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Growing up on the hardscrabble streets of LA in the late 1950s,
Billy McGill stood out. At eleven he was dunking. At fifteen he was
playing in pickup games against Bill Russell and Wilt
Chamberlain--and holding his own, in part because he invented the
jump hook shot, which no one could defend. How he went from college
phenom, well on his way to becoming the greatest player Los Angeles
ever produced, to sleeping in abandoned houses and washing up in a
Laundromat sink is the story Billy "the Hill" McGill recounts
here. The first African American to play basketball for the University
of Utah and the highest scoring big man in NCAA history, McGill was
the first pick of the 1962 NBA draft. But the injury that would
undo him--a knee injury in his junior year of high school--had
already occurred, and it would worsen year after year until his
career faded away. From college star (whose scoring record is still
unbroken) to troubled player, bouncing around the NBA and the ABA,
McGill takes us from the heights to his precipitous fall--and the
slow recovery of a life he had never prepared for. A cautionary
tale, written with a candor and authenticity rarely seen in pro
athletes, his book is also the incredible story of one of the
greatest unknown basketball players of all time.
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