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Connie Hawkins was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 1992. He currently works in community relations with the Suns. Point-shaving scandalHawkins' career was hampered when as a freshman at the University of Iowa, he was an innocent victim of the hysteria surrounding an infamous NCAA basketball Point shaving scandal, with its origins in New York City. While some of the conspirators and characters involved were known to or knew Hawkins, none, including the New York attorney at the center of the scandal, Jack Molinas, had ever sought to involve Hawkins in the conspiracy. At the time, college freshmen were not allowed to participate in varsity athletics, thus Hawkins could — at worst — have been only a prospect in future point-shaving efforts by the gamblers. Hawkins' name surfaced in an interview conducted with an individual who was involved in the scandal. Hawkins was kept from seeking legal counsel while being grilled repeatedly by New York City Police Department detectives who were investigating the scandal. Hawkins' story to the detectives, while at times difficult to follow, never contained any admission of wrongdoing. Though Hawkins was not arrested or charged, he was for a time prohibited from continuing his college career or joining an NBA team. The prohibition was later lifted due to lack of evidence implicating Hawkins.
High SchoolConnie Hawkins (Boys High, New York City) Hawkins didn't play much at Boys High until his junior year, but two great years of spectacular ball were enough to land him on this list. Hawkins was All-City first team as a junior as Boys went undefeated and won New York's ultra-competitive PSAL (Public School Athletic League) title in 1959. His senior year he averaged 25.5 ppg., including one game in which he scored 60, and Boys again went undefeated and won the 1960 PSAL title. Hawkins dunked for the first time when he was 11, and was the original flash. "Connie Hawkins was the best I've ever seen in the PSAL," said a former PSAL commissioner who'd witnessed 50 years of New York high school hoops. Added Sixers coach Larry Brown, "He was Julius before Julius. He was Elgin before Elgin. He was Michael before Michael. He was simply the greatest individual player I have ever seen." He is 6-8 and his playing weight was 215 pounds
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