Hal Greer
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Harold Everett Greer (born June 26, 1936 in Huntington, West Virginia) is a former professional basketball player.
He played college basketball at Marshall University and is well-known for his time as teammate of Wilt Chamberlain on the Philadelphia 76ers (especially the powerful 1967 team that ended the 8 year championship-winning streak of the Boston Celtics). Greer is usually considered the 3rd best guard of the 1960s, behind Oscar Robertson and Jerry West. Greer played in 10 NBA All-Star Games, was the MVP of the 1968 game, was named to the All-NBA Second team seven times, and scored over 20,000 points during his NBA career. His hometown has honored his success by renaming 16th street, which carries West Virginia Route 10 as the main artery between the campus/downtown area and Interstate 64, as 'Hal Greer Boulevard.' Hal Greer is recognized the only African-American sports player enshrined in a major sports hall of fame from West Virginia.
Greer is sometimes confused with Hal Lear, another star guard who played alongside Guy Rodgers for Temple University in the mid-1950s.
[edit] College Accomplishments
- Two-time All-Conference (1957, 1958)
- Team high scorer and Conference MVP (1958)
- AP All-America Honorable Mention (1958)
- Led Marshall in 71 games as its first black scholarship athlete
- Averaged 19.4 ppg and 10.8 rpg
- At the time of graduation, held the school's career record for field goal percentage (54.6 percent), hitting 531 of 974 attempts
[edit] Accolades
- Averaged 22 ppg to lead 76ers to NBA Championship (1967)
- Played in 10 consecutive NBA All-Star Games (1961-70)
- NBA All-Star Game MVP (1968)
- Set record for most points scored in a quarter (19) during an All-Star Game (1968)
- Seven-time All-NBA Second Team (1963-69)
- Scored 21,586 career points, including 50 in one game vs. Boston Celtics
- Scored 1,876 points in 92 playoff games and 120 points in 10 All-Star Games
- NBA 50th Anniversary Team (1996)
- His jerseys were retired by Marshall University (#16) and the Philadelphia 76ers (#15)
- A one-and-one-half-mile stretch of road in Huntington, WV, was renamed "Hal Greer Boulevard
[edit] External links
Chamberlain | Costello | Cunningham | Gambee | Greer | Guokas | Jackson | W. Jones | Melchionni | Walker | Weiss | Coach Hannum
Categories: 1936 births | Living people | People from Huntington, West Virginia | African American basketball players | American basketball players | Marshall Thundering Herd men's basketball players | Syracuse Nationals players | Philadelphia 76ers players | Basketball Hall of Fame | United States basketball biography stubs