Personal information | |
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Born | May 25, 1927 Chicago, Illinois |
Died | March 16, 2015 Erie, Pennsylvania |
(aged 87)
Nationality | American |
Listed height | 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) |
Career information | |
High school | Lindblom Tech (Chicago, Illinois) |
College | William & Mary (1946–1950) |
NBA draft | 1950 / Round: 4 / Pick: 45th overall |
Selected by the Rochester Royals | |
Position | Center |
Number | 32 |
Career highlights and awards | |
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Chester Frank "Chet" Giermak (May 25, 1927 – March 16, 2015) was an All-American college basketball player for William & Mary from 1946 to 1950.
Prior to matriculating at the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, Giermak attended Lindblom Technical High School in Chicago, Illinois, where he was a four-year stand-out center on the basketball team. In 1945, Giermak's senior year, he led Lindblom to the semi-finals of the All-Chicago high school basketball tournament and earned Second Team All-City for the center position. In April 1945, Chet enlisted into the Navy, where he spent the next 14 months serving as a corpsman.
After arriving on William & Mary's campus in September 1946, one year removed from high school, Chet Giermak was not a heralded basketball prospect. He began his collegiate career as a walk-on player, asking for a uniform from varsity coach Dick Gallagher (whom he later credited with teaching him "the finer points of the game"). He made the junior varsity team but did not stay on it long. During the team's first intra-squad game, Gallagher noticed Chet's ability and immediately promoted him to the Tribe's varsity team.
Over the next four seasons, Giermak was consistently the nation's top scorer or close to it, using his lanky frame and deadly hookshot to amass myriad points. He recorded back-to-back seasons during his junior and senior years where he averaged 20+ points (21.8 and 20.8, respectively). On January 13, 1949, Chet scored 45 points against the University of Baltimore, establishing a new Blow Gymnasium record. This total set the all-time Virginia state collegiate mark, plus the national, conference, and state individual single game marks for the 1948-49 college basketball season. All of those records have since been broken. Seton Hall University's coach and basketball legend John "Honey" Russell once praised Chet's abilities by noting, "[t]his Giermak is better than Tony Lavelli."