George McGinnis, the former NBA and ABA All-Star who was later inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame, has died at 73 after reportedly suffering a cardiac arrest.
The 73-year-old's medical emergency was first revealed on Tuesday by the Indianapolis Record Newspaper and long-time NBA insider Peter Vescey, who reported that McGinnis had been on life support for three days.
'The greatest Indiana Pacer ever is fighting for his life after going in to cardiac arrest,' read a Facebook post on the newspaper's account. 'Please light a candle for George McGinnis.'
On Thursday, the Pacers revealed that McGinnis had passed away.
'From his all-state high school days to his time as an IU All-American and, of course, to his legendary ABA championship runs with the Pacers, George McGinnis shaped so many of the fondest basketball memories for generations of Hoosiers,' read a statement from the Pacers and the Simon Family, which owns the team.
George McGinnis, the former NBA and ABA All-Star who was later inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame, is fighting for his life after reportedly suffering a cardiac arrest
The Pacers and the Simon Family, which owns the team, expressed their grief in a statement
'He was the very definition of an Indiana basketball legend, a champion, and Hall of Fame athlete,' the statement continued. But he was more than that. George was family. A passionate advocate for his fellow ABA players and a present, smiling face around the franchise, George has been as synonymous with our Pacers franchise as anyone. He will be greatly missed, and all of us at Pacers Sports & Entertainment will keep George and his family in our prayers.'
Many in Indianapolis credit McGinnis with saving the Pacers, which periodically threatened to leave the city, which has traditionally been more focused on college hoops.
'The Pacers are still around today in large part thanks to this man, who finally got his due in 2017 as a Naismith Hall of Fame Inductee,' Pacers announcer Pat Boylan wrote on X. 'RIP to an Indianapolis and Indiana legend.'
McGinnis is basketball royalty in the Hoosier state, where he was recently inducted into the Indiana University Athletics Hall of Fame. Not only is he from Indianapolis, but he played at IU in 1970 and 1971 before joining the ABA's Pacers from 1971 until 1975. He would win two ABA titles during that time, and was named the ABA MVP in 1975 before joining the NBA the following season.
It was in Philadelphia that McGinnis became a household name, playing alongside Julius Erving, Darryl Dawkins, Mike Dunleavy, World B. Free, Caldwell Jones and Doug Collins on a team that was famously upset by Maurice Lucas, Bill Walton and the Portland Trail Blazers in the 1977 NBA Finals.
'McGinnis' Sixers' teams were among the NBA's best to never win a title,' WFAN's Joey Wahler wrote on X.
A 76ers fan followed: 'Every kid in Philly of a certain age grew up trying to imitate his one handed jumper. Then we realized if you didn't have hands the size of George's it was impossible. God bless Big Mac.'
McGinnis was a star at Washington High School in Indianapolis, where he and his future IU teammate Steve Downing led the school to a 31-0 record and state title in 1969.
The two would have similar success at Indiana under coach Lou Watson – one season before the school hired Bob Knight, the Hoosier legend who died earlier this year.
1969 Indiana State semifinals. George McGinnis scores 27 & grabs the game sealing rebound, as Indianapolis Washington defeats Marion, 61-60.
McGinnis would score 35 in the championship game, a 79-76 win over Gary Tolleston. The Continentals went 31-0. pic.twitter.com/BagsKYLcF0
George McGinnis has some fun with the Indiana Pacers mascot in April of 2004 in Indianapolis
But McGinnis' stay in Bloomington was brief, and he was soon off to the upstart ABA, where he was named to the All-Rookie team in 1972.
The Pacers were dominant in his first two seasons, winning a pair of ABA crowns under coach Slick Leonard, who passed away in 2021. He was at his best in 1974-75, averaging 29.8 points and 10.3 rebounds a game, although the Pacers would fall to Artis Gilmore, Dan Issel and the Kentucky Colonels in the ABA Finals that season.
Following the 1976 ABA-NBA merger, McGinnis would return to the Pacers in 1980 following a two-year stint with the Denver Nuggets. He ultimately retired in 1982.
He was inducted into the Naismith Hall of Fame in 2017 alongside Tracy McGrady, Bill Self, and Rebecca Lobo.