Jump to content

Talk:Jerry Lucas

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 208.54.40.203 (talk) at 03:18, 8 January 2014 (Remembering Lucas). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Memory guy 1970s

As a geezer, I remember his memory schtick in the late 1970s. Can anyone find out more definiate details? Thanks Bona Fides 20:52, 27 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

It's more than just a schtick. Lucas has written 30 books on memory and image-based memory education. The most famous are The Memory Book and Remember The Word, which teaches about the New Testament. I saw him this year in Ohio. He has developed DVDs, software, the whole gamut.He is known today as Dr.Memory and has a website. He's probably doing more for education than he did in basketball, which is saying alot.

Jerry Lucas and The Classic NBA@yahoogroups.com

Amazing look back

Remembering Lucas

I was a big of Lucas as a youngster who enjoyed basketball. His record as a player is legendary and he had a great, great many fans. He has been mentioned as the first American player to win a championship at every level of the game. His mark at each level is by itself remarkable. In high school, his Middletown teams won 76 straights game and two Ohio high school championships. The 76 straight is probably the longest streak in American high school history, and Ohio is a very good, sizable state for basketball. He scored about 34 points per game average over three varsity seasons, but games then were only 32 minutes long. He sat out some minutes during blowouts, so that makes his impact here even greater. The amount of interest generated in his high school days was a truly rare and remarkable thing. He was asked to appear on ' The Steve Allen Show ' while at Middletown. Few players have ever created that level of interest in high school. In college, his Ohio State teams went 78-6 and made three straight NCAA finals, winning the 1960NCAA title. He was two-time NCAA player of the year and Three-time Big Ten MVP. Again, how many players can say all this ? He did this while also getting his bachelors degree in Business in three years. Very impressive stuff, In the Olymnpics, coach Pete Newell was very impressed with Lucas, calling him ' the best player I ever coached '. Oscar Robertson and Jerry West were on that team. Many don't know that Lucas shot 80% from the floor in those eight games, or that he co-led the U.S. team in scoring depite getting only six free throws for the entire Olympics. In the NBA, he was named to the NBA's First Team three times. The hype on him did sell a lot of tickets in Cincinnati. He grabbed 40 rebounds in one game. NBA games are 48 minutes long, and he was playing forward, a position which sometimes took him 15-20 feet away from the basket. I do consider Lucas the best pure rebounder of all-time, because of the way he rebounded. He was just 6' 8 with sore-heavily wrapped knees, and found a way to observe rebounds and match the best rebounders of his time. Bigger guys, better leapers. He had two 30-rebound games against Bill Russell and the Boston Celtics. Look up his playoff stats against Wilt and Russell. He was definitely in their class in this area. Plus, he scored and passed very well. He played the amount of minutes that few players today even approach. In Cincinnati, he played with Oscar Robertson. So, the great scoring and passing he was known for at Ohio State wasn't emphasized during the first half of his pro carrer. Robertson chiefly did those things. So he focused on rebounding. Playing with Robertson shaped his career. He was also asked to play a new position, forward, that he had real trouble with. He was still All-Pro at that spot. The way he played as an outside shooting, passing center for the Knicks was sometimes mindblowing. If he had had a three-line, he might have averaged 50% back there at 20 points a game. He netted 30 for the Knicks against Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to led a win in March, 1972. In the 1972 NBA Finals, he scored 26, 23 and 25 points in three of the first four games. Wilt Chamberlain was, at times, completely bewildered by him. He flirted with triple-doubles in two of those games. These remain my favorite, most vivid memories of Lucas as a player.

Below are some very cutting comments about Lucas as a player, and heavy-handed criticism of this article. I did write a good portion of it, though others have added to it also, and some of it has come and gone in years since. There are links provided for at least some of the citations shown, if not more. I admit I'm not impartial where Lucas is concerned. But I also suggest that those who have such angry issues with this article should simply rewrite it. I have attempted to satisfy some criticisms here on this. I am not a professional writer, but am very knowledgable on this subject. Wikipedia was made for just such a thing, correct ? So, rather than simply waterboarding a contributor here, show your own expertise and shape this article into something that meets whatever desired standard is wanted for this article. My statement here will not be mysteriously unsigned, either. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Jerjets11 (talkcontribs) 02:59, 8 January 2014 (UTC)[reply]

If Lucas played against today's stars

Unusual Intellect

The article several times mentions JLs prodigious intellect and even has the text:

He also earned the reputation of being arguably the most intelligent man ever to play in the NBA.

I think the article ought to cite reasons for claiming unusual intellect.

Is there reason, say, to regard JL as superior to former teammate (Princeton grad/Rhodes scholar/long time senator/credible presidential hopeful) Bill Bradley?

--Philopedia 21:50, 13 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

That's one of the glaring omissions of the article. Lucas is acknowledged as a memory expert. While still in high school, he studied memory improvement techniques, got through OSU with honors partly because he could memorize any textbook, and during his NBA career would frequently do public appearances where he would memorize the telephone book of a major city. Lucas now has his own education consulting company to disseminate his memory techniques. Google "Jerry Lucas" and you'll find it easily. Truddick 22:50, 28 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Particular to the NBA, Lucas memorized every play every team ran in the league, a valuable resource. Bradley himself witnessed Lucas's trick with the Manhattan Phone Book, some of which he had memorized. He often knew the stats of every player on the floor of a given game. He had gained his four-year bachelors in three years at OSU, his six-year doctorate in 4 1/2. He used memory techniques to reduce his study time in college and was Phi Beta Kappa. He memorized paragraphs of Russian, Italian and Japanese for the 1960 Olympics. Bradley himself was very impressed with Lucas.

Jerry Lucas Pass-Time Games, Inc.

I found a board game called "Perplexion" at a thrift store yesterday. The company listed as the copyright holder has this name and has a Columbus, Ohio PO Box listed as their address. It is copyrighted 1964, which would have been around the height of his basketball career. Perhaps the company was named after him, or did he have any part in it?

I have exhausted my traditional search methods, but will probably search at the library (I actually live in Columbus), or even write the address. Which would beg the question: add the info about the game-making company to this article, or a disambiguation page with a seperate article?

I suppose that would largely depend on the man Jerry Lucas' involvement on the company. With both being from central Ohio though, it can't just be a coincidence.

--Nbody 00:58, 15 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Lucas's Impact on his teams

Lucas won the Oscar Robertson Award?

That's kind of a joke, right? Lucas and Robertson were contemporaries. But the college Player of The Year award is now named for Robertson. So Lucas is now listed as a two-time winner of the award named after Oscar. Weird stuff.

Serious editing needed for this "entry"

No offense to whoever wrote this entry but the entire tone of the supposedly encyclopedic entry is worshipful to the point of parody. The entry, particularly the "High School" section, reads like one of those biographies that come out about adolescent pop stars that attempt to capitalize on their fleeting fame after they get their first #1. Compare the entry on Wilt Chamberlain to the one on Lucas to see how bad the Lucas entry is. And I specifically mention Chamberlain because statistically Lucas wasn't even in the same league, yet the author of the Chamberlain entry managed to write something that doesn't read like he wishes he could have had Chamberlain's kids, if such a thing were possible. The following sentence is one of the more laughable examples: "An academic ace as well, whose mnemonic skills made him an A+ student, Lucas cut quite the image of the handsome young star student-athlete." Academic ace? Cut quite the image of the handsome young star? Seriously, give us a break. That sentence reads like it was written by someone with a creepy Jerry Lucas shrine at his house. Here is another classic: "We do know he did hit a then very high 60% of his field goal attempts and over 80% of his free throws. Increasingly a passer, he may have also averaged 5–6 assists per game".

Who exactly is the "we" being mentioned in that quotation? Furthermore, the entire last portion of that quote doesn't even try to hide the fact the author is engaging in pure speculation, and the use of superlatives such as "very high" in that quote doesn't help things. For an online encyclopedia that seems to want to have verifiability as its hallmark, the almost complete lack of citations(there is a grand total of one in the laughably venerational "High School" section)is troubling. Furthermore, it reads like original research which is also supposed to be a no-no for Wikipedia. Moreover, there are instances where Lucas is referred to by his first name, which just makes the obeisant tone of the "entry" even worse. For instance, the following sentence taken from the "High School" section:

"Lucas was the first player to be named three time First Team All-Ohio by the Associated Press and on February 17, 2009 Jerry's number 13 was retired at Wade E. Miller gymnasium."

Referring to an individual by his first name in such a way in an encyclopedia is just plain tacky. Also, the entry is filled with value judgments concerning Lucas's greatness that just have no place in an encyclopedia. Here is one example:

"Losing by one point to an undefeated opponent shocked Middletown to such a degree that the school never honored its departing senior star with a ceremony, until 50 years later when the oversight was discovered." The oversight? That one however is not that bad, particularly when compared to this:

"The Warriors, needing a small scoring forward like Cazzie Russell, dealt Lucas to the New York Knickerbockers, who needed a big man who would work behind both Willis Reed and Dave DeBusschere. Lucas had long rated ahead of both as an NBA player, but easily agreed as New York was a serious championship contender."

Lucas "rated" above Willis Reed and Dave DeBusschere? Really? I was unaware there was a rating system employed by the NBA used to determine that Lucas "long rated ahead" of DeBusschere and Reed. It goes without saying that no citation is provided concerning the supposed rating of Lucas ahead of Willis Reed and Dave DeBusschere. Here is another example and this one is truly ridiculous:

"Lucas led the way averaging 27 points, 17 rebounds, 60% shooting and perhaps five or six assists per game. It was a good balanced team, but one that ran well because Lucas was not a selfish star. All five starters scored in double-figures."

In addition to the absurdly biased statement about Lucas being the one responsible for the team running well because he wasn't selfish (I guess the fact that John Havlicek was on the team really didn't have that much to do with it)we get another example of pure speculation regarding Lucas's assist totals, with the author also implying that the reason all five starters were in double-figures was because of the actions of Lucas. And naturally, no citation is provided. Given that basketball is a team game, and all five starters scored in double figures, it would seem all of the players, not just Lucas, were unselfish. The next example is an absolute howler:

"The 1960-61 team went into the NCAA Finals undefeated before losing to Cincinnati in an upset in overtime. During the 1961 NCAA Tournament, LUKE became the only player ever to record a '30-30 ', 33 points and 30 rebounds in a single tournament game, versus Kentucky. in the 1961 final, Lucas had played well for OSU, but other Buckeyes had off games"(emphasis mine).

Yes, that's right, in an entry that is supposed to be worthy of an encyclopedia, the author is referring to Lucas as "Luke" as if they are best buddies, and given the tone of the entry, it wouldn't surprise me if they are. Moreover, those sentences impugn the rest of the team without providing a single citation concerning the performance of the players being insulted. Here is yet another, uncited, classic:

"He was commonly rated the greatest collegian ever upon graduation."

He was? Well if this rating was so common, why is no citation provided? Oh and by the way, the quote directly above this was taken, without citation, of course, from an article entitled "The 50 Greatest College Basketball Players of All-Time" at http://bleacherreport.com/articles/415905-the-50-greatest-college-basketball-players-of-all-tim#/articles/415905-the-50-greatest-college-basketball-players-of-all-tim/page/39. I doubt it is coincidence that the wording is the exact same, thus it seems plagiarism can be added to the list of this entry's faults; I have listed only a very minor example of it, but I guarantee I could find more if I looked. Putting aside issues of citation and theft of intellectual property, even that article ranks 4 individuals who played most, if not all, of their college basketball before Lucas ahead of him. For those who are curious, Lucas ranks #13 on that list. The uncited accolades don't stop there. Here is more:

"The local Middletown star and Ohio legend quickly again became a sensation. Lucas was still so popular, that he would boost league attendance that season. He was even a factor, as a needed white star, in the league's new television contract. Lucas would easily be one of the NBA's most popular players."

Not a single citation provided for the "Lucas is actually a god in human form" tone of those sentences. And, for good measure, two sentences later, Lucas is again referred to as "Luke":

"With Lucas now added, Cincinnati was quickly named favorites to dethrone the Boston Celtics as NBA champions in Luke's rookie season."

Man oh man would I love to see the citation for the assertion that the Cincinnati Royals, the Cincinnati freakin Royals, were favorites to defeat the greatest dynasty in the history of professional sports. Here is more worshipful bullshit(excuse the language but the absurdity of the entry merits it):

"In 1967-68, Lucas out-rebounded Russell. Not the leaper or bull some others were, Lucas outsmarted other players to the ball, over and over again. From 1964 to 1968, Lucas averaged 19.8 rebounds per game." And more: "More than just a tip-in guy, Lucas the forward took half his shots from 15 feet or more and still out-shot most dunkers. He shot 50% for his pro career."

I guess those other guys who had better FG percentages really weren't better shooters than Lucas (after all, is it even possible to be better than Lucas), they were just lousy, lazy "tip-in guys". I guess such is to be expected in an entry that implies Jerry Lucas was a better player than Oscar Robertson(don't make me friggin' laugh):

"Some experts even named Lucas, not Robertson, as the team's key player."

As is to be expected, given the "quality" of the entry, none of these so-called experts is cited. I guess when it is so self-evident that Jerry Lucas is actually Jesus in a basketball jersey, no citations are needed when claiming he is better than a mediocrity like Oscar Robertson, right(and frankly, comparing Jerry Lucas favorably to Oscar Robertson is outright laughable)? The entry on Lucas is easily one of the worst I have ever read on Wikipedia, and man is that saying something. It reads more like an article about Justin Bieber in Tiger Beat than an encyclopedia entry, which is what it is supposed to be. But encyclopedias don't engage in uncited speculation and worshipful fellation in regards to their subjects. Well, at least real ones don't.74.138.44.11 (talk) 22:49, 20 October 2012 (UTC)[reply]

I just noticed another laughable statement concerning Lucas in the entry, and this one is so bad, I did a double-take after I first read it to make sure I wasn't just imagining it:

"His overall amateur record of two Ohio high school championships, then three NCAA Finals with one championship was a total amateur record THAT PERHAPS HAS NO MATCH IN BASKETBALL HISTORY" (emphasis mine)

What a fuc*ing joke. Why does the author of this entry continually feel the need to imply (or outright claim), with no attempt, at all, to hide the bias, that Lucas is quite simply the greatest player to ever step foot on a basketball court? Off the top of my head, I can name numerous players who had better amateur careers than Jerry "Jesus" Lucas, but I will bring up only one of them, as he is the most obvious, Lew Alcindor (Kareem Abdul Jabbar). In high school, Alcindor(I will use that name as he didn't change his name until he had played several NBA seasons) led his team to, according to Wikipedia, three NYC Catholic Championships, a 71 GAME WINNING STREAK, and a 79-2 record. When discussing Alcindor's college career, Lucas isn't even in the same league. The Bleacher Report website(I provide the link in one of the paragraphs I wrote above this one), the same site that rated Lucas as the 13th greatest collegiate player, ranks Alcindor as the greatest collegian of all time. According to that site and the Wikipedia entry on Alcindor, Alcindor was player of the year in 1967 and 1969, was a three time first-team All-American in 1967, 1968 and 1969, was named the Outstanding Player of the NCAA tournament all three years he participated in the tournament and, unlike Lucas, he won the championship all three years his team reached the final; that fact alone demolishes the silly notion that Lucas is the greatest amateur player ever. Furthermore, Alcindor was the first-ever Naismith College Player of the Year in 1969 and was the USWBA Player of the Year in 1968 and 1969. Alcindor's dominance was such that the NCAA banned the dunk, a move that was commonly referred to as the "Alcindor Rule". UCLA went 88-2 during his time there; no, that record is not a typo. No offense to whoever wrote it, but the assertion that Lucas's amateur career has no match in HISTORY is just plain stupid and serves as a perfect example of the worshipful-to-the-point-of-parody tone of the entire entry. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 74.141.152.223 (talk) 21:59, 30 January 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Plagiarism

This entry really, really needs to be redone and the pertinent citations need to be added to the body of the entry. Merely including a reference section at the end of the entry, with no indication as to which information comes from which reference is improper, to say the least. I have googled entire paragraphs of this entry and found that they were taken, VERBATIM, from others sources on the internet, with no direct attribution provided. That is plagiarism, period. Pretty much the entire entry copies WORD FOR WORD from other sources. And the "author" of the entry merely lists a few references at the very end of the entry with no indication in the body of the text as to which references are being used for a particular bit of information. If you don't believe me, copy a random sentence or paragraph from this entry, paste it into google and hit enter. I guarantee you will get a hit other than Wikipedia. I got word for word hits from the NBA website, the Cincinnati Enquirer, random blogs, the list goes on. Merely listing a few references at the end of the entry is simply not good enough. This entry is plagiarised and something needs to be done to rectify the situation, immediatetly. If the information in this entry is not properly cited and the other changes listed in the talk section directly above this are not taken into consideration, I am going to delete the entire entry. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 74.141.152.117 (talk) 04:11, 17 October 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Pitiful lack of citations

The dearth of citations in this entry is absolutely pitiful. The entire "High school" section includes a grand total of one citation, one, and that comes at the end of the very first sentence. There are thirty other sentences in that section and not one of them is followed by a citation. I would like one person to tell me how you can write a sentence like the following without a reference: "Lucas, still weeks from his 16th birthday, burned Cleveland East Technical for 53 points before a crowd of 5,000." Are we to believe that Lucas's age, the number of points he scored and the crowd size, from a game that took place 57 years ago, are such common knowledge that one can simply state those numbers without reference to some sort of source? Yeah, sure thing. And much like the blatant speculation concerning some of Lucas's assist totals that was thankfully removed from the entry, we get a sentence about a "legend[ary]" meeting with Adolph Rupp that may not have even taken place. No citation is provided, of course, for this "legend". Some of the people who write these entries seem to be confused as to how citations work. You can't just use a citation for the very first sentence of a section or entry and then expect that to carry over to every single sentence in the entire entry or section. Nor can you place the citation at the very end of a section with the expectation that that is sufficient to cover the entire section. In regards to other sections, the one citation contained within the high school section represents an improvement. The section entitled "Cincinnati Royals" has at least 40 sentences and not a single one is followed by a citation. The section even includes a direct quote from Lucas(which is improperly punctuated, by the way)yet no source is provided for that quote. There are multiple sentences containing rebounding and scoring statistics and not a single reference is cited. Again, are we to believe that such statistics are considered common knowledge and thus don't require a citation? Hmm, I don't think so. The "San Francisco" and "New York" sections also contain no inline citations.74.138.45.132 (talk) 04:44, 16 August 2013 (UTC)[reply]