Take A Look At Larry Bird’s Life Off The Court

NBA legend Larry Bird is a three-time NBA champion with the Boston Celtics and is one of the greatest shooters ever, but he struggled through life along his journey to the NBA.

Read on to take a look at Bird's life, on and off the court.

"The Hick From French Lick"

Larry Bird and local children
Joseph Runci/The Boston Globe via Getty Images
Joseph Runci/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

For Larry Bird, growing up in West Baden, Indiana, with a population of 2,000 people, called for him to be a fighter.

Bird was born the fourth of six children.

ADVERTISEMENT

Larry's Childhood Was Not Hall of Fame-Worthy

ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird's childhood home
Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Bird grew up with his siblings and parents, Georgia and Joe. The couple stayed married until their divorce while Larry was in high school.

ADVERTISEMENT

Larry's father worked in factories before his unfortunate passing.

ADVERTISEMENT

Larry Struggled With His Parents' Divorce

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird at Indiana State
Getty Images/Archives
Getty Images/Archives
ADVERTISEMENT

The Bird family struggled before their divorce, with Joe often having to repair the home himself.

ADVERTISEMENT

For example, Larry and his family would have to stand outside while his father attempted to fix their furnace. It was too smokey to stand indoors.

ADVERTISEMENT

Bird Was About More Than Basketball In High School

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird's high school coach
Tracy A Woodward/The Washington Post via Getty Images
Tracy A Woodward/The Washington Post via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

In high school, Larry played many sports before choosing basketball.

ADVERTISEMENT

Bird also enjoyed playing baseball and softball until he grew from 6' 3" his junior year to a 6' 7" senior.

ADVERTISEMENT

His High School Career Was Unparalleled

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
A sign that reads
Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

During his time at Springs Valley High School in French Lick, Bird averaged 31 points, 21 rebounds, and 4 assists per game — all in an era when scoring was much lower than it is in the modern day.

ADVERTISEMENT

When he graduated in 1974, Bird was Springs Valley's all-time scoring leader. It was in high school that Bird first started wearing his iconic number 33.

ADVERTISEMENT

His First Wife Was Janet Condra

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird of the Boston Celtics in Action Against the Detroit Pistons
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Janet Condra met Larry, and they married after he left high school.

ADVERTISEMENT

Condra and Bird had one child, a daughter named Corrie, before the couple's marriage ended after less than a year.

ADVERTISEMENT

Larry Bird: The Father

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird
David L. Ryan/The Boston Globe via Getty Images
David L. Ryan/The Boston Globe via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Learning from his parents' work ethic, Bird did whatever he could to have enough money to raise his daughter Corrie.

ADVERTISEMENT

Larry worked as a garbageman and helped maintain parks and roads.

ADVERTISEMENT

Bird's Struggles Off the Court Carried on to the Court

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird and his Indiana State coach
Getty Images/Archives
Getty Images/Archives
ADVERTISEMENT

Losing his father and his own divorce were large contributors to Larry's struggles at Indiana University.

ADVERTISEMENT

Bird had issues adjusting to campus life and dropped out after only twenty-four days.

ADVERTISEMENT

Larry Bird and the Indiana State Sycamores

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird at Indiana State
Focus on Sport via Getty Images
Focus on Sport via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

After Larry grew two more inches to 6'9" and weighed 222lbs, he returned to college, attending Indiana State.

ADVERTISEMENT

The basketball team nicknamed "the Sycamores and Bird" went undefeated in 1979.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Bird and Magic Johnson Rivalry Begins

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird and Magic Johnson
Getty Images/Archives
Getty Images/Archives
ADVERTISEMENT

The Sycamores run lasted until they met Magic Johnson's Michigan State Spartans for the 1979 N.C.A.A. basketball championship.

ADVERTISEMENT

Michigan State won 75-64, and Bird scored 19 points, shooting only 7-21.

ADVERTISEMENT

Larry Vs. Magic Redefined College Basketball

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Gregory Kelser in Action under Basket
Getty Images
Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

While Bird may not have prevailed in his final college game, the rivalry between him and Magic Johnson helped propel college basketball to new heights.

ADVERTISEMENT

The championship between Indiana State and Michigan State achieved the highest-ever television rating for a college basketball game, all owing almost entirely to their fierce rivalry.

ADVERTISEMENT

Bird Almost Held Out Before Draft Day

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird on Draft day
Tom Landers/The Boston Globe via Getty Images
Tom Landers/The Boston Globe via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

On June 8th, 1979, the Boston Celtics drafted Larry Bird as the sixth overall pick in the first round.

ADVERTISEMENT

Celtics' GM Red Auerbach declared he would not pay Bird more than the average.

ADVERTISEMENT

Even Before His Hall of Fame Career Began, Bird Was Game

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird
Getty Images/Archives
Getty Images/Archives
ADVERTISEMENT

Upon hearing Auerbach's bold public statement, Larry and his agent decided that he should sit out.

ADVERTISEMENT

The plan was for Bird to finish his final collegiate year and play ball.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Boston Celtics' $3.25 Million-Dollar Man

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird signing first contract
Getty Images/Archives
Getty Images/Archives
ADVERTISEMENT

The danger of Bird re-entering the draft a year later and going number one ultimately convinced Auerbach to sign Larry.

ADVERTISEMENT

Auerbach signed Bird to a three-year, $3.25 million contract. He was going to play for the Celtics.

ADVERTISEMENT

Bird Made an Immediate Impact

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Boston Celtics Team Picture
Getty Images
Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

The Celtics had been a dominant team throughout the '60s and early '70s before falling on hard times later in the decade — but the arrival of Larry Bird turned things around quickly.

ADVERTISEMENT

Bird's rookie season was a resounding success, as he helped the Celtics improve their win total by 32 games from the previous season.

ADVERTISEMENT

It Was One of the Most Impressive Rookie Campaigns Ever

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Boston Celtics
Robert Riger/Getty Images
Robert Riger/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

At the end of the 1979-80 season, Bird's rookie year, he had averages of 21.3 points, 10.4 rebounds, 4.5 assists, and 1.7 steals per game, and he helped push the Celtics all the way to the Eastern Conference Finals before they were eliminated by the Philadelphia 76ers.

ADVERTISEMENT

For his efforts, Bird was named to the All-Star Team and also won the Rookie of the Year award.

ADVERTISEMENT

Larry Bird's Second Wife, Dinah Mattingly

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird's wife Dinah Bird
Jonathan Wiggs/The Boston Globe via Getty Images
Jonathan Wiggs/The Boston Globe via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Dinah Mattingly became Larry's second wife when they were married in 1989.

ADVERTISEMENT

The couple started dating after the end of his first marriage. The couple's two children are adopted.

ADVERTISEMENT

Dinah Mattingly, The "Older" Woman

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird and his family
Ray Tamarra/FilmMagic
Ray Tamarra/FilmMagic
ADVERTISEMENT

Dinah is two years older than Larry, and this fact caused drama and controversy early on for the newlyweds.

ADVERTISEMENT

Mattingly was born in 1954 and raised in Vigo County, Indiana.

ADVERTISEMENT

Larry vs. Magic Defined '80s Basketball

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Boston Celtics v Los Angeles Lakers
Focus on Sport/Getty Images
Focus on Sport/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

After their showdown in the 1979 NCAA Championship, Bird and Johnson would once again face each other in the NBA as part of the long-running Lakers-Celtics rivalry.

ADVERTISEMENT

In fact, the two teams — led by their respective superstars — were so dominant that every single NBA Finals series of the 1980s featured the Lakers, the Celtics, or both.

ADVERTISEMENT

They Squared Off In Three NBA Finals

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Los Angeles Lakers v Boston Celtics - 1985 NBA Finals
Focus on Sport/Getty Images
Focus on Sport/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

While both men found repeated championship success in the '80s, Johnson would have the upper hand overall.

ADVERTISEMENT

Bird's Celtics beat Magic's Lakers in the 1984 NBA Finals, but the Lakers came back with a vengeance, beating the Celtics in 1985 and 1987.

ADVERTISEMENT

A Career Cut Short

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
2018 Basketball Hall of Fame Enshrinement Ceremony
Maddie Meyer/Getty Images
Maddie Meyer/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Bird had a stellar 13-year NBA career which was cut short by nagging injuries.

ADVERTISEMENT

Larry guided the Boston Celtics to three NBA championships, winning Finals MVP in two of them.

ADVERTISEMENT

Magic Wasn't His Only Rival

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Boston Celtics v Detroit Pistons
Focus on Sport/Getty Images
Focus on Sport/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

While the Bird vs. Magic rivalry was largely respectful, pitting the two best players of their era against each other, the rivalry between Larry Bird and Bill Laimbeer of the Detroit Pistons was anything but cordial.

ADVERTISEMENT

In contrast to Johnson's Lakers, Laimbeer's Pistons were a scrappy, borderline violent team. Bird squared off with Laimbeer repeatedly, and the two reportedly dislike each other to this day.

ADVERTISEMENT

Retirement

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird dealing with injuries
Frank O'Brien/The Boston Globe via Getty Images
Frank O'Brien/The Boston Globe via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Injuries to Bird shortened what potentially could have been an even more legendary NBA career.

ADVERTISEMENT

Larry had surgery on both of his heels, back issues, and other injuries before retiring.

ADVERTISEMENT

Hall of Famer: Larry Bird

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird Hall of Fame induction
Maddie Meyer/Getty Images
Maddie Meyer/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Neither Celtics fans nor GM Red Auerbach truly knew how great Bird would be.

ADVERTISEMENT

Bird was the NBA MVP for three consecutive seasons from 1984-1986 and a twelve-time All-Star in the league.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Boston Celtics and Los Angeles Lakers' Rivalry

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird and Magic Johnson in college
Getty Images/Archives
Getty Images/Archives
ADVERTISEMENT

A rivalry that later became a friendship started in college between Bird and Magic, lasting for over twenty years.

ADVERTISEMENT

Johnson's Lakers lost to Bird's Celtics in the 1986 NBA Finals.

ADVERTISEMENT

Larry Bird and the "Dream Team"

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird and Magic Johnson Dream Team
Icon Sportswire/Getty Images/Archives
Icon Sportswire/Getty Images/Archives
ADVERTISEMENT

In 1992, Bird and Magic became teammates on arguably the greatest basketball team ever, the "Dream Team."

ADVERTISEMENT

Bird, Magic, and Michael Jordan guided Team U.S.A. to an easy gold medal at the Olympic Games.

ADVERTISEMENT

Bird's Last Game Was Not in the NBA

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird Team USA Dream Team
David Madison/Getty Images
David Madison/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Bird played his last game as a member of the "Dream Team" in 1992.

ADVERTISEMENT

After retiring, Larry joined the Boston Celtics front office as a basketball consultant for the team.

ADVERTISEMENT

He Went Down as One of the Best Ever

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Former Boston Celtics and current Indiana Pacers h
JOHN MOTTERN/AFP via Getty Images
JOHN MOTTERN/AFP via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

After his retirement, Bird immediately earned plaudits for his remarkable career. He was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1998, his first year of eligibility.

ADVERTISEMENT

Bird was also named to the NBA's 50th Anniversary All-Time Team list in 1996. Years later, he'd receive the NBA Lifetime Achievement Award.

ADVERTISEMENT

Introducing Head Coach Larry Bird

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird Indiana Pacers' Head Coach
STAN HONDA/AFP via Getty Images
STAN HONDA/AFP via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

After leaving his consulting job with the Celtics in 1997, Bird entered the world of coaching.

ADVERTISEMENT

Bird returned to his home state of Indiana to coach the NBA Indiana Pacers.

ADVERTISEMENT

Coach of the Year

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Indiana Pacers' Head Coach Larry Bird
Jonathan Wiggs/The Boston Globe via Getty Images
Jonathan Wiggs/The Boston Globe via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Bird coached the Pacers for three seasons from 1997-2000 and was named NBA Coach of the Year in his rookie season.

ADVERTISEMENT

Larry's Pacers made it to the 2000 NBA Finals.

ADVERTISEMENT

He's a Movie Star

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
space-jam_blQBuq
Warner Bros. via MovieStillsDb
Warner Bros. via MovieStillsDb
ADVERTISEMENT

While Bird was never a Hollywood leading man, he has appeared as himself in three movies, all released between 1994 and 1996.

ADVERTISEMENT

The first, Blue Chips, starred Nick Nolte, while the last, Celtic Pride, was a comedy starring Dan Aykroyd, Daniel Stern, and Damon Wayans. The middle film, and easily the best-known, is 1996's Space Jam.

ADVERTISEMENT

Mr. President, Larry Bird

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird Pacers President
PATRICK LIN/AFP via Getty Images
PATRICK LIN/AFP via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

In 2003, Bird became the Pacers' president of basketball operations.

ADVERTISEMENT

Bird excelled as president and was the 2012 NBA Executive of the Year. Bird retired as president in 2017.

ADVERTISEMENT

Larry Bird Owns Many Records, But Only One Unique One

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird Lifetime Achievement Award
Joe Scarnici/Getty Images for Turner Sports
Joe Scarnici/Getty Images for Turner Sports
ADVERTISEMENT

Bird owns a unique NBA record.

ADVERTISEMENT

He was the only NBA Rookie of the Year, MVP, Finals MVP, All-Star MVP, Coach of the Year, and Executive of the Year.

ADVERTISEMENT

He's Stepped Away From Basketball

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Create History, Not Hype - An All-Star Weekend Conversation With Larry Bird
Brian Ach/Getty Images for Converse
Brian Ach/Getty Images for Converse
ADVERTISEMENT

After his lengthy playing and executive career, it's somewhat surprising to see that in recent years, Bird has distanced himself from the game.

ADVERTISEMENT

While he's still listed as a consultant for the Indiana Pacers, he no longer occupies a front-facing role and is rarely seen with the team.

ADVERTISEMENT

Bird Had A Strained Relationship With His First Daughter, Corrie

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird and his Jeep Renegade
Focus on Sport via Getty Images
Focus on Sport via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Larry's first marriage to Janet ended on bad terms, and his relationship with their daughter Corrie suffered because of it.

ADVERTISEMENT

Janet raised their daughter after they divorced without Larry's help.

ADVERTISEMENT

You Are the Father

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry and Dinah Bird at a funeral
Jim Davis/The Boston Globe via Getty Images
Jim Davis/The Boston Globe via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Asking for a paternity test did not help Bird ease tensions between Janet and himself.

ADVERTISEMENT

The paternity test confirmed that Corrie was indeed Larry's child, but it barely affected him.

ADVERTISEMENT

Corrie Still Struggles For Larry's Attention

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Classic NBA
Icon Sportswire/Getty Images
Icon Sportswire/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Larry's only contribution to Corrie's life was paying child support as part of the divorce requirements made with Janet.

ADVERTISEMENT

A bank account was set up for monthly withdrawals until Corrie turned 18.

ADVERTISEMENT

Corrie Bird: "...I Still Have Hope That He Can Be A Part of My Life"

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Larry Bird acceptance speech
Michael Kovac/Getty Images for Turner Sports
Michael Kovac/Getty Images for Turner Sports
ADVERTISEMENT

Corrie has been quite public about her disappointment over Larry's lack of a relationship with her.

ADVERTISEMENT

Corrie has moved on but still remains hopeful for a relationship with Bird someday.