đ„ The Untold Larry Bird Story: How One Legendary Game Cemented His Status as the Most Feared and Ruthless Competitor in NBA HistoryâPlayers Still Talk About It Today
Enemies for Life: The Untold War Between Larry Bird and Bill Laimbeer
There are rivalries in sports, and then there are wars. In the heated, bruising landscape of 1980s NBA basketball, no battle burned hotterâor lasted longerâthan the one between Larry Bird and Bill Laimbeer.
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It began, innocently enough, with a note. Before facing Laimbeer in a game, Charles Barkley sent him a handwritten message:
“Dear Bill, thank you sincerely, Charles Barkley.”
But politeness vanished quickly. That night, fists flew. Barkley and Laimbeer traded punches, setting the tone for a decade of animosity.
Laimbeer was the NBAâs villainâtough, physical, and unapologetically ruthless. To many, he was the dirtiest player in the league. Robert Parish, who fought Laimbeer three years in a row, once said, âIf you canât say something nice about someone, donât say anything at all. So Iâll say nothing at all.â Then, with a grin, he added, âBut nobody hated Bill Laimbeer more than Larry Bird.â
Bird never hid his contempt. âYou never liked Laimbeer in any social situation,â he admitted. âHe was a dirty player. Lots of cheap shots. If you watch the Pistons play Chicago, youâll see Scottie [Pippen] getting poundedâafter the whistle, even.â Ricky Mahorn would hit you hard, but he didnât try to maim you. Laimbeer? Heâd try to hurt you.
Bird remembered Laimbeerâs infamous trickâsliding his foot under a shooterâs ankle to cause a twist. âThatâs why Parish was always twisting his ankle against the Pistons,â Bird said. âOne time, I shot a jumper and Larry did it to me. I stepped on his foot, but I didnât twist my ankle. Later, he shot a jumper and I slid my foot under his. That was the last time he ever tried it.â
The league knew Laimbeerâs reputation. When Michael Jordan called him âthe dirtiest player in the NBA,â nobody argued. By then, Laimbeerâs legacy was set.
During the 1986 season, the All-Star roster was announced. Larry Bird asked reporters, âDid Laimbeer make the team again?â When told he hadnât, Bird smirked, âGood. Now I wonât have to worry about him getting on the bus and saying, âHi, Larry,â and me having to say, âF*** you, Bill.ââ

But the playoffs brought them face-to-face. Tensions ran high. Bird and Laimbeer clashed, exchanged elbows, and, at one point, Bird hurled a ball at Laimbeerâs head. Both were ejected. Bird later said, âLaimbeer was backing away from me. I wish theyâd just cleared the court for 15 minutes and let us go at it. Classic Bird and Laimbeer style.â
Laimbeer played the victim. âI didnât do a thing,â he claimed. âI tried to grab him to keep him from falling, and Larry came up swinging.â Birdâs response dripped with sarcasm: âI was just trying to throw the ball to the referee. Billâs face just got in the way.â
The Celtics saw themselves as retaliators, not instigators. Detroit, they believed, started the fights. In one game, when Laimbeer tried to shake Birdâs hand, Bird stared him down and said, âGo f*** yourself.â Bird explained, âNormally, I respect the guys I play against, but with Laimbeer, it was different. I really think he was trying to hurt me.â
In Game 5, the Boston crowdâs hatred for Laimbeer was palpable. Parish, fueled by the atmosphere, punched Laimbeer in the second quarter. No ejection. No technical. Not even a foul. The game just continued.
Bird called it âa good deed.â That night, he made the greatest play of his careerâstealing an inbound pass and assisting Dennis Johnson for the game-winning layup. Even Laimbeer had to admit, âIt was probably one of the most incredible plays Iâve ever witnessed.â
After the final buzzer, Laimbeer tried again to shake Birdâs hand. Bird walked right past him. âI donât like Bill Laimbeer,â Bird said. âWhy should I shake his hand?â Even Isiah Thomas, Laimbeerâs teammate for 11 years, admitted, âIf I didnât know Bill, I wouldnât like him either.â
The hatred lingered. When the Celtics retired Birdâs jersey in 1993, the tension hadnât faded.
Laimbeerâs brand of hate was unmatched. He didnât respect anyoneânot even his own teammates. In his final Pistons practice, he elbowed Isiah Thomas and broke his rib. When Thomas got angry, Laimbeer hit him again. Thomas retaliated, breaking his own hand while punching Laimbeer.
As Bird once said, âIt couldnât happen to a nicer guy.â
Imagine sitting next to Larry Bird. Would you start a conversation? If you did, would you dare mention Bill Laimbeer? Maybe, just maybe, youâd get a story. But youâd also see the fire that fueled one of basketballâs greatest rivalriesâa war that lasted long after the final buzzer.
In the end, the battles between Bird and Laimbeer werenât just about basketball. They were about pride, grit, and the kind of old-school hatred that made every second on the court unforgettable.