Basketball legend Larry Bird obviously had a dominant career with the Indiana Sycamores after he initially signed with the Indiana Hoosiers. Bird was named national college player of the year in 1979 and was a two-time All-American in 1978 and 1979. But as it turns out, he initially didn’t want to go to either school.
During a recent conversation between basketball legends Larry Bird, Isiah Thomas and Reggie Miller, Larry Bird had a pretty shocking admission that he wanted to go to Kentucky before signing with Indiana, but claimed that Kentucky stopped recruiting him.
“Well, I wanted to go to Kentucky,” Bird said. “But Kentucky quit recruiting me, so it was down to Indiana State and IU, so I went to IU.”
I didn't know Larry Bird wanted to go to Kentucky. How'd they mess that up @wildcatnews? Kentucky loves shooters, what could have been. pic.twitter.com/U496tDHltN
— Vince Cali (@_VinceCali) February 21, 2024
Kentucky sports historian Oscar Combs offered a little more context to this claim by Bird, indicating that it might not have been that simple.
“It’s a long, somewhat complicated conversation and one with disagreeable takes. One UK official told me UK’s then rigid academic criteria for out-of-state students prevented UK from pursuing him, but would have been accepted had he lived in Ky. Others say that wasn’t the case,” Combs said in a post on X, the social media website that was formerly known as Twitter.
Obviously, Kentucky was one of the most dominant teams in the country at the time, so adding a player like Bird certainly would have been something.

About Kevin Harrish
Recent Posts
Gus Malzahn retires after 35 years
"There are so many people to thank."
Vikings move on from general manager
“These decisions are never easy."
Baker Mayfield on Mike Evans: ‘more in the tank’
“Mike’s too much of a competitor."
Kevin Stefanski waiting on Falcons to hire GM to name starter
“I think we have to hire a general manager first."
Zac Robinson thrilled to get to work with Baker
"Baker was the number-one pick in the draft for a reason."
Mike Vrabel brushes off disrespect
“It doesn’t matter."