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Dick Boushka

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Nationality
  
American

Listed weight
  
209 lb (95 kg)

Role
  
Basketball Player

Weight
  
95 kg

Positions
  
Basketball positions

Listed height
  
6 ft 5 in (1.96 m)

Name
  
Richard Boushka

Height
  
1.96 m

Education
  
Saint Louis University

Born
  
July 29, 1934 (age 89) Springfield, Illinois (
1934-07-29
)

High school
  
Campion (Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin)

College
  
Saint Louis (1951–1955)

NBA draft
  
1955 / Round: 3 / Pick: 20th overall

SLU Honors Boushka, Ferry, Macauley


Richard James "Dick" Boushka (born July 29, 1934) was an American basketball player who competed in the 1956 Summer Olympics. Born in Springfield, Illinois, Boushka played collegiately at Saint Louis University.

Contents

Dick Boushka thedraftreviewcomhistorydrafted1955imagesdick

In addition to his play on the gold-medal winning 1956 American Olympic team, he was a member of the American team in the 1959 Pan American Games and was a standout player for the Wichita (Kansas) Vickers of the AAU. Boushka eventually became the president of team sponsor Vickers Petroleum.

Boushka was named to the Saint Louis Billikens All Century Team. He was on the team with other Saint Louis greats such as Jordair Jett, Anthony Bonner, and Larry Hughes.

Investments

After parimutuel gambling was legalized in Kansas in 1986, Boushka approached RD Hubbard with the idea of a greyhound track. The Los Angeles Times wrote that they planned on building a "combined horse-dog complex, and now Kansas has a $70-million facility [named The Woodlands], the two tracks sharing a joint parking lot." According to Hubbard, "if we didn't do what we did, the greyhounds and the horses would have wound up competing against one another in the same market. It was a better idea getting the two industries to work together." In Kansas City, they funded the construction and opening of The Woodlands racing park in 1989. Built to serve as both a greyhound track and later as a horse racing track, the venue was the first legal gambling outlet in the area since the 1930s, and in its second year attendance peaked at 1.7 million attendees.

References

Dick Boushka Wikipedia