John Schommer |
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| Born | (1884-01-29)January 29, 1884
Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
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| Died | January 11, 1960(1960-01-11) (aged 75) |
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| College | Chicago (1905–1909) |
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| Position | Center |
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| 1910–1911 | Chicago |
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- National player of the year (1909)
- 4× Consensus All-American (1906–1909)
- 3× First-team all-Western Conference (1907–1909)
- 3× Helms national champion (1907–1909)
- Univ. of Chicago Hall of Fame (2004)
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| Basketball Hall of Fame |
| Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame |
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John Joseph Schommer (January 29, 1884 – January 11, 1960) was an American multi-sport athlete in the 1900s. He is considered by some to be the first basketball superstar and one of the first great all-around athletes.[1] The Chicago, Illinois native was the first athlete in University of Chicago history to win 12 letters in American football, basketball, baseball and track.[2] This earned him the nickname "Mr. Everything". Schommer was a four-time All-American in basketball and led the Maroons to three straight Big Ten championships (1907–09).[3] He was named the Helms Foundation College Basketball Player of the Year for the 1908-09 season. One of his most famous moments was when he made an 80-foot field goal which helped lift Chicago over University of Pennsylvania in the final game of the 1907–08 regular season, winning them the championship. He was one of the first four players inducted to the Basketball Hall of Fame in 1959.
References
Links to related articles |
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Chicago Maroons men's basketball head coaches |
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Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 1959 |
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| Players | |
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| Coaches | |
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| Contributors | |
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| Referees | |
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| Teams |
- Original Celtics
- The First Team
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Helms Foundation College Basketball Player of the Year |
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- 1905: Steinmetz
- 1906: Grebenstein
- 1907: Kinney
- 1908: Keinath
- 1909: Schommer
- 1910: Page
- 1911: Kiendl
- 1912: Stangel
- 1913: Calder
- 1914: Halstead
- 1915: Houghton
- 1916: Levis
- 1917: Woods
- 1918: Chandler
- 1919: Platou
- 1920: Cann
- 1921: Williams
- 1922: Carney
- 1923: Endacott
- 1924: Black
- 1925: Mueller
- 1926: Cobb
- 1927: Hanson
- 1928: Holt
- 1929: C. Thompson
- 1930: Hyatt
- 1931: Carlton
- 1932: Wooden
- 1933: Sale
- 1934: Bennett
- 1935: Edwards
- 1936: Moir
- 1937: Luisetti
- 1938: Luisetti
- 1939: Jaworski
- 1940: Glamack
- 1941: Glamack
- 1942: Modzelewski
- 1943: Senesky
- 1944: Mikan
- 1945: Mikan
- 1946: Kurland
- 1947: Tucker
- 1948: Macauley
- 1949: Lavelli
- 1950: Arizin
- 1951: Groat
- 1952: Lovellette
- 1953: Houbregs
- 1954: Gola
- 1955: B. Russell
- 1956: B. Russell
- 1957: Rosenbluth
- 1958: Baylor
- 1959: Robertson
- 1960: Robertson
- 1961: Lucas
- 1962: Hogue
- 1963: Heyman
- 1964: Hazzard
- 1965: Bradley & Goodrich
- 1966: C. Russell
- 1967: Alcindor
- 1968: Alcindor
- 1969: Alcindor
- 1970: Maravich & Wicks
- 1971: Carr & Wicks
- 1972: Walton
- 1973: Walton
- 1974: Walton & D. Thompson
- 1975: D. Thompson
- 1976: Benson & May
- 1977: Johnson
- 1978: Givens
- 1979: Bird
- 1980: Griffith
- 1981: Aguirre
- 1982: Sampson & Worthy
- 1983: Olajuwon
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1906 Helms Foundation NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans |
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1907 Helms Foundation NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans |
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1908 Helms Foundation NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans |
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1909 Helms Foundation NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans |
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