Don Ohl
Personal information
Born (1936-04-18) April 18, 1936
Murphysboro, Illinois, U.S.
Listed height6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)
Listed weight190 lb (86 kg)
Career information
High schoolEdwardsville (Edwardsville, Illinois)
CollegeIllinois (1955–1958)
NBA draft1958: 5th round, 36th overall pick
Selected by the Philadelphia Warriors
Playing career1959–1970
PositionPoint guard / shooting guard
Number10, 30
Career history
1959–1960Peoria Cats
19601964Detroit Pistons
19641968Baltimore Bullets
19681970St. Louis / Atlanta Hawks
Career highlights and awards
Career NBA statistics
Points11,549 (15.9 ppg)
Rebounds2,163 (3.0 rpg)
Assists2,243 (3.1 apg)
Stats at Basketball-Reference.com

Donald Jay Ohl (born April 18, 1936) is an American former professional basketball player who spent 10 seasons (19601970) in the National Basketball Association (NBA). His nickname was Waxie because of his crew cut.[1]

College career

Ohl attended Edwardsville High School in Edwardsville, Illinois, and the University of Illinois.

Professional career

Ohl played for the Detroit Pistons, Baltimore Bullets, and St.Louis/Atlanta Hawks. Among the best distance shooters of his time, the 6'3", 190-pound guard scored 11,549 points and appeared in five NBA All-Star Games in his career.

Shortly after the 1963–64 campaign, Ohl was involved one of the first so-called megatrades, this one an eight-player deal between the Pistons and Bullets. On June 9, 1964, the Pistons sent Ohl, center Bob Ferry, forward Bailey Howell, forward Les Hunter and the draft rights to guard Wally (later Wali) Jones to the Bullets in exchange for forwards Terry Dischinger and Don Kojis and guard Rod Thorn. The deal turned out to a fortuitous one for the Bullets, as Howell and Ohl became mainstays with the team.

Ohl twice scored a career high of 43 points in a single game, on January 23, 1963 in a 123–119 loss to the Los Angeles Lakers, and on December 25, 1966 in a 129–127 loss to his former team, the Pistons.[2]

Ohl experienced his finest hour in the 1965 playoffs, which saw the Bullets eliminate the St. Louis Hawks in four games in round one. In the Western Division finals, Ohl and future Hall of Fame guard Jerry West were locked in a tense shootout that saw West and the Los Angeles Lakers finally prevail in six games, each of which was decided by eights points or fewer. Ohl averaged 26.1 points in 10 games that post-season, and specifically 28.8 points along with 5.7 rebounds in the division finals against the Lakers.[3]

In 1968, Ohl was traded to the afformentioned Hawks for Tom Workman and a third round pick. Two years later, he was taken in the 1970 NBA Expansion draft by the Cleveland Cavaliers, though he never suited up for the team.[4]

Career statistics

Legend
  GP Games played   GS  Games started  MPG  Minutes per game
 FG%  Field goal percentage  3P%  3-point field goal percentage  FT%  Free throw percentage
 RPG  Rebounds per game  APG  Assists per game  SPG  Steals per game
 BPG  Blocks per game  PPG  Points per game  Bold  Career high
 *  Led the league

NBA

Source[4]

Regular season

Year Team GP GS MPG FG% FT% RPG APG PPG
1960–61 Detroit 79* 27.5 .394 .719 3.2 3.4 13.3
1961–62 Detroit 77 32.8 .444 .718 3.5 3.2 17.0
1962–63 Detroit 80* 37.0 .439 .724 3.0 4.1 19.3
1963–64 Detroit 71 33.3 .408 .680 2.5 3.2 17.3
1964–65 Baltimore 77 36.6 .438 .732 4.4 3.2 18.4
1965–66 Baltimore 73 36.2 .445 .735 3.8 4.0 20.6
1966–67 Baltimore 58 34.9 .451 .780 3.3 2.9 20.3
1967–68 Baltimore 39 28.1 .433 .770 2.9 2.2 14.8
1967–68 St. Louis 31 26.5 .454 .783 2.0 2.4 13.1
1968–69 Atlanta 76 26.3 .427 .707 2.2 2.9 12.1
1969–70 Atlanta 66 14.9 .473 .806 1.7 1.7 6.3
Career 727 30.8 .434 .732 3.0 3.1 15.9
All-Star 5 0 17.4 .372 .933 1.8 1.4 9.2

Playoffs

Year Team GP MPG FG% FT% RPG APG PPG
1961 Detroit 5 26.0 .321 .684 3.8 2.8 12.6
1962 Detroit 8 39.6 .415 .815 3.4 3.1 20.5
1963 Detroit 4 38.8 .398 .864 3.0 4.8 21.3
1965 Baltimore 10 43.2 .481 .782 6.4 2.7 26.1
1966 Baltimore 3 37.0 .507 .750 4.7 2.7 26.7
1968 St. Louis 6 23.8 .482 .682 2.0 3.5 11.5
1969 Atlanta 11 17.6 .349 .591 1.2 1.5 6.6
Career 47 31.5 .427 .752 3.4 2.8 16.9

References

  1. Klingaman, Mike. "Catching Up With...former Bullet Don Ohl", The Toy Department (The Baltimore Sun sports blog), Tuesday, June 16, 2009.
  2. "Don Ohl Career High 43 Points". Statmuse.
  3. "1965 NBA Western Division Finals Bullets vs. Lakers". Basketball Reference.
  4. 1 2 "Don Ohl Transactions". Basketball Reference. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved January 3, 2024.
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