Dick McGuire

To those St. John's alumni and fans of the 1940s and 1950s, there will always be one player – Dick McGuire. The numbers, of course, do not tell the story as the stats of today were not a part of McGuire's game. His playmaking ability, his superb court sense and his ball handling under fire are more representative of his career, and it was those qualities which brought him to the Naismith Memorial Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass.

McGuire was a soft-spoken man who bore the nickname "Mumbles" for his quick and jumbled ways of conversation, and "Tricky Dicky" for his moves through the defense.

McGuire came to St. John's in 1943-44, a year St. John's won its second consecutive NIT title. He was awarded the first of two Haggerty Awards as New York's Outstanding College Player. Returning to St. John's after the war, he won a second Haggerty in 1949 while playing alongside his brother, Al. He joined the New York Knicks for the 1949-50 season and his long career in the NBA included service with the Detroit Pistons as a player-coach and with the Knicks as a bench coach. You really can't explain Dick McGuire's brilliance if you did not see him play, for seeing him under game pressure was the only thing to make you believe.