Ann Meyers Signs with the Pacers: Breaking Barriers in Pro Basketball

Ann Meyers Signs with the Pacers: Breaking Barriers in Pro Basketball


Join us on Daily Sports History as we explore Ann Meyers' groundbreaking signing with the Indiana Pacers in 1979, becoming the first woman to sign a contract with an NBA team. Learn about her trailblazing career, the challenges she faced, and how her historic achievement opened doors for women in professional sports.

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On September fifth, nineteen eighty, basketball player Anne Myers did something no woman had ever done before when she signed a contract with the Indiana Pacers of the NBA for a chance to try out for their team, becoming the first woman to ever sign an NBA contract. The question is was this just a stunt or did she actually have a chance to make the team. We're gonna find out all about it today on Daily Sports Pascade. Welcome to Daily Sports History. I'm Ethan Reese, your guide to a rapid deep dive into sports history every day. And today's trivia question is what professional basketball league did Ann Myers actually play for now. Ann Myers was born in nineteen fifty five and was one of eleven children who almost all loved sports, especially basketball, but it turned out that Anne was something special and growing up with that many kids, they would often compete against each other and that helped her gain success as she was an all around athlete. In high school, she lettered in softball, badminton, field hockey, tennis, and basketball, and over her career she earned thirteen most valuable Players for her high school teams. But basketball was her love and where she really stood out. She led her high school team to an eighty and five record during her time there and would become the first high school student to ever play for a US national team, where she won silver in the nineteen seventy six Olympics. And her siblings were great at basketball too. Her sister Patty won a national championship with cal State Fullerton, and her brother Dave, was a number two overall pick in nineteen seventy seven by the Los Angeles Lakers, and just like her brother, she followed him to UCLA in nineteen seventy four, where she would become a four time All American and lead them to the nineteen seventy eight national championship and be named the most Outstanding college basketball Player of the year. And on February eighteenth, nineteen seventy eight, she recorded the very first quadruple double in NCAA history man or woman, where she faced off against Stephen F. Austin and had twenty points, fourteen rebounds, ten assists, and ten steals and since then, only four other Division one players have been able to achieve this feat, and she did so all while only being five nine, which is relatively taller for women but shorter for men. That comes into play later on in her career. After she graduated college, a new league popped up called the Women's Pro Basketball League in nineteen seventy eight, and she was the very first pick in their draft. Now, this league was a small, barnstorming league and would go on to lose about fourteen million dollars in its three seasons of being active. But it was a great start for women. But it may have just been too early and not had the backing it needed to have success like the WNBA has today. So as it was folding in nineteen eighty, she gets a call to try out for the Indiana Pacers, where she is giving a fifty thousand dollars no cut contract to try out for the Pacers. Now, many thought was this just a stunt because the Pacers at the time were not a very good team. They had just come from the ABA to the NBA and had lost some of their great ABA players and were struggling to make a name for themselves in the NBA. But the Pacers coach at the time, Slick Leonard, said he actually tried to talk her out of trying out for this team. He grew up at a time where women didn't play with men. They stayed in the house, did the cooking, did the cleaning. That's what he grew up in and many thought the same thing. It was just nineteen eighty, but she was set to prove him wrong, and she actually did now. Slick said he treated her as any other player. If she did good, then she could stay for the tryout. But she did bad, he would cut her. And after the first day of tryouts she actually did very good and was better than multiple players, and she made it to the next day where multiple players got cut, and the second day she was able to make it again despite multiple players being cut. But after the three day tryout, she was also cut, where where Slick Leonard, the coach of the Pacers, said he cut her just like any other player. It was nothing to do with her. She just wasn't quite there yet, although she was better than half the other players at the tryout, and though this was discouraging for her to not make it, especially since there was no other avenue for women at the time, the WBL was struggling and was going to fold within a year, and being part of these leagues meant that she could not compete in the Olympics again because Now she had gotten professional contracts, but she didn't stop being involved, as she would go on to do commentary for the Pacers and women's sports over the years. Then, when the WNBA formed, she became an analyst for the WNBA and go on to become an executive for the WNBA, where she's helped grow the sport in other ways than just playing. Now, she wasn't the first player to ever the first woman to ever dabble in possibly playing for the NBA, as in nineteen sixty nine, Denise Long was drafted by the San Francisco Warriors, but the NBA avoided the Warriors selection, so Denise Long never played for the NBA, And in nineteen seventy seven, Luisa Harris was drafted by the New Orleans Jazz and Harris declined to try out for the Utah Jazz. But it's interesting to see that since then, not many women have gotten the opportunity in the NBA, although there have been great players, especially before the WNBA happened. The reason is mainly hyped. Women are just naturally shorter than men, and when we think of the NBA, we all think of really tall men and women are just naturally shorter, as Anne Myers was only five to nine, and that made it hard for her as she could only play point guard in the NBA due to her height, and that limited her options. Although women today have grotten a little bit taller, it still doesn't negate the fact that it is different. But maybe one day a woman will make that leap. But maybe they won't have to as women's sports are growing even more, especially in the WNBA with the addition of Caitlin Clark and Angel Reece, which has moved women's basketball to the forefront of sports, and maybe it can make their own league as valuable as the NBA. Thank you for listening to today's Daily sports History. If you like this, please follow us on our socials. We're on Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, Facebook threads. We even throw macedon and pinterest in there. Sometimes follow us where you like to socialize and come back tomorrow for more daily sports history. And did you catch the answer to today's trivia question what league did Anne Myers play for? And it was the WBL, the Women's Professional Basketball League, where she was the number one overall pick.