Oscar Schmidt

Oscar Daniel Bezerra Schmidt (born February 16, 1958) is a retired Brazilian professional basketball player. He is also commonly known as Oscar Schmidt in Spain, where he played for Fórum Valladolid for the 1993–94 and 1994–95 seasons, and simply Oscar, or Mão Santa (Holy Hand), in his homeland. Schmidt primarily played at the small forward position, was 2.05 m (6 ft 834 in) tall and weighed 110 kg (243 lbs).[1] He was born in Natal, Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil.

Oscar Schmidt
Schmidt, in 2006.
Personal information
Born (1958-02-16) February 16, 1958
Natal, Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil
NationalityBrazilian
Listed height6 ft 8.75 in (2.05 m)
Listed weight243 lb (110 kg)
Career information
NBA draft1984 / Round: 6 / Pick: 131st overall
Selected by the New Jersey Nets
Playing career1974–2003
PositionShooting guard / Small forward
Number6, 11, 14, 18
Career history
1974–1978S.E. Palmeiras
1978–1982E.C. Sírio
1982América do Rio
1982–1990JuveCaserta
1990–1993Pavia
1993–1995Valladolid
1995–1997S.C. Corinthians Paulista
1997–1999Bandeirantes / Mackenzie
1999–2003C.R. Flamengo
Career highlights and awards
Basketball Hall of Fame as player
FIBA Hall of Fame as player

He is considered to be the all-time leading scorer in the history of basketball, with 49,737 career points scored (pro club league play, plus senior Brazilian national team play combined).[2] He is the record holder for the longest career span of a professional basketball player at 29 years. He is also the top scorer in the history of the Summer Olympic Games, and the top scorer in the history of the FIBA World Cup.

He was named one of FIBA's 50 Greatest Players in 1991. He received the Olympic Order in 1997. On August 20, 2010, Schmidt became a FIBA Hall of Fame player, in recognition of his play in international competitions.[3] On September 8, 2013, Schmidt was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.[4] He was inducted into the Italian Basketball Hall of Fame in 2017.

Youth club career

Schmidt played youth club basketball in the youth systems of S.E. Palmeiras and Mackenzie College. With Palmeiras' youth teams, he scored 2,114 points in 85 games, for a scoring average of 24.9 points per game. With Mackenzie's youth teams, he scored 1,332 points in 36 games, for a scoring average of 37.0 points per game.

Professional career

Brazil

Schmidt began his professional club career in 1974, at the age of 16, with the Brazilian Championship club S.E. Palmeiras. As a member of Palmeiras, he won the São Paulo State Championship in 1974, and the Brazilian Championship in 1977.

In 1978, he moved to the Brazilian club E.C. Sírio. As a member of Sírio, Schmidt won the São Paulo State Championship in both 1978 and 1979, and the Brazilian Championship in 1979. With Sírio, he also won the South American Club Championship, and the FIBA Intercontinental Cup title in 1979. He scored 42 points in the 1979 FIBA Intercontinental Cup's Final against the Yugoslav First Federal League club Bosna Sarajevo.[5] Schmidt was the top scorer of the Brazilian Championship in both 1979 and 1980.

In 1982, Schmidt joined the Brazilian club América do Rio. However, he only stayed with the club for a brief amount of time.[6]

JuveCaserta

For the 1982–83 season, Schmidt joined the Italian 2nd Division club JuveCaserta. With JuveCaserta, he played in the first division level Italian League, for the first time in the 1983–84 season. That same season, Schmidt played in a Pan-European club competition for the first time, as he also played in Europe's third-tier level FIBA Korać Cup's 1983–84 season. Schmidt played in Europe's 2nd-tier level competition, the FIBA European Cup Winners' Cup (later renamed to FIBA Saporta Cup), for the first time, in the 1984–85 season.

With JuveCaserta, he won the Italian Cup title in 1988. In the European-wide secondary level 1988–89 FIBA European Cup Winners' Cup's Final, Schmidt scored 44 points against the Spanish club Real Madrid. However, Real Madrid's star player Dražen Petrović, scored 62 points in the same game, and JuveCaserta lost the game, by a score of 117–113.[7]

Schmidt led the Italian top division in scoring six times, while he was a member of JuveCaserta (1983–84, 1984–85, 1985–86, 1986–87, 1988–89, and 1989–90 seasons). JuveCaserta eventually retired Schmidt's #18 jersey.

Pavia

In 1990, Schmidt joined the Italian 2nd Division club Pavia. With Pavia, Schmidt led the Italian 2nd Division in scoring, in both the 1990–91 and 1992–93 seasons. With Pavia, he also led the first division Italian League in scoring, during the 1991–92 season. He was also a member of the FIBA European Selection in 1991.

As a member of Pavia, Schmidt also had his highest scoring single game in the top division Italian League, as he scored 66 points in a 1991–92 season game versus Auxilium Torino, on 30 November, 1991.[8][9] Pavia eventually retired his #11 jersey.

While playing club basketball in Italy, Schmidt earned a fan in future NBA star Kobe Bryant. At that time, Bryant was a young child that was living in Italy, while his father, Joe Bryant, played professional basketball in the country. Bryant called Schmidt one of his childhood idols,[10] and also stated that Schmidt could have been one of the greatest players in the NBA, if he had played in the league.[11]

Overall during his club career in Italy, Schmidt was the Top Scorer of the Italian First Division seven times (1983–84, 1984–85, 1985–86, 1986–87, 1988–89, 1989–90, and 1991–92 seasons). In 2017, Schmidt was inducted into the Italian Basketball Hall of Fame.

Valladolid

In 1993, Schmidt joined the Spanish ACB League club Valladolid. With Valladolid, Schmidt was the Spanish league's top scorer in the 1993–94 season, with a scoring average of 33.3 points per game, in 33 games played (regular season and playoffs). On 19 March, 1994, Schmidt made 11 3-point field goals, in a Spanish League game against Murcia.[12]

Schmidt also spent the 1994–95 season with Valladolid. In that season, he averaged 24.0 points per game, in 38 games played. His single-game scoring high in the Spanish League, was in a game that season versus Málaga, in which he scored 47 points, and made all 8 of his 3-point field goal attempts.[13]

In two seasons in the Spanish ACB, Schmidt scored a total of 2,009 points in 71 games played (regular season and playoffs), for a scoring average of 28.3 points per game.[14]

Return to Brazil

Schmidt returned to his native Brazil in 1995, to once again play in the Brazilian Basketball Championship. He was a member of S.C. Corinthians Paulista, from 1995 to 1997. He then played with Grêmio Barueri Bandeirantes / Mackenzie, from 1997 to 1999, and he finished his club career with C.R. Flamengo, where he played from 1999 to 2003.

With Corinthians Paulista, he won the Brazilian Championship in 1996. As a member of Grêmio Barueri Bandeirantes, he won the São Paulo State Championship in 1998. With Grêmio Barueri Bandeirantes, Schmidt, at the age of 39, scored 74 points in a São Paulo State Championship game on 28 November, 1997.[15][16][17]

As a member of Flamengo, he won the Rio de Janeiro State Championship in 1999 and 2002. Flamengo eventually retired his #14 jersey. Schmidt was the Brazilian Championship's top scorer in each of his last eight seasons playing in the competition (1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003). That was in addition to the two times that he had previously led the same competition in scoring, in 1979 and 1980.

Schmidt retired from his club basketball playing career on May 26, 2003, at the age of 45. During his club playing career, he scored a total of 42,044 points, in 1,289 games played, for a career scoring average of 32.6 points per game. However, those totals do not include all of the games that he played in during his pro club career, as the data for some of the national cup games and Pan-European games that he played in Europe are not available.

NBA draft rights

Schmidt was drafted by the New Jersey Nets in the sixth round of the 1984 NBA Draft, and he played with them in their 1984 NBA training camp and preseason. However, he declined the club's offer a fully guaranteed contract, because it was for considerably less money than he made at the time playing in Italy, and also because to accept the team's contract offer would have meant that he could no longer represent the senior Brazilian national team. That was because until 1989, NBA players were not allowed to play for national teams.[18]

National team career

Junior national team

Schmidt played in the youth systems of Brazil's national federation program. He played in 15 games with the junior selection of São Paulo, with which he scored 393 points in 15 games, for a scoring average of 26.2 points per game. He also played in 31 games with Brazil's national junior selection, in which he scored a total of 569 points, for a scoring average of 18.4 points per game.

Senior national team

With the senior Brazil national team, Schmidt played in five Summer Olympics (he was the second player to do so after Teófilo Cruz) and was the top scorer in three of them. However, he never went past the tournament's quarterfinals. In the 1980 Summer Olympics, he played in seven games and scored 169 points, for a 24.1 average.

He again scored 169 points in seven games in the 1984 Summer Olympics. His best Olympic performance was the 1988 Summer Olympics. At that tournament, he scored 338 points, for an average of 42.3 points per game. In 1992, he scored 198 points in eight games, and in 1996, he scored 219 points in 8 games. In 38 career Olympic basketball games, Schmidt scored a record of 1,093 points, for an average of 28.8 points per game.

Schmidt is also the all-time career leader in total points scored in the FIBA World Cup, having scored a total of 843 points in 33 games, for a scoring average of 25.5 points per game. He won the bronze medal and made the All-Tournament Team at the 1978 FIBA World Cup, and he also made the All-Tournament Teams of both the 1986 FIBA World Cup and the 1990 FIBA World Cup, which he also led in scoring, with an average of 34.6 points per game.

Schmidt played in the gold-medal match of the 1987 Pan American Games, which was held in Indianapolis. The US national team, which was composed of NCAA Division I college basketball players at those games, featured two All-Americans in David Robinson (Hall of Fame member) and Danny Manning, two NCAA Championship Final Four MVPs, in Pervis Ellison and Keith Smart, and other future NBA players, such as Rex Chapman and Dan Majerle. Brazil faced a 68–54 halftime deficit. However, Schmidt finished the game with 46 points, in a 120–115 win for Brazil.

In 1996, at the age of 38, Schmidt retired from playing with the senior Brazilian national team as its all-time leading scorer. While representing Brazil, he scored a total of 7,693 points in 326 games played, for a career scoring average of 23.6 points per game.[19] In 1997, Schmidt was given the Olympic Order award.

Post-athletic career

In 2004, Schmidt started his career in management. He was the CEO of "Telemar Rio de Janeiro", a Brazilian professional basketball team which won the "Campeonato Carioca" (Rio de Janeiro State Championship) in 2004, and the Brazilian Championship in 2005.

In 2006, Schmidt, along with other Brazilian basketball greats such as Paula and Hortência, (another Hall of Fame member), led the NLB: Nossa Liga de Basquete ("our basketball league"), an attempted rival to the Brazilian Basketball Championship. However, the league folded a year later.

Personal life

On May 13, 2013, Schmidt had brain surgery to excise a malignant tumor.[20] At first, nobody knew about it except for his family. The press found out about the disease fifteen days after the surgery, at a dinner celebrating the 50th anniversary of the two-time FIBA World Champion senior men's Brazilian National Team. Schmidt did not appear at the event, as he was recuperating from daily chemotherapy sessions. The disease was later put into remission.[20]

In 2016, Schmidt was one of the guests at the opening ceremony of the 2016 Rio Summer Olympics, alongside other Brazilian celebrities, such as model Gisele Bündchen, actor Gustavo Goulart, and singer Caetano Veloso, among others.

Senior club teams

Statistics

Denotes seasons in which the player won the league's championship
* League's Top Scorer Based On Total Points Scored
# League's Top Scorer Based On Points Per Game

European national club leagues

Season Competition Games Played Points Scored Scoring Average Club
Italian 2nd Division
1982–83
Italian 2nd
33
988
29.9
JuveCaserta
1990–91
Italian 2nd
40
1,760
44.0#
Pavia
1992–93
Italian 2nd
40
1,585
39.6#
Pavia
Career Totals
Italian 2nd
113
4,333
38.3
Italian 1st Division
1983–84
Italian League
34
955*
28.1
JuveCaserta
1984–85
Italian League
38
1,140*
30.0
JuveCaserta
1985–86
Italian League
40
1,226*
30.7
JuveCaserta
1986–87
Italian League
39
1,316*
33.7
JuveCaserta
1987–88
Italian League
32
1,190
37.2
JuveCaserta
1988–89
Italian League
36
1,283
35.6#
JuveCaserta
1989–90
Italian League
32
1,045
32.7#
JuveCaserta
1991–92
Italian League
39
1,469
37.7#
Pavia
Career Totals
Italian League
290
9,624
33.2
Spanish 1st Division
1993–94
Spanish League
33
1,098
33.3#
Valladolid
1994–95
Spanish League
38
911
24.0
Valladolid
Career Totals
Spanish League
71
2,009
28.3
Career Totals
All Domestic Leagues
474
15,966
33.7

Pan European club leagues

Season Competition Games Played Points Scored Scoring Average Club
FIBA Korać Cup (European 3rd-tier)
1983–84
FIBA Korać Cup
6
152
25.3
JuveCaserta
1985–86
FIBA Korać Cup
10
261
26.1
JuveCaserta
1986–87
FIBA Korać Cup
8
257
32.1
JuveCaserta
1987–88
FIBA Korać Cup
7
287
41.0
JuveCaserta
1989–90
FIBA Korać Cup
8
223
27.9
JuveCaserta
Career Totals
FIBA Korać Cup
39
1,180
30.3
FIBA Saporta Cup (European 2nd-tier)
1984–85
FIBA Saporta Cup
4
120
30.0
JuveCaserta
1988–89
FIBA Saporta Cup
10
341
34.1
JuveCaserta
Career Totals
FIBA Saporta Cup
14
461
32.9
Career Totals
Korać Cup / Saporta Cup
53
1,641
31.0

Brazilian Basketball Championship

Season Club GP MPG 2P% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
1996† Corinthians 3134.3.588.485.8819.8.8.6.230.9
1997 Corinthians 2637.6.530.504.88010.51.3.6.338.2
1998 Barueri 2838.6.541.440.90311.51.4.6.244.8
1999 Barueri 3642.2.573.464.91310.81.7.7.338.2
2000 Flamengo 3837.9.543.389.8629.61.7.5.134.9
2001 Flamengo 3436.9.483.457.8998.81.3.6.133.0
2002 Flamengo 3437.1.516.403.9088.31.9.6.234.8
2003 Flamengo 3136.3.495.451.9247.52.0.5.233.1

Brazilian senior national team

[22]

Year Tournament GP MPG FG% 2P% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
1978 FIBA World Cup 9-.688----17.7
1980 Summer Olympics 729.4.548.548.8756.70.40.3.024.1
1982 FIBA World Cup 6---.700---21.0
1984 Summer Olympics 726.7.524.524.7814.70.71.0.024.1
1986 FIBA World Cup 10---.764----28.1
1988 Summer Olympics 836.0.569.576.556.9187.81.60.6.442.3
1990 FIBA World Cup 8---.873----34.6
1992 Summer Olympics 831.8.347.324.378.8893.50.62.1.024.8
1996 Summer Olympics 832.9.416.475.381.9533.11.00.5.027.4

Per team

Team Years Games Played Points Scored Points Per Game
Palmeiras
1974–1978
82
2,033
24.8
Sírio
1978–1982
146
4,351
29.8
América
1982
-
-
-
JuveCaserta
1982–1990
284
9,143
32.2
Pavia
1990–1993
119
4,814
40.5
Valladolid
1993–1995
71
2,009
28.3
Corinthians
1995–1997
131
4,270
32.6
Barueri
1997–1999
237
8,183
34.5
Flamengo
1999–2003
219
7,241
33.1
Club Totals
1974–2003
1,289
42,044
32.6
Brazil
1977–1996
326
7,693
23.6
Career Totals
1974–2003
1,615
49,737
30.8

Honours and awards

Summer Olympics Records

  • All-time leading points scorer: 1,093 points
  • Most total points scored in a tournament: 338 points
  • Highest per game scoring average in a tournament: 42.3 points per game
  • Most points scored in a single game: 55 points
  • Oldest player to score 40 or more points in a single game: 38 years and 155 days (scored 45 points)
  • Tied for most tournament appearances by a men's basketball player: 5 (tied with Teófilo Cruz, Andrew Gaze, and Juan Carlos Navarro)

Individual

As a member of pro club teams

Brazil senior national team

See also

References and notes

  1. Schmidt Oscar PROFILO CM 205 KG 110 (in Italian).
  2. halloffame.fiba.com Oscar SCHMIDT (2010 Class) Individual Highlights: Archived 2014-03-18 at the Wayback Machine
  3. "FIBA announces 2010 Hall of Fame Class". FIBA. 2010-08-20. Archived from the original on 2010-10-19.
  4. "Basketball Hall of Fame 2013". 2013-09-07.
  5. E.C. Sírio 100 - Bosna 98.
  6. CARREIRA DO BRASIL PARA O MUNDO (1982) (in Portuguese).
  7. Final Real Madrid CF 117 - SC Sanidero Juventus Caserta 113.
  8. Record individuali per Oscar Schmidt Più punti segnati (in Italian).
  9. 30 NOV 1991 ASD Pavia 109 - Reale Mutua Torino 110 (in Italian).
  10. "Kobe Bryant turns to David Beckham for advice on Achilles injury", Eric Pinkus, Los Angeles Times
  11. "Oscar Schmidt Story: The Greatest Player Ever?", The Lead
  12. Los 11 triples de Oscar Schmidt cumplen un cuarto de siglo (in Spanish).
  13. Do you remember 'Mano Santa? This is how Oscar Schmidt scored 47 points, with 8/8 in triples, being 36 years old ... (Video) (in Spanish).
  14. Historial estadístico Schmidt, Oscar (in Spanish).
  15. Oscar Schmidt bate recorde de pontos num só jogo (in Portuguese).
  16. Com 74 pontos em um jogo, atleta obtém sua melhor marca Oscar afirma, após recorde, que atingiu o limite do 'impossível' (in Portuguese).
  17. O Mão Santa do Basquete (in Portuguese).
  18. OSCAR SCHMIDT CIERRA EL CICLO GREPB (in Spanish).
  19. Oscar Schmidt rejeitou a NBA e mostrou que o melhor caminho nem sempre é o mais fácil | Mais que um jogo #19 (in Portuguese).
  20. "Casey", "Tim" (9 September 2013). "Oscar Winner". "Sports on Earth". Retrieved 5 June 2015. In the spring, he had his second brain tumor surgery in two years. He is now on chemotherapy five days a month...
  21. STATISTICHE (in Italian).
  22. Oscar SCHMIDT (BRA) SENIOR LEVEL.
  23. Oscar Schmidt: história, títulos e recordes do Mão Santa (in Portuguese).
  24. "Destruidor de recordes: dez façanhas de Oscar Schmidt nas Olimpíadas". sportv.globo.com (in Portuguese). February 24, 2016. Retrieved February 24, 2016.
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