OSUBasketballJunkie
Never Forget 31-0
C Jerry Lucas (NBA Hall of Famer)
Cincy
Cincy
Lucas left his mark
Inside dominance, intellect defined Middletown star
BY TOM GROESCHEN | ENQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Jerry Lucas is usually the first name that comes up when old-timers discuss the greatest stars in Ohio high school basketball history.
LeBron James and O.J. Mayo are the latest and greatest. Before that, there were Jimmy Jackson and Clark Kellogg. But the talk inevitably returns to Middletown legend Lucas, who is No. 1 on The Enquirer's list of the 100 greatest players in Greater Cincinnati history.
The short list of Lucas' accomplishments at Middletown:
Led the Middies to a state-record 76 consecutive wins from 1955-58, including two Class AA (big-school) state championships.
Scored 53 and 44 points in consecutive state tournament games as a sophomore. The 97 points are still a tournament record.
Averaged 34 points a game over three varsity seasons. His rebounding statistics are unknown, although estimates say at least 15 a game.
Received multiple awards as Parade magazine All-American and state player of the year.
Scored 2,460 points, No. 3 in state history then, and now No. 9.
"There wasn't the media coverage then that there is now," said Jerry Nardiello, who covered Lucas and is now retired as sports editor of the Middletown Journal. "He got better known as it went along. By the time he was a senior, he was on the Steve Allen TV show from New York City."
Lucas was a sharpshooting 6-foot-8 forward, known for his work habits and phenomenal intellect. He was a straight-A student who, in his NBA days, became known for memorizing entire pages of the Manhattan phone book.
"Those were great days," Lucas said of his Middletown era. "As it was happening, I didn't think very much about it. I look back now and realize how extraordinary it was."
Lucas, 66, remains active doing memory work. He lives in Templeton, Calif., and has published more than 60 books. In recent weeks, he's been back close to home and working temporarily in the Mansfield, Ohio, area, where he was done training with prison inmates at the Marion Correctional Facility.
Lucas was a self-taught sensation.
He was 6-8 by the time he was 14 years old. He became a three-time All-American at Ohio State (one NCAA title), a U.S. Olympic gold medalist (1960) and an NBA champion (New York Knicks, 1973). He spent most of the 1960s with the NBA's Cincinnati Royals, a franchise that is now the Sacramento Kings.
Lucas said he would shoot "12 to 15 hours a day" as a youngster. He sometimes would practice missing on purpose, shooting at different spots on the rim.
"Then, when it was time to make it, it would be like I was throwing it in the ocean," Lucas said.
He had range out to 25 feet, with a somewhat unorthodox "push" one-hand shot that some likened to the form used by a shot putter.
He was mostly an inside player in high school and extended his range when he got to college and the NBA against bigger men.
Middletown under coach Paul Walker was good before Lucas got there, and the school's seven state titles remain a state record. Lucas and friends took it to another level.
"Jerry could have scored 60 points a game if he wanted," said Larry Emrick, one of Lucas' Middletown teammates. "He was a team player. There was never any resentment to him being the star. You almost got to rely on the guy and figure he could win any game by himself."
That was true until Lucas' senior year, when Columbus North upset the Middies 63-62 in the state semifinals. The Middies never won another state basketball title, but the Lucas era retains a life of its own.
Back then, Cincinnati proper did not know much of Lucas beyond the occasional newspaper story. Middletown rarely played Cincinnati teams then, usually seeing them only in postseason tournaments.
One meeting was with Elder in March 1957, when the Middies routed the Panthers 87-63 in a regional final at Cincinnati Gardens. Lucas was held to 23 points by a swarming Elder defense but had 27 rebounds.
"They really killed us from the outside, because everybody was sagging on Lucas inside," said Jerry Drew, a guard who led Elder that night with 18 points.
The Enquirer the next day spoke of "the Middies' incomparable Jerry Lucas ... whose scoring feats have made him one of the most sought-after cage players ..."
Drew said Lucas was a legend come to life that night at the Gardens.
"I'd have to say in a way, we were intimidated," Drew said. "Nobody wanted to take the ball inside against him, he was so dominating."
Lucas has told the Middletown story many times. He never tires of it.
"It still comes up quite often, when I'm traveling in certain parts of the country," Lucas said. "It was a very unique time. I have nothing but fond memories of it."
E-mail [email protected]
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