Zelmo Beaty
Zelmo "Big Z" Beaty (/ˈbeɪtiː/ BAY-tee;[1] October 25, 1939 – August 27, 2013) was an American basketball player. He played eight seasons in the National Basketball Association (NBA) and four in the rival American Basketball Association (ABA). A three-time ABA All-Star and two-time NBA All-Star, Beaty was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as a player in 2016. Early lifeHigh schoolZelmo Beaty Jr. was born on October 25, 1939, in Hillister, Texas, a small town of 250. Beatty's father died when he was a child.[1] He attended the segregated Scott High School in Woodville, Texas,[1] and played for coach John Payton,[2] winning back-to-back Prairie View Interscholastic League 1A state championships in 1957 and 1958.[3] CollegeBeaty attended Prairie View A&M University, a small National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) school outside of Houston, Texas.[4] "From 1958–1962 at Prairie View A&M Beaty averaged 25 points and 20 rebounds per game and was a two-time first team NAIA All-American (1960 & 1962). The "Big Z" led Prairie View A&M to the NAIA national basketball title in 1962 and was named the Chuck Taylor Tournament MVP."[3] NBASt. Louis HawksBeaty was selected with the third pick of the 1962 NBA draft by the St. Louis Hawks.[3] Beaty was named to the inaugural NBA All-Rookie Team in 1963, along with Dave DeBusschere, Terry Dischinger, John Havlicek and Chet Walker.[1][5] He averaged more than 20 points per game in three different seasons, and over ten rebounds per game in six of his seven seasons with the Hawks.[6] A physical player, Beaty led the NBA in personal fouls in 1962–63 and 1965–66, and tied for the league lead in disqualifications during the 1963–64 season.[7] On December 3, 1967, Beaty scored an NBA career high 42 points in a 123–109 win over the Seattle SuperSonics.[8][9] During the 1969 NBA Playoffs, the first Hawks postseason in Atlanta, Beaty averaged 22.5 points (his highest NBA playoffs average) and 12.9 rebounds in 11 games before, in a pattern familiar for the 1960s Hawks, they were eliminated in the Western Division Finals by the Los Angeles Lakers, the round before the NBA Finals.[6][10] During his Hawks tenure, Beaty made two NBA All-Star Game appearances in 1966 and 1968,[1][6] and helped the Hawks reach the playoffs every season of his tenure.[11] In 1969, Beaty left the NBA to play in the rival American Basketball Association (ABA).[1] After playing in the ABA, Beatty returned to the NBA for one final year, 1974–1975, playing 69 games for the Los Angeles Lakers.[1] ABAUtah StarsBeaty was legally barred from playing in the ABA by a legal injunction from the Hawks during the 1969-70 NBA season, and had to wait a year to join the Utah Stars (who had been the Los Angeles Stars).[1][12] In his first season in the ABA (1970–1971), Beaty led the league in two-point field goal percentage,[13] was third in the league in rebounds per game (15.7),[14] and averaged 22.9 points per game.[4] Coached by Bill Sharman and also featuring ABA star Willie Wise, the Stars were dominant in the regular season and finished with the second best record in the league at 57–27.[15] Utah's success continued in the playoffs, sweeping the Texas Chaparrals in the first round (4–0), before defeating the Indiana Pacers (4–3) to advance to the 1971 ABA Finals.[16] In the finals, Beaty averaged 28.4 points and 16 rebounds per game, including recording totals of 36 points and 16 rebounds in a Game 7 win to end the series.[17] After the game, Beaty was awarded the ABA Playoffs Most Valuable Player Award for his role in the championship victory.[6][4] The following year, Beaty averaged a career high (for both his NBA and ABA careers) of 23.6 points per game while playing all 84 games of the regular season.[6][1] However, that postseason the Stars would be eliminated during a hard-fought seven-game series in the Western Division Finals by the Pacers, who Utah had beat the year before to advance to the finals.[18] In total, Beaty played four seasons with the Stars, being named to the All-ABA Second Team twice and making the ABA All-Star Game three times (1971–1973), before returning to the NBA as a member of the Los Angeles Lakers.[19][1][4] He also served as president of the ABA's Player Association, as well as union player representative with the Hawks.[20] By 1974 during his final year with the Stars, Beaty was severely hampered by knee injuries, having undergone six surgeries on his knees during his career.[21] Beaty retired in 1975 with combined ABA/NBA totals of 15,207 points and 9,665 rebounds.[22][6] In the 1975–1976 season, he briefly served as a coach for the ABA's Virginia Squires for 42 games.[1][23] PersonalAfter pro ball, Beaty worked in financial planning. He worked at a bank in Southern California during the year between playing for the Hawks and Stars. He also worked as a substitute physical education teacher in Seattle elementary schools.[1] As reported by Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Curt Gowdy Award writer Peter Vecsey, Beatty's Utah roommate Willie Wise said Beatty "was greatly influenced by Martin Luther King and became a staunch proponent for equality in all arenas, especially education. That’s why he became a substitute teacher. He went into the unruliest schools in Washington State because he wanted Afro American kids to have a chance to learn.'”[24] Beaty died from cancer on August 27, 2013, at his home in Bellevue, Washington. He was 73 years old. He had been married to his wife for about 50 years, and had two children.[1] Posthumous honorsBeaty was selected to be inducted into the 2014 National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame class,[25] the 2015 Texas Sports Hall of Fame class,[3] and the 2016 Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame class.[26][4] Earlier, in 1997, Beatty was named to the ABA's 30-man all-time team,[3] and in 1989, was inducted into the Prairie View A&M Sports Hall of Fame, and is a recipient of the William "Billy" Nicks Legend Award.[27] Host Josh Levin ends every episode of the Slate sports podcast Hang Up and Listen by saying, "Remember Zelmo Beaty." This is a reference to an appearance by Shaquille O'Neal on the Late Show with David Letterman in which the host asked O'Neal about several centers from earlier eras and O'Neal did not know about Beaty even though Beaty made significant contributions to the game on and off the court.[28] NBA/ABA career statistics
Regular season
Playoffs
LegacyThe March 16, 2022, game between Maryland Eastern Shore and Coastal Carolina at The Basketball Classic been designated the Zelmo Beaty Game.[29] References
External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Zelmo Beaty.
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