Top 50 Quotes & Sayings by Oscar Robertson

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American athlete Oscar Robertson.
Last updated on December 22, 2024.
Oscar Robertson

Oscar Palmer Robertson, nicknamed "the Big O", is an American former professional basketball player who played for the Cincinnati Royals and Milwaukee Bucks in the National Basketball Association (NBA). Robertson played point guard and was a 12-time All-Star, 11-time member of the All-NBA Team, and one-time winner of the MVP award in 14 seasons. In 1962, he became the first player in NBA history to average a triple-double for a season. In the 1970–71 NBA season, he was a key player on the team that brought the Bucks their first NBA title. His playing career, especially during high school and college, was plagued by racism.

You see what happens in college and high school games today - a three-point shot or a dunk. I think that's the reason that you see a lot of that in the pros today.
But I like to think an athlete is an athlete.
You need a teaching coach who understands the game of basketball, not just some guy coming on the court talking about Xs and Os. — © Oscar Robertson
You need a teaching coach who understands the game of basketball, not just some guy coming on the court talking about Xs and Os.
Basketball is basketball.
You've got to learn the footwork, the positioning, how to box out, how to pass, how to shoot your free throws. All these things are necessary, not to be the No. 1 player in the world, but maybe you can play against him.
When you play against different people from all walks of life you can't do the same thing against every player defensively or offensively. You have to change up the way you go at a player.
When you play guard, you're not going to block a lot of shots. Inside, you're going to block shots.
If you're a basketball player, you've got to shoot.
They should have a rule: in order to be a sportswriter, you have to have played that sport, at some level; high school, college, junior college, somewhere. Or, you should have had to have been around the game for a long time.
I don't think that players learn how to play any other aspect of the game in high school or college.
Who do I think was the greatest? This might shock you: Elgin Baylor. He did so many great things. Nobody could guard him, playing in the forward spot. I'd love to see some of today's greats playing against Elgin. They couldn't guard him. Nobody could.
I think that everyone should be able to dribble. Everyone should be able to pass. Otherwise, why are you out there?
We're all Americans trying to compete. Magic was competing for his team and Larry for his team. — © Oscar Robertson
We're all Americans trying to compete. Magic was competing for his team and Larry for his team.
It's a sad commentary when I have to say that sometimes in our country we are real sensitive to race.
But if people are buying the products, naturally they're gonna use them.
I was taught to play that way when I was in high school and even before I got to high school.
But I think the image that's thrown out on television is a bad image. Because you see players who want to imitate hip-hop stars. And the NBA is taking advantage of the situation.
I'd like to think that the nature of the two teams - Boston being a championship team over the years and the Lakers, same thing - was a lot bigger than Larry Bird or Magic Johnson.
Some players are more physical than others, some play with more finesse. Some are just really great all-around players. So you have to change your game.
It's like all guys want to do is make a dunk, grab their shirt and yell out and scream - they could be down 30 points but that's what they do. Okay, so you made a dunk. Get back down the floor on defense!
I think that basketball players should get the job done no matter how it looks on the screen.
This is where young players today want to land. They want to be NBA players because of the money.
I think that teaching coaches are the norm now.
You don't cut anywhere, don't pick down anywhere, don't double screen, no weak side picking. All these things that should happen in a game of basketball don't happen anymore.
I don't blame David Stern because a player gets on the court and he doesn't put out competitively. No one can make you play if you don't want to play.
Now, I guess, people want stars. People are trying to invent stars.
When you go into a game on offense, you make a couple moves and see what the defender is going to do. Then you pretty much can figure out what he is going to do against you - whether he carries his hands low or high, whether he is bumping or pushing, those type of things.
The thing about it is almost everyone could pass that way, but we were kept from doing it by our coaches.
You look at today, it's a different situation. You have a game that has been transformed into a game where almost every shot is either an outside shot - a three-point shot - or a dunk.
The Olympics were great, because you had to make the team, and then go to the games. Now, I don't know, these guys today don't want to do anything like that.
But after that you don't see a lot of real good fundamental play. You see a showboat-type basketball which is almost parallel to street basketball.
I think no one has written a history of the great coaches who were around 30 to 40 years ago who taught the fundamentals.
When I started playing, I wasn't fast, I was gangly, my jumpshot was terrible. — © Oscar Robertson
When I started playing, I wasn't fast, I was gangly, my jumpshot was terrible.
When I came into the league, once a team drafted you, they owned you forever. If they didn't like the clothes you wore, or the car you drove, they could blackball you.
People will think there are no other great ballplayers. Look at Garnett. Look at Duncan, Shaq, Kobe. Look at the players with Sacramento. The have a really good basketball team.
People say that, but I think the NBA was bigger than Larry Bird and Magic Johnson.
The players have no real self-esteem when it comes to putting the best image out there in a real competitive fashion.
There's so many young peoople who start to play basketball and never learn the fundamentals.
I don't know hardly any of the players who have the in-between game like me, who can go to any position on the court.
Just fundamental things - I played guard and I played forward, so you get into a position where you are pivoting out on the court.
Just because it is an All-Star Game doesn't mean that you are playing as efficiently as you should.
College coaches want to power the ball inside, they want (their post players) to power the ball up, but no one can shoot from that 15-foot area anymore.
I'm sorry that the young athletes in basketball will not get the chance to play (in the Olympics) anymore, and live that dream. — © Oscar Robertson
I'm sorry that the young athletes in basketball will not get the chance to play (in the Olympics) anymore, and live that dream.
The triple-double is just a stat. It's a test of your strength and stamina and playing ability, really.
I played when I played, and played, I think, against the greatest players in the greatest time in the history of basketball.
You have to teach now - tell a kid how to box out, tell him how to pass, teach him footwork. Players don't understand that anymore.
But when I did it (the triple-double), I didn't even know it until someone told me.
I played on an all-black high school team and we didn't want people saying that we were clowns.
Look, I think you should promote the game, but I think you should make it what it ought to be. Not some kind of a side-show.
Actually, Magic and the Lakers beat Philadelphia for Magic's first NBA Championship.
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