Larry Fleischer Inducted in 2002

Contributor Inducted in 2002
Larry Fleisher Larry Fleischer, Inducted into the NYC Hall of Fame in 2002
Photo credit: (Nasmith HOF)
Lawrence "Larry"  Fleisher (September 26, 1930 — May 4, 1989) a Bronx native, in 1953 he graduated from Harvard Law School.   At the request of an NBA player Tom Heinsohn, he helped create the National Basketball Association Players’ Association, where he served as president from (1962 to 1968). During this time pensions, minimum salaries, and disability pay were secured for the membership. For 19 years, Fleisher would continue to serve, without salary, as general counsel for the Players’ Association, arguing before U.S. Congress and the National Labor Relations Board to gain players the right of free agency, which right was eventually won in 1976.

Having guided players to the American Basketball Association in the late 1960s, Fleisher later helped broker the merger between the ABA and NBA and worked to set up relationships between the NBA and professional leagues in Europe and South America; he would represent little-known foreign players as well as established American stars, including Bill Bradley, John Havlicek, Bob Lanier, Willis Reed, and Jerry West, and, in an effort to promote basketball globally, would lead his clients on playing tours to Europe, South America, and Asia.

Prior to his 1987 retirement, Fleisher helped broker a labor agreement that installed a salary cap on NBA franchises and provided penalties for players caught using hard drugs.