Bill Russell was born to Charles Russell and Katie Russell in West - TopicsExpress



          

Bill Russell was born to Charles Russell and Katie Russell in West Monroe, Louisiana. West Monroe was strictly segregated, and the Russells often struggled with racism.[4] Once, Russells father was refused service at a gasoline station until the staff had taken care of all the white customers. When his father attempted to leave and find a different station, the attendant stuck a shotgun in his face, threatening to kill him unless he stayed and waited his turn.[4] At another time, Russells mother was walking outside in a fancy dress when a policeman accosted her. He told her to go home and remove the dress, which he described as white womans clothing.[4] Because large numbers of blacks were moving to the West during World War II to look for work there, Russells father moved the family out of Louisiana when Russell was eight years old and settled them in Oakland, California.[4] While there the family fell into poverty, and Russell spent his childhood living in a series of public housing projects.[4] Charles Russell is described as a stern, hard man who was initially a janitor in a paper factory (a typical low paid, intellectually unchallenging Negro Job, as sports journalist John Taylor commented),[5] but later became a trucker when World War II broke out.[5] Being closer to his mother Katie than to his father,[5] Russell received a major emotional blow when she suddenly died when he was 12. His father gave up his trucking job and became a steel worker to be closer to his semi-orphaned children.[5] Russell has stated that his father became his childhood hero, later followed up by Minneapolis Lakers superstar George Mr. Basketball Mikan, whom he met when he was in high school.[6] In his early years, Russell struggled to develop his skills as a basketball player. Although Russell was a good runner and jumper and had large hands,[5] he simply did not understand the game and was cut from the team in junior high school. As a freshman at McClymonds High School[7] in Oakland, California, Russell was almost cut again.[8] However, coach George Powles saw Russells raw athletic potential and encouraged him to work on his fundamentals.[5] Russells previous encounters with white authority figures were often negative, so he was delighted to receive warm words from his white coach. He worked hard and used the benefits of a growth spurt to become a decent basketball player, but it was not until his junior and senior years that he began to excel, winning back to back high school state championships.[8] Russell soon became noted for his unusual style of defense. He later recalled, To play good defense ... it was told back then that you had to stay flatfooted at all times to react quickly. When I started to jump to make defensive plays and to block shots, I was initially corrected, but I stuck with it, and it paid off.[9] One of Russells high school basketball teammates was Frank Robinson.[10]
Posted on: Tue, 08 Apr 2014 22:38:40 +0000

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