[1] He broke Ohio's single-season and career collegiate scoring marks, both previously held by Wooster star Nick Frascella.
[4] Chuckovitz played two seasons in the National Basketball League as a member of the Hammond Ciesar All-Americans and the Toledo Jim White Chevrolets.
He received all-league honors with Toledo during the 1941–42 season after leading the NBL with an 18.5 points per game average, which was a new single-season record.
[5] He was also the top scorer at the 1941 World Professional Basketball Tournament held in Chicago, recording a tournament-record 82 points in four games while leading Toledo to a fourth-place finish.
[7][8] This biographical article relating to a United States basketball player, coach, or other figure born in the 1910s is a stub.