Larry Bird lit up the Boston Garden on a crisp November night in 1985, and one fan’s dad got the courtside seat of a lifetime.
What happened?
On November 12, 1985, a young fan’s father watched Larry Bird drop 32 points, grab 12 rebounds, and lead the Boston Celtics past the Detroit Pistons 118–103. The game featured a classic Bird vs. Isiah Thomas matchup, with Bird outdueling Thomas in a duel of future Hall of Famers. The fan’s dad, a lifelong Celtics supporter, still recalls the moment Bird hit a step-back three over Bill Laimbeer to seal the win.
Why this night still matters for Larry Bird
Bird’s 1985–86 season remains one of his most dominant, ending with 25.8 points, 9.8 rebounds, and 6.8 assists per game. That year, he won his third straight MVP and led Boston to a league-best 67–15 record. The Pistons, fresh off their Bad Boys rise, were the Celtics’ biggest obstacle—and Bird made sure they paid. The 1985 playoff rematch between the two teams set the tone for their decade-long rivalry.
What made that game special?
The fan’s dad remembers Bird’s pregame routine: a towel draped over his shoulder, a towel he’d snap before every free throw. Bird nailed 12 of 14 from the line that night. The Pistons’ physical defense couldn’t rattle him. After the game, Bird told reporters he wanted to prove Boston could still run with the young, aggressive teams rising in the East. He did exactly that.
What comes next for Celtics fans?
Bird’s 1985–86 MVP season capped a stretch where he averaged at least 25 points, 9 rebounds, and 6 assists for five straight years. The Celtics’ 67-win campaign remains the franchise’s second-best single-season mark. For the fan’s dad—and thousands of others—Bird’s 1985 performances weren’t just highlights. They were proof Boston’s legend was still being written.