallied 25,279 points and was named
to nine All-NBA/ABA First Teams.
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Book Rick Barry for Your Event
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