Mike Sylvester: Difference between revisions

 

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Sylvester also played the sport of [[baseball]] in his youth. He was selected in the [[1970 MLB Draft]], by the [[Major League Baseball]] team the [[Chicago Cubs]],<ref>[https://www.baseball-reference.com/register/player.fcgi?id=sylves000mik#:~:text=Draft%3A%20Drafted%20by%20the%20Chicago,HS%20(Cincinnati%2C%20OH). Draft: Drafted by the Chicago Cubs in the 12th round of the 1970 MLB June Amateur Draft from Archbishop Moeller HS (Cincinnati, OH). High School: Archbishop Moeller HS (Cincinnati, OH) Full Name: Mike Sylvester.]</ref> in the 12th round of the draft, with the 282nd overall draft pick.<ref>[Mike Sylvester Mike Sylvester Moeller (OH) HS Drafted in the 12th round (282nd overall) by the Chicago Cubs in 1970.]</ref>

Sylvester also played the sport of [[baseball]] in his youth. He was selected in the [[1970 MLB Draft]], by the [[Major League Baseball]] team the [[Chicago Cubs]],<ref>[https://www.baseball-reference.com/register/player.fcgi?id=sylves000mik#:~:text=Draft%3A%20Drafted%20by%20the%20Chicago,HS%20(Cincinnati%2C%20OH). Draft: Drafted by the Chicago Cubs in the 12th round of the 1970 MLB June Amateur Draft from Archbishop Moeller HS (Cincinnati, OH). High School: Archbishop Moeller HS (Cincinnati, OH) Full Name: Mike Sylvester.]</ref> in the 12th round of the draft, with the 282nd overall draft pick.<ref>[Mike Sylvester Mike Sylvester Moeller (OH) HS Drafted in the 12th round (282nd overall) by the Chicago Cubs in 1970.]</ref>

Sylvester competed in Italian professional Serie A1 baseball in the summer of 1978, when he played with Diavia Bollate. As a [[pitcher]], he played in eleven games, in which he pitched a total of sixty-six innings overall, with a 3.55 [[Earned run average|era]]. At the plate, he made batting appearances in 13 games. In 29 atbats, he recorded a batting average of .269.

Sylvester competed in Italian professional Serie A1 baseball in the summer of 1978, when he played with Diavia Bollate. As a [[pitcher]], in games, a total of innings , with a 3.55 [[ run average]]. At the plate, he made batting appearances in 13 games. In 29 atbats, he recorded a batting average of .269.

==Personal life==

==Personal life==

American basketball player

Michael Joseph “Mike” Sylvester (born December 10, 1951) is an American and Italian former professional baseball player, basketball player, and coach. During his basketball playing career, at a height of 1.97 m (6 ft 5+12 in), he was known as an accurate shooter. Due to the United States boycotting the 1980 Summer Olympics, he was the only American to win a medal at those games, using a dual citizenship to play for the senior Italian national basketball team.

Early life and career

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Sylvester was born December 10, 1951, in Cincinnati, Ohio. He graduated from Moeller High School, where he competed in the sports of baseball and basketball, with All-American honors. After high school he played college basketball at the University of Dayton, with the Dayton Fyers.

Sylvester’s college basketball career highlight with the Dayton Flyers, happened at the 1974 NCAA championship, in a game in which he scored 36 points, in a match where the Flyers forced three overtimes, and nearly upset Bill Walton‘s UCLA Bruins.[1]

Professional basketball career

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Following his college basketball career, Sylvester declared for both the NBA draft and the American Basketball Association draft. He was chosen in the sixth round, with the 105th pick overall, by the Detroit Pistons, in the 1974 NBA draft. He was also chosen with the tenth pick, by the Carolina Cougars, in the ABA draft. After those drafts, Cesare Rubini, the head coach of Italian League team Olimpia Milano, invited him to play for the team in the European-wide 3rd-tier level 1974–75 FIBA Korać Cup competition.

The President of Olimpia Milano at that time, had directed Rubini to seek-out American basketball players of Italian descent, who wished to become naturalized citizens of Italy, and to play for Italy’s senior national team. Sylvester qualified, due to one his grandfathers being an Italian immigrant. Sylvester (known in Italy by the spelling of “Silvester”), ended up signing with Milano. Sylvester was a major part of the Milano team that won the European-wide 2nd-tier level 1975–76 FIBA European Cup Winners’ Cup championship. Milano’s victorious years with Sylvester would end in 1980, as after he had a heated argument with teammate C. J. Kupec, the team’s head coach Dan Peterson, would request that Sylvester leave the team. Sylvester would eventually be transferred to the Italian club VL Pesaro, for a then-Italian basketball league record transfer fee of $500,000 US Dollars.

Sylvester spent six seasons with the Italian club Scavolini Pesaro. He helped lead Pesaro to achieve two Italian League Runner-Up finishes, in the 1981–82 and 1984–85 seasons, the 1982–83 FIBA Saporta Cup title, the 1983–84 FIBA Saporta Cup Semifinals, the 1985 Coppa Italia (Italian Cup) title, and the 1985–86 FIBA Saporta Cup Finals.

Sylvester’s Italian league basketball career, also included playing stints with Basket Rimini and Virtus Bologna.[2][3][4]

National team career

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Sylvester was naturalized as Italian citizen in 1977. Three years later, he would be called on to represent the senior Italy national basketball team, and he had a great performance at the European qualifier that gave the Italians a spot at the 1980 Moscow Summer Olympic Games. However, as soon as Sylvester heard the United States was leading the 1980 Summer Olympics boycott, Sylvester wondered if he needed to adhere, particularly as an Italian player, refusing an Olympic invitation could potentially cause a ban from playing professionally. He contacted the U.S. State Department, who advised Sylvester to play. He still abstained from a vote within the Italian team about the boycott, saying he would follow the squad’s decision – the Italians eventually played, though under the Olympic flag. Despite suffering a sprained ankle during the 1980 Summer Olympics Basketball Tournament, he won a silver medal, after the Italians upset the Soviet Union, before eventually losing in the Olympic final to Yugoslavia. Sylvester was the only American to win a medal at those games.[5][6]

After his playing career ended, Sylvester became a basketball coach. He worked as the head coach of Cincinnati Hills Christian Academy high school.[7]

Sylvester also played the sport of baseball in his youth. He was selected in the 1970 MLB Draft, by the Major League Baseball team the Chicago Cubs,[8] in the 12th round of the draft, with the 282nd overall draft pick.[9]

Sylvester competed in the Italian professional Serie A1 baseball league in the summer of 1978, when he played with Diavia Bollate. As a pitcher, in 11 games played, Sylvester had a total of 66 innings pitched, with a 3.55 earned run average (ERA). At the plate, he made batting appearances in 13 games. In 29 at bats, he recorded a batting average of .269.

Sylvester is a current resident of Loveland, Ohio.[10] The Sylvester family has a sports tradition. Mike’s brothers, Steve and Vince, were American football players, with the former reaching the NFL and playing for the Oakland Raiders, and the latter being a college star at the University of Cincinnati. Mike’s son Matt was also a basketball player, and he played in college for Ohio State, before going to Europe to play professionally like his father.[11][12]

  1. ^ Born to Play – Matt Sylvester’s Roots Planted on the Court
  2. ^ Mike Silvester (in Italian)
  3. ^ Italy Always In the Heart of Mike Sylvester (in Italian)
  4. ^ Sylvester Michael Joseph (in Italian)
  5. ^ Moeller grad was only American to medal in ’80
  6. ^ Sarantakes, Nicholas Evan (2010). Dropping the Torch: Jimmy Carter, the Olympic Boycott, and the Cold War. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 1139788566. p. 133.
  7. ^ Mike Sylvester Biographical information.
  8. ^ Draft: Drafted by the Chicago Cubs in the 12th round of the 1970 MLB June Amateur Draft from Archbishop Moeller HS (Cincinnati, OH). High School: Archbishop Moeller HS (Cincinnati, OH) Full Name: Mike Sylvester.
  9. ^ [Mike Sylvester Mike Sylvester Moeller (OH) HS Drafted in the 12th round (282nd overall) by the Chicago Cubs in 1970.]
  10. ^ Meale, Tony (July 1, 2009). “CHCA lands former pro, Olympian”. The Loveland Herald. The Community Press. Retrieved July 2, 2009. Sylvester, who had dual citizenship in Italy and the United States, also helped the Italian team to a silver medal at the 1980 Olympics in Moscow …. Born in the Elder heartland, the current Loveland resident is eager to begin his tenure at CHCA.
  11. ^ Moeller star upholds family tradition
  12. ^ How One Shot 10 Years Ago Changed Everything for Ohio State Basketball

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