Medicine Hat News

Wayne Embry says if given the choice to play amid racial unrest, he would

- LORI EWING

Wayne Embry remembers the shock and sorrow that swept through the Boston Celtics when Martin Luther King Jr., was assassinat­ed hours before Game 1 of the 1968 Eastern Division finals.

That April 5 game in Philadelph­ia, a day after King’s death, almost didn’t happen.

“Our immediate reaction was we will not play the game,” said Embry, who spent the day of the game wrestling with his grief in the hotel room he shared with Don Nelson. “Players were just shaken, all the emotions you can probably think of. We just thought ‘We will not play the game.”’

Eight of the game’s 10 starters were Black, including Bill Russell, one of the most vocal athletes during the civil rights movement.

The Celtics’ game-day meeting was heated, some white players argued against a postponeme­nt.

But as racial unrest exploded in cities across the U.S., Celtics general manager Red Auerbach believed playing would keep people off the streets.

“So, of course we had to go out compete, but in the back of our minds, the Sixers and Celtics players shared grief and were visibly upset and disturbed about what had happened. But we still went out and played,” said Embry, who is now the Toronto

Raptors’ senior basketball adviser.

The mood was eerie that night in The Spectrum as the Celtics beat Philly 127-118.

“You could tell there was a difference, people were afraid of what might happen, you could sense it, you could just feel it,” said Embry, whose Celtics won the series then went on to beat the Los Angeles Lakers in the Final.

Cooped up in his home near Dayton, Ohio, because of COVID-19, the 83-year-old Embry has watched the racial unrest of the past few weeks play out on his TV. The images remind him of the turbulent 1960s.

“I am saddened, angered, and quite frankly terrified by the way things are, and this is how many years later?” Embry said. “We thought things were well, and things got well in the late 70s and early 80s, we started to see progress, corporate America opened up, I think we saw great progress. And I think it continued on into the 90s.

“But in recent years, it’s just amazing, somehow we’ve regressed. It’s sad to see.”

Since George Floyd’s death last month in Minneapoli­s, numerous NBA players including Raptors veteran guard Kyle Lowry have joined the hundreds of thousands of people who have protested across the U.S

 ??  ?? Wayne Embry
Wayne Embry

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