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For you old timers, Whatever happened to Larry Johnson who played PG for us from 1973-1977

Uncle Adolph

Junior
Aug 9, 2019
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Played at Union County HS in Morganfield, KY
Was a good player for us but is rarely mentioned.
Finished with 789 career pts and 302 assists.
 
Played at Union County HS in Morganfield, KY
Was a good player for us but is rarely mentioned.
Finished with 789 career pts and 302 assists.
Good player, good defensive player, fair playmaker, not a great shooter...but seems I recall his going full court, end to end to hit game winning layup in a NIT game maybe?
 
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Not a ton of info outside of basketball, but here's his Wikipedia entry:

Larry O. Johnson (born November 28, 1954) is an American retired basketball player who had a brief career in the National Basketball Association (NBA). He was a 6'3" shooting guard and played competitively at Kentucky's Union County High School and the University of Kentucky (UK) from 1973 to 1977. He was the first of three African-Americans from Union County recruited by UK.[1]

Johnson was selected in the second round in the 1977 NBA draft by the Buffalo Braves. He played only four games for them in 1977–78 season, averaging 1.5 points per contest.[1] Johnson would go on to play internationally for many years.[1] Most notably in Japan for Matsushita Denki, which later became known as the Panasonic Corporation, from 1979 to 1989 and eventually coached the team after he retired.[2]
 
I am not certain but seems like he was the all time assists leader when he graduated. He was a steady point guard who was the backup for Mike Flynn on the 75 runner-up team and a 2 year starter at pg. Kyle Macy was the starter after LJ so I guess it kinda made it easier to forget about him since Macy is one of the best (if not the best) pure point guards at Kentucky. I always liked Larry Johnson as a player, seemed like one of the most most underrated players for Kentucky.
 
I distinctly remember LJ trying to chase Phil Ford all over the floor withUNC Chicken$hit playing a 4 corner stall ( no shot clock era) so they could beat the best team in the NCAA tournament.
 
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I'm an old timer so I'll tell you what I know...that I just found out on Wikipedia. :)

He played pro ball in Japan from 1977 to 1989 and then coached that team he played for some undetermined amount of time and is still alive at 69 years young. That's all they've got so it's all I've got.
 
Played at Union County HS in Morganfield, KY
Was a good player for us but is rarely mentioned.
Finished with 789 career pts and 302 assists.
Larry Johnson was a good player.

I think he's not as well remembered as other players from that era because he was the only starter on that squad to never win an NCAA title. He was one of just two scholarship seniors on that team (Merion Haskins was the other) so he missed the 1978 championship by 1 year.

Another reason may be that not very long after graduating and a short stay in the NBA he went to Japan where he seems to have had a long career as a player and coach (Japan Times did an article on his influence in bringing American players to Japanese pro basketball) but I don't recall him staying connected with UK and being overseas back then meant he kind of got lost in the collective memory of UK fandom.
 
I distinctly remember LJ trying to chase Phil Ford all over the floor withUNC Chicken$hit playing a 4 corner stall ( no shot clock era) so they could beat the best team in the NCAA tournament.
I also remember this game as well. UNC played a great first half and led 53-41 at the half. UK came out as a different team in the 2nd half. UNC went to the 4 corners with 15 minutes left in the game. UK continued to chop away at the lead and got it down to 1-2 points with a minute or two left. UNC hit FTs and sealed a win that I still despise to this day. For the game UNC shot 33-36 from the line while UK was 16-18. Steve Krafcisin and John Kuester combined to score 27 points with 21 of those points were FTs. SMH!
 
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I think he was the best on ball defender in UK history.
I totally agree. I had a conversation one day with a UK starter on the 1973 team. He told me that in practice Johnson stopped Jimmy Dan Conner cold. IMO, he did the same to just about everyone he guarded in games too. In a 1977 game at UT, Joe B decided to put Johnson on Ernie Grunfeld. He stopped him pretty well, but ended up in foul trouble as one might expect, especially on the road against UT. I thought that probably cost us the game that we lost 85-82. We picked our poison, but Johnson's defense was stellar as always. Without him on the court, we not only lost his defense, but his terrific ability to handle and distribute the ball.
 
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