Education
Lincoln High School.
Lincoln High School.
He played in college for Oregon State University, and at 7 ft 3 in (221 m), was at the time the tallest player to ever play college and professional basketball. Swede Halbrook played high school basketball at Lincoln High School in Portland where he also starred in track as a high jumper and hurdler. In one tournament game he scored 50 points and had 34 rebounds.
When Halbrook joined the Oregon State Beavers, Life magazine declared him the "World"s Tallest Basketball Player" in their January
18, 1954 issue. Under legendary head coach Slats Gill, he instantly turned the team into a national title contender, earning All-American status in 1955 and All-Pacific Coast Conference first team and All-Northern Division first team honors in 1954 and 1955, the only two seasons he played. As of 2006, he still holds the top 3 spots on Oregon State"s single game rebound records, his top performance of 36 being tied for 15th in National Collegiate Athletic Association history.
He also holds the Oregon State record for free throws attempted at 28. Halbrook signed with the Wichita Vickers in 1956, where he played five seasons and led the team to the national Amateur Athletic Union title in 1959.
The next year he was selected to play for the Syracuse Nationals.
He played in 79 games for them in the 1960-1961 season, with his team making it to the National Basketball Association playoffs and finishing the season in third place. Halbrook was a key presence in many of the Nationals" victories, including a 3-game series sweep over Wilt Chamberlain and the Philadelphia Warriors. The following season he played in 64 games for the Nationals, that season marking the end of his professional career.
He remained the tallest player in National Basketball Association history until the 1982 draft brought Mark Eaton and Chuck Nevitt into the league.
Office-court issues cut short both Halbrook"s college and professional careers. He would reportedly go missing for days, sometimes weeks at a time without explanation.
Oregon State coach Gill was forced to cut him from the team after only two seasons for skipping class so often. Nationals coach Hannum is quoted to have said that "He could have had a worthwhile career if he had taken care of himself.
During his second season, he disappeared for a week and we sent the police out to look for him.
But they couldn’t find a 7-footer! He came back on his own but he never would tell me where he had been."
Swede moved to Portland, Oregon after being released from the Nationals and worked at a variety of odd jobs for the remainder of his life. He died of a heart attack on April 5, 1988 on a Portland city business