Top 39 Quotes & Sayings by Bob Cousy

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American athlete Bob Cousy.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Bob Cousy

Robert Joseph Cousy is an American former professional basketball player. Cousy played point guard for the Boston Celtics from 1950 to 1963, and briefly with the Cincinnati Royals during the 1969–70 season. A 13-time NBA All-Star and 1957 NBA Most Valuable Player (MVP), he was a core piece during the early half of the Celtics dynasty winning six NBA Championships during his 13-year tenure with the Celtics. Nicknamed "The Houdini of the Hardwood", Cousy was the NBA assists leader for eight consecutive seasons, introducing a new blend of ball-handling and passing skills to the NBA. Following his playing career with the Celtics he served as a college basketball coach and an NBA head coach for the Cincinnati Royals. He is regarded as the first great point guard of the NBA.

The MVP award was very satisfying in terms of personal accomplishments, but the championship was the most important thing of all.
We had a strong relationship with Walter Brown, and felt that he was the best owner in the league.
I was the original socially depraved shy ghetto kid. — © Bob Cousy
I was the original socially depraved shy ghetto kid.
I grew up in the heart of the Depression.
My biggest win was getting the meal money bumped from $5 to $7.
But as a coach I wanted to keep things from being too complicated.
Race wasn't an issue. My family was French, but Yorkville was a melting pot of races and cultures.
You have to remember that coaching wasn't sophisticated back then - you didn't have the camps, clinics and all the technical advances that are available today - so from that standpoint, playing with a cast on my arm was a fortunate event in my life.
People have been killing because of racial differences since the time of Adam and Eve, but in this country racism has been primarily aimed at African Americans.
We hung out on the streets, played stickball, and did all of the things that other kids did.
Russell joined the team in December, 1956, following the Olympics.
That seemed to be the case with most of the teams based in the smaller towns - the fans were more rabid, and they wanted to literally kill the opposition.
Do your best when no one is looking. If you do that, then you can be successful in anything that you put your mind to. — © Bob Cousy
Do your best when no one is looking. If you do that, then you can be successful in anything that you put your mind to.
There were riots in just about every game we played with Syracuse.
I won the city scoring championship as a senior.
The NBA wasn't a big deal at that time, so it wasn't really in my career plans.
French was my first language.
I was literally fabricated over in France and born about six months after the boat landed at Ellis Island. This was the heart of the Depression. For the first 12 years of my life we lived in a terrible ghetto on the East River.
We played every night. Sometimes we'd stay overnight after a game, but we'd usually drive on to our next destination.
We lived in Yorkville, which is located on the East End of Manhattan. It's further east than Hell's Kitchen, and back then it was the kind of place where the roaches and cockroaches were big enough to carry away small children.
Back then every small town had a gym, and if itseated more than 2,000 then we'd be interested in playing in it.
In whatever sport of field of endeavor you are interested, you should do whatever is necessary to compliment your God-given talent with proper mental preparation so as to do "the best you can." The criterion should be to fully exploit your potential rather than to win at any cost. What more could anyone ever ask of you than to be the best you possibly can?
I dribbled by the hour with my left hand when I was young. I didn't have full control, but I got so I could move the ball back and forth from one hand to the other without breaking the cadence of my dribble. I wasn't dribbling behind my back or setting up any trick stuff, but I was laying the groundwork for it.
We lived in Yorkville until 1940, at which point we moved into the St. Albans neighborhood of Queens.
Bob Brannum was my body guard on the court. He was 6'-6 and built like a bulldog.
These days I smile benignly at the fights that I see in NBA games. There aren't any broken noses or black eyes, which happened quite often when I played.
Indiana gets credit for having the most rabid basketball fans in the union, but Maine is a very, very active basketball state.
Do your best when no one is looking.  If you do that, then you can be successful at anything you put your mind to — © Bob Cousy
Do your best when no one is looking. If you do that, then you can be successful at anything you put your mind to
My family was poor, my father drove a cab for a living, but we felt normal because everybody else was in the same boat.
Every jock gets up and tells the world how lucky he is. But I feel that I may be the luckiest one of all in terms of timing and being at the right place at the right moment-even though, for the last 30 years, I was told I was born 20 years too soon, for obvious reasons.
It also didn't take me long to decide that Tri-Cities wasn't for me, and that I wasn't going to go there to play basketball.
We ran an up-tempo, transition-style of game at Boston College - very similar to what we ran when I played for Arnold.
Sports create a bond between comtemporaries that lasts a lifetime. It also gives your life structure, discipline and a genuine, sincere, pure fulfillment that few other areas of endeavor provide.
Do your best when no one is looking.
But in fairness also to the idea of continuing success, you also have to exploit opportunities.
Kerner decided to trade my rights to the Chicago Stags, which sounded better to me than Tri-Cities, but the Stags folded up almost immediately.
I had endured six years of frustration so I think winning it all meant more to me than most of the others on the team.
I once heard that Paul Seymour said as much as winning an NBA Championship, he'd like to see the Celtics lose a game after Auerbach brought out the cigar so he could go up to Arnold and stuff the cigar in his face.
Cooper was my road roommate, and also happened to be the first African American player drafted by a National Basketball Association team. — © Bob Cousy
Cooper was my road roommate, and also happened to be the first African American player drafted by a National Basketball Association team.
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