Wikipedia is a great thing. Go read up on Wilt's B-ball career, as well as his days a pro volleyballer, boxer, race car driver. He also excelled in Track and field, ran marathons and ULTRA marathons as wellas being offered a contract by the Kansas City Chiefs to play football. The man is simply the G.O.A.T.
Inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame (1978)
2x NBA champion (1967, '72)
1x NBA Finals MVP (1972) (the finals MVP wasn't created until '67, Wilt's 10 season)
4x NBA regular season MVP (1959-60, 1965-66, 1966-67, 1967-68 seasons)
7x All-NBA First Team (1960, '61, '62, '64, '66, '67, '68)
3x All-NBA Second Team ('63, '65, '72)
2x All-Defensive First Team (1972, '73)
Rookie of the Year (1959-1960 season)
One of the 50 Greatest Players in NBA History (1996).
And some os his records include...
Chamberlain scored 31,419 points in 1,045 professional games. This was the most in NBA history when he retired in 1973, though his scoring total has since been exceeded by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Karl Malone, both of whom played several more seasons than Chamberlain, and by Michael Jordan. His career scoring average of 30.06 points per game (ppg) is second-highest in league history, fractionally behind Jordan's 30.12 ppg.
Chamberlain averaged 30.1 points and 22.9 rebounds per game for his career.
Wilt's 1961-62 scoring average of 50.4 ppg, accomplished with the Philadelphia Warriors, is by far the NBA record. Chamberlain also holds the next three spots on the NBA's season scoring average list with 44.8, 38.9 and 38.4 points per game. The closest other player is Elgin Baylor, who averaged 38.3 ppg in the same '61-62 season in which Chamberlain set the record.
Chamberlain scored 60 or more points in a game an astonishing 32 times, more than all other NBA players combined (26 times). The closest player on that list is Michael Jordan, who accomplished the feat 5 times. See List of National Basketball Association players with 60 or more points in a game.
Chamberlain also set a record for rebounds in a game with 55, against the Celtics on November 24, 1960. The opposing team in that game was the Boston Celtics, with center Bill Russell, who had held the prior one-game record of 51.
Wilt led the NBA in rebounding 11 times, in shooting percentage seven times, and in scoring seven times. Less eye-catching stats also serve to demonstrate Chamberlain's dominance: after critics called him a one-dimensional (or even selfish) player, Chamberlain defiantly promised to lead the league in assists the next season, which he did in 1968 at a clip of 8.6 per game — numbers good enough to match those of today's point guards.
Chamberlain is the only player in NBA history to achieve a double-triple-double (meaning 20 points, 20 rebounds, 20 assists) in one game. In 1968, he logged 22 points, 25 rebounds and 21 assists. For basketball devotees, this may be his most jaw-dropping stat line, as it is the ultimate testimony of Wilt's versatility.
In a related note, Chamberlain is also the only player in NBA history to achieve a quadruple double-double (meaning 40 points, and 40 rebounds or 40 assists in a single game). On December 8, 1961, when he scored a then-record 78 points against the Los Angeles Lakers, he also collected 43 rebounds.
Chamberlain as well holds the record for longest continuous streak of triple-doubles with nine straight which occurred in 1968.
Chamberlain was also known for incredible stamina and durability. In 1962, he averaged 48.5 minutes per game, meaning that he played practically every minute of overtimes as well as regulation. His 3882 minutes played out of the team's possible 3890 leaves an average of six seconds rest per game. Chamberlain played over 46 minutes per game for seven seasons, and his career 45.8 average is unmatched. Chamberlain also holds the top five marks in minutes played in a season and the top seven marks in minutes-per-game played in a season, including 3882 out of a possible 3890 minutes in his superlative 1961-62 season, an average of more than 48 minutes per game.
Despite the fact that Chamberlain was regularly double-and triple-teamed on offense and was relied upon so heavily on defense, in his 14 years in the NBA he never once fouled out of a game. In at least one game, he accumulated five fouls during the fourth quarter, and the game went into overtime, but still he did not foul out. (Six fouls was the personal limit.)
As an arguable but somewhat probable note, many sportswriters attest that Chamberlain would have had several if not many quadruple-doubles, and may have averaged a triple-double (points, rebounds, blocks) over his career; but since he played in an era during which statistics on blocks and steals were not officially recorded this is still speculation.
In one season, Chamberlain set all three of these individual season records:
1) Most free throws attempted, 2) Most free throws made, and 3) Most free throws missed. The record for most free throws made was eventually broken by Jerry West, but the other two records still stand.
Chamberlain was so dominant on the rebounding boards that only one season in his career did one of his teammates accumulate 1,000 or more rebounds. In the 1971-72 season with the Lakers, forward Happy Hairston barely topped the 1,000 total. But that season, Chamberlain snared over 1,600 himself.