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There aren’t too many times where a player becomes a Hall of Famer in a career with a team who never wanted him in the first place.
Serious. The Celtics had the number 1 pick in the 1950 Draft, and they passed on Cousy, who was a local kid and a star at Holy Cross. The Tri-Cities Blackhawks chose the Point Guard at number 3, but Cousy refused to report, and the NBA brokered him to the Chicago Stags, who subsequently folded. Three Stags were made available for dispersal, Max Zaslofsky, Andy Phillip and Cousy, and the Celtics landed Cousy…who again they didn’t want.
Before we begin, just being nicknamed “Hondo” is enough for us to put John Havlicek in our top five!
Havlicek was the 7th Overall Pick from the 1962 Draft, and he would go on to be the most tenured player in Celtics history with 16 seasons and 1,270 games under his belt. He rarely missed games, led by example and was a lethal weapon on both ends of the court. "Hondo" would develop into the game's first real swingman, moving effortlessly from guard to forward. From 1965-66 to his retirement, he was a perennial All-Star and would average 20.8 Points per Game. This is no surprise, which if you look at his overall tenure he is the Celtic's all-time leading scorer.
While we said that anointing Bill Russell was a lock as our top Boston Celtic of all-time, Larry Bird gave us pause.
Before Bird's arrival to Boston, the franchise was in disarray after being without question the most dominant franchise in the league. The city craved basketball greatness, and Bird gave them just that. Bird was the 6th overall pick in 1978 but joined a year later after staying at Indiana State for his senior year. As expected, Bird was an automatic superstar winning the Rookie of the Year and being named to his first of what would be 12 All-Star Games.
Despite the high amount of Hall of Famers that the Boston Celtics had and how many championships that they won; you would think that there would be a glut of top considerations for the spot of the best of Celtic of all-time.