Maris Valainis


Maris Valainis is an American construction consultant and a former actor, best known for his role in the 1986 film Hoosiers. He portrayed Jimmy Chitwood, a basketball player who makes a last-second shot to win the 1952 Indiana state high school championship. Bobby Plump accomplished that feat in 1954.
Valainis, a native of Indiana, was invited to an open casting call for Hoosiers after being spotted by the film's casting director playing basketball at an open-gym night. Growing impatient waiting in line with hundreds of other hopefuls, Valainis decided to leave. But then the casting director saw him and asked him to come in and audition. Although Valainis had been cut each of the three times he tried out for his own high school basketball team, he impressed the filmmakers enough that he was invited back the next day to read lines. After several rounds of callbacks, he landed the part of star player Jimmy Chitwood. Of the eight young men cast as team members, Valainis was one of two who had never played high school basketball.
The scene in Hoosiers with Jimmy Chitwood and Coach Norman Dale talking while Jimmy is shooting baskets at an outdoor basket was filmed in one take. Valainis said that he "wasn't even listening to. I was just concentrating on making, and I made one, and they kept going in." In the scene where Jimmy makes the final shot of the state championship game, Valainis was told that whether he made the shot or not, the fans would rush the floor because of the need for a wide shot of the court. Luckily, he made it on the first take.
After shooting Hoosiers, Valainis moved to California to pursue a career in acting. However, he later reflected that after getting the role in Hoosiers so easily, he believes he took acting for granted. He landed a few small roles, one of them being Scott Thorson in the TV biopic Liberace, before turning his attention to golf. Valainis had been an all-state golfer at Bishop Chatard High School in Indianapolis, Indiana, as well as a member of the golf team at Purdue University. After giving up on acting, he began a career in golf course management, including working as a caddie for professional golfers.
As of 2010, Valainis was working as a construction consultant. He was married, with two daughters, and living in Costa Mesa, California. He noted that when in public, he was still frequently recognized for his role in Hoosiers. As of 2017, Valainis was working as a scheduler for a construction firm based out of Indianapolis.