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1 | SENATE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, The members of the Senate of the State of Illinois | ||||||
3 | learned with sadness of the death of George Mikan, the original | ||||||
4 | "Mr. Basketball", of Arizona and formerly of Joliet, on June 1, | ||||||
5 | 2005; and
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6 | WHEREAS, Mr. Mikan was born June 18, 1924, in Joliet; he | ||||||
7 | attended Joliet Catholic High School in Joliet,
Quigley | ||||||
8 | Preparatory Seminary School in Chicago, and graduated from | ||||||
9 | DePaul University;
he started studies to be a priest and was an | ||||||
10 | accomplished classical pianist; he was told he could never play | ||||||
11 | basketball because he wore glasses, but he persisted and proved | ||||||
12 | everyone wrong; and
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13 | WHEREAS, George Mikan, a 6-foot-10 giant of a man who | ||||||
14 | played basketball with superior coordination and a fierce | ||||||
15 | competitive spirit, was one of the prototypes for the | ||||||
16 | dominating tall players of later decades; and
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17 | WHEREAS, During George Mikan's college days at DePaul, he | ||||||
18 | revolutionized the game; he, along with fellow Hall of Famer | ||||||
19 | Bob Kurland, swatted away so many shots that in 1944 the NCAA | ||||||
20 | introduced a rule that prohibited goaltending; and
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21 | WHEREAS, He was a three-time All-America (1944, 1945, 1946) | ||||||
22 | and led the nation in scoring in 1945 and 1946; his 120 points | ||||||
23 | in three games led DePaul to the 1945 NIT championship; he | ||||||
24 | scored 1,870 points at DePaul and once tallied 53 against Rhode | ||||||
25 | Island State, a remarkable feat considering he single-handedly | ||||||
26 | outscored the entire Rhode Island State team; and
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27 | WHEREAS, In 1950, he was voted the greatest player in the | ||||||
28 | first half of the century by the Associated Press; he won his | ||||||
29 | first professional championship with the Chicago American | ||||||
30 | Gears of the NBL in 1947 and captured six more pro titles (1 |
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1 | NBL-1948, 1 BAA-1949, and 4 NBA-1950, 1952-54); as the | ||||||
2 | cornerstone of the Minneapolis Lakers, he led the NBA in | ||||||
3 | scoring three times (1949-52), played in the first four NBA | ||||||
4 | All-Star Games (MVP 1953), and led the league in rebounding | ||||||
5 | twice (1952, 1953); and
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6 | WHEREAS, Towering over most of his competitors, he was one | ||||||
7 | of the most effective scorers of his day, averaging 22.6 points | ||||||
8 | over a professional career that lasted nine years - one with | ||||||
9 | the Chicago American Gears and eight with the Minneapolis | ||||||
10 | Lakers; and
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11 | WHEREAS, He announced his retirement after the Lakers' 1954 | ||||||
12 | championship run and devoted all his energies to his law career | ||||||
13 | and to raising his large family; while practicing corporate and | ||||||
14 | real estate law, he also bought and renovated buildings in | ||||||
15 | Minneapolis; he was in the first class elected to the Naismith | ||||||
16 | Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1959; in 1967, he returned | ||||||
17 | to the basketball world to become the first commissioner of the | ||||||
18 | American Basketball Association (ABA); faced with all the | ||||||
19 | problems of trying to create and sustain a fledgling | ||||||
20 | professional sports organization, he came up with the novel | ||||||
21 | idea of the league's multicolored basketball; and
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22 | WHEREAS, He served as ABA commissioner until 1969; he | ||||||
23 | resurfaced in the mid-1980s as the head of a task force whose | ||||||
24 | goal was to bring professional basketball back to Minneapolis; | ||||||
25 | with the financial backing of local businessmen, he | ||||||
26 | successfully lobbied the NBA to add an expansion team in | ||||||
27 | Minnesota for the 1989-90 season; the team became the Minnesota | ||||||
28 | Timberwolves;
one of the most dominant players ever to play the | ||||||
29 | game, George Mikan's contributions to the sport and his impact | ||||||
30 | on the NBA still loom as large as his 6-10 frame; his | ||||||
31 | accomplishments were further acknowledged when he was named a | ||||||
32 | member of the NBA 50th Anniversary All-Time Team in 1996; and
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1 | WHEREAS, The passing of George Mikan is felt by all who | ||||||
2 | knew and loved him, especially his wife of 58 years, Patricia; | ||||||
3 | his children, G. Larry Mikan, Terry (Karen) Mikan, Patrick | ||||||
4 | Mikan, Michael (Karla) Mikan, Tricia (Doug) Johnson, and | ||||||
5 | Maureen Mikan; and his grandchildren, Gina, Molly Marysa, | ||||||
6 | Shannon, Max, Jenna, Kristin, and Keara Mikan and Christine and | ||||||
7 | Danny Johnson; and
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8 | WHEREAS, While one of the most outstanding athletes in | ||||||
9 | history, George Mikan will be remembered for his big smile, | ||||||
10 | positive attitude, and competitive spirit; he was a major role | ||||||
11 | model for all the young people who grew up watching him | ||||||
12 | dominate his sport while still being a kind, thoughtful, clean | ||||||
13 | living citizen; therefore, be it
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14 | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE NINETY-FOURTH GENERAL | ||||||
15 | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we mourn the passing of | ||||||
16 | George Mikan and extend our sincerest condolences to his family | ||||||
17 | and friends; and be it further
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18 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be | ||||||
19 | presented to his family as an expression of our deepest | ||||||
20 | sympathy.
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