
Wilt Chamberlain emerges from a working-class home in West Philadelphia with a combination of size and athleticism that college basketball and the NBA had never seen before. His undeniable achievements on the court challenge the racism embedded within his own league and teammates. Yet from his triple overtime loss in the 1957 NCAA national championship game to his last second disappointment in 1962 to the Boston Celtics, one accomplishment eludes him...to be a champion.
Wilt Chamberlain emerges from a working-class home in West Philadelphia with a combination of size and athleticism that college basketball and the NBA had never seen before. His undeniable achievements on the court challenge the racism embedded within his own league and teammates. Yet from his triple overtime loss in the 1957 NCAA national championship game to his last second disappointment in 1962 to the Boston Celtics, one accomplishment eludes him...to be a champion.
In the 1960s, Wilt Chamberlain’s ongoing rivalry with Bill Russell and the Boston Celtics drives a basketball boon. Wilt learns to better blend his singular gifts and by doing so he raises his team to a championship. Despite his great achievement, Wilt remains controversial - a Nixon Republican in the era of Civil Rights, yet it’s his business acumen that drives up the salaries of himself and all the players who follow in his wake.