Education
A 6"7" forward/center from Dallas" Madison High School, Stallworth graduated in 1961 and attended Wichita State University.
A 6"7" forward/center from Dallas" Madison High School, Stallworth graduated in 1961 and attended Wichita State University.
In his three seasons with the Shockers, he set 18 school records, including the highest career point per game average (242). Stallworth helped the team reach the 1964 National Collegiate Athletic Association Men"s Division I Basketball Tournament, the school"s first appearance in the National Collegiate Athletic Association Tournament, and was named to the All-American team twice. He earned the nickname "Dave the Rave" while playing at Wichita State.
In the 1965 National Basketball Association Draft, Stallworth was selected in the first round by the New York Knicks, with the third overall pick.
Stallworth"s play for the Knicks in the 1969-1970 season came after he had suffered a heart attack in March 1967, during his second season in the National Basketball Association. He had posted a scoring average of 12.6 points per game the previous season.
Following a period as a coach for a Wichita-based amateur team, Stallworth was told by his doctor that he could return to playing. A back-up on the 1969-1970 Knicks, Stallworth was forced into action in Game 5 of the 1970 National Basketball Association Finals after Willis Reed was injured early. He was assigned to cover Los Angeles Lakers star Wilt Chamberlain, and aided in holding him in check when on defense.
In 1971, Stallworth was traded along with Mike Riordan to the Bullets for Earl Monroe.
He averaged 11.4 points per game and 6.2 rebounds per game in his 64 appearances for the Bullets in 1971-1972, but his statistics declined over the next two seasons and the Bullets traded him to the Phoenix Suns in 1974. Stallworth was released by the Suns without playing for the team, and he returned to the Knicks for the 1974-1975 season, playing in seven games.
After his playing career ended, Stallworth was employed in Wichita, Kansas by Boeing.
He averaged 9.3 points per game in his career and won a league championship with New York in 1970. In a game that the Knicks won after trailing by 16, Stallworth made a reverse layup after driving to the basketball on Chamberlain in the final minutes. The New York Daily News" Wayne Coffey called it "one of the single most dramatic moments of the season.".
He played in the National Basketball Association (National Basketball Association) for eight seasons and was a member of the New York Knicks" 1969-1970 championship-winning team Stallworth played eight seasons (1965–1967. 1969–1975) in the National Basketball Association as a member of the Knicks and Baltimore/Capital Bullets.