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Make It Count: The Life and Times of Basketball Great Jojo White
Make It Count: The Life and Times of Basketball Great Jojo White
Make It Count: The Life and Times of Basketball Great Jojo White
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Make It Count: The Life and Times of Basketball Great Jojo White

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In an age dominated by overhyped athletes who are sometimes short on character, JoJo Whites story offers a refreshing look back at one athletes careera career that was the product of genuine good values. In Make It Count, author Mark C. Bodanza presents a biography of a man who triumphed both on and off the basketball court.

Whites story is interwoven with ours as a nation. His basketball days were shaped byand in a few cases, helped shapeevents of monumental importance. Race relations, the war in Vietnam, and political tumult across the land punctuated Whites years as both a Kansas Jayhawk and Boston Celtic. Bodanza shows how, through his years on the court, the point guard from St. Louis, Missouri, maintained a steady contribution to the game that became his passion while still a child. With each passing game, season, or team that formed a part of his playing days, White stayed true to principles learned before he donned his first high-school uniform.

Make It Count narrates a compelling chronicle of a sports career complete with drama, triumphs, and losses, as well as an affirmation that hard work has its reward. In life, as in basketball, JoJo Whites approach to each opportunity that a new day presents has always been the same: make it count.

LanguageEnglish
PublisheriUniverse
Release dateJun 28, 2013
ISBN9781938908453
Make It Count: The Life and Times of Basketball Great Jojo White
Author

Mark C. Bodanza

Mark C. Bodanza is a historian and trial lawyer who has written numerous historical newspaper columns, guest commentated on radio and television programs nationwide, and lectured at schools and colleges throughout the country. Bodanza lives in Leominster, Massachusetts, with his family. Ten Times a Champion is his fifth book.

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    Make It Count - Mark C. Bodanza

    Copyright © 2012, 2014 by Mark C. Bodanza

    All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

    The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.

    iUniverse Star

    an iUniverse LLC imprint

    iUniverse

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    Bloomington, IN 47403

    www.iuniverse.com

    1-800-Authors (1-800-288-4677)

    Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.

    Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Thinkstock are models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.

    Certain stock imagery © Thinkstock.

    ISBN: 978-1-9389-0844-6 (sc)

    ISBN: 978-1-4917-5593-8 (hc)

    ISBN: 978-1-9389-0845-3 (e)

    Library of Congress Control Number: 2013911583

    iUniverse rev. date: 12/8/2014

    Contents

    Preface

    Acknowledgments

    Interviews

    Introduction

    1. Rival Leagues Compete for Talent

    2. Youngest of Seven

    3. A Talent Recognized

    4. Becoming a Jayhawk

    5. The Shot That Helped Make History

    6. Tournament Play

    7. International Play and Competing in the NIT

    8. The 1968 Olympics, Uncertain Times

    9. A Time of Transition

    10. Rookie Season

    11. Building the New Celtics

    12. Hoisting a Banner

    13. The Greatest Game Ever Played

    14. Epilogue

    Outline

    Statistics as of October 2011

    Bibliography

    Also by Mark C. Bodanza:

    A Game That Forged Rivals:

    How Competition between Two New England High Schools Created One of the Greatest Traditions in Football

    and

    1933

    Football at the Depth of the Great Depression

    To Annunziata and Calogero,

    and all who came after.

    Have you made someone happy

    or have you made someone sad?

    What have you done

    with the day that you had?

    God gave it to you

    to do just as you would.

    Did you do something wicked

    or did you do something good?

    Did you hand out a smile

    or just give out a frown?

    Did you pick someone up

    or push someone down?

    What have you done

    with your beautiful day?

    God gave it to you;

    don’t throw it away!

    Elizabeth White

    September 11, 1912–July 26, 2009

    Preface

    I first met JoJo White in my Leominster, Massachusetts, law office during February of 2010. The lanky former Celtic settled into the chair across from my desk with a graceful ease. Despite his departure from professional basketball nearly three decades earlier, he still retained that unmistakable look of an athlete. His gestures and words were measured and polite and made with great candor and openness. It was readily apparent that JoJo White was a true gentleman in every sense of the word. It was not difficult, even at that early juncture, to start building a rapport with him.

    During our meeting I couldn’t help but recall some distant memories. My mind wandered back to June 1976. I had just finished my sophomore year of college and had swapped my textbooks for a paintbrush and a summer of house painting. One particular day had my focus: a warm day in early June that my buddy and I had spent in the hot sun plying our summer trade. With a full day of labor behind us we cleaned up, bought some beer, and settled in at a friend’s house to watch game five of the NBA finals.

    That game, pitting the Phoenix Suns and Boston Celtics, captured my imagination more that any basketball game ever has. Today, most fans recall with relative ease that the Boston Celtics defeated the Suns that night in triple overtime. Some still refer to that game as the greatest game ever played. JoJo White put on a dominating performance that night, scoring 33 points and playing a record sixty minutes of the sixty-three it took to decide the epic battle. His efforts in that game helped earn White MVP honors for the finals on Boston’s way to its thirteenth NBA championship.

    I had one inescapable thought as JoJo and I conversed that winter day nearly thirty-four years after that memorable contest. In 1976, as I watched that historic game, I could never have imagined that the player who helped spark the Celtics that night might be sitting in my office more than three decades later. Life is unpredictable, and in that moment I felt compelled to share my thoughts with JoJo. He flashed the warm grin I have come to know and with a glint in his eye took off his championship ring from that year. As he handed it to me to examine, I felt the weight of all that it symbolized.

    A good sports story has always appealed to Americans, and the best chronicles from the sporting world always reveal the importance of values central to all of us as human beings. Our nation was coming of age and in the throes of becoming a superpower when James Naismith tacked up a couple of peach baskets and invented the game of basketball at Springfield College in Massachusetts during December of 1891. There is something about sports that connects us to each other, and this is especially true in a nation built on the premise that individuals bound to a common cause can accomplish the unimagined. It is no wonder that athletic drama so often captures our attention and hearts. More often than not, the common thread in a saga from the field or arena is the triumph of hard work and dedication, often against all odds.

    Even before meeting JoJo White, I knew enough about his story to comprehend that his basketball career was worthy of telling, but I completely underestimated the breadth of the story. What time disclosed, as I got to know him, was how much his basketball career was the product of genuine values. He has always conducted himself, both on and off the basketball court, with dignity and determination.

    While his basketball days, which so frequently intersected with many historic moments, are a worthy topic all alone, they tell the smaller part of his story. In an age dominated by overhyped athletes sometimes short on character, JoJo White’s story is a refreshing look back. As the years go by and seasons fade into history, the point guard from St. Louis will leave a lasting legacy. That legacy is as important for what it means to the young people, for whom he serves as an example, as it is for the sport he loves so much. An examination of JoJo’s playing days is replete with a lot of great basketball history that fans of the game will enjoy. All of that aside, there are many reasons to admire JoJo White, and when you have the opportunity to read this book, I’m confident that you will appreciate his story even more.

    Acknowledgments

    It has been my privilege to have the assistance of many wonderful people in the research and writing of this book. It is no great surprise that a book about such a fine person as JoJo White would provide many opportunities to meet and interview many good people.

    All of JoJo’s teammates and friends have been gracious in relating the story of his basketball career and times. I wish to sincerely thank John Havlicek, Dave Cowens, Charlie Scott, Paul Silas, Cedric Maxwell, Tom Satch Sanders, and Isaac Bud Stallworth. I am also indebted to Ted Owens, JoJo’s coach at Kansas, who generously related so many recollections of his college basketball career. Tom Heinsohn, JoJo’s coach during his years with the Celtics, himself a former Celtics player and today a talented broadcaster, helped focus the story as only he could.

    I am thankful to Dana Aks, a 2010 graduate of Kansas University (and my daughter Kathryn’s law-school roommate), who taught me the meaning of rock chalk.

    Many members of JoJo’s family have been supportive and happy to provide some wonderful recollections of JoJo’s childhood. I particularly want to thank JoJo’s sister Adlean Foster. I also owe a debt of gratitude to JoJo’s son, Brian White, who gave me some valuable and heartfelt insight about his dad.

    I am grateful to my friend Nancy Bell who, as she has done so many times before, challenged me to improve the earliest drafts of the manuscript. My friend and mentor, Adrian Nicole LeBlanc, was a great inspiration, and I am thankful for her insight and support. Kathi Wittkamper, my editorial consultant, has given freely of her time, and I am fortunate to have been guided by her great dedication.

    My law-office staff always gets leaned on a bit with each book I write. Each time they respond as the dedicated professionals they are, for which I give many thanks to Kathleen Welch, Gabriella Goodale and Diane Downey. My brother and law partner, David Bodanza, is always my most valuable sounding board, and I’m beyond blessed to be able to work with him each day.

    I will be forever grateful that Joseph JoJo White trusted me to tell his story. JoJo and his wife, Deborah, are two of the finest people I have ever met. It became evident early on in this project that this wasn’t a book about a basketball career so much as it was the story of a humble, dedicated man with a warm and generous heart. With each passing month of research, interviews, and writing, I have become closer to JoJo and Deborah. I am very proud to call them my friends.

    To my wife, Adele; children, Melissa, Kathryn, and Nicholas; and grandson, Brody, too: thank you for always being there, for understanding, and most of all, for your unending love and support.

    Interviews

    JoJo White

    Deborah White

    Brian White

    Adlean Foster

    Dave Cowens

    John Havlicek

    Tom Heinsohn

    Cedric Maxwell

    Ted Owens

    Tom Satch Sanders

    Charlie Scott

    Paul Silas

    Isaac Bud Stallworth

    Introduction

    Deborah White was parked on the roadside. Her trip home was interrupted by a cell phone call from her husband’s doctor. He asked her to pull over before they talked. It didn’t take a whole lot of instinct to know that the news wasn’t good. The doctor had a diagnosis for what had been plaguing her husband, JoJo White, a former basketball player for the NBA’s Boston Celtics. It was early May of 2010, and JoJo had been sick for more than six months. Originally the doctors thought his twenty-pound weight loss and an inability to hold food down was the result of a gastrointestinal virus. Mrs. White was not prepared for the news she was about to hear.

    JoJo had a brain tumor. The doctor’s words hit with a thud and echoed long after the call ended. Deborah sat alone and prayed. She asked God to help him. The tumor was walnut sized. An athletic body, well conditioned even after retirement, helped compensate for deficits caused by the growing tumor. There wasn’t any time to delay surgery, which was scheduled for a week later. The doctor suspected that the tumor was not cancerous, and his theory proved correct.

    While his beloved Celtics were on

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