Reece “Goose” Tatum
Basketball Player | Class of 2010
Reece “Goose” Tatum excelled at two sports, baseball and basketball, but he is most famous for his basketball career with the Harlem Globetrotters. Known as “Goose” for his comic walk and for his exceptionally wide arm span, he is remembered more for his comic antics in games than for his athletic ability and accomplishments, which were considerable. Reece Tatum was born on May 3 or 31, 1921, in Arkansas in either El Dorado or Hermitage— sources differ on his birth date and birthplace. His father, Ben, was a part-time preacher and part-time farmer who also worked at the local sawmill, while his mother, Alice, mostly remained at home to rear their seven children, of whom Reece was the fifth. She also often worked as a domestic cook. Tatum attended Booker T. Washington High School in El Dorado but may not have graduated, since he was employed at the local sawmill and played baseball while still in his teens.
By 1937, Tatum was playing professional baseball for the Louisville Black Colonels of the Negro Leagues. He later played for the Memphis Red Sox, the Birmingham Black Barons (1941 and 1942), and the Indianapolis Clowns (1943 and 1946–1949). He reportedly played for a baseball team in Forester, Arkansas, one summer as a young man and acquired his nickname “Goose” there. Later, as part-owner of the team, he occasionally played for the Detroit Stars. Tatum played first base, where his long arms made him skilled at fielding the throws of his teammates. Early in his career, he began enlivening the games with comic antics, including catching throws behind his back, kneeling in mock prayer before going to bat, and inviting fans (especially children) onto the field during a game. These performances caught the attention of Abe Saperstein, who had founded the Harlem Globetrotters as a touring basketball team from Chicago in 1926.
In high school, Tatum had played basketball and football, as well as baseball. His natural athletic ability and sense of comic timing made him a natural fit for the Globetrotters. He soon became the team’s clown, eventually earning the nickname “Clown Prince” for his antics on the basketball court. Tatum’s comedic routines on the court were usually played off his stature (he had an arm span of eighty-four inches). He often said, “My goal in life is to make people laugh,” which he deftly accomplished with such antics as playing hide-and-seek with the referees or replacing the original basketball with a trick one. Tatum studied clowns in movies and circuses, always seeking new elements to add to his routines. By showcasing his antics of hiding in the audience during a game or pretending to spy on the opponents’ huddle or pretending to faint until he was “revived” by the smell of his own shoes, Tatum helped to establish the Globetrotters’ reputation as an act that exceeded the usual showmanship of professional basketball teams.
Tatum played with the Globetrotters for the 1941 and 1942 seasons, and then he was drafted into the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II. He served at Lincoln Army Airfield in Nebraska, largely as an entertainer for the troops. After the war, he returned to play with the Globetrotters for another ten years. Tatum is credited with many inventive basketball moves, such as the hook shot, and he frequently scored more than fifty points in a game. At the same time, he continued his baseball career, playing in an all-star game in 1947 that drew the attention of major league scouts.
On occasion, Tatum failed to show up for scheduled games with the Globetrotters, sometimes missing as much as two weeks of work. In 1954, he left the team for good and created his own touring basketball teams, including the Harlem Road Kings, Goose Tatum’s Harlem Stars, and Goose Tatum’s Harlem Clowns.
Many sources report that Tatum was moody and even violent when he was not performing. He is said to have stabbed a pitcher from an opposing baseball team with a screwdriver and to have been arrested on several occasions on charges ranging from attacking a police officer to nonpayment of taxes. Tatum was married three times, but little information is available about his marriages; he was not married at the time of his death.
He died on January 18, 1967, in El Paso, Texas, of an apparent heart attack. He is buried at Fort Bliss National Cemetery in El Paso. Tatum was inducted into the Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame in 1974. His jersey (number 50) was retired on February 8, 2002, sixty years after his first season. His was the fourth number the Globetrotters had retired. On the same occasion, he was entered into the Globetrotters’ “Legends” Ring at Madison Square Garden. Tatum was elected to be in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2011.