Meadowlark Lemon may be best remembered as the “Clown Prince of Basketball,” but the former Harlem Globetrotters star, who passed away on Sunday at age 83, also deserves credit for helping basketball become a bigger crossover success.
For two decades, he was the face of the Globetrotters during arguably their most ubiquitous period, which included appearances in everything from Saturday morning cartoons to variety shows and admittedly cheesy B-movies. And while it was his on-the-court buffoonery that made him a star, his genuine basketball skills were never in question.
“Meadowlark was the most sensational, awesome, incredible basketball player I’ve ever seen,” NBA icon Wilt Chamberlain once said. “People would say it would be Dr. J or even [Michael] Jordan. For me, it would be Meadowlark Lemon.”
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Chamberlain played on the Globetrotters opposite Lemon before breaking into the NBA, and that team’s success helped make racial integration in the NBA possible. Although not as widely publicized as Jackie Robinson’s breaking the color barrier in Major League Baseball, the entry of ex-Globetrotter Nathaniel “Sweetwater” Clifton in 1950 into the all-white pro-leagues alongside two other African-American players was almost as significant.
And for many up-and-coming basketball fans in the ’50s, ’60s and ’70s, Lemon’s Globetrotters provided the first exposure for many mainstream audiences to black players and a more liberated style of play. Now, no-look passes and slam dunks are part of the NBA’s DNA — but that may never have happened had the Globetrotters not enjoyed a national following.
“I, growing up, was living in Hawaii, which didn’t have that many African-Americans and whenever the Globetrotters came into town it was just a wonderful, fun-filled afternoon, but had I think some deeper meaning to it,” a then-Sen. Barack Obama said in a 2005 documentary tribute to the team.
Lemon purportedly played in 7,500 consecutive games, missing just one in 24 years, and his website claims he played in a total of 16,000 in more than 100 countries. Mannie Jackson, the current owner of the Globetrotters, said during a 2003 NBA Hall of Fame induction speech that Lemon “changed people’s attitudes about race, foreigners’ attitudes about America and along the way he made millions love the game of basketball.”









