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Bob Pettit

Robert E. Lee Pettit Jr. (/ˈpɛtɪt/ PET-it; born December 12, 1932)[2] is an American former professional basketball player. He played 11 seasons in the NBA, all with the Milwaukee/St. Louis Hawks (1954–1965). In 1956, he became the first recipient of the NBA's Most Valuable Player Award and he won the award again in 1959. He also won the NBA All-Star Game MVP award four times. As of the end of 2022-2023 regular season, Pettit is still the only regular season MVP in the history of the Hawks, despite the team relocating to Atlanta following his retirement in 1965.

Bob Pettit
Pettit with the St. Louis Hawks in 1961
Personal information
Born (1932-12-12) December 12, 1932 (age 90)
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, U.S.
Listed height6 ft 9 in (2.06 m)
Listed weight205 lb (93 kg)
Career information
High schoolBaton Rouge
(Baton Rouge, Louisiana)
CollegeLSU (1951–1954)
NBA draft1954: 1st round, 2nd overall pick
Selected by the Milwaukee Hawks
Playing career1954–1965
PositionPower forward / center
Number9
Career history
19541965Milwaukee / St. Louis Hawks
Career highlights and awards
Career NBA statistics
Points[1]20,880 (26.4 ppg)
Rebounds12,849 (16.2 rpg)
Assists2,369 (3.0 apg)
Stats  at NBA.com
Stats  at Basketball-Reference.com
Basketball Hall of Fame as player
College Basketball Hall of Fame
Inducted in 2006

The first NBA player to score more than 20,000 points, Pettit was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1970. He is one of four players who was named to all four NBA anniversary teams and one of only two living members as of 2023 with Bob Cousy. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest power forwards of all time.[3][4]

Early life

Pettit's basketball career had humble beginnings, as at Baton Rouge High School, he was cut from the varsity basketball team as both a freshman and sophomore. He played church league basketball as a sophomore and grew five inches in less than a year. His father, sheriff of East Baton Rouge Parish (1932–1936), pushed him to practice in the backyard of the Kemmerly house until he improved his skills. It worked: Pettit became a starter and made the All-City prep team as a junior. As a 6-7 senior, he led Baton Rouge High to its first state championship in over 20 years. Pettit was then selected to play in a North–South all-star game at Murray, Kentucky.[5]

College career

After high school, Pettit had scholarship offers from 14 universities and accepted a scholarship to play at nearby Louisiana State University (LSU). He was a three-time All-Southeastern Conference selection and a two-time All-American as a member of the LSU men's basketball team. (Freshmen were not allowed to play varsity basketball in those days.) During those three years, Pettit averaged 27.8 points per game. He was also a member of the Zeta Zeta Chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon at LSU.

 
Pettit in 1951

Pettit made his varsity debut at LSU in 1952. He led the SEC in scoring for his first of three consecutive seasons, averaging 25.5 points per game. He ranked third in the nation in scoring and also averaged 13.1 rebounds per game, helping his team to a 17-7 win–loss record for a second-place finish in the league, and was selected to the All-SEC team.

During his junior year, Pettit helped the Tigers sail through a 23-game regular-season schedule with only one loss (to Tulsa). A clean sweep of SEC Conference opponents became LSU's second SEC Title (their first came in 1935) and the school's first NCAA Final Four. He averaged 24.9 points and 13.9 rebounds per game for the 1953 season. He was honored with selections to both the All-SEC and All-American teams.

Pettit averaged 31.4 points and 17.3 rebounds per game during his senior year and once again led LSU to an SEC Championship and garnered All-SEC and All-American honors. He set a then-SEC scoring record of 60 points against Louisiana College in his second game, and also the SEC record for scoring average, with both records being broken by Pete Maravich. Pettit also was the second player in major-college basketball history to average more than 30 points a game.[5]

In 1954, his number 50 was retired at LSU. He was the first Tiger athlete in any sport to receive this distinction. In 1999, he was named Living Legend for LSU at the SEC Basketball Tournament. He is a member of the LSU Hall of Fame. Bob Pettit Boulevard in Baton Rouge, Louisiana is named after him.

Professional career

Milwaukee / St. Louis Hawks (1954–1965)

 
Pettit in 1962

In 1954, the Milwaukee Hawks selected Pettit second in the first round of the NBA draft after the Baltimore Bullets' selection of Frank Selvy. With $100 in the bank, he signed a contract with Hawks owner Ben Kerner for $11,000 – an all-time high for an NBA rookie then. Pettit's awkward ballhandling and a lack of strength to battle NBA bruisers weighing 200 pounds that early in his career, had Hawks coach Red Holzman move him from center, his position at LSU, to forward in his first training camp. "In college I played the standing pivot", he said in an interview. "My back was to the basket. In the pros, I'm always outside. Everything I do is facing the basket now. That was my chief difficulty in adjusting, the fact that I had never played forward before." Though many were skeptical about Pettit making the transition from college to the rough-and-tumble NBA, in 1955 he won the NBA Rookie of the Year Award after averaging 20.4 points and 13.8 rebounds per game. He became the second rookie to win all-NBA honors but the team finished last in the Western Division.[5] After the season, the Hawks moved to St. Louis.

 
Pettit in 1957
 
Pettit in 1958 after being named MVP of the All-Star Game

He helped the Hawks improve during their first year in St. Louis by winning 33 games during 1955–56. In his second season, Pettit adjusted his game so that he would get to the free-throw line for easy points for his team and foul trouble for his opponents. Being a phenomenal offensive rebounder and an instinctive scorer, he told basketball historian Terry Pluto that "Offensive rebounds were worth eight to 12 points a night to me. Then I'd get another eight to 10 at the free-throw line. All I had to do was make a few jump shots and I was on my way to a good night."[6] Pettit won his first scoring title with a 25.7 average, and led the league in rebounding (1164 for a 16.2 average). He was also named MVP of the 1956 NBA All-Star Game after scoring 20 points with 24 rebounds and 7 assists; he would win subsequent MVP All-Star Game honors in 1958, 1959, and 1962. He also won his first of two NBA regular season MVP awards (the other was in 1959).

Retooling before the 1956–57 season, the Hawks acquired Ed Macauley and rookie Cliff Hagan from the Boston Celtics for the draft rights to Bill Russell. The team added guard Slater Martin in an early-season deal with the New York Knicks while Alex Hannum arrived a few weeks later after being released by the Fort Wayne Pistons. Hannum became the team's third coach that season by taking over as player-coach with 31 games left on the schedule. Though they posted a 34-38 record in 1956–57, a series of tie-breaking playoff games against the Pistons and a three-game sweep of the Minneapolis Lakers had them in the NBA Finals. In Game 1 of the 1957 NBA Finals at the Boston Garden, Pettit scored 37 points as the Hawks shocked the Bill Russell-led Boston Celtics in double overtime. Pettit won his team the third game in the series with a late basket in St. Louis. His two free throws with six seconds left in Game 7 forced overtime, but Pettit's 39 points and 19 rebounds in 56 minutes weren't enough to win a double-overtime game. Pettit averaged 29.8 points and 16.8 rebounds per game during their 1957 playoff run.

 
Pettit as a member of the Hawks

A franchise-record 41 wins and a division crown allowed the Hawks to get back at the Celtics in the 1958 NBA Finals. Pettit led the Hawks to an NBA Championship with a then-playoff record 50 points in the Hawks' 110-109 series-clinching victory in game 6. Pettit’s 50 points stood alone as the most in a Finals close-out victory until it was matched by Giannis Antetokounmpo in 2021. Both teams would later meet in the 1960 and 1961 Finals, with Boston winning each time. For the season, Pettit scored 24.6 ppg and pulled down 17.4 rpg, and earned All-Star Game MVP honors with a performance that included 28 points and 26 rebounds. St. Louis finished at the top of the Western Division in each of the next three seasons. Pettit's league-leading scoring average of 29.2 points per game in the 1958–59 season was an NBA record at the time, and he was named the Sporting News NBA MVP.

In the 1960–61 season, Pettit averaged 27.9 points per game[7] and pulled down 20.3 rebounds per game, making him one of only five players to ever break the 20 rpg barrier. He, along with Wilt Chamberlain and Jerry Lucas, are the only three people who averaged more than twenty points and twenty rebounds in an NBA season. On February 18, 1961, Pettit scored a career-high 57 points and grabbed 28 rebounds in a 141-138 win over the Detroit Pistons.[8]

In the following season, he scored a career-best 31.1 points per game, but the Hawks slipped to fourth place. After missing 30 games because of injuries, Pettit ended his career in 1965 still near the peak of his game. He was the first NBA player to eclipse the 20,000 points mark (20,880 for a 26.4 average). Of the 20,880 points he scored in the NBA, 6,182 of them (nearly 30 percent) came from free throws. His 12,849 rebounds were second-most in league history at the time he retired, and his 16.2 rebounds per game career average remains third only to Wilt Chamberlain and Bill Russell.

Pettit was an NBA All-Star in each of his 11 seasons, was named to the All-NBA First Team ten times, and was named to the All-NBA Second Team once. Pettit still holds the top two NBA All-Star Game rebounding performances with 26 in 1958 and 27 in 1962, and has the second-highest All-Star Game points per game average with 20.4 (behind only Oscar Robertson). Pettit averaged at least 20 points per game and at least 12 rebounds per game in each of his 11 NBA seasons. He never finished below seventh in the NBA scoring race[7] and no other retired player in NBA history other than Pettit and Alex Groza (who played only two seasons) has averaged more than 20 points per game in every season they've played (note: Michael Jordan averaged exactly 20 points per game in his final season).

In 1970, Petit was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. He is one of four players who was named to all four NBA anniversary teams (25th, 35th, 50th, 75th), along with Bob Cousy, George Mikan, and Bill Russell.[9]

 
Pettit in 2013

Personal life

Pettit worked in the banking industry in Baton Rouge and Metairie for 23 years before entering financial consulting in 1988. In 2006, he retired from Equitas Capital Investors, a financial consulting company that he co-founded.

He was married to his wife Carole, who died in 2010, and has three children and 10 grandchildren.[10]

NBA career statistics

Legend
  GP Games played   GS  Games started  MPG  Minutes per game
 FG%  Field goal percentage  3P%  3-point field goal percentage  FT%  Free throw percentage
 RPG  Rebounds per game  APG  Assists per game  SPG  Steals per game
 BPG  Blocks per game  PPG  Points per game  Bold  Career high
 †  Won an NBA championship  *  Led the league

Regular season

Year Team GP MPG FG% FT% RPG APG PPG
1954–55 Milwaukee 72 36.9 .407 .751 13.8 3.2 20.4
1955–56 St. Louis 72 38.8 .429 .736 16.2 2.6 25.7*
1956–57 St. Louis 71 35.1 .415 .773 14.6 1.9 24.7
1957–58† St. Louis 70 36.1 .410 .749 17.4 2.2 24.6
1958–59 St. Louis 72* 39.9 .438 .759 16.4 3.1 29.2*
1959–60 St. Louis 72 40.2 .438 .753 17.0 3.6 26.1
1960–61 St. Louis 76 39.8 .447 .724 20.3 3.4 27.9
1961–62 St. Louis 78 42.1 .450 .771 18.7 3.7 31.1
1962–63 St. Louis 79 39.1 .446 .774 15.1 3.1 28.4
1963–64 St. Louis 80 41.2 .463 .789 15.3 3.2 27.4
1964–65 St. Louis 50 35.1 .429 .820 12.4 2.6 22.5
Career[11] 792 38.8 .436 .761 16.2 3.0 26.4
All-Star[11] 11 32.7 .420 .775 16.1 2.0 20.3

Playoffs

Year Team GP MPG FG% FT% RPG APG PPG
1956 St. Louis 8 34.3 .367 .843 10.5 2.3 19.1
1957 St. Louis 10 43.0 .414 .767 16.8 2.5 29.8
1958 St. Louis 11 39.1 .391 .729 16.5 1.8 24.2
1959 St. Louis 6 42.8 .423 .785 12.5 2.3 27.8
1960 St. Louis 14 41.1 .442 .754 15.8 3.7 26.1
1961 St. Louis 12 43.8 .412 .757 17.6 3.2 28.6
1963 St. Louis 11 42.1 .459 .778 15.1 3.0 31.8
1964 St. Louis 12 41.2 .412 .835 14.5 2.8 21.0
1965 St. Louis 4 23.8 .366 .800 6.0 2.0 11.5
Career[11] 88 40.3 .418 .774 14.8 2.7 25.5

See also

References

  1. ^ Stats at NBA.com
  2. ^ "Legends profile: Bob Pettit". NBA.com. August 23, 2017. Retrieved January 2, 2021.
  3. ^ "All-Time #NBArank: Duncan tops list of best power forwards ever". ESPN. January 15, 2016. Retrieved January 15, 2016.
  4. ^ "Top 10 power forwards in NBA history". Fox Sports. October 20, 2016. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  5. ^ a b c "Bob Pettit".
  6. ^ "Bob Pettit". HowStuffWorks. August 12, 2007.
  7. ^ a b "NBA.com: Bob Pettit Bio". www.nba.com.
  8. ^ "St. Louis Hawks at Detroit Pistons Box Score, February 18, 1961". Basketball-Reference. Retrieved February 16, 2020.
  9. ^ Butler, Alex (October 22, 2021). "LeBron, Kobe, Shaq among 76 players on NBA's 75th anniversary team". United Press International. Retrieved October 24, 2021.
  10. ^ . www.myneworleans.com. March 2, 2009. Archived from the original on January 20, 2019.
  11. ^ a b c "Bob Pettit". Basketball Reference. Retrieved February 25, 2020.

External links

pettit, baseball, player, baseball, robert, pettit, born, december, 1932, american, former, professional, basketball, player, played, seasons, with, milwaukee, louis, hawks, 1954, 1965, 1956, became, first, recipient, most, valuable, player, award, award, agai. For the baseball player see Bob Pettit baseball Robert E Lee Pettit Jr ˈ p ɛ t ɪ t PET it born December 12 1932 2 is an American former professional basketball player He played 11 seasons in the NBA all with the Milwaukee St Louis Hawks 1954 1965 In 1956 he became the first recipient of the NBA s Most Valuable Player Award and he won the award again in 1959 He also won the NBA All Star Game MVP award four times As of the end of 2022 2023 regular season Pettit is still the only regular season MVP in the history of the Hawks despite the team relocating to Atlanta following his retirement in 1965 Bob PettitPettit with the St Louis Hawks in 1961Personal informationBorn 1932 12 12 December 12 1932 age 90 Baton Rouge Louisiana U S Listed height6 ft 9 in 2 06 m Listed weight205 lb 93 kg Career informationHigh schoolBaton Rouge Baton Rouge Louisiana CollegeLSU 1951 1954 NBA draft1954 1st round 2nd overall pickSelected by the Milwaukee HawksPlaying career1954 1965PositionPower forward centerNumber9Career history1954 1965Milwaukee St Louis HawksCareer highlights and awardsNBA champion 1958 2 NBA Most Valuable Player 1956 1959 11 NBA All Star 1955 1965 4 NBA All Star Game MVP 1956 1958 1959 1962 10 All NBA First Team 1955 1964 All NBA Second Team 1965 NBA Rookie of the Year 1955 2 NBA scoring champion 1956 1959 NBA rebounding leader 1956 NBA anniversary team 25th 35th 50th 75th No 9 retired by Atlanta Hawks Consensus first team All American 1954 Consensus second team All American 1953 No 50 retired by LSU TigersCareer NBA statisticsPoints 1 20 880 26 4 ppg Rebounds12 849 16 2 rpg Assists2 369 3 0 apg Stats at NBA comStats at Basketball Reference comBasketball Hall of Fame as playerCollege Basketball Hall of FameInducted in 2006The first NBA player to score more than 20 000 points Pettit was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1970 He is one of four players who was named to all four NBA anniversary teams and one of only two living members as of 2023 with Bob Cousy He is widely regarded as one of the greatest power forwards of all time 3 4 Contents 1 Early life 2 College career 3 Professional career 3 1 Milwaukee St Louis Hawks 1954 1965 4 Personal life 5 NBA career statistics 5 1 Regular season 5 2 Playoffs 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEarly life EditPettit s basketball career had humble beginnings as at Baton Rouge High School he was cut from the varsity basketball team as both a freshman and sophomore He played church league basketball as a sophomore and grew five inches in less than a year His father sheriff of East Baton Rouge Parish 1932 1936 pushed him to practice in the backyard of the Kemmerly house until he improved his skills It worked Pettit became a starter and made the All City prep team as a junior As a 6 7 senior he led Baton Rouge High to its first state championship in over 20 years Pettit was then selected to play in a North South all star game at Murray Kentucky 5 College career EditAfter high school Pettit had scholarship offers from 14 universities and accepted a scholarship to play at nearby Louisiana State University LSU He was a three time All Southeastern Conference selection and a two time All American as a member of the LSU men s basketball team Freshmen were not allowed to play varsity basketball in those days During those three years Pettit averaged 27 8 points per game He was also a member of the Zeta Zeta Chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon at LSU Pettit in 1951Pettit made his varsity debut at LSU in 1952 He led the SEC in scoring for his first of three consecutive seasons averaging 25 5 points per game He ranked third in the nation in scoring and also averaged 13 1 rebounds per game helping his team to a 17 7 win loss record for a second place finish in the league and was selected to the All SEC team During his junior year Pettit helped the Tigers sail through a 23 game regular season schedule with only one loss to Tulsa A clean sweep of SEC Conference opponents became LSU s second SEC Title their first came in 1935 and the school s first NCAA Final Four He averaged 24 9 points and 13 9 rebounds per game for the 1953 season He was honored with selections to both the All SEC and All American teams Pettit averaged 31 4 points and 17 3 rebounds per game during his senior year and once again led LSU to an SEC Championship and garnered All SEC and All American honors He set a then SEC scoring record of 60 points against Louisiana College in his second game and also the SEC record for scoring average with both records being broken by Pete Maravich Pettit also was the second player in major college basketball history to average more than 30 points a game 5 In 1954 his number 50 was retired at LSU He was the first Tiger athlete in any sport to receive this distinction In 1999 he was named Living Legend for LSU at the SEC Basketball Tournament He is a member of the LSU Hall of Fame Bob Pettit Boulevard in Baton Rouge Louisiana is named after him Professional career EditMilwaukee St Louis Hawks 1954 1965 Edit Pettit in 1962In 1954 the Milwaukee Hawks selected Pettit second in the first round of the NBA draft after the Baltimore Bullets selection of Frank Selvy With 100 in the bank he signed a contract with Hawks owner Ben Kerner for 11 000 an all time high for an NBA rookie then Pettit s awkward ballhandling and a lack of strength to battle NBA bruisers weighing 200 pounds that early in his career had Hawks coach Red Holzman move him from center his position at LSU to forward in his first training camp In college I played the standing pivot he said in an April 1957 SPORT magazine interview My back was to the basket In the pros I m always outside Everything I do is facing the basket now That was my chief difficulty in adjusting the fact that I had never played forward before Though many were skeptical about Pettit making the transition from college to the rough and tumble NBA in 1955 he won the NBA Rookie of the Year Award after averaging 20 4 points and 13 8 rebounds per game He became the second rookie to win all NBA honors but the team finished last in the Western Division 5 After the season the Hawks moved to St Louis Pettit in 1957 Pettit in 1958 after being named MVP of the All Star GameHe helped the Hawks improve during their first year in St Louis by winning 33 games during 1955 56 In his second season Pettit adjusted his game so that he would get to the free throw line for easy points for his team and foul trouble for his opponents Being a phenomenal offensive rebounder and an instinctive scorer he told basketball historian Terry Pluto that Offensive rebounds were worth eight to 12 points a night to me Then I d get another eight to 10 at the free throw line All I had to do was make a few jump shots and I was on my way to a good night 6 Pettit won his first scoring title with a 25 7 average and led the league in rebounding 1164 for a 16 2 average He was also named MVP of the 1956 NBA All Star Game after scoring 20 points with 24 rebounds and 7 assists he would win subsequent MVP All Star Game honors in 1958 1959 and 1962 He also won his first of two NBA regular season MVP awards the other was in 1959 Retooling before the 1956 57 season the Hawks acquired Ed Macauley and rookie Cliff Hagan from the Boston Celtics for the draft rights to Bill Russell The team added guard Slater Martin in an early season deal with the New York Knicks while Alex Hannum arrived a few weeks later after being released by the Fort Wayne Pistons Hannum became the team s third coach that season by taking over as player coach with 31 games left on the schedule Though they posted a 34 38 record in 1956 57 a series of tie breaking playoff games against the Pistons and a three game sweep of the Minneapolis Lakers had them in the NBA Finals In Game 1 of the 1957 NBA Finals at the Boston Garden Pettit scored 37 points as the Hawks shocked the Bill Russell led Boston Celtics in double overtime Pettit won his team the third game in the series with a late basket in St Louis His two free throws with six seconds left in Game 7 forced overtime but Pettit s 39 points and 19 rebounds in 56 minutes weren t enough to win a double overtime game Pettit averaged 29 8 points and 16 8 rebounds per game during their 1957 playoff run Pettit as a member of the HawksA franchise record 41 wins and a division crown allowed the Hawks to get back at the Celtics in the 1958 NBA Finals Pettit led the Hawks to an NBA Championship with a then playoff record 50 points in the Hawks 110 109 series clinching victory in game 6 Pettit s 50 points stood alone as the most in a Finals close out victory until it was matched by Giannis Antetokounmpo in 2021 Both teams would later meet in the 1960 and 1961 Finals with Boston winning each time For the season Pettit scored 24 6 ppg and pulled down 17 4 rpg and earned All Star Game MVP honors with a performance that included 28 points and 26 rebounds St Louis finished at the top of the Western Division in each of the next three seasons Pettit s league leading scoring average of 29 2 points per game in the 1958 59 season was an NBA record at the time and he was named the Sporting News NBA MVP In the 1960 61 season Pettit averaged 27 9 points per game 7 and pulled down 20 3 rebounds per game making him one of only five players to ever break the 20 rpg barrier He along with Wilt Chamberlain and Jerry Lucas are the only three people who averaged more than twenty points and twenty rebounds in an NBA season On February 18 1961 Pettit scored a career high 57 points and grabbed 28 rebounds in a 141 138 win over the Detroit Pistons 8 In the following season he scored a career best 31 1 points per game but the Hawks slipped to fourth place After missing 30 games because of injuries Pettit ended his career in 1965 still near the peak of his game He was the first NBA player to eclipse the 20 000 points mark 20 880 for a 26 4 average Of the 20 880 points he scored in the NBA 6 182 of them nearly 30 percent came from free throws His 12 849 rebounds were second most in league history at the time he retired and his 16 2 rebounds per game career average remains third only to Wilt Chamberlain and Bill Russell Pettit was an NBA All Star in each of his 11 seasons was named to the All NBA First Team ten times and was named to the All NBA Second Team once Pettit still holds the top two NBA All Star Game rebounding performances with 26 in 1958 and 27 in 1962 and has the second highest All Star Game points per game average with 20 4 behind only Oscar Robertson Pettit averaged at least 20 points per game and at least 12 rebounds per game in each of his 11 NBA seasons He never finished below seventh in the NBA scoring race 7 and no other retired player in NBA history other than Pettit and Alex Groza who played only two seasons has averaged more than 20 points per game in every season they ve played note Michael Jordan averaged exactly 20 points per game in his final season In 1970 Petit was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame He is one of four players who was named to all four NBA anniversary teams 25th 35th 50th 75th along with Bob Cousy George Mikan and Bill Russell 9 Pettit in 2013Personal life EditPettit worked in the banking industry in Baton Rouge and Metairie for 23 years before entering financial consulting in 1988 In 2006 he retired from Equitas Capital Investors a financial consulting company that he co founded He was married to his wife Carole who died in 2010 and has three children and 10 grandchildren 10 NBA career statistics EditLegend GP Games played GS Games started MPG Minutes per game FG Field goal percentage 3P 3 point field goal percentage FT Free throw percentage RPG Rebounds per game APG Assists per game SPG Steals per game BPG Blocks per game PPG Points per game Bold Career high Won an NBA championship Led the leagueRegular season Edit Year Team GP MPG FG FT RPG APG PPG1954 55 Milwaukee 72 36 9 407 751 13 8 3 2 20 41955 56 St Louis 72 38 8 429 736 16 2 2 6 25 7 1956 57 St Louis 71 35 1 415 773 14 6 1 9 24 71957 58 St Louis 70 36 1 410 749 17 4 2 2 24 61958 59 St Louis 72 39 9 438 759 16 4 3 1 29 2 1959 60 St Louis 72 40 2 438 753 17 0 3 6 26 11960 61 St Louis 76 39 8 447 724 20 3 3 4 27 91961 62 St Louis 78 42 1 450 771 18 7 3 7 31 11962 63 St Louis 79 39 1 446 774 15 1 3 1 28 41963 64 St Louis 80 41 2 463 789 15 3 3 2 27 41964 65 St Louis 50 35 1 429 820 12 4 2 6 22 5Career 11 792 38 8 436 761 16 2 3 0 26 4All Star 11 11 32 7 420 775 16 1 2 0 20 3Playoffs Edit Year Team GP MPG FG FT RPG APG PPG1956 St Louis 8 34 3 367 843 10 5 2 3 19 11957 St Louis 10 43 0 414 767 16 8 2 5 29 81958 St Louis 11 39 1 391 729 16 5 1 8 24 21959 St Louis 6 42 8 423 785 12 5 2 3 27 81960 St Louis 14 41 1 442 754 15 8 3 7 26 11961 St Louis 12 43 8 412 757 17 6 3 2 28 61963 St Louis 11 42 1 459 778 15 1 3 0 31 81964 St Louis 12 41 2 412 835 14 5 2 8 21 01965 St Louis 4 23 8 366 800 6 0 2 0 11 5Career 11 88 40 3 418 774 14 8 2 7 25 5See also EditList of National Basketball Association career scoring leaders List of National Basketball Association career rebounding leaders List of National Basketball Association annual rebounding leaders List of National Basketball Association players with 50 or more points in a playoff game List of NCAA Division I men s basketball players with 60 or more points in a gameReferences Edit Stats at NBA com Legends profile Bob Pettit NBA com August 23 2017 Retrieved January 2 2021 All Time NBArank Duncan tops list of best power forwards ever ESPN January 15 2016 Retrieved January 15 2016 Top 10 power forwards in NBA history Fox Sports October 20 2016 Retrieved March 30 2022 a b c Bob Pettit Bob Pettit HowStuffWorks August 12 2007 a b NBA com Bob Pettit Bio www nba com St Louis Hawks at Detroit Pistons Box Score February 18 1961 Basketball Reference Retrieved February 16 2020 Butler Alex October 22 2021 LeBron Kobe Shaq among 76 players on NBA s 75th anniversary team United Press International Retrieved October 24 2021 Goaltending www myneworleans com March 2 2009 Archived from the original on January 20 2019 a b c Bob Pettit Basketball Reference Retrieved February 25 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bob Pettit Bob Pettit at the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Official NBA profile Basketball Reference com Bob Pettit as player Basketball Reference com Bob Pettit as coach Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bob Pettit amp oldid 1165753263, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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