Current:Home > FinanceJack Nicholson, Spike Lee and Billy Crystal set to become basketball Hall of Famers as superfans -EliteFunds
Jack Nicholson, Spike Lee and Billy Crystal set to become basketball Hall of Famers as superfans
View
Date:2025-04-14 19:16:10
Back when the Lakers were putting on shows as good as anything coming out of Hollywood, the coolest guy in the building might’ve been courtside.
Even across the country, everyone noticed Jack Nicholson.
“Growing up, the guy I looked at was Jack Nicholson,” Spike Lee said. “When I was sitting in the blue seats at the Garden, I said, ‘Hopefully one day I can sit courtside like my guy Jack Nicholson.’”
Lee eventually made it to the front row to watch his beloved Knicks. And this weekend, he and Nicholson will together make it to basketball’s Hall of Fame.
Along with fellow actor and entertainer Billy Crystal and businessman Alan Horwitz, they will be added to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame’s James F. Goldstein SuperFan Gallery on Sunday, a few hours before this year’s class is enshrined in Springfield, Massachusetts.
Named for Goldstein, one of the NBA’s most familiar non-playing faces who attends some 100 games a year, the gallery recognizes fans for their knowledge and passion of basketball, along with their reputation within the basketball community and their appreciation for the history of the sport. Besides Goldstein, the gallery established in 2018 includes Penny Marshall and Raptors fan Nav Bhatia.
Celebrities are just fans with better seats
They are more famous than most, but at heart are just like the customers sitting way up in the cheap seats.
“I merely represent all devoted fans of the game we love,” said Crystal, a longtime Clippers ticket holder whose love of the team dates back to when they still played in San Diego.
Besides, for the most die-hard of fans, it’s never about where they sit. It’s just about being in the building when their team needs them most.
For Lee, that was May 8, 1970. Then 13 years old, he missed his father’s concert performance after receiving an offer to attend Game 7 of the NBA Finals. He wasn’t sitting close, but still had a great view to see Willis Reed walk on to the court with his injured leg that had forced him to miss Game 6 against the Lakers and had his availability in doubt for the decider.
“I’ve been to World Series, World Cup, Super Bowls and Olympics,” Lee said. “That’s the loudest noise I’ve ever heard in my life.”
Billy Crystal has had it ‘rough’ in LA as a Clippers fan
The Knicks won that title and added another in 1973, though have only gotten close a couple times since Lee became a ticket holder after they drafted Patrick Ewing with the No. 1 pick in 1985. Horwitz’s Philadelphia 76ers are also still stuck in a lengthy drought, though still nothing quite like the Clippers, still waiting for their first chance to deliver for Crystal.
“He’s been suffering, too,” Lee said. “What makes it worse, he’s in L.A. and he’s all the years with the Clippers when the Lakers had Magic and Shaq and Kobe. Oh man, that was really rough.”
Nicholson was on the right side of the Los Angeles rivalry after becoming a Lakers ticket holder in the 1970s. The three-time Academy Award-winning actor would adjust his shooting schedules and personal meetings so he could be seated in his sunglasses next to the visiting bench at big Lakers games.
It was from that spot that he watched the Lakers blow a 24-point lead against Boston in Game 4 of the 2008 NBA Finals — a defeat Nicholson saw coming as the Celtics were rallying.
“It was late in the game and I just kept hearing, ‘Hey Doc, we’re dead men walking,’” said Doc Rivers, then the Celtics coach. “And he just kept saying it. I didn’t quite know what he was talking about and then I figured it out late when we came back and won the game.”
The two would become friends when Rivers later coached the Clippers, and the Lakers’ most famous fan even went to check out the other side when they were facing the Houston Rockets in the 2015 playoffs.
“Jack came to that game,” Rivers said. “Showed up at a Clipper game and then we blew a (huge) lead and he left and I don’t think he’ll ever go back to another Clipper game again.”
Now 87, Nicholson no longer goes to see the Lakers and is the only one of the four new superfans not expected to attend Sunday’s ceremony.
Spike Lee on Hall of Fame honor: ‘Who would have thunk it?’
Lee is still a regular at Madison Square Garden, now wearing a Jalen Brunson jersey that was once a John Starks one. The Hall of Fame honor is significant for him, he said, because of how close he has become to many NBA players through his film career, from Air Jordan commercials with Michael Jordan to movies such as “He Got Game.”
“I know these guys and especially the visiting teams, a lot of these guys, they come on the court and they come and say hello to me,” Lee said, chuckling at how many times Jordan would profanely tell him to sit down. “They give me five, give me a hug — and these are the opposing teams.”
Sometimes, those interactions backfire and Lee bears the blame for a Knicks loss. He was blasted for riling up Reggie Miller in the playoffs when Indiana came back for a Game 5 victory. When Kobe Bryant poured in an opponent-record 61 points on Feb. 2, 2009, he was motivated by not letting Lee run his mouth if the Knicks won when they were meeting later that night for a project they were working on.
Lee has a stat sheet from the game signed by Bryant, who wrote: “Spike, this (expletive) was your fault!!!!”
Now he’ll join Jordan, Bryant and many other greats in the Hall of Fame.
“Resorting to some Brooklyn language,” Lee said, “who would have thunk it?”
___
AP Sports Writer Steve Megargee in Milwaukee contributed to this report.
___
AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba
veryGood! (49)
Related
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Maui official defends his decision not to activate sirens amid wildfires: I do not regret it
- U.S. sanctions 4 Russian operatives for 2020 poisoning of opposition leader Alexey Navalny
- How 5th Circuit Court of Appeals mifepristone ruling pokes holes in wider FDA authority
- Grammy nominee Teddy Swims on love, growth and embracing change
- 8-year-old girl fatally hit by school bus in Kansas: police
- Sam Asghari Breaks Silence on Britney Spears Divorce
- Former Alabama correctional officer convicted in 2018 inmate beating
- 'Most Whopper
- Maui fire survivors are confronting huge mental health hurdles, many while still living in shelters
Ranking
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Sam Asghari Files for Divorce From Britney Spears
- NYC bans use of TikTok on city-owned phones, joining federal government, majority of states
- New Mexico congressman in swing district seeks health care trust for oil field workers
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Biden will use Camp David backdrop hoping to broker a breakthrough in Japan-South Korea relations
- 'Hot Ones' spicy chicken strips now at stores nationwide; Hot Pockets collab coming soon
- New Mexico congressman in swing district seeks health care trust for oil field workers
Recommendation
Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
With a simple question, Ukrainians probe mental health at a time of war
Execution set for Florida man convicted of killing two women he met at beach bars in 1996
Composer Bernstein’s children defend Bradley Cooper’s prosthetic nose after ‘Maestro’ is criticized
Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
US Army soldier accused of killing his wife in Alaska faces court hearing
8-year-old girl fatally hit by school bus in Kansas: police
North Dakota governor, running for president, dodges questions on Trump, says leaders on both sides are untrustworthy