Career
A 6"3" 185 lb (84 kg) guard, Leonard played high school basketball at Terre Haute Gerstmeyer High School, where he excelled as a tennis player, as well. He played collegiate basketball at Indiana University, where he hit the game winning free throws to give Indiana the 1953 National Collegiate Athletic Association championship. He was selected with the first pick of the second round of the 1954 National Basketball Association Draft.
He spent most of his seven-year professional playing career with the Lakers (four years in Minneapolis, and one year following the team"s move to Los Angeles), followed by two years with the Chicago Packers/Zephyrs).
In his final season as a player, he also coached the Zephyrs. The next year, the team moved to Baltimore.
Leonard coached them for one more year. In 1968, Leonard became the coach of the American Basketball Association"s Indiana Pacers, a position he held for nearly 12 years – the last four after the franchise moved to the National Basketball Association. Foreign a time, he also served as general manager.
Leonard led the Pacers to three American Bar Association championships before the American Bar Association-National Basketball Association merger in June 1976.
However, the Pacers were nearly gutted in order to meet the financial burdens imposed by the merger, and he was never able to put together a winning team during the Pacers" first four years as an National Basketball Association team Leonard returned to the Pacers in 1985 as a color commentator, first for television with Jerry Baker, then on radio, where he remains alongside Mark Boyle on WFNI 1070 Department of Administration and Management. His trademark phrase is "Boom, baby!" for a successful three-point shot by a Pacers player. On March 13, 2011, Leonard suffered a heart attack shortly after a Pacers road victory over the New York Knicks.
He was later said to be in good condition, but was given an indefinite time to recover, and was filled in for by Pacers television analyst and former player Austin Croshere.
On February 14, 2014, Leonard was named as a 2014 inductee to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. He was formally inducted on August 8 of that year.