Trump presents Bob Cousy with Medal of Freedom – live updates

FAN Editor

President Trump is presenting six-time NBA champion and Bostons Celtic legend Bob Cousy with the Presidential Medal of Freedom on Thursday, the highest civilian honor. The ceremony is scheduled to begin at 4:30 p.m ET and can be viewed live in the player above at that time.

CELTICS HAWKS COUSY
Bob Cousy, Boston Celtics guard, goes after a loose ball in game against the St. Louis Hawks in St. Louis, Mo., Tuesday night, Feb. 21, 1956. At right is Jack Coleman, who is partially covering Jack Stephens (15). (AP Photo) / AP

“Mr. Basketball,” as the 91-year-old Cousy was known when he was a point guard for the Boston Celtics in the 1950s and ’60s, has been invited to the White House six times before. His first visit to the Oval Office, Cousy told CBS News, was during the Eisenhower administration. President Eisenhower, he recalled, asked him, “Cooz, how’s your basketball?”

But he said receiving the Medal of Freedom “falls into a different category.” 

“It closes a circle. It’s like the cherry on top of the sundae,” he told CBS News in a phone call on Wednesday. “At 91, you get excited when the doorbell rings.”

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Cousy still lives in what he described as the “laid-back New England town” of Worcester, Massachusetts, where he attended college and as a freshman, helped the College of the Holy Cross Crusaders win their first NCAA men’s basketball championship in 1947. 

After ending his NCAA career with a 26-game winning streak in his senior year, Cousy graduated from Holy Cross in 1950 and moved east on the Boston Turnpike to play for the Celtics, beginning his legendary 13-season run with the team.

Playing with his friend Bill Russell, a fellow Medal of Freedom recipient whom Cousy described as “the greatest center who ever played,” “Cooz” won six NBA championships and was named the league’s Most Valuable Player in 1957. He was an all-star each of his 13 years in the league, and was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 1971.

Cousy said he’s been considered before for the Medal of Freedom, during the Obama administration, and he received support from Massachusetts icons like former Senator James McGovern, former Governor Deval Patrick, and future presidential contender, Sen. Elizabeth Warren.  

After befriending the “very helpful” Democratic Senator Joe Manchin, a sometime-Trump ally whom Cousy praised for “voting his conscience,” the retired Celtic said he received an unexpected call from President Trump in December. 

“I gave it a two-count,” he said of the call from the president, which he feared might be a prank. 

To Cousy, who last traveled to the White House to meet President Reagan, neither the novelty nor the division of the Washington he’s visiting on Thursday is lost. 

“In my 91 years, I’ve never seen this kind of polarization,” he said. “It doesn’t seem to me we will ever have a Ronald Reagan – Tip O’Neill moment,” in reference to the relationship between the conservative icon and the Democratic speaker of the House. 

The grandfather of two said that in 2016, he voted for Libertarian Gary Johnson for president and is an independent. He said Wednesday he will most likely “pull [Trump’s] lever” in the 2020 election, but blames the polarization in Washington on both sides of the aisle. 

Cousy observed of the president, “He’s not a politician…What you’re seeing is what Donald Trump’s been about his entire life.” When asked if he would press Mr. Trump on the partisan divide, Cousy told CBS News that based on his experience with past presidents, he knows he won’t get it in before the buzzer: “The president is not going to have time to chitchat.” 

For the Celtics legend, Thursday’s visit is not about politics. He views the Medal of Freedom as perhaps the most prestigious recognition of his esteemed career and, and said, “I can stop chasing the bouncing ball.” 

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