Chad Kessler (basketball)

Dr. Chad M. Kessler is a former college basketball player for University of Georgia from 1984–1987 and currently an orthopedic surgeon. He is the older brother of the late Alec Kessler (1967–2007) who also played basketball at the University of Georgia in 1987-1990 and in the NBA with Miami Heat (1990–1994) before retiring to pursue a career also as an orthopedic surgeon.

Playing career

Kessler played for the Bulldogs while studying pre-med and received his Bachelor of Science degree but deferred his enrollment into medical school to play professional basketball. He entered the 1986 NBA Draft and was chosen in the fifth round (93rd pick overall) by the Los Angeles Clippers; unfortunately, he failed to make the roster and never got to play in the NBA. Kessler later played in the Pro Am Basketball Leagues[1] for a year before returning to his studies in medicine.

Medical career

Kessler received his medical degree from the Medical College of Georgia in Augusta where he also completed his general surgery internship and orthopedic residency. After finishing his orthopedic training, Kessler pursued his special interest in spine surgery at the Leatherman Spine Fellowship Program at Louisville, Kentucky. Dr. Kessler is currently on staff at the Georgia Bone & Joint in Newnan, Georgia.[2]

Notable Awards

  • GTE Academic All-American in 1987.
  • Special citation from the Georgia Sports Hall of Fame
  • University of Georgia President's Award.
gollark: I would be worried about the networking between the payment terminals and central server, too - if it's not secured properly people could intercept it and/or run attacks on it.
gollark: You *don't* trust the payment terminals, because people can go around editing the code on them to do basically whatever, and they have to read the card and contact the bank server.
gollark: You trust the central server but it can't actually physically be there to handle every transaction somehow.
gollark: You trust the card but it's a blind data storage device which can't compute or do networking.
gollark: It's not a crypto problem. It's a trust problem.

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on February 12, 2010. Retrieved September 26, 2010.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on November 8, 2010. Retrieved September 20, 2010.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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