By SHAWN MCFARLAND

"He shouldn't be dead. Of anyone, he should be here. Just to see what his legacy has become. He needs to be here to see the Hornets in New Orleans, the success of the Jazz in Utah. He needs to see Steve Nash's hair worn like a tribute, the old footage of his appearances on Red On Roundball, the popularity of his Hawks jersey throughout the ATL during the '03 All-Star Weekend. He needs to see Jason Williams play. He needs to see all the And 1 Mix Tapes. Then again, Pete Maravich is probably seeing all of it. Looking down on us from above. Smiling, saying, 'They finally got it.'"

- Scoop Jackson, SLAM, June 9, 2003, The Greatest NBA Players of All Time.

Jared Holmes, one of my best friends, was the first to introduce me to 'Pistol Pete.' We were in middle school at the time; maybe 12 or 13-years-old. One day we were smacking around plastic golf balls in his back yard with a putter when I noticed something was printed on it. "Pistol Pete."

"Who names their putter 'Pistol Pete?' I joked. "Who even is that?"

He looked at me like I had three heads.

"Tell me you don't know who Pistol Pete is?" he said. "Do you know anything about basketball?"

Looking back now – no, I didn't. I tried to defend myself at the time. I said I was young. How was I supposed to know about somebody that played in the 60s and 70s? Fortunately for Jared, his father used to tell him about the legend of 'Pistol Pete' and how great of a player he was. Where does the putter fit in? Nowhere. Jared's dad used it as a snake hook in the early 1970s. He has no idea why it as 'Pistol Pete' on it. Funny how things work out.

Still, I would bet that today not many 13-year-olds have heard of Pete Maravich. They don't know about the 'Pistol' and how he transcended the game. Well, they need to.

I will start out with the basics for those not as familiar with Maravich. In just three seasons at Louisiana State University (1968-1970), the 'Pistol' tallied 3,667 career points. That's an average 44.2 points-per-game over 83 games. Both are still NCAA Division I records. His three season averages of 44.5 (senior), 44.2 (junior) and 43.8 (sophomore) points-per-game rank No. 1, 2 and 3 all-time respectively.

At the time, NCAA rules prohibited freshman from playing on the varsity level and were forced to participate on either freshman or junior varsity teams. This prevented Maravich's freshman numbers, 741 points (43.6 ppg), from being added to his college totals. Imagine if they were. That would push his total to over 4,400 points. Oscar Robertson (2,973 pts, No. 8) and Elvin Hayes (2,884 points, No. 11) are also Top-25 scorers affected by this rule.

On a side note, here are some other pieces of information that I think are very noteworthy. Maravich's stat-line in his first college game against Southeastern Louisiana University: 50 points, 14 rebounds and 11 assists. He holds the NCAA record for most 50-point games in a season (10 in 1970) and in a career (28). The list goes on as he currently holds at least 14 other NCAA records.

Now to the point of inspiration for this column. I was watching a sports talk show the other night and SNY's Brandon Tierney quoted a piece of information that I found absolutely staggering. Per Les Levine's article from The News-Herald (Ohio) on June 14, 2009…

Former LSU coach Dale Brown watched tape of every college game played by Maravich. Brown calculated that 13 of his made shots per game were from what is now behind the collegiate 3-point line.

Thirteen three-pointers per game. Thirteen. Take a second and think about that…

Why are you still reading? Literally, take a few seconds and think about it.

Crazy, right? The three-point line wasn't instilled until 1986-87, so I am sure this affected a lot of the top scorers. Not as much as Maravich. The extra points would push his career scoring average from 44.2 to a ridiculous 57.2 points-per-game. Players can't even do that in video games.

Maravich did shoot a lot though. He fired up 3,166 shots in his three-year career. That's an astounding 38.1 shots-per-game with a .438 shooting percentage, but I don't think it should be he