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"The reason he's passing the ball now is he can't score anymore" - How a Sports Illustrated headline motivated Wilt to ...
NBA 75: At No. 6, Wilt Chamberlain made the impossible ordinary, setting records that might never be broken Amid the awful ESPN layoffs, the company still has to do business with on-air people who ...
When asked who he preferred to start a franchise with at point guard, Chamberlain gave a stunning answer. Wilt credited Magic ...
New documentaries explore the star-crossed careers and delicate spirits of Wilt Chamberlain and Bill Walton, two of basketball’s greatest. By Mike Hale Pity the poor 7-footer. That’s the ...
Wilt Chamberlain didn’t just silence critics — he obliterated them. In 1962, after a Sports Illustrated headline claimed he was passing more because he “couldn’t score anymore,” Wilt responded with a ...
Taylor Swift’s New Heights debut shattered records, leaving Jason and Travis Kelce in a good place. Shout-out to the Swifties ...
In this March 2, 1962 file photo, Wilt Chamberlain of the Philadelphia Warriors holds a sign reading "100" in the dressing room in Hershey, Pa., after he scored 100 points, as the Warriors ...
Here’s a baller spread. Late NBA hall of famer Wilt Chamberlain’s former Bel-Air, Calif., palatial residence has hit the market for $14.9 million. The 7-foot-1 center — regarded as one of ...
Oscar winning director Quentin Tarantino once claimed that his mother had a little thing with the late Wilt Chamberlain.
Take a trip through the tomes of NBA statistics, and find that Wilt Chamberlain’s name is omnipresent. When his career ended in 1973, “The Big Dipper” held 128 league records.
"Feed Wilt," McGuire would remember telling his team, and the next night Chamberlain scored 67 points in a loss to the Knicks. Two days later, he scored 65 in a Philadelphia victory over St. Louis.
Even though the game was well in hand (125-106), Philadelphia would keep feeding Wilt and see if the big guy could reach 100. A 20-foot jump shot gave Chamberlain 79 points.