Given the nickname “Super Stat” in 1966 by then-Bulletin sports writer George Kiseda, Pollack brought such terms as triple-double, blocked shots, assists and steals into the everyday basketball vernacular.
Through Gottlieb’s uninformed yet proper hire, Pollack unknowingly began a streak that lasted until yesterday, as being the only person associated with the NBA since Day 1. He previously shared the lead with Red Auerbach, who died in 2006.
The impact he had on basketball statistics was similar to the impact his favorite player, Wilt Chamberlain, had on the record books.
The 76ers began publishing “Harvey Pollack’s NBA Statistical Yearbook” in 1966. It has grown from 24 pages to almost 400 pages in its latest edition. It has become the bible for all stat freaks.
Everything you ever wanted to know — or didn’t want to know — about NBA stats is in there. He broke down dunk leaders’ shots by alley-oop, driving, putback, reverse, running, slam, fastbreak and plain. Want a 48-minute projection? In there. Rebounding opponents’ missed free throws? Got it. Jump ball situations. Number of offensive fouls. Four-point plays. League leaders in tattoos. All there.
But Pollack’s greatest night as a stat man, sports writer and PR director was March 2, 1962, in Hershey, Pa. Chamberlain, playing for the Warriors, scored 100 points against the New York Knicks and Pollack was the only media representative there. Besides being the Warriors’ public relations director, he was also writing for the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Bulletin, Associated Press and United Press International. And then he had the wherewithal to grab Paul Vathis, an Associated Press photographer who just happened to be at the game but not shooting it, to take a photo of Chamberlain in the locker room after the game. Needing something to commemorate the historic event, Pollack scribbled “100” on a piece of paper. Wilt held it up and Vathis shot what became one of the most iconic photos in sports history.