Harvey Pollack | |
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Born | Herbert Harvey Pollack (1922-03-09)March 9, 1922 Camden, New Jersey, U.S. |
Died | June 23, 2015(2015-06-23) (aged 93) Philadelphia,Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Alma mater | Temple University |
Spouse | Bea Pollack (1944–2002) |
Children | Ron and Linda |
Herbert Harvey Pollack (March 9, 1922 – June 23, 2015) was an American sportsstatistician, ajournalist ofsports andentertainment, apublicist, and long term director of statistical information for thePhiladelphia 76ers. At the time of his death, Pollack was the only person still working for the NBA since its inaugural 1946–47 season. Because of his proclivity tostatistics, thenPhiladelphia Bulletin writer George Kiseda pinned the moniker ofSuper Stat on him in 1966.[1]
Pollack played basketball forSimon Gratz High School and graduated in 1943 from Temple University in Philadelphia.[2]
He took his first job as a sportswriter for thePhiladelphia Bulletin after serving as a soldier in the United States Army duringWorld War II. In 1946–47 he started as the assistant publicity director for the Philadelphia Warriors of the Basketball Association of America, which later merged with theNational Basketball League to form theNational Basketball Association. Midway through the 1952–53 season, he became head of media relations for the Warriors. The Warriors were sold by ownerEddie Gottlieb (a founder of the NBA) and the team moved toSan Francisco in 1962 (renamedGolden State Warriors), but Pollack remained in Philadelphia, where he worked for the NBA in various capacities until the 76ers were formed in 1963. Pollack then served as the media relations director of the Philadelphia 76ers until the 1987–88 season, when he assumed the duties of director of statistical information for the team.
Pollack holds the distinction of keeping score duringWilt Chamberlain's 100-point game, on March 2, 1962. According to Pollack, it was the "Busiest night of my career" as there was no press. Thus, he was the statistician and sole reporter for the game. Pollack made Chamberlain the sign which he holds in his famous post-game photo. Pollack was responsible for many stats that are now officially recorded by the NBA, such asblocked shots, and he was the first statistician to separate rebounds intooffensive anddefensive. Some believe[weasel words] he coined the term "triple-double,"[3][4] although others claim that it was coined by formerLos Angeles Lakers public relations director, Bruce Jolesch.[5][6]
During the Sixers’ offseason, Pollack analyzed all 1,230 play-by-play sheets from the previous season (every game of the regular season) to produce theHarvey Pollack's NBA Statistical Yearbook, a book of rare basketball information that took statistical analysis to a new level.[7] It includes stats such as the shot distance of every field goal, who gets their shot blocked the most, and other creative categories like "working-man," which a player has to contribute to every category but no fouls or turnovers, and "trillionaire club" which is when a player plays in a game and has all zeros across their name. This NBA publication evolved from developing the first of its kind media guides for the Philadelphia 76ers in 1966–67 and then separated later into a new NBA publication to become among the most distinguished compilations in the sports business.
Pollack claimed that Wilt Chamberlain had not only a quadruple-double, but also a game where he recorded at least double digits in all five primary statistical categories. However, this has not been recorded in the books because the NBA had not officially adopted the statistics yet.[citation needed]
On June 23, 2015, Pollack died at the age of 93.[2][8]