Determination:

Becoming Your

Best (A True Story)

Determination

"Oh no!  I missed again."

 

The pro scouts are fond of saying that most great stars show their athletic ability at an early age. Bobby Orr, for example, was an outstanding hockey prospect at the age of twelve. Mickey Lolich was pitching shutouts as a teenager in the Babe Ruth League. And there are many other examples. Yet sometimes a fumble-fingered youngster who moves as if he has two left feet turns out to be a superstar. This is the story of one boy who couldn't seem to do anything right, at least in the beginning.

As a gawky teen-ager, the boy tried out Łor his freshman high school football team. Opposing players had a fine time running all over him. He tried out for the basketball team, and in three games failed to score a point. Baseball produced no better results. He was the first boy dropped from the squad.

Still determined, the boy came back out for basketball as a sophomore. But the team ran out of uniforms. Rather than get one for him, the coach told him to forget about playing. The boy joined a team in a church league, but even facing other ordinary players, he couldn't get very far. His dribbling was poor, his passing was worse and his shots never went anywhere near the basket.

Still the boy was not discouraged. His father set up a hoop in the backyard, gave him a basketball and urged him to keep practicing.

His shooting did improve. Also, by the time he was a junior, he stood 6-foot-5. Noting the change, his high school coach made sure he found a uniform to fit the boy. The improvement continued, slowly, steadily. At graduation the young man was 6-foot-7 and good enough to receive several college scholarship offers. He chose Louisiana State University .

The LSU freshman coach found him eager to learn. The following summer, he took a job as counselor in a Wisconsin summer camp. There he met Ray Meyer, who had once coached the great George Mikan at DePaul. Meyer turned the young counselor into a fantastic shooter .

The rest of the story can be found in the NBA record book. The former clumsy oaf played eleven seasons with the St. Louis Hawks, and every sportswriter called him one of the greatest ever  to play basketball at any time, in any league. By the time he retired, this superstar had scored a total of 20,880 points as a pro.

The player's name is Bob Pettit.. He retired in 1965, but he is still in the record books with other all-time all-pro basketball players.

   

From: The Giant Book Of Strange But True Sports Stories by Howard Liss, illustrations by Joe Mathieu, © 1976, Random House, NY, page 64,.

NBA Career Leaders
 
POINTS SCORED
(through the 1999-2000 season)
 
Player Points Gms Avg Yrs
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 38,387 1560 24.6 20
Wilt Chamberlain 31,419 1045 30.1 14
Karl Malone 31,041 1192 26.0 15
Michael Jordan 29,277 930 31.5 13
Moses Malone 27,409 1329 20.6 19
Elvin Hayes 27,313 1303 21.0 16
Oscar Robertson 26,710 1040 25.7 14
Dominique Wilkins 26,668 1074 24.8 15
John Havlicek 26,395 1270 20.8 16
Hakeem Olajuwon 25,822 1119 23.1 16
Alex English 25,613 1193 21.5 15
Jerry West 25,192 932 27.0 14
Charles Barkley 23,757 1073 22.1 16
Patrick Ewing 23,665 1039 22.8 15
Robert Parish 23,334 1611 14.5 21
Adrian Dantley 23,177 955 24.3 15
Elgin Baylor 23,149 846 27.4 14
Clyde Drexler 22,195 1086 20.4 15
Larry Bird 21,791 897 24.3 13
Hal Greer 21,586 1122 19.2 15
Walt Bellamy 20,941 1043 20.1 14
Bob Pettit 20,880 792 26.4 11
George Gervin 20,708 791 26.2 10
Tom Chambers 20,049 1107 18.1 16
Reggie Miller 19,792 1013 19.5 13
Bernard King 19,655 874 22.5 14
Mitch Richmond 19,639 875 22.4 12
Walter Davis 19,521 1033 18.9 15
Terry Cummings 19,460 1183 16.4 18
Bob Lanier 19,248 959 20.1 14
Dolph Schayes 19,247 1059 18.2 16
Eddie Johnson 19,202 1199 16.0 17
Gail Goodrich 19,181 1031 18.6 14
From:  http://www.basketball.com/nba/records/NBAcarLdrsPoints.shtml