"64 years ago today, Wilt Chamberlain made his varsity debut at Kansas in an 87-69 win over Northwestern, setting the single-game school record for both points (52) and rebounds (31) in the process.
By the numbers: In two years as a Jayhawk, Wilt averaged 29.9 points and 18.3 rebounds.
Rewind: Conference rules prohibited freshmen from playing varsity ball, which was bad news for the latter as a young Wilt dominated (42 pts, 29 reb) in the annual freshmen-varsity scrimmage, dealing them their first loss since the series began in 1922.
Fast forward: With Wilt finally on the varsity team as a sophomore, Kansas made a run all the way to the national championship, losing to UNC by one point in triple overtime for the Tar Heels' first title.
Yes, but: Wilt earned the Tournament's Most Outstanding Player anyway, becoming the fourth (of 11) to win the award despite not winning the title.
What came next: As a junior, teams routinely froze the ball or triple-teamed Wilt to neutralize the otherwise unstoppable force.
The strategy worked, as Kansas failed to even make the tournament, but it frustrated him so much he opted to leave a year early, signing with the Harlem Globetrotters while he waited for his NBA eligibility to kick in." Axios
By the numbers: In two years as a Jayhawk, Wilt averaged 29.9 points and 18.3 rebounds.
Rewind: Conference rules prohibited freshmen from playing varsity ball, which was bad news for the latter as a young Wilt dominated (42 pts, 29 reb) in the annual freshmen-varsity scrimmage, dealing them their first loss since the series began in 1922.
Fast forward: With Wilt finally on the varsity team as a sophomore, Kansas made a run all the way to the national championship, losing to UNC by one point in triple overtime for the Tar Heels' first title.
Yes, but: Wilt earned the Tournament's Most Outstanding Player anyway, becoming the fourth (of 11) to win the award despite not winning the title.
What came next: As a junior, teams routinely froze the ball or triple-teamed Wilt to neutralize the otherwise unstoppable force.
The strategy worked, as Kansas failed to even make the tournament, but it frustrated him so much he opted to leave a year early, signing with the Harlem Globetrotters while he waited for his NBA eligibility to kick in." Axios
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