On the night of March 2, 1962, in Hershey, Pennsylvania, right up
the street from the chocolate factory, Wilt Chamberlain, a young
and striking athlete celebrated as the Big Dipper, scored one
hundred points in a game against the New York Knickerbockers.
As historic and revolutionary as the achievement was, it remains
shrouded in myth. The game was not televised; no New York
sportswriters showed up; and a fourteen-year-old local boy ran onto
the court when Chamberlain scored his hundredth point, shook his
hand, and then ran off with the basketball. In telling the story of
this remarkable night, author Gary M. Pomerantz brings to life a
lost world of American sports.
In 1962, the National Basketball Association, stepchild to the
college game, was searching for its identity. Its teams were mostly
white, the number of black players limited by an unspoken quota.
Games were played in drafty, half-filled arenas, and the players
traveled on buses and trains, telling tall tales, playing cards,
and sometimes reading Joyce. Into this scene stepped the
unprecedented Wilt Chamberlain: strong and quick-witted, voluble
and enigmatic, a seven-footer who played with a colossal will and a
dancer's grace. That strength, will, grace, and mystery were never
more in focus than on March 2, 1962. Pomerantz tracked down Knicks
and Philadelphia Warriors, fans, journalists, team officials, other
NBA stars of the era, and basketball historians, conducting more
than 250 interviews in all, to recreate in painstaking detail the
game that announced the Dipper's greatness. He brings us to
Hershey, Pennsylvania, a sweet-seeming model of the gentle,
homogeneous small-town America that was fast becoming
anachronistic. We see the fans and players, alternately fascinated
and confused by Wilt, drawn anxiously into the spectacle. Pomerantz
portrays the other legendary figures in this story: the Warriors'
elegant coach Frank McGuire; the beloved, if rumpled, team owner
Eddie Gottlieb; and the irreverent p.a. announcer Dave "the Zink"
Zinkoff, who handed out free salamis courtside.
At the heart of the book is the self-made Chamberlain, a romantic
cosmopolitan who owned a nightclub in Harlem and shrugged off
segregation with a bebop cool but harbored every slight deep in his
psyche. March 2, 1962, presented the awesome sight of Wilt
Chamberlain imposing himself on a world that would diminish him.
"Wilt, 1962" is not only the dramatic story of a singular
basketball game but a meditation on small towns, midcentury
America, and one of the most intriguing figures in the pantheon of
sports heroes.
Also available as a Random House AudioBook
"From the Hardcover edition."
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