Every generation of basketball produces one player who redefines what is possible at a position. Kevin McHale did not simply redefine post play. He created an entirely new language for it — a vocabulary of footwork, shoulder fakes, up-and-under moves, and shot-pocket adjustments so complete that opposing coaches spent full practice days designing schemes that still did not work.
Kevin McHale's #32 was retired by the Boston Celtics in 1993. The number represents three championships, six All-Star selections, two Sixth Man of the Year awards, and the most technically accomplished post game in NBA history.
The Move Catalog
Ask any basketball coach to describe Kevin McHale's post game and they will eventually fall silent, because the full description requires a whiteboard and more time than a conversation allows. The jump hook. The step-through. The up-and-under. The reverse pivot. The baseline spin. He had a collection of moves in the low post that no defender could fully prepare for, because mastering the counter to one move only exposed you to three others. He scored over 17,000 points in his career almost entirely within twelve feet of the basket, in an era of increasingly athletic defenders, and made it look like a mathematics problem he had already solved.
His arms — the legendary wingspan that allowed him to shoot over virtually any defender — were the starting point. But it was the footwork that made McHale unguardable. He moved in the post with a deliberateness that looked almost slow, until the defender realized the footwork had already created a shot that was going in.
Three Championships and a Sacrifice
McHale won three championships with the Celtics: 1981 before he became a starter, then 1984 and 1986 as one of the three best players on one of the best teams in NBA history. The Larry Bird–Kevin McHale–Robert Parish frontcourt is widely considered the greatest in basketball history — three Hall of Famers operating as a unit so complete that opposing coaches effectively had no answer for it.
In the 1987 playoffs, McHale played on a fractured foot, a decision he later acknowledged was medically reckless and personally necessary. He played through it. The Celtics reached the Finals. The foot never fully healed, and his career was shortened as a result. The sacrifice was characteristic: McHale never played basketball for individual recognition. He played to win.
The Standard
Forty years after his final game in Boston, Kevin McHale remains the measuring stick for post play. When analysts evaluate modern big men, the standard is always McHale. His #32 honors not just a player but a philosophy of craftsmanship — that basketball, played with intelligence and an obsessive commitment to technique, produces results that raw athleticism alone cannot match.



