LEGENDS – William ‘Bird’ Averitt

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Hopkinsville High legend William ‘Bird’ Averitt was recognized Thursday at the Second Region Basketball Tournament on the floor where he starred in the late 1960s.

Bird’s nickname came from his slight build.  He was a 6-foot-1 left-handed player that glided in and out of the lane with moves a quick as a hummingbird.  He was a third-team All-State selection on Hopkinsville’s 1969 region championship team and was also named to the All-State Tournament Team.

In his senior season, he was named first-team All-State by the Associated Press and was named second-team All-State by the Louisville Courier-Journal.  His Hopkinsville team again advanced to the region championship where they lost to Trigg County.

Bird Averitt led the nation in scoring at Pepperdine University in 1973. He was later inducted into the West Coast Conference Hall of Fame. (Photo by Pepperdine-graphic.com)

Averitt was selected to play in the Kentucky-Indiana All-Star Game that summer.

While Averitt was making a name for himself in Hopkinsville, the state’s colleges didn’t take notice.  His lone in-state interest came from Kentucky State.

Crofton native Fred Overton was an assistant coach at Pepperdine and had watched Bird play over the Christmas break during his senior season.  The Bird flew to California and Pepperdine signed him shortly after.

NCAA rules did not allow freshmen to play on college teams when Bird began at Pepperdine.  They did field college teams, and Bird scored 40+ points in two games against a UCLA freshman team that included Bill Walton.

Pepperdine’s up-tempo style of play suited Bird, who led the nation in scoring his senior season at 33.9 points a game and was named the West Coast Conference Player of the Year.

Bird was drafted by the NBA’s Portland Trail Blazers and the ABA’s San Diego Conquistadors in 1973.  He played for San Antonio in 1973-74.  Following the season, Kentucky Colonels owner John Y. Brown Jr. hired Hubie Brown to coach his team and signed Averitt to return to the Bluegrass.

Playing alongside Dan Issel, Louie Dampier, and Artis Gilmore, Bird and the Colonels won the 1975 ABA championship.  He shot 41-percent from the field and averaged 13 points and four assists that season.

Bird would play three seasons in the NBA for the Buffalo Braves and New Jersey Nets, averaging 9.5 points a game for the Braves in 1977-78.

Bird returned to Hopkinsville soon after.  He stayed in shape on the local basketball courts and even played tennis.  He was injured in a 1995 car crash that left him partially paralyzed with a broken neck and arm injuries.

He has seen some health issues take its toll in recent years.  Bird was recently in the hospital and had a toe amputated.  But it didn’t stop him from being recognized Thursday at Tiger Gym and receiving yet another thunderous round of applause.

(Some information for this story was obtained from the Los Angeles Times and the Bowling Green Daily News)

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