George Eddy – ‘The French Connection’

George Eddy is an American born basketball enthusiast who has spent his life and career contributing to basketball in France.  His influence is immeasurable.  Eddy has a 40 year history of being involved in everything regarding basketball that one might imagine; including, playing, coaching, teaching, writing, TV commentating, building basketball courts.  His influence is immeasurable.

George Eddy

An American in Paris …

 

George Eddy

George Eddy in 2012
Born

16 June 1956 (age 69)

Roanoke, Alabama, United States
OccupationPundit
EmployerCanal +

Georges Sherwood Eddy[1] (born June 16, 1956) is an American-French basketball journalist and former professional basketball player.

Career

Eddy was born in Roanoke, Alabama,[2] and moved to Florida with his family at age three. He is the son of a French mother, Denyse, who was visually handicapped, and an American father, David, who was partially paralyzed and was working as a literature teacher. His parents were supporters of Martin Luther King. David Eddy was a lifetime member of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), also his mother was a member of the association.[3] George Eddy shook King’s hand as a three-year old in Talladega, Alabama.[4] He said, the fight for civil rights for black Americans was always present during his childhood.[3]

Eddy grew up in Winter Park, Florida.[4] He discovered basketball at age six when his neighbor invited him watching a game of the Harlem Globetrotters on television and fell in love with the sport. As a child, he played basketball on playgrounds in and around Winter Park and started playing organized basketball in a local team at age ten. He quickly found out that shooting the ball was his biggest strength. He attended Glenridge Middle School and Winter Park High School, but never made the varsity basketball teams as he was regularly cut shortly before the start of the season. At Winter Park, Eddy was a close friend of Stan Pietkiewicz. As a senior in high school, Eddy served as public address announcer at the school’s basketball games.[3]

In 1974, he enrolled at the University of Florida, studying criminal justice. Eddy tried to make the Gators’ basketball team as a walk-on, but was never granted a roster spot. According to Eddy, he gained reputation as the best basketball player on campus who did not make the varsity team. He practiced several times a week, but did not consider to transfer to another university to play competitive basketball, because he wanted to stay at the University of Florida.[3]

While visiting France with his mother in the summer of 1977, Eddy was looking for a place to play basketball and was put in contact with first division side Alsace de Bagnolet. After a one-hour tryout, in which only 2-on-2 basketball was played, the club’s chairman signed him for a low salary. The fact that Eddy would count as a French player worked for him as well. “To go over to France and suddenly find myself playing professionally was just a dream come true”, he told the Orlando Sentinel in 1987.[5] However, Eddy did not see much playing time on the Bagnolet team in the early stages of the 1977–78 campaign and was about to be sent back to the United States. He stayed with the team and saw his playing time increase considerably during the season after the team was hit by injuries, suspension[6] and had released their American player.[3]

From 1978 to 1980, Eddy, a 6’3’’ shooter, played at Châlons-sur-Marne in the third tier of French basketball where he excelled as a scorer and finished second with the team in both seasons.[7] In 1980, he signed with Caen Basket Club of the French top flight, where he played his best basketball. Eddy continued his professional basketball career at first-division side Nice (1982–83), before joining St. Julien-les-Villas (second division) near the city of Troyes for the 1983–84 season. After being among the best French scorers of the league, Eddy went to Paris in 1984, turning out for Racing Club de France in the 1984–85 season. He helped Racing earn promotion to the French top flight, again ranking among the best French scorers of the league. In the 1985–86 season, Eddy saw action in 25 games of the first French division, averaging 3.7 points per contest for Racing.[8]

In November 1984, Eddy sent in his application for a job as basketball commentator at French TV station Canal Plus, who had acquired the rights to cover the NBA, and was handed the job in January 1985. He started commentating NBA games for Canal Plus. “I’m very different from the French announcers because I’m enthusiastic, sort of in the John Madden style. French sports announcers take themselves very seriously. They think of themselves as journalists, not fans, so they sort of have a stone-faced, Dan Rather approach”, he told the Orlando Sentinel in 1987. In an article published in the New York Times in April 2017, Eddy was called “perhaps the man most responsible for introducing the country (France) to the NBA”. His style of sportscasting was described as exuberant. Speaking French with a strong American accent and mixing French with American basketball terms became his trademark.[9]

Eddy also commentated basketball games of the French league and international competition, such as the Olympic Games.[10] Besides Canal Plus, he worked for other media, including Eurosport.[11] Eddy also covered the Super Bowl on French TV.[12] When Michael Jordan and later Shaquille O’Neal visited France in the 1990s, Eddy served as their translator and tour guide.[13] He commented his last game involving the French men’s national team in September 2022 (final of the European championship), but continued his commentary work on Canal Plus Afrique and Canal Plus France.[14]

In July 2023, Eddy had a heart attack while shooting hoops at a playground in Chatou. He was saved by a 21-year-old man who performed first aid.[15] In December 2024, Eddy was decorated with the Legion of Honour.[16]

You played and even coached in Paris in the 1980s. Today we know you mainly as a commentator. What are your ties with the capital and the Parisian sports scene?
I’ve been involved with everything to do with Parisian basketball for 45 years. Things have changed, clubs have changed, and Paris Basketball [club] is going to have a magnificent new venue at Porte de la Chapelle. It’s a revival for the capital, having a first division team with this brand-new 8,000-seat venue. There’s plenty of scope to build an ambitious project. The team could eventually play in the European Cup, become French Champion or maybe one day play in the Euro League. Anything is possible in a major, world-famous city like Paris. Seeing this court on the Champ-de-Mars is in a way the culmination of everything I’ve been able to do in Parisian basketball at various levels, and I’m delighted!

George Eddy gives it a shot

“It’s the most beautiful court in the world”. George Eddy, a sports journalist with an inimitable voice and accent, was on hand at the inauguration of the 3×3 basketball court on the Champ-de-Mars in September 2023. This “basketball purist” talks about the development of Parisian basketball, the bond he maintains with the capital and his favorite court!
There are many basketball courts in Paris, some of which are being renovated or have recently been renovated. What do you think of the place of this sport in the capital?
In the early 1990s, there was a similar phenomenon, known as the “courts” phenomenon. Many young people in Paris and the suburbs preferred basketball to soccer. We were lucky enough to build several hundred courts in France. Thirty years on, we need to renovate them. This is a fabulous City of Paris project which will refurbish more than thirty courts between now and the 2024 Olympic Games.
We’re seeing the fruits of this labor with the Champ-de-Mars course, which for me is the most beautiful in the world, with the Eiffel Tower behind it. Clubs are full, so amateurs can enjoy free access without signing up to one. Just like in the 1990s, we’re seeing a basketball court revival.
 
What’s your favorite court?
I’ve been living near Chatou (78) for twenty years. We’ve had a beautiful court with two nets for four years, which I have worked on. I consider it to be one of the most beautiful courts in France, but to be honest, the one at Champ-de-Mars definitely competes with the one in Chatou!

Henry the Gentlemen Fields was the first American to play as a top level professional in France.  He changed the game with his Paris Club team winning with their adopted Field’s style of basketball.  He brought the modern game to France … … … .

Henry ‘Gentlemen’ Fields

Martin Feinberg brought the modern game to France … … … .  He was responsible for initiating Henry ‘Gentlemen’ Fields to French Basketball.

Martin Feinberg

Below is A video and a podcast about another American who played basketball in Europe, Israel and Brazil.  An article about his Spring time in Paris during his 1987 season break from basketball

Spring In Paris 1987
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