The
center, colloquially known as the
five or the
pivot, is one of the
standard positions in a regulation
basketball game. The center is normally the
tallest player on the team, and often has a great deal of strength
and body mass as well. A typical
NBA center is
6'10" (2.08 m) or taller.
In many cases, the center's primary role is to use his or her size
to score and defend from a position close to the basket. A center
who possesses size along with athleticism and skill constitutes an
unparalleled asset for a team. The centers are also generally the
players who are chosen to take
jump
balls.
There has been occasional controversy over what constitutes a "true
center". For example, some would say that
Tim
Duncan, although listed throughout his career as a
power forward, is actually a
center, because of his size and style of play. Nonetheless, the
judgment of whether a given player is a center or power forward is
often highly subjective. Because there are currently so few people
who meet the ideal size requirements of an
NBA center, teams will
sometimes find it necessary to play an individual at that position
who would be more effective as a power forward.
It should also be noted that centers and power forwards often have
low
free throw percentages. Because of
this, it is not uncommon for the opposing team to purposely foul
and therefore send them to the line, especially late in games. This
has been a common strategy used against certain centers who have
continuously struggled with free throws; examples include
Wilt Chamberlain,
Shaquille O'Neal, and
Ben Wallace. The technique of fouling a poor
free throw shooter in order to win back possession in the hope that
the player will (as usual) miss his free throws is sometimes known
as the
Hack-a-Shaq strategy.
Nevertheless, there are centers who are particularly good from the
free throw such as retired Lithuanian great
Arvydas Sabonis or his currently active
countryman
Žydrūnas
Ilgauskas, the latter of whom is one of the few centers along
with
Yao Ming in the NBA regularly assigned
to shoot free throws after
technical
fouls.
Centers are among the leaders in blocks and rebounds and are said
to "anchor" defenses. It is common for centers to roam the paint,
and therefore block a high numbers of shots, especially when their
man does not have the ball.
The tallest player to ever be drafted in the NBA was the 7'8"
Yasutaka Okayama from Japan, though
he never played in the NBA. The tallest players to ever play in the
NBA, at 7'7" (2.31 m) are centers
Gheorghe Mureşan and
Manute Bol (although Bol was said to be a few
millimeters smaller). Standing at 7'2" (2.18 m),
Margo Dydek is the tallest player to have ever
played in the
WNBA.
History of the center position
Emergence of the Center
The center is considered a necessary component for a successful
team, especially in professional leagues such as the NBA. Great
centers have been the foundation for most of the dynasties in both
the NBA and NCAA. The 6’10"
George
Mikan pioneered the Center position, shattering the widely-held
perception that tall players could not develop the agility and
coordination to play basketball well, and ushering in the role of
the dominant big man.
He led DePaul University
to the NIT title, then, after
turning professional, won seven National Basketball
League, Basketball
Association of America and NBA
Championships in his ten year career (1946–56), nine of them
with the Minneapolis
Lakers. Using his height to dominate opposing players,
Mikan invented the
hook shot and the
shot block; as a consequence, the
NCAA, and later NBA, adopted the
goaltending rule, and, in 1951, the NBA widened
the foul lane, a decision known as the 'Mikan rule.'
1960s: The Era of Bill Russell and Wilt Chamberlain
In the 1960s,
Bill Russell and
Wilt Chamberlain further transformed
basketball by combining height with a greater level of athleticism
than previous centers. Following the retirement of
George Mikan, the rivalry of the two big men
came to dominate the NBA. Between the two of them, Chamberlain and
Russell won nine of the eleven
MVP awards in the twelve year
period between 1958 and 1969; played against one another in six
Eastern Conference Finals and two NBA Finals between 1959 and 1969.
Many of the records set by these two players have endured today.
Most notably, Chamberlain and Russell hold
the top eighteen season averages for rebounds.
Bill Russell led the
University of San Francisco to two
consecutive
NCAA
Championship (1955, 56). He joined the
Boston Celtics and helped make them one of
the greatest dynasties in NBA history, winning eleven championships
over his thirteen-year career (1956–69) as well as five MVP awards.
Russell revolutionized defensive strategy with his shot-blocking,
rebounding and physical
man-to-man
defense. While he was never the focal point of the Celtics
offense, much of the team's scoring came when Russell grabbed
defensive rebounds and initiated
fast
breaks with precision outlet passes, primarily to
point guard Bob Cousy.
As the
NBA's first African-American superstar, Russell struggled
throughout his career with the racism he encountered from fans in
Boston
, particularly after the 1966–67 season, when he
became the first African-American in any major sport to be named
player-coach.
His principal rival,
Wilt
Chamberlain, listed at 7'1", 275 pounds, lacked Russell's
supporting cast. Chamberlain played college ball for the
Kansas Jayhawks, leading
them to the 1957 title game against the
North Carolina Tar
Heels. Although the Jayhawks lost by one point in triple
overtime, Chamberlain was named the tournament's Most Outstanding
Player. Briefly a member of the
Harlem Globetrotters before joining the
Philadelphia Warriors of the
NBA in 1959, Chamberlain won two Championships, in 1967 with the
Philadelphia 76ers and 1972 with
the
Los Angeles Lakers, although
his teams were repeatedly defeated by the Celtics in the Eastern
Conference and NBA Finals. He also won seven scoring titles, eleven
rebounding titles, and four regular season
Most
Valuable Player awards, including the distinction, in 1960, of
being the first rookie to receive the award. Taller and stronger
than any player of his era, he was usually capable of scoring and
rebounding at will. Although he was the target of constant double-
and triple-teaming, as well as fouling tactics designed to take
advantage of his poor free-throw shooting, he set a number of
records that have never been broken. Most notably, Chamberlain is
the only player in NBA history to average more than 50 points in a
season and
score 100
points in a single game (both in 1961–62 as a member of the
Philadelphia Warriors). He
also holds the NBA's all-time records for rebounding average
(27.2), rebounds in a single game (55), and
career rebounds (23,924).
A lesser-known center of the era was
Nate
Thurmond, who initially played the forward position opposite
Wilt Chamberlain for the
San Francisco Warriors but moved to
center after Chamberlain was traded to the new Philadelphia
franchise. Although he never won a Championship, Thurmond was known
as the best
screen setter in the
league, and his averages of 21.3 and 22.0 rebounds per game in
1966–67 and 1967–68, are exceeded only by Chamberlain and
Russell.
Centers in the 1970s and 1980s
In contrast to the Celtics dynasty of the 1960s, the 1970s were a
decade of parity in the NBA, with eight different champions and no
back-to-back winners. At the college level, the
UCLA Bruins, under Coach
John Wooden, built the greatest dynasty
in NCAA basketball history, winning seven consecutive titles
between 1967 and 1973. UCLA had already won two consecutive titles
in 1964 and 1965 with teams that pressed and emphasized guard play.
After not winning in 1966, Wooden's teams changed their style when
Lew Alcindor became eligible. He
led UCLA to three championships-in 1967, 68' and 69'-while winning
the first
Naismith
College Player of the Year Award. During his college career,
the NCAA enacted a ban on dunking primarily because of Alcindor's
dominant use of the shot. His entrance into the NBA with the
Milwaukee Bucks in 1969 was timely,
as Bill Russell had just retired and Wilt Chamberlain was 33 years
old and increasingly plagued by injuries. After leading the Bucks
to the 1971 NBA championship, teamed up with legendary
Point guard Oscar
Robertson, Alcindor, who had converted to
Islam, changed his name to
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. In 1975,
Abdul-Jabbar was traded to the
Los
Angeles Lakers, and, after the arrival of
Point guard Magic
Johnson in 1980, formed part of a new Lakers dynasty that won
five NBA titles (1980, 82', 85', 87', 88'). In addition,
Abdul-Jabbar won six regular-season MVP awards (1971, '72, '74,
'76, '77, '80). At 7'2", 235 pounds, he lacked the strength of
Chamberlain in his prime, but had a longer wingspan and ultimately
proved more durable, adhering to a strict physical-fitness regime
that enabled him to play for twenty years, the longest career in
NBA history at the time. Offensively, he was best known for his
trademark 'Skyhook' hook-shot, almost impossible to block because
of his height and wingspan. His career record of 38,387 points has
yet to be broken. Defensively, the 1973–4 season was the first in
which the number of blocked shots were kept, and, over the next
seven years, Kareem led the league in this statistic or finished
second.
Another product of John Wooden's UCLA program,
Bill Walton, appeared poised to join the ranks
of great centers. He led UCLA to back-to-back NCAA titles in 1972
and 1973, led the
Portland Trail
Blazers to the NBA championship in 1977, and won the NBA MVP
the following year. However, his career was plagued with injuries,
most infamously a broken bone in his left foot suffered during his
MVP season that he never fully recovered from, and he spent most of
the following decade on the bench, although he eventually did win a
second NBA title as a backup for the
Boston Celtics in 1986, when he received the
Sixth Man Award.
Willis Reed won two championship with the
New York Knicks in 1970 and 1973,
teamed with Point guard
Walt Frazier;
although undersized for the center position at 6'9", he had the
strength to play inside, was a highly-skilled jump shooter, and was
effective at setting
pick, a key
element in the Knicks motion-oriented offense. The undersized but
scrappy
Dave Cowens, drafted at the
recommendation of Bill Russell, helped the
Boston Celtics win two more NBA titles, in
1974 and 1976.
Leading centers of the late 1970s and early 1980s include
Wes Unseld of the
Baltimore/Washington Bullets,
Artis Gilmore of the
ABA Kentucky Colonels,
Chicago Bulls and
San Antonio Spurs;
Moses Malone of the
Houston Rockets and
Philadelphia 76ers;
Mark Eaton of the
Utah Jazz and
Robert
Parish of the
Boston Celtics, who
was acquired from the
Golden State
Warriors in
1980 for the top
overall pick in the NBA Draft. Unseld led the Bullets to four NBA
finals appearances and one championship, in 1978. Using his
strength and determination to compensate for his lack of size (6 ft
7 in), he was famous for his rebounding, shotblocking, and
bone-jarring picks.
Artis Gilmore,
often overlooked because of the mediocrity of his teams,
established himself as the best low-post scorer in the league.
He set the
NCAA Division I record for career average in rebounds (25.2) at
tiny Jacksonville
University
, and enjoyed an illustrious ABA career before joining
the NBA's Chicago Bulls in 1976, playing there until he was traded
to San Antonio in 1982, for whom he played until his retirement in
1987. He remains the NBA's career leader in field goal
percentage (minimum 2000 shots made) with a 59.9 percentage.
Malone, the first high school player to turn professional, was
drafted by the
Houston Rockets after
several years in the ABA, and won two MVP Awards and led Houston to
its first NBA Finals in 1981, before joining the
Philadelphia 76ers, where, teamed with
Julius Erving and
Bobby Jones, he won an
NBA Championship in 1983, as well as a third League MVP. Never a
dominant defender, his quickness and tenacity made him one of the
best rebounders in NBA history, particularly on the offensive end;
he led the league in rebounds six times in a seven-year period and
still holds the NBA record for offensive rebounds.
In the mid-1980s, the 7'4" Eaton was the most prolific shot-blocker
in the league, and, although never a major offensive contributor,
won two
NBA
Defensive Player of the Year Awards while helping transform the
lowly
Utah Jazz into a playoff contender.
Of all these players, none enjoyed the success of
Robert Parish, who, with forwards
Larry Bird and
Kevin
McHale, formed the legendary frontcourt of the
Boston Celtics team that won three titles
(1981, 1984 and 1986). The Celtics' fierce rivalry with the Lakers
dominated the NBA during the decade and helped basketball reach an
unprecedented level of popularity. Nicknamed "Chief" after a
character in the film
One Flew Over the
Cuckoo's Nest because of his stoic demeanor, Parish was
known for his trademark arching jump-shot—leading many experts to
consider him the best medium-range shooting center of all time —and
his ability to finish fast-breaks with his surprising speed.
Playing until the age of 43, Parish broke Abdul-Jabbar's record for
career games played.
Centers in the 1990s
Coach
John Thompson, once
a seldom-used backup to
Bill Russell
with the Celtics, developed the
Georgetown Hoyas into the
chief pipeline for talent at the Center position, producing a
succession of great defensive big men in
Patrick Ewing,
Dikembe Mutombo and
Alonzo Mourning. In 1984, Georgetown, led by
Patrick Ewing, defeated the
University of
Houston, led by
Hakeem Olajuwon,
to win the NCAA championship. This matchup involved the two premier
Centers of their generation.
The
Nigerian
-born Olajuwon, a former soccer goalkeeper who did
not play basketball until age 15, was drafted by the Houston Rockets and paired with power forward Ralph Sampson in what was dubbed the 'Twin
Towers' duo. In his second season, 1985–86, the Rockets
upset the Lakers in the Western Conference finals. After
Michael Jordan's first retirement, Olajuwon
established himself as the NBA's most dominant player, leading the
Rockets to two consecutive NBA championships in 1994 and 1995. In
the 1993–94 season he became the only player in NBA history to win
the NBA's
Most
Valuable Player (MVP),
Defensive Player of the
Year, and
Finals MVP awards in
the same season. In both Finals, Olajuwon outplayed two of the
league's leading Centers,
Patrick
Ewing of the
New York Knicks and
the
Orlando Magic's young
Shaquille O'Neal. Defensively Olajuwon
broke Abdul-Jabbar's career record for blocked shots. Offensively,
he was best known for his 'Dream Shake,' a series of fakes and spin
moves regarded as the pinnacle of big man footwork.
Ewing,
from Jamaica
by way of
the Boston area, was drafted by the
New York Knicks in 1985, with whom
he spent fifteen of his seventeen seasons in the NBA. An
eleven-time All Star, Ewing was one of the best shooting centers in
NBA history, possessing a nearly unstoppable baseline jump-shot, as
well as a formidable shot blocker and rebounder. Ewing never won an
NBA championship, but his Knicks represented the most formidable
opponents of the
Michael Jordan-led
Chicago Bulls dynasty in the Eastern
Conference playoffs. Ewing's successor as the starting center at
Georgetown,
Dikembe Mutombo, who
played most of his NBA career with the
Denver Nuggets and
Atlanta Hawks, was less adept offensively, but
proved an even more dominant defender.
Mutombo, who had not
played basketball before arriving in the U.S. from his native
Zaire
on a USAID scholarship, was
among the greatest shot blockers in NBA history, leading the NBA in
blocked-shots five consecutive years, in the course of a career in
which he ranked second in the history of the league in blocked
shots, behind only Hakeem Olajuwon. He was also the
recipient of four
NBA Defensive Player of
the Year Awards, tied for the record with
Ben Wallace.
The other dominant center of the early 1990s was
David Robinson.
Playing college ball
at the United States Naval Academy
, his entry into the NBA was delayed by his military
service, but he unanimously won the Rookie of the Year Award in
1990 and, in 1995, was voted the MVP. Offensively,
Robinson excelled in fast-breaks, running the floor like no
7-footer before or since, while also possessing an effective
left-hand jumper. Defensively, his speed and agility helped him
hold the distinction of being the only player in NBA history to
rank among the top five in rebounds, blocks and steals in a single
season.
Several
European centers made an impact in the NBA in the 1990s, most
notably Lithuanian
Arvydas Sabonis of
the Portland Trail Blazers,
Serbian
Vlade Divac of the
Los Angeles Lakers and Sacramento Kings and Dutchman
Rik Smits. In
keeping with its more perimeter-oriented style of play, European
basketball strategy utilized centers as playmakers more than in the
NBA, and Divac and Sabonis in particular distinguished themselves
as the best passing centers in the league. The 7'3" (2.20 m)
Sabonis, who led the
Soviet Union to an
upset victory over the U.S. en route to a gold medal at the
1988
Olympics, was considered by many experts to have been among the
best centers in the world in the late 1980s, but did not enter the
NBA until he was well past his prime and limited by injuries. He
nonetheless played seven solid seasons in Portland before returning
to his homeland to finish his career. In his next-to-last season,
during which he turned 39, he earned MVP honors in both of the
initial two phases of
the 2003–04
Euroleague with the club of his youth,
Žalgiris.
The
1992 NBA Draft marked the
entrance into the league of
Shaquille
O'Neal, who was drafted by the
Orlando
Magic. Immediately drawing comparisons to Wilt Chamberlain, the
7'1", 325-pound O'Neal was billed as potentially the most
physically dominating player ever and he quickly lived up to the
hype. By his third season, he led the league in scoring and led the
Magic to the NBA Finals, where they were swept by the
Houston Rockets, with O'Neal out-played by
the more experienced Olajuwon. After the 1995–96 season, he signed
with the rebuilding
Los Angeles
Lakers. Former Georgetown center
Alonzo Mourning, also drafted in 1992,
established himself as a premier big man with the
Charlotte Hornets and, later, the
Miami Heat, winning two Defensive Player
of the Year Awards thanks to his prolific shot blocking while also
proving a reliable scoring threat.
Centers in the 21st century
The balance of power shifted to the Western Conference, and the NBA
was dominated by the
Los Angeles
Lakers, who won titles in 2000, 01' and 02', and the
San Antonio Spurs, who won in 1999, 03',
05', and 07'. The Lakers hired former Bulls coach
Phil Jackson, and
Shaquille O'Neal thrived in Jackson's
triangle offense. The
San Antonio Spurs were initially led by
the 'Twin Towers' tandem of center
David Robinson and
power forward Tim Duncan. With the arrival of Duncan, the
veteran Robinson modified his game by playing primarily in the high
post to accommodate Duncan's strengths as a low-post scorer and
defender.
In the 1990s, an increasing number of smaller forwards, most
notably
Dennis Rodman and
Charles Barkley, excelled at the traditional
Center functions of rebounding, shot-blocking and low-post defense,
anticipating a trend towards relying on shorter and quicker post
players that has continued into the 2000s, as exemplified by
perennial Defensive Players of the Year
Ben
Wallace and
Ron Artest. In the
fast break oriented style of offense
employed by a growing number of teams, the traditional role of the
Center is diminished, if not done away with altogether. Many
talented big men have elected to play the more versatile
power forward position, giving
them more room to run the floor and play outside the paint. The
best example of this is
Kevin Garnett,
a 7-footer who listed his height as 6'11" in order to avoid playing
Center. Under the influence of European basketball, the offensive
role of big men has been redefined to include more emphasis on
perimeter play, as exemplified by 3-point shooting big men like
Dirk Nowitzki,
Mehmet Okur, and
Peja
Stojakovic (although Stojakovic generally plays small
forward).
The 7'6"
Yao Ming was drafted by the
Houston Rockets with tremendous hype
in 2002; possessing unprecedented shooting touch and coordination
for a player of his height, many experts predicted he would
revolutionize basketball. Yao has proven a highly efficient
rebounder and scorer, particularly with his mid-range jump shot,
and shown the potential to be an elite defender. Another heralded
young prospect,
Dwight Howard of the
Orlando Magic, has utilized his
exceptional vertical leap to become one of the top rebounders in
the NBA, while his spectacular
slam dunks
have made him a staple of highlight reels.
Dominant big men continue to anchor the teams that have had the
most success in the post-season. Two of the last three teams to win
championships have had notable centers:
Detroit Pistons/
Ben
Wallace (2004) and
Miami
Heat/
Shaquille O'Neal (2006).
However, O'Neal's playing time has been increasingly limited by
injuries, benefiting in the Heat's Championship run from the
presence of another veteran,
Alonzo
Mourning, as his backup. Defensive specialist
Ben Wallace, listed at 6'9", is considered by
most experts as a
Power
Forward playing out of position, although his strength, leaping
ability and uncanny timing has enable him to dominate taller
players in the low-post, helping him tie
Dikembe Mutombo's record of four
NBA Defensive Player of
the Year Awards. The
San Antonio
Spurs have won 2 championships since the retirement of
David Robinson, in 2005 and
2007, with
Tim Duncan assuming an even
greater share of the work as the primary rebounder, shot-blocker
and low-post scorer, as well as taking most of the teams jump
balls, although he continues to be listed primarily as a
power forward. The entry into the
NBA of
Greg Oden, who won two national
high school player of the year awards, led the
Ohio State Buckeyes to the NCAA Finals,
and is arguably the most physically skilled Center to come into the
league since Dwight Howard, has caused many experts to predict a
revival in the importance of the Center position.
Centers in women's basketball
In women's
basketball, 7'0" Iuliana Semenova
pioneered the center position, helping the Soviet Union
women's team win two Olympic Gold medals, in 1976
and 1980, and never losing a game in international
competition. Semenova also led her club team, TTT
Riga
to fifteen European Champion's Cup titles.
The 6'8"
Anne Donovan led the Old Dominion
University
Lady Monarchs to the 1979 Association
for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women championship, and was
the first female Naismith College Player of
the Year recipient in 1983, before enjoying a successful
professional career in Japan and Italy.
With the formation of the
WNBA,
Lisa Leslie established herself as the premier
center, and the league's most popular player. The first WNBA player
to reach the 3,000 point milestone, she led the
Los Angeles Sparks to consecutive titles
in 2001 and 2002, and holds the distinction of being the first
player to dunk in a WNBA game. Other prominent centers in women's
basketball include Australian
Lauren
Jackson of the
Seattle Storm and
Karl Malone's daughter
Cheryl Ford of the
Detroit Shock.
Rebecca
Lobo led the
Connecticut
Huskies to a
NCAA
Championship in 1995, but never recovered from a torn
anterior cruciate ligament and
had a disappointing professional career.
Courtney Paris of the University
of Oklahoma
is considered the next dominant female Center after
becoming the only NCAA player, male or female, to score 700 points,
grab 500 rebounds and block 100 shots in a single
season.
List of centers
Further reading
Notes
- NBA.com: George Mikan vs. The Knicks
- http://www.bostonsportsreview.com/200707_story_cover.asp
- NBA.com: Wilt Scores 100, Averages 50
- Lew's Still Loose - TIME
- NBA.com: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Bio
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Statistics -
Basketball-Reference.com
- NBA.com: Artis Gilmore Summary
- It Was All A Dream