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Gar Heard

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American basketball player and coach (born 1948)

Gar Heard
Personal information
Born (1948-05-03) May 3, 1948 (age 76)
Hogansville, Georgia, U.S.
Listed height6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)
Listed weight219 lb (99 kg)
Career information
High schoolEthel Knight (LaGrange, Georgia)
CollegeOklahoma (1967–1970)
NBA draft1970: 3rd round, 40th overall pick
Selected by the Seattle SuperSonics
Playing career1970–1981
PositionPower forward
Number40, 24
Career history
As player:
19701972Seattle SuperSonics
1972–1973Chicago Bulls
19731976Buffalo Braves
19761980Phoenix Suns
1980–1981San Diego Clippers
As coach:
19871993Dallas Mavericks (assistant)
1992–1993Dallas Mavericks (interim)
19931997Indiana Pacers (assistant)
1997–1998Philadelphia 76ers (assistant)
1998–1999Detroit Pistons (assistant)
1999–2000Washington Wizards
2000–2001Atlanta Hawks (assistant)
2004–2005Detroit Pistons (assistant)
Career highlights and awards
Career NBA statistics
Points6,828 (8.7 ppg)
Rebounds5,876 (7.5 rpg)
Assists1,220 (1.6 apg)
Stats at NBA.com Edit this at Wikidata
Stats at Basketball Reference

Garfield Heard (born May 3, 1948) is an American retired professional basketball player and coach. He played collegiately at the University of Oklahoma and was selected by the Seattle SuperSonics (now the Oklahoma City Thunder) in the third round of the 1970 NBA draft. He had a 15-year NBA career for four teams: the Sonics, the Buffalo Braves (now the Los Angeles Clippers), the Chicago Bulls, and the Phoenix Suns. Heard is best known for a buzzer beater he made to send Game 5 of the 1976 PhoenixBoston championship series into a third overtime. This feat is commonly known as "The Shot", or "The Shot Heard 'Round the World", in reference to Ralph Waldo Emerson's poem "Concord Hymn", which was written about the Battle of Lexington.

Early life

Heard was born on May 3, 1948, in Hogansville, Georgia. He attended Ethel W. Kight High School in LaGrange, Georgia.

College career

In 1966, Heard chose to attend the University of Oklahoma (OU), over the University of Southern Illinois. At the time he graduated, Heard was the Sooners' all-time leading rebounder and second-leading scorer. As a senior, he averaged 21.7 points and 12.5 rebounds per game. The school has described him as "OU's first true superstar." He was selected first team All-Big Eight for the 1969-70 season. Heard played under head coach John McLeod for three seasons (1967-1970). (McLeod would later coach Heard as an NBA player and Heard would serve as an assistant coach under McLeod).

Heard set an Oklahoma school record with 21 double-doubles for a season by a Sooner in 27 games during 1969–70. It was finally broken by Blake Griffin on February 14, 2009.

Professional career

Supersonics, Bulls, Braves

Heard was selected by the Seattle SuperSonics (now the Oklahoma City Thunder) in the third round of the 1970 NBA draft (40th overall). He played his first two seasons in Seattle as a reserve power forward. In October 1972, three games into the 1972-73 season, he was traded to the Chicago Bulls (along with a third round draft pick) for Kenny McIntosh. Primarily playing as a reserve power forward, he averaged 20 minutes per game, with 10.3 points and 5.7 rebounds per game that season for the Bulls.

Prior to the 1973–74 NBA season, Heard and Kevin Kunnert were traded from the Bulls to the Buffalo Braves for John Hummer, a 1974 NBA draft 2nd round pick and a 1975 NBA draft 2nd round pick. The deal was part of the drafting and trade resume that earned Braves General Manager Eddie Donovan, who had constructed the championship New York Knicks teams of the early 1970s, the NBA Executive of the Year Award. In 1973-74, Heard had his best season in the NBA, averaging career highs with 35.7 minutes per game, 15.3 points per game, 11.7 rebounds per game, and 2.8 blocked shots per game. Heard went on to rank in the NBA top ten in rebounds (10th) and blocked shots (6th) that season.

Suns

After Donovan returned to the Knicks in April 1975, on February 1, 1976, 50 games into the Braves season, Heard was traded along with a second round pick to the Phoenix Suns for John Shumate. The Suns' coach was John McLeod, who had coached Heard for three years at Oklahoma. Heard went on to play 36 games that year for the Suns, playing in a total of 86 games in an NBA season, which is 82 games long. This is the third most games played in an NBA regular season, behind Walt Bellamy (88) and Tom Henderson (87), and tied with McCoy McLemore (86).

The 1975-76 Phoenix team had a large number of strong offensive players, but defense was a problem. In Buffalo, the team lacked in offensive capability, and became interested in Shumate, offering Heard in a trade. Before the trade, the Suns had a 19–27 (.413) record and had trouble keeping opposing teams under 100 points per game. After acquiring Heard the team had a 23–13 (.639) record. During his 36 games with the Suns that season, Heard averaged 12.4 points, 9.8 rebounds, 1.4 steals and 1.1 blocks per game, and had a 45.2% shooting percentage.

The Suns defeated Seattle in the first round of the Western Conference playoffs (4–2), and then defeated the Golden State Warriors in the Western Conference Finals (4–3). Golden State had a 59–23 regular season record. Heard started all six games in the first round, averaging 15.3 points, 9.3 rebounds, 2.2 steals and 2 blocks per game. He likewise started all seven games against the Warriors, averaging 13.1 points, 12.1 rebounds, 2.3 steals and 2.1 blocks per game.

The Suns played the Boston Celtics in the 1976 NBA finals, losing the series 4–2. Heard played more minutes than any other Sun during the six-game series, averaging 13.5 points, 9.3 rebounds, 1.7 steals and 1.7 blocks per game.

The Shot

Game 5 against the Celtics is often rated as the greatest, or one of the greatest, NBA finals game in history. The Celtics won the game 128–126 in triple-overtime. It is the end of the second overtime period, including an extraordinary shot from Heard with one second left in the period, that has been the object of particular focus.

With four or five seconds left in double overtime, after a steal by Paul Westphal, the Suns took a 110–109 lead. Future Celtic hall of famer John Havlicek raced down the floor and made a running 15 foot one-handed shot with two seconds remaining, giving Boston a one-point advantage (111–110). The Celtics' timekeeper then ran the clock out instead of stopping it after a made basket, per league rules. The Boston Garden crowd erupted, believing the game was over, and the Celtics themselves actually went back to their locker room. Legend has it that Havlicek had actually taken the tape off his ankles by this stage.

But the Suns correctly pointed out that there was still time left, though the officials only placed one second back on the clock instead of two, on the logic Havlicek let the ball go with two seconds left, and it would have taken one second to reach the basket. (Celtics fans had stormed the court after the time was erroneously allowed to expire, and one particularly boisterous fan attacked referee Richie Powers after it was announced that the game was not over yet.) Suns guard Paul Westphal then intentionally took a technical foul by calling a timeout when the Suns had no more timeouts to use. It gave the Celtics a free throw, which Jo Jo White converted to give Boston a two-point edge, but the timeout also allowed Phoenix to inbound from mid-court instead of from under their own basket. When play resumed, Heard caught the inbound pass and fired a very high-arcing turnaround jump shot from at least 18–20 feet away over Celtic defender Don Nelson. It swished through, sending the game into a third overtime. However, Boston eventually won the game and the Finals, four games to two. Heard had scored 17 points and grabbed 12 rebounds in Game 5.

A revision to Rule 12-A, Section I, in regards to excessive timeouts, resulted in the elimination of the advancement of the ball following an excessive timeout. The rule has since been changed to award the ball to the team shooting the technical free throw.

Heard went on to play four more seasons for the Suns (1976-1980), with the Suns advancing to the Western Conference Finals twice during that period. He played his final season with the San Diego Clippers, for which he had played when the team was in Buffalo.

Coaching

Heard was an assistant coach with the Dallas Mavericks for five years (1987–92) under John McLeod (Heard's coach at Oklahoma and with the Suns) and Richie Adubato. He began the 1992-93 season as an assistant coach, but served as the Mavericks' interim head coach through the end of the season, when Adubato was fired in January 1993. He next served as an assistant coach for the Indiana Pacers (1993-1997) under Larry Brown, the Philadelphia 76ers (1997–98) under Larry Brown, and Detroit Pistons (1998–99) under Alvin Gentry.

Heard began the 1999-2000 season as head coach of the Washington Wizards, coaching 44 games, until he was fired in January 2000 by the team's new president, Michael Jordan. He joined the Dallas Mavericks as an assistant coach for the remainder of the season, under Don Nelson (over whom he had taken "the shot" in the 1976 finals). The Washington job was his last as a head coach. His overall head coaching record is 23–74.

From 2000-2003, he was an assistant coach with the Atlanta Hawks under Lon Kruger. During the 2004–2005 season, he joined Larry Brown's staff for the third time, as an assistant coach with the Detroit Pistons. He served as head coach in several games that season when Brown was out due to a medical condition. The Pistons went to the NBA finals that year, losing to the San Antonio Spurs in seven games.

Career statistics

Legend
  GP Games played   GS  Games started  MPG  Minutes per game
 FG%  Field goal percentage  3P%  3-point field goal percentage  FT%  Free throw percentage
 RPG  Rebounds per game  APG  Assists per game  SPG  Steals per game
 BPG  Blocks per game  PPG  Points per game  Bold  Career high
 *  Led the league

NBA

Source

Regular season

Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
1970–71 Seattle 65 15.8 .381 .656 5.0 .7 5.9
1971–72 Seattle 58 25.8 .401 .617 7.6 .9 7.9
1972–73 Seattle 3 5.7 .444 1.000 2.0 .7 3.0
1972–73 Chicago 78 9 19.7 .425 .650 5.7 .7 10.3
1973–74 Buffalo 81 35.7 .435 .650 11.7 2.2 1.7 2.8 15.3
1974–75 Buffalo 67 32.1 .388 .564 9.9 2.8 1.6 1.8 11.1
1975–76 Buffalo 50* 30.5 .421 .607 10.2 2.5 1.3 1.1 9.9
1975–76 Phoenix 36* 33.9 .452 .673 9.9 1.8 1.4 1.1 12.4
1976–77 Phoenix 46 29.6 .379 .725 9.6 1.9 1.2 1.2 9.7
1977–78 Phoenix 80 26.2 .424 .612 8.2 1.7 1.6 1.3 7.8
1978–79 Phoenix 63 19.3 .441 .689 5.6 1.0 .8 .9 6.3
1979–80 Phoenix 82 17.1 .417 .000 .744 4.6 1.2 1.0 .6 5.0
1980–81 San Diego 78 20.9 .376 .000 .782 4.5 1.6 1.3 .9 4.8
Career 787 9 24.9 .414 .000 .654 7.5 1.6 1.3 1.3 8.7

Playoffs

Year Team GP MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
1973 Chicago 2 4.5 .500 1.5 .0 2.0
1974 Buffalo 6 40.0 .457 .708 14.7 2.5 1.5 2.0 16.8
1975 Buffalo 7 35.7 .396 .429 10.9 2.6 1.3 1.1 11.7
1976 Phoenix 19* 37.9 .441 .679 10.4 1.7 2.1 1.9 13.9
1978 Phoenix 2 31.0 .353 .500 8.0 2.5 1.0 2.0 6.5
1979 Phoenix 15 21.3 .372 .600 7.1 .9 .8 1.7 5.5
1980 Phoenix 8 27.9 .393 .733 6.4 1.5 1.1 1.4 6.9
Career 59 30.9 .419 .651 9.1 1.6 1.4 1.7 10.2

Head coaching record

Legend
Regular season G Games coached W Games won L Games lost W–L % Win–loss %
Playoffs PG Playoff games PW Playoff wins PL Playoff losses PW–L % Playoff win–loss %
Team Year G W L W–L% Finish PG PW PL PW–L% Result
Dallas 1992–93 53 9 44 .170 6th in Midwest Missed Playoffs
Washington 1999–00 44 14 30 .318 (fired)
Career 97 23 74 .237

References

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  17. "NBA & ABA Single Season Leaders and Records for Games". Basketball-Reference.com. Retrieved January 7, 2025.
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  38. "Larry Brown: Coaching Record, Awards". Basketball-Reference.com. Retrieved January 7, 2025.
  39. "Philadelphia 76ers Historical Statistics and All-Time Top Leaders". Basketball-Reference.com. Retrieved January 7, 2025.
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  43. Nance, Roscoe (November 4, 2004). "Brown is out after hip surgery". USA Today.
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# denotes interim head coach

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