Here’s a man in evening clothes
How he got here, I don’t know
Man, you oughta see him go!
My son told me recently that he had been doing some research on old-time NBA players as part of his job with NBC Sports, which will start broadcasting NBA games next season.
By “old-time players,” I mean the guys who played in the 1960s . . . guys like Bill Russell, and Bob Pettit, and Oscar Robertson, and Wilt Chamberlain.
All four of those basketball legends had prominent roles in the 1962 NBA all-star game. I don’t remember watching that game – I was only nine years old at the time – but I’m guessing that I did, because I tuned in to just about every baseball, football, and basketball game that was televised in my hometown when I was growing up. (We had only two TV stations, so there weren’t a lot of games to choose from.)
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After saying good-bye to my son, I fell down the rabbit hole that is Basketball-Reference.com – the most comprehensive source of basketball statistics that exists.
I always knew that Wilt Chamberlain was an amazing man – both on and off the basketball court – but I didn’t appreciate just how amazing a player he was until I spent a few minutes studying his career stats.
Chamberlain was a powerfully built seven-footer, so it comes as no surprise that he was a great rebounder. He is the NBA’s career leader in rebounds by a wide margin.
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Wilt Chamberlain |
What’s even more remarkable is that Chamberlain’s seventh-best single-season total rebounds number is greater than any other player’s best single-season total. (Think about that – he not only has the highest single-season rebound number in NBA history, he also has the second-highest, third-highest, fourth-highest, fifth-highest, sixth-highest, and seventh-highest number of rebounds in a single season.)
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Chamberlain was just as dominant a scorer as he was a rebounder. If you rank players according to the number of points per game they scored over the course of their career, Michael Jordan and Chamberlain are in a virtual tie for first.
Michael Jordan scored 37.1 points per game in the 1986-87 season. No other player – other than Chamberlain – has ever beaten that mark.
Chamberlain beat it not once, but four times. In the 1959-60, 1960-61, 1961-62, and 1962-63 seasons, Wilt averaged 37.6, 38.4, 50.4, and 44.8 points per game respectively.
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Think about that 1961-1962 number – 50.4 points per game.
Chamberlain scored 50 or more points for the Philadelphia Warriors no fewer than 45 times that season. (No one else has ever scored 50 in a game more than ten times in a single season.)
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Wilt in 1962 |
He scored an astonishing 100 points against the Knicks on March 2, 1962. The second-highest single-game total ever is Kobe Bryant’s 81 in 2006.
Including Bryant, only three players other than Chamberlain have scored 72 or more points in an NBA game – and each of those three did it only once. Chamberlain scored 72 or more five times in a twelve-month period.
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While no one else has ever scored more points or pulled down more rebounds than Chamberlain did in 1961-62, there’s another Chamberlain statistic from that season that’s even more mind-boggling.
Chamberlain’s Warriors played 80 games in the 1961-62 regular season, plus 12 playoff games. Do you know how many times in those 92 games Chamberlain’s coach sent in a sub to give him a breather? Would you believe ZERO times!
You heard that right – Chamberlain never came out of a game that year.
Actually, he did come out of one game. It appears that he talked back to a referee one night and was ejected with about eight minutes left in the fourth quarter. Otherwise, he played every single second of every minute of every game his team played that season.
That included a stretch in January 1962 when his team played five games – two of which went into overtime – in five nights. (Wilt scored 62, 54, 53, 44, and 62 points respectively in those games.)
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Chamberlain’s playing-time numbers that season were no anomaly. In fact, Chamberlain ranks first, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh all-time when it comes to minutes played per game in a single season.
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Not surprisingly, he holds the all-time NBA career record for minutes played per game with a 45.8 mark – over the course of his career, Chamberlain was on the floor a full three and a half minutes more per game than anyone else who’s ever played in the NBA.
In his final season, when Wilt was 36 years old, he still averaged 43.2 minutes played – second-highest in the league. (Last season, no NBA player averaged more than 37.8 minutes per game.)
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Sam Cooke’s “Twistin’ the Night Away” was sitting at #27 on the Billboard “Hot 100” singles chart the night that Wilt dropped 100 points on the Knicks.
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Sam Cooke |
“Twistin’ the Night Away” is also notable because it was one of the first two 45s I ever owned. I bought it and Bobby Lewis’s “Tossin’ and Turnin’” with my winnings from the first round of my fourth-grade spelling bee that year.
Click here to listen to “Twistin’ the Night Away.”
Click here to buy it from Amazon.