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Parenting & Family Quote by Bob Cousy

"We hung out on the streets, played stickball, and did all of the things that other kids did"

About this Quote

The point of Bob Cousy's line isn't the stickball; it's the insistence on normalcy. An athlete who became a symbol of mid-century excellence is reaching back past the trophies to frame his origin story as unremarkable: streets, pickup games, the everyday rituals that confer legitimacy in American sports mythology. It's a subtle pushback against the idea that greatness is engineered in private gyms or handed down by privilege. Cousy is telling you he came up the way "real" kids did, in public space, among peers, under no one's curated supervision.

That phrase "other kids" does heavy lifting. It flattens difference, smoothing over whatever set him apart - talent, ambition, maybe even background - to claim membership in a shared civic childhood. For a Jewish kid in Depression-era New York, that belonging mattered; saying he did what everyone else did is also saying he wasn't an outsider, or at least didn't want to be remembered as one. The subtext is assimilation through play: sports as a social passport.

It also reads as a generational marker. Cousy is invoking a pre-digital, pre-organized childhood where the street doubled as playground and proving ground, and toughness was learned informally. The nostalgia isn't just sentimental; it's an argument about character. By locating his formation in unstructured public life, he implies that his discipline and creativity weren't coached into him - they were negotiated, improvised, earned.

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TopicYouth
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About the Author

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Bob Cousy (born August 9, 1928) is a Athlete from USA.

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