Jo Jo White was another in a long line of Red Auerbach masterstrokes; while highly coveted in the 1969 NBA Draft, the Kansas All-American slipped to the Celtics because of what was believed to be a two-year military obligation. White found himself in the Marine Reserve program instead, and Auerbach suddenly had the foundation on which to build a post-Russell title winner. A year later, Auerbach would add swashbuckling center Dave Cowens to the mix; by 1974 the Boston Celtics were once again atop the basketball world.
White, who grew up playing sports in St. Louis, was such a gifted all-around athlete that both the Dallas Cowboys and Cincinnati Reds drafted him. A consensus All-American at Kansas, White helped the United States to Olympic gold in Mexico City as the U.S. erupted for 17 unanswered points to begin the second half against the Yugoslavians. (White would score eight points in the onslaught.)
Still, his name will forever be linked to "The Greatest Game Ever Played", and on that sweat-box of a stage otherwise known as Boston Garden, Jo Jo White came to play. Thirty-three points. Hellish defense. Sixty-plus minutes on the court in a pivotal, triple-overtime Game 5 that put the Celtics up 3-2 in the series. White's performance catapulted Boston to its 13th NBA title, guaranteed him the NBA Finals MVP award, and solidified his place in the pantheon of Celtic immortals. Intelligent, articulate and thoughtful, Jo Jo White epitomizes what Celtic greatness is all about.