Former Chicago Bulls Great Bob Love to Speak at
MSU Billings (July 21, 2003)
BILLINGS, MT – Before Michael
Jordan, Bob Love was the most prolific scorer in the
history of the Chicago Bulls. On Thursday, Love
will be the keynote speaker at the 2003 MYLF Montana
Youth Leadership Forum on the campus of
MSU Billings.
Now the Director of Community
Relations for the Chicago Bulls, Love grew up poor
as one of fourteen children in rural Louisiana. His
two ambitions in life were to play basketball and
speak without stuttering. The first dream came true
at Southern University in Louisiana, where he became
the school’s first All-American.
Following college, Love began a
professional basketball career with the Cincinnati
Royals. He was later traded to the Milwaukee Bucks
and then to the Chicago Bulls, for whom he played
eight seasons from 1969 to1976. Love scored 12,263
points for the Bulls, becoming the team’s all-time
leading scorer until Jordan broke the record in
1989. Love averaged 23.0 points per game over his
eight seasons, earning three NBA All-Star
appearances. His jersey was retired by the Bulls in
1994.
After suffering a back injury
in 1977, Love retired after doctors told him he may
never walk again. Still unable to speak without
stuttering, Love struggled to find steady work until
he took a dishwashing job in Seattle in 1984. At
the age of 45, he hired a speech therapist to help
him learn to speak. The Bulls heard Love’s story
and offered him the Director of Community Relations
position, which he still holds.
In conjunction with his work
for the Bulls, Love also travels the country as a
motivational speaker. On Thursday, he will address
the MYLF Montana Youth Leadership Forum at the
sponsor’s banquet in the MSU Billings SUB Ballroom.
The banquet is scheduled to run from 5:30 to 7:00
p.m. Members of the media are welcome to attend and
interview Love. For more information, contact June
Hermanson at the Montana Center on Disabilities at
657-2095. |