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“Oscar Robertson’s legendary basketball journey began in Indianapolis where he led Crispus Attucks High School to the first state championship in the country won by an all-Black team ...
Rendering of Oscar Robertson statue announced by the NBA and Pacers on Thursday night. The statue will be unveiled at Crispus Attucks in 2025.
Crispus Attucks Museum tells the story of Oscar Robertson's legendary high school team and Indiana's Black history. Michaela Gilmer Updated on February 16, 2024 1:08 PM ...
The NBA and Pacers Sports & Entertainment shared a rendering of the statue of Oscar Robertson that has been commissioned for Crispus Attucks H.S. The statue, created by Indianapolis artist Ryan Feeney ...
For the first time since 1959, Crispus Attucks are state champions. It was historic, and it was dramatic. For the first time since 1959, ... Oscar Robertson, at age 78, does not. Not anymore.
INDIANAPOLIS — The NBA will honor Oscar Robertson with a statue in Indianapolis. The statue will be placed in front of his alma mater and Indianapolis high school Crispus Attucks.
As a junior, Robertson (43) led Crispus Attucks to the first of back-to-back state titles-likely the first in the country by an all-Black school :: Bob Doeppers/USA TODAY NETWORK ...
Oscar Robertson looks to put the winning medal around Crispus Attucks Tigers Jamal Harris (5) after winning the IHSAA 3A Boys Basketball State Finals game, March 25, 2017.
One of the many events timed to coincide with all-star festivities is the debut run of a play about the 1955 Crispus Attucks High School basketball team, led by Oscar Robertson, that became the ...
NBA Commissioner Adam Silver announced Thursday that the statue of Robertson has been commissioned by the league. INDIANAPOLIS–There will be a statue to honor Oscar Robertson at his ... in partnership ...
Oscar Robertson's Crispus Attucks' teams got the better of Herschell Turner's Shortridge teams in 1950s but Robertson held Turner in high regard. advertisement. Indianapolis Star.
An Indiana Farm Bureau commercial in the mid-1980s depicted a young Oscar Robertson running around outside in his neighborhood, pretending to shoot a basketball with an old tin can. The commercial ...