Sport: Basketball
Born: May 1, 1942
Town: Riverside, New Jersey
George Lehmann was born May 1, 1942 in Riverside Township, NJ. George was a two-sport athlete at Palmyra High School, playing football and basketball. Healso earned a reputation for getting in trouble. According to newspaper accounts, he and another boy broke into the school one Sunday hoping to get their hands on some test answers. At some point, his co-conspirator started a fire that destroyed 15 classrooms. So his next stop was Camden Catholic, where he began to attract attention as a deadly long-range shooter.
This talent was the product of endless hours of shooting drills. The wiry six-footer was also a gifted ballhandler and passer. George received a basketball scholarship from Wake Forest and played for the freshman squad in 1960–61. He wore out his welcome at Wake, however, and transferred to Campbell College (now Campbell University). Baseball stars Gaylord and Jim Perry were among its more famous alums.
George went undrafted by the NBA and played five seasons in the Eastern Basketball League with the Sudbury Mercuries, Allentown Jets and Trenton Colonials. He averaged over 20 points a game in EBL play and was a good playmaker. In 1965–66 and 1966–67 with Trenton, George was in the top three in the league in assists. Among his teammates in Trenton was future NBA All-Star Bob Love. During his days in the Eastern League George also played with fellow New Jerseyans Walter Dukes, Vinnie Ernst, Nick Werkman.
In the summer of 1967, George was invited to try out for the St. Louis Hawks. The ABA had begun play and there was a sharp drain on talent in the NBA. George made the Hawks as Lenny Wilkens’s backup. He played 10 minutes a game as a rookie and saw action in one playoff game. George accompanied the club on its move to Atlanta the following season, but was cut after playing 11 games.
George signed with the ABA Los Angeles Stars in January and took over as the team’s point guard. He led the Stars with 18.9 and 5.0 assists per game in 1968–69. In 1969–70, the Stars drafted Mack Calvin. He supplanted George as the starting point guard, making him expendable. The Stars traded George to the New York Nets, where he backed up Bill Melchionni for 46 games. The two had actually shared the same backcourt in 1969 as members of the Trenton Colonials. Toward the end of the season, the Nets traded George to the Miami Floridians. In 25 games, he averaged 17.9 points and 5.0 assists.
George’s best season was 1970–71. He was traded to the Carolina Cougars, a team that featured a constellation of Carolina college basketball stars, including Billy Cunningham, Doug Moe, Larry Miller, Bill Bunting, Bob Verga, Randy Mahaffey and, of course, George, the ertswhile Deamon Deacon. Their best player was Joe Caldwell, a former Hawks teammate who had jumped from the NBA to the ABA over the summer.
George set league records with 27 points in a quarter, and 154 3-pointers on the year. His long-range jumpers were known as “Screamin’ Lehmanns.” That season, he also became the first pro to make more than 40 percent of his 3-pointers. The Cougars did plenty of scoring, but they gave up 105 points a game, and finished 34–50—and out of the playoffs.
George had another good year for the Cougars in 1971–72, but the team continued its losing ways and he was traded to the Memphis Pros with a month to go in the season. The Pros changed their name to the Tams in 1972–73. George spent his final two years with Memphis, splitting point guard duties with George Thompson. Midway through the 1973–74 season, the Tams released George. He played a handful of games with the Allentown Jets back in the Eastern League but, at 31, it was time to move on. When he retired, George had the third highest 3-point shooting average in history, at 36.5 percent.
After his pro career, George returned to South Jersey and went into partnership with his brother, Austin, in a mail-order business specializing in novelty apparel. He also conducted basketball clinics. In 1989–90, George’s son, Todd, led the nation with 9.3 assists per game as a guard for Drexel. His daughter, Nicole, was a guard for NC State. Like their father, they were fearless and accurate shooters. Todd joined his father in business after college.