Posted on 03/02/2017 10:06:50 AM PST by EveningStar
Wilt Chamberlain set the single-game scoring record in the National Basketball Association (NBA) by scoring 100 points for the Philadelphia Warriors in a 169147 win over the New York Knicks on March 2, 1962, at Hershey Sports Arena in Hershey, Pennsylvania. It is widely considered one of the greatest records in basketball. Chamberlain set five other league records that game including most free throws made, a notable achievement, as he was regarded as a poor free throw shooter. The teams broke the record for most combined points in a game (316). That season, Chamberlain averaged a record 50.4 points per game, and he had broken the NBA single-game scoring record (71) earlier in the season in December with 78 points. The third-year center had already set season scoring records in his first two seasons. In the fourth quarter, the Knicks began fouling other players to keep the ball away from Chamberlain, and they also became deliberate on offense to reduce the number of possessions for Philadelphia. The Warriors countered by committing fouls of their own to get the ball back.
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Ouch, you read my mind.
Well that gives you some idea too, of the small crowds which attended NBA games in those days.
Is it just a coincidence that Philadelphia’s Athletics and Warriors ended up in Oakland?
It was common at one time for the Philly NBA team to play home games at various venues around Pennsylvania.
When I was a kid the 76ers scheduled about six dates a year at the Civic Arena in Pittsburgh.
“He went to the volley ball court and put his name on the list of people waiting to play, just like everybody else.”
That is SO COOL. A guy that could OWN THE BEACH instead played by the rules and waited his turn.
VERY IMPRESSIVE MAN. Very sad that he died so (relatively) young (at 63).
SourceIn the 1961-62 season, during which Chamberlain averaged 50.4 points a game for the Philadelphia Warriors and scored 100 points in a game against the Knicks, Chamberlain played every minute of every matchup on the 80-game regular-season schedule except on the night of Jan. 3, 1962.
With 8 minutes 33 seconds remaining in the Warriors game against the Lakers in Los Angeles, [Earl] Strom gave Chamberlain a technical foul for complaining about a call. Chamberlain then made reference to Earl Stroms old mother, according to [Norm] Druckers report to the league, as cited in Gary M. Pomerantzs book Wilt, 1962 (2005).
When Chamberlain yelled at Strom that he must be gambling on the game, according to Druckers report, he slapped Chamberlain with a second technical, causing an automatic ejection. Drucker tacked on a third technical after additional sequences of profane words from Chamberlain.
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