And no, you would not be beating Wilt Chamberlain’s ass in an elevator.
That lanky goof couldn't fightDefinitely not kicking Wilt’s ass
That lanky goof couldn't fight
Just one of the crazy stories about how strong he was.That lanky goof couldn't fight
He was actually trained.That lanky goof couldn't fight
A shot to all shawt niggas everywhere.Zero fucks mode from 7ft high
A shot to all shawt niggas everywhere.
I've actually heard Wilt used to hold back on blocks because he knew he could break a person's hand virtually every time.Just one of the crazy stories about how strong he was.
The Los Angeles Times on Feb. 26, 1981, recalled that Wilt Chamberlain “dislocated the shoulder of the powerful Gus Johnson when he blocked one of Gus' dunks.”
The Philadelphia Inquirer on Oct. 26, 1986, got the scoop from Billy Cunningham, who witnessed the event: "It was Gus against Wilt," Cunningham said. "Gus went in to dunk, and Wilt caught the ball, threw Gus to the floor, and they had to take Gus off the floor with a dislocated shoulder."
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I've actually heard Wilt used to hold back on blocks because he knew he could break a person's hand virtually every time.
The man was a serious problem.Another time, Wilt broke an opponent's toe with a dunk. Wilt dunked one time and the ball hit the foot of Hall of Famer Johnny "Red" Kerr with such force that he broke it.
Wilt Chamberlain: Did He Really Play In a Weak Era?
Wilt Chamberlain had more competition back in his day than there is today. The biggest misconception on Wilt is that he dominated because the game had no competition, which is just wrong and senseless...syndication.bleacherreport.com