Los Angeles Times

Basketball mourns Meadowlark

MEADOWLARK LEMON, 1932 - 2015

- By Carla Rivera

Former Harlem Globetrott­ers star Meadowlark Lemon died Sunday in Arizona. He was 83.

Long before athletes tweeted, and inyour-face dunks and tackles could be shared by millions instantly, Meadowlark Lemon became one of the most popular sports personalit­ies in the world.

His dazzling basketball skills and slapstick humor were a key attraction for perhaps the most famous basketball team ever, the Harlem Globetrott­ers. He became known as the “Clown Prince of Basketball,” appearing before presidents and kings and portraying himself in television programs, movies and cartoons.

Lemon “just had a great joy,” Clippers Coach Doc Rivers said Monday.

He died Sunday in Scottsdale, Ariz., at age 83. The cause of death was not known, said Brett Meister, a spokesman for the Globetrott­ers.

Meister said Lemon had been scheduled to fly from his Scottsdale home to Chicago to take part in taping an ESPN special as part of the Globe-

trotters’ 90th anniversar­y tour.

Lemon spent 24 years with the Globetrott­ers, joining the team in 1954 and acting as ringleader and showman-in-chief during the team’s heyday through the 1960s and ’70s.

Lemon and the Trotters toured more than 100 countries, introducin­g the sport to millions who had never before seen a basketball thrown through a hoop and breaking down cultural and racial barriers along the way.

During Lemon’s early days, the all-black Globetrott­ers’ influence was no less in the United States. The team showcased the talents of African American players such as Reece “Goose” Tatum and dribbling wizard Marques Haynes at a time when the fledgling National Basketball Assn. was largely white and lacked the razzle-dazzle of America’s first show-time team.

The Globetrott­ers played exhibition ball, mixing theater and sports. But they were also seriously competitiv­e, especially in the early years. Their victory in 1948 over the Minneapoli­s Lakers helped put the NBA on the map.

Many have speculated that Lemon might have been a huge NBA star had the league been more welcoming to black players.

By the time Lemon departed the Globetrott­ers in 1978, the NBA was far more integrated, and a more aggressive athleticis­m was helping it gain worldwide popularity. Lemon’s basketball chops would influence Michael Jordan and other greats.

The Globetrott­ers’ street style was something that helped draw fans to their games.

“I remember my dad taking me to Chicago Stadium and getting to see him [Lemon] and Curly Neal and the whole group,” Rivers said. “Then I get back home and I’m sitting in the backyard and I’m doing the ball-spinning-on-my-finger thing.”

Famously, Wilt Chamberlai­n joined the Globetrott­ers for a year in 1958, fresh out of the University of Kansas. But there was no question of who had the starring role.

Lemon was an entertaine­r, smack-talking through games, chasing referees with water buckets and teasing spectators with similar buckets of confetti. The teams’ usual foils were the mostly white — and hapless — Washington Generals.

But Lemon backed the comedy up with jaw-dropping half-court hook shots and no-look behindthe-back passes.

“Meadowlark was the most sensationa­l, awesome, incredible basketball player I’ve ever seen,” Chamberlai­n said during an interview before his death in 1999. “People would say it would be Dr. J [Julius Erving] or even Michael Jordan. For me, it would be Meadowlark Lemon.”

The late Times sports columnist Jim Murray described Lemon as “an American institutio­n whose uniform should hang alongside the Spirit of St. Louis and the Gemini space capsule in the halls of the Smithsonia­n Institute.”

Meadowlark Lemon was born April 25, 1932, in Wilmington, N.C. His given name was Meadow Lemon III, according to his website, but various accounts say his birth name was George Meadow Lemon. He legally changed his name to Meadowlark in the 1950s.

He started out playing football at playground­s. When he was 11, according to his website, he saw a newsreel about the Harlem Globetrott­ers and was taken by their slick showmanshi­p, which was accompanie­d by their signature tune “Sweet Georgia Brown.”

“The newsreel on this particular Saturday was about a new kind of team — a basketball team known as the Harlem Globetrott­ers,” he wrote in his 2010 memoir, “Trust Your Next Shot: A Guide to a Life of Joy.” “The players in the newsreel were unlike any I had ever seen.... They laughed, danced and did ball tricks as they stood in a ‘Magic Circle’ and passed the ball to a jazzy tune called ‘Sweet Georgia Brown.’ How they could play!”

He added: “There was one other thing that was different about them, though. They were all black men. The same color as me.”

At the time, he wrote that his family was so poor that he practiced by rigging a makeshift hoop with an onion sack and coat hanger. He used an empty Carnation milk can as a ball. After a boy’s club opened nearby, he finally got to handle a real basketball, practicing his shots for as many as 18 hours a day, he wrote.

In April 1952, the Globetrott­ers received a letter from Lemon asking for a tryout, according to the team’s Web page. While serving two years in the Army, he played a few games on an overseas tour for the team, and owner Abe Saperstein gave Lemon a chance. He played his first season with one of the Globetrott­ers’ developmen­tal teams, the Kansas City Stars, before joining the Globetrott­ers in 1954.

Lemon appeared on “The Ed Sullivan Show” and in the animated “Harlem Globetrott­ers” and “Scooby-Doo” cartoon series.

In his later playing years, some derided his on-court antics as buffoonish. But Lemon discounted such criticism.

“We were part of something that America needed at one time,” Lemon said of the Globetrott­ers in a 2010 interview with The Times. “America needed Joe Louis. America needed Arnold Palmer. America needed Sammy Davis Jr., and Louis Armstrong. And America and the world at one time needed people like the Harlem Globetrott­ers and Meadowlark Lemon.”

He was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2003 as well as the Internatio­nal Clown Hall of Fame. An ordained minister, he worked as a motivation­al speaker until his death.

 ?? Harlem Globetrott­ers ?? COURT JESTING Meadowlark Lemon spent 24 years with the Globetrott­ers.
Harlem Globetrott­ers COURT JESTING Meadowlark Lemon spent 24 years with the Globetrott­ers.
 ?? Joe Kennedy
Los Angeles Times ?? MIXING THEATER AND SPORTS Lemon slyly stuffs the basketball under his jersey to confuse an opponent. The Globetrott­ers
were also seriously competitiv­e; they defeated the NBA’s Minneapoli­s Lakers in 1948.
Joe Kennedy Los Angeles Times MIXING THEATER AND SPORTS Lemon slyly stuffs the basketball under his jersey to confuse an opponent. The Globetrott­ers were also seriously competitiv­e; they defeated the NBA’s Minneapoli­s Lakers in 1948.
 ?? Fitzgerald Whitney
Los Angeles Times ?? SLAPSTICK HUMOR, DAZZLING SKILLS Meadowlark Lemon demonstrat­es the art of ball twirling to a
group of youngsters at a Los Angeles park in 1972.
Fitzgerald Whitney Los Angeles Times SLAPSTICK HUMOR, DAZZLING SKILLS Meadowlark Lemon demonstrat­es the art of ball twirling to a group of youngsters at a Los Angeles park in 1972.

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