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Larry Siegfried (born May 22, 1939, in Shelby, Ohio) is a retired American National Basketball Association player.
Siegfried played college basketball for the Ohio State University, and his tenure there overlapped with future Hall-of-Famers Jerry Lucas and John Havlicek. He played for the national champion 1960 team, and in 1961 he was named to the NCAA Final Four All-Tournament Team. Siegfried, a junior high scoring guard, and Joe Roberts, a senior forward, were the two holdover starters when three outstanding sophomores, Lucas, Havlicek and guard Mel Nowell arrived for the 1959-60 season.
Siegfried adjusted his scoring to allow for Lucas and Nowell while joining Roberts and Havlicek as a key defender. Siegfried was also an excellent free throw shooter few risked fouling. The Ohio State Co-Captain of the 1960 team, Siegfried played a key role in the Buckeyes run to the NCAA title. All five starters from that team later played in the NBA, which then had just nine teams and eleven players per team. Future coach Bobby Knight was a reserve on that team as well. For the 1960-61 season, Siegfried was team captain outright.
The team went undefeated until the NCAA Final, when they were upset by Cincinnati. Named All-Big Ten, Siegfried did not get the All-American consideration he may have been due because of the star presence of Lucas. Siegfried did play in the 1960 US Olympic Trials for the Rome Games. While he outperformed nearly every guard there, politics demanded several AAU selections that left him off that squad.
At 6'3" and 190 pounds, Siegfried was considered a prototype guard for the NBA at that time. The Cincinnati Royals drafted him with their first pick in 1961 to pair with Oscar Robertson in their backcourt. Siegfried would not play in Cincinnati because of Ohio State's loss to Cincinnati's Bearcats that year. Instead, he joined the Cleveland Pipers of the American Basketball League. The team, owned by future Yankee boss George Steinbrenner, and coached by John McLendon and Bill Sharman, won that pro league's 1961-62 title. Dick Barnett and Connie Dierking were among that team's stars. The highly-drafted Siegfried was just a reserve.
When the ABL folded the next year, the St. Louis Hawks acquired his rights but then surprisingly cut him. Siegfried considered retirement, becoming a high school coach and teacher before former college teammate Havlicek convinced coach Red Auerbach to try him out for the Boston Celtics. Slowly regaining his confidence, Siegfried proved to be a key pickup. He eventually became a starter next to Havlicek or Sam Jones in the backcourt. His defense and free throw shooting were key to NBA title wins for Boston in 1968 and 1969. Boston announcer Johnny Most often noted his tenacious defense, calling 'Ziggy's in his shirt tonight' to describe Siegfried on many nights.
Siegfried played his first seven professional seasons with the Boston Celtics, earning five championship rings during that time. He led the NBA in free throw percentage in both the 1965-66 and 1968-69 seasons. Siegfried spent the last two seasons of his career with the Rockets and Hawks organizations.
Larry Siegfried - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
STRAIGHT SHOOTER
The Larry Siegfried Interview
By: Michael D. McClellan | Tuesday, May 16th, 2006
He was a high school phenom, a Paul Bunyan in basketball shorts, and a player who could score points in bunches from all angles on the court. His 176-point eruption in a one month span during his senior season at Shelby High remains laced across the record books in the State of Ohio, a testament to his telekinetic court presence and deadeye marksmanship. Few at that level have ever played the game better. Fewer still would argue that claim. He was a virtuoso in high tops, equally adept at pulling down rebounds and dishing out assists, and the kind of player perfectly suited to join John Havlicek and Jerry Lucas on a championship quest at Ohio State. That Larry Siegfried would follow Havlicek to professional glory with the Boston Celtics is hardly surprising. Siegfried?s sweet shooting touch and trip-hammer release translated well from high school to college, and then again into the pros, and his presence on the Celtic roster helped keep basketball?s greatest dynasty rolling through the close of the 1960s.
Siegfried?s story begins modestly, on the rolling farmland just outside of Shelby, Ohio, where his father worked in a local factory and Siegfried spent countless hours shooting baskets against the family barn. The ball and the hoop were relatively inexpensive toys for a blue-collar family on a budget. Siegfried often shot alone, honing his jumper, playing imaginary games against All-Americans like Ralph Beard and Alex Groza of Kentucky, or Dick Schnittker of Ohio State. It proved to be the perfect training ground for an eager young athlete blessed with an abundance of God-given natural talent.
Celtic-Nation.com: Boston Celtics legend LARRY SIEGFRIED interview page 1
Schafrath, Siegfried enter Circle of Champions
By CURT CONRAD ? News Journal ? March 27, 2009
Siegfried dominated the Northern Ohio League for the Shelby Whippets. He scored more than 1,700 career points and averaged more than 38 points a game without the benefit of a 3-point line.
Like Schafrath, Siegfried attended Ohio State and, as a junior, teamed with Jerry Lucas and John Havlicek to win the program's only national championship in 1960. The Buckeyes reached the championship game again during Siegfried's senior season before falling to Cincinnati.
Siegfried was drafted by the Cincinnati Royals, but instead signed with the Cleveland Pipers of the American Basketball League. The Pipers won the ABL title in 1962. After the league folded, Siegfried signed with the Boston Celtics.
He played seven seasons with the Celtics, winning five championships.
"It's like Robin (Freeman) said when we were walking off the floor. It would be nice to go back and do it again," Siegfried said. "I enjoyed my time playing for those teams and I hope fans enjoyed watching them."
Schafrath, Siegfried enter Circle of Champions | mansfieldnewsjournal.com | Mansfield News Journal


