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Oscar Robertson - Wikipedia. Oscar Robertson. Robertson in the 1. Cincinnati Royals. Personal information. Born(1. 93. 8- 1. November 2. 4, 1. Charlotte, Tennessee.
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Nationality. American. Listed height. 6 ft 5 in (1. Listed weight. 20. Career information. High school. Crispus Attucks(Indianapolis, Indiana)College.
Cincinnati (1. 95. NBA draft. 19. 60 / Pick: Territorial. Selected by the Cincinnati Royals. Playing career. 19. Position. Point guard. Number. 14, 1. Career history. Cincinnati Royals.
Milwaukee Bucks. Career highlights and awards. Career NBA statistics.
Points. 26,7. 10 (2. Rebounds. 7,8. 04 (7. Assists. 9,8. 87 (9. Stats at Basketball- Reference. Basketball Hall of Fame as player. FIBA Hall of Fame as player. College Basketball Hall of Fame.
Inducted in 2. 00. Oscar Palmer Robertson (born November 2. The Big O", is an American former National Basketball Association player who played for the Cincinnati Royals and Milwaukee Bucks.[1] The 6 ft 5 in (1.
Robertson played point guard and was a 1. All- Star, 1. 1- time member of the All- NBA Team, and one- time winner of the MVP award in 1. In 1. 96. 2, he became the first of only two players in NBA history to average a triple- double for a season.[3] In the 1. NBA season, he was a key player on the team that brought the Bucks their only NBA title. His playing career, especially during high school and college, was plagued by racism.[3]Robertson is a two- time Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame inductee, having been inducted in 1. United States men's Olympic basketball team and president of the National Basketball Players Association. He also was voted one of the 5.
Greatest Players in NBA History in 1. The United States Basketball Writers Association renamed their College Player of the Year Award the Oscar Robertson Trophy in his honor in 1.
National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame class in 2. He was ranked as the 3. American athlete of the 2. ESPN.[6][7]Robertson was also an integral part of Robertson v. National Basketball Ass'n of 1. The landmark NBA antitrust suit, named after the then- president of the NBA Players' Association, led to an extensive reform of the league's strict free agency and draft rules and, subsequently, to higher salaries for all players.[3]Early years.
Robertson was born in poverty in Charlotte, Tennessee, and grew up in a segregated housing project in Indianapolis. In contrast to many other boys who preferred to play baseball, he was drawn to basketball because it was "a poor kids' game." Because his family could not afford to buy a basketball, he learned how to shoot by tossing tennis balls and rags bound with rubber bands into a peach basket behind his family's home.[3] Robertson attended Crispus Attucks High School, an all- black high school.
Crispus Attucks High School. At Crispus Attucks, Robertson was coached by Ray Crowe, whose emphasis on a fundamentally sound game had a positive effect on Robertson's style of play. As a sophomore in 1. Attucks team that lost in the semi- state finals (state quarterfinals) to eventual state champions Milan, whose story would later be the basis of the classic 1.
Hoosiers. When Robertson was a junior, Crispus Attucks dominated its opposition, going 3. The following year the team finished with a perfect 3. Indiana state title, becoming the first team in Indiana to secure a perfect season and compiling a state- record 4. The state championships were also the first ever by an Indianapolis team in the Hoosier tourney. After their championship game wins, the team was paraded through town in a regular tradition, but they were then taken to a park outside downtown to continue their celebration, unlike other teams.
Robertson stated, "[Officials] thought the blacks were going to tear the town up, and they thought the whites wouldn't like it."[9] Robertson scored 2. Indiana "Mr. Basketball" in 1.
After his graduation that year, Robertson enrolled at the University of Cincinnati. University of Cincinnati (1. Robertson continued to excel while at the University of Cincinnati, recording an incredible scoring average of 3. In each of his three years, he won the national scoring title, was named an All- American, and was chosen College Player of the Year, while setting 1. NCAA and 1. 9 school records.[4]Robertson's stellar play led the Bearcats to a 7. Final Four appearances.
However, a championship eluded Robertson, something that would become a repeated occurrence in his professional career. When Robertson left college he was the all- time leading NCAA scorer until fellow Hall of Fame player Pete Maravich topped him in 1. It is interesting to note that Robertson took Cincinnati to national prominence during his time there, but the university's greatest success in basketball took place immediately after his departure, when the team won national titles in 1. He continues to stand atop the Bearcats' record book. The many records he still holds include: points in one game, 6. Robertson had many outstanding individual game performances, including 1.
His personal best might have been his line of 4. Indiana State in 1.
Despite his success on the court, Robertson's college career was soured by racism. In those days, southern university programs such as those of Kentucky, Duke, and North Carolina did not recruit black athletes, and road trips to segregated cities were especially difficult, with Robertson often sleeping in college dorms instead of hotels.
I'll never forgive them", he told The Indianapolis Star years later.[3] Decades after his college days, Robertson's stellar NCAA career was rewarded by the United States Basketball Writers Association when, in 1. NCAA Division I Player of the Year the Oscar Robertson Trophy. This honor brought the award full circle for Robertson since he had won the first two awards ever presented.[1. Olympics. After college, Robertson and Jerry West co- captained the U. S. basketball team at the 1. Summer Olympics. The team, described as the greatest assemblage of amateur basketball talent ever, steamrollered the competition to win the gold medal.
Robertson was a starting forward along with Purdue's Terry Dischinger, but played point guard as well. He was the co- leading scorer with fellow NBA legend Jerry Lucas, as the U. S. team won its nine games by a margin of 4. Ten of the twelve college players on the American squad later played in the NBA, including Robertson as well as future Hall- of- Famers West, Lucas, and Walt Bellamy.[1. Professional career.
Cincinnati Royals. Robertson displaying his ball- handling talent with the Cincinnati Royals. Prior to the 1. 96. NBA season, Robertson made himself eligible for the 1. NBA draft. He was drafted by the Cincinnati Royals as a territorial pick. The Royals gave Robertson a $3.
In his rookie season, Robertson averaged 3. He was named NBA Rookie of the Year, was elected into the All- NBA First Team – which would happen in each of Robertson's first nine seasons – and made the first of 1. All- Star Game appearances.[1] In addition, he was named the 1.
NBA All- Star Game MVP following his 2. West victory. However, the Royals finished with a 3. Western Division. In the 1. 96. 1–6.
Robertson became the first player in NBA history to average a triple- double for an entire season, with 3. Robertson also set a then- NBA record for the most triple- doubles during the regular season with 4. Russell Westbrook recorded 4.
Robertson as the only other player to average a triple- double for an entire season. He broke the assists record by Bob Cousy, who had recorded 7. Watch Sucker Punch Online Facebook.