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Showing results for tags 'Kansas'.
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Did we really not have a thread on Wilt Chamberlain? I don't have much to say that hasn't already been said, but I'd like to list for everyone Chamberlain's single-season rebounds-per-game average in the playoffs over the course of three different decades: 1959-1960: 25.8 1960-1961: 23.0 1961-1962: 26.6 1963-1964: 25.2 1964-1965: 27.2 1965-1966: 30.2 1966-1967: 29.1 1967-1968: 24.7 1968-1969: 24.7 1969-1970: 22.2 1970-1971: 20.2 1971-1972: 21.0 1972-1973: 22.5 If I had to name five athletes of the 20th century who had the most imposing statistics, in any sport, Wilt Chamberlain would be on that list.
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- Pennsylvania
- Philadelphia
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Tagged with:
- Pennsylvania
- Philadelphia
- 1936
- Wilton Norman Chamberlain
- Wilt Chamberlain
- Basketball
- NBA
- 2-Time NBA Champion
- NBA Finals MVP 1972
- 4-Time NBA MVP
- 13-Time NBA All-Star
- NBA All-Star Game MVP 1960
- 7-Time All-NBA First Team
- 2-Time NBA All-Defensive First Team
- NBA Rookie of the Year
- 7-Time NBA Scoring Champion
- 11-Time NBA Rebounding Champion
- 9-Time NBA Field-Goal Percentage Leader
- NBA Assists Leader 1968
- Harlem Globetrotters
- Kansas
- Lawrence
- University of Kansas
- NCAA Final Four MVP 1957
- 2-Time NCAA First-Team All-American
- Overbrook HS
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There are some truly great quotes in this column from two men who clearly had the utmost of respect for one another. Cobb's quote about the first time he ever laid eyes on Johnson is hysterical. "Ty Cobb Talks About the Greatest Pitcher he Ever Faced" by J. Conrad Guest on detroitathletic.com
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- Kansas
- Humbolt
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- Humbolt
- 1887
- Walter Johnson
- Baseball
- MLB
- 1907
- Pitcher
- Washington Senators
- World Series Champion 1924
- 2-Time AL MVP
- 3-Time Pitching Triple Crown Winner
- 6-Time AL Wins Leader
- 5-Time AL ERA Leader
- 12-Time AL Strikeout Leader
- Pitched No-Hitter Jul 1 1920
- MLB Record 110 Career Shutouts
- 417 Career Wins
- MLB All-Century Team
- MLB All-Time Team
- Washington Nationals Ring of Honor
- Baseball Hall of Fame (Inaugural Class)
- 1927
- Washington DC
- 1946
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Remember the names Shareef O'Neal and Bol Bol - they'll be graduating in 2018, and to say they have a lot of talent is something of an understatement. As great as Shareef O'Neal looks, Bol Bol is a more unusual talent - he has the same type of low-release 3-point shot as Stephen Curry (actually, they both do) ... and he's 6'11. Bol has the skills of a guard (!), but will he ever bulk up enough for the NBA? O'Neal comes across as being a really likable young man - when he could easily be a cocky, spoiled brat - but there's a certain seriousness about Bol - undoubtedly due to the influence from, and the death of, his father, that makes him seem like an old soul. It wouldn't surprise me one bit if O'Neal emerges as the greater player of the two, and Bol could easily become injury-prone, but it just seems like there's a certain precocious wisdom to Bol, both as a player and a person. BTW, this is the *high school* class of 2018. This all said, my hope for these kids is that they're happy, regardless of whether they're basketball players or accountants (considering Shareef got a Lamborghini for his 16th birthday, he's probably well on his way). It's a wee bit early to be predicting a Magic-Bird-like rivalry, but the groundwork is there: the flashy, dunking, mega-rich kid from LA, whose father gave him a Lamborghini for his 16th birthday, and the pensive Sudanese-American from rural Kansas, whose father, a war-conscious Dinka tribesman, died when he was 10, and once killed a lion with a spear. Shareef O'Neal, son of Shaquille O'Neal: Bol Bol, son of Manute Bol, a truly great, kind, giving man:
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- 2018
- California
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