DES MOINES – Rick Barry stands fourth in all-time NBA free-throw accuracy. He was 89.8% for his long Hall of Fame pro career, including 92.3% in 1975-76.
Forty-one seasons later, Rick's son Canyon Barry was a graduate transfer at Florida and set a school record with 42 consecutive made free throws. He made 113 of 128 attempts, 88.3%, becoming the SEC's Sixth Man of the Year on a team that lost the 2017 East Regional final to South Carolina.
Rick Barry shot his free throws with an underhand flip — referred to as "granny style" by detractors. His free throws kept dropping in softly over the front rim, but his approach continued to be disdained as an antidote for bad free-throw shooters.
Wilt Chamberlain, legendary bricklayer from the line, went underhanded for the 1961-62 season, which predated Barry's NBA arrival by four seasons.
Wilt made 61.3% of his free throws. He averaged an all-time record 50.4 points per game. He made 28 of 32 free throws when he scored 100 on March 2, 1962.
And then Wilt went back to a variety of ineffective overhand styles. Maybe he feared losing his billing as America's most macho athlete if he continued the underhand flip.
Two of Barry's sons, Jon and Brent, were NBA first-rounders and matched Rick's 14 seasons in the league. Oldest son Scooter played 17 seasons of pro ball, mostly in Europe. Drew was a second-rounder and played three seasons in the NBA.
They all shot free throws conventionally and were good at it. Plus, they weren't that influenced by Dad by the time they reached basketball maturity. He left the house shared with his wife, Pam, the four boys and daughter Shannon in August 1979.