Moses
Malone
Moses Eugene
Malone (born March 23, 1955 in Petersburg, Virginia) is an
American former National Basketball Association (NBA) basketball
player who also played in the American Basketball Association
(ABA), as well as on the NBA's Atlanta Hawks, Houston Rockets,
Milwaukee Bucks, Philadelphia 76ers, San Antonio Spurs and
Washington Bullets. Malone played 21 seasons in the NBA.
Before retiring from basketball, he was the last ABA participant
to still be playing in the NBA.
High
school and ABA
Malone graduated from Petersburg High School to the ABA, being hired by the Utah
Stars in 1974, after signing a letter of intent to play at the University of
Maryland. He was the first basketball player to jump straight from high school
into the professional leagues.
In two seasons in the
ABA, Malone averaged 17.2 points and 13.9 rebounds per game. He
played with the Stars and the Spirits of St. Louis.
NBA career
After the ABA was merged with the NBA, Malone became a member of the Buffalo
Braves, having been selected by the Portland Trail Blazers in the ABA dispersal
draft but traded to the Braves after the draft. After a short period of time
there, he was shipped to the Houston Rockets. He caused an immediate impact
in Houston, helping make the franchise a respectable one and reaching the NBA
Finals in 1981, where they lost in six games to Larry Bird and the Boston Celtics.
Malone had been named the NBA's Most Valuable Player two seasons earlier, in
1978-79.
76ers' savior
After averaging 31 points per game in the 1981-82 season, Malone again won
the MVP award. He was, however, traded to the Sixers over the course of the
next summer. In Philadelphia, he teamed up with Julius Erving, Maurice Cheeks,
and Bobby Jones, among others, to win his only NBA championship when the Sixers
swept Magic Johnson and the Los Angeles Lakers during the 1983 NBA Finals.
Said head coach Billy Cunningham, "The difference from last year was Moses" (the
Lakers had beaten the Sixers in the 1982 NBA Finals).
Malone was named
MVP of the 1983 Finals, as well as league MVP for the third time.
Before the 1983 playoffs began, Malone made the famous prediction
characterized by the phrase "fo' fo' fo'"--as in "four,
four, four"--claiming that the Sixers would sweep through
the playoffs in the minimum 12 games. However, the Sixers lost
one game to the Milwaukee Bucks in the Eastern Conference Finals.
Still, the Sixers' 12-1 record in the playoffs is one of the most
dominant playoff run in NBA history (the Lakers went 15-1 in 2001
in the extended four-round playoff format).
Post-championship years
Prior to the 1986-87 season, he was traded to the Bullets, but not before playing
one season with legend in the making Charles Barkley. Once again, Malone helped
his team reach a level of respectability with the Bullets, as they reached
the NBA playoffs during the two seasons that Malone played with them. Malone
then went on to star alongside Dominique Wilkins and Spud Webb on the Mike
Fratello-coached Atlanta Hawks of 1988-89 and 1989-90.
Malone then went
on to the Milwaukee Bucks after the 1990-91 season, remaining there
until the summer of 1993.
Malone then rejoined
the Sixers for a short period of time, participating with Manute
Bol in what would be an injury plagued 1993-94 season. In 1994,
he was sent to the Spurs, where he played the back-up center role
behind superstar David Robinson. 1994-95 was his last season in
the NBA. During the final game of his NBA career in a game against
the Charlotte Hornets, he hit a buzzer-beating three-point shot
from the opposing free throw line, eighty feet away from the goal.
It was only the eighth three-pointer of his career. He played just
17 games for the Spurs, all in November and December 1994.
Malone wore several
different jersey numbers in his career, among them #2 with the
Sixers, Hawks, and Spurs, #4 with the Bullets, #6 with the Bucks,
#13 with the Spirits, #22 with the Stars, and #24 with the Rockets.
Career accomplishments and trivia
Malone helped his high school team to 50 wins in a row, and a number of state
championships.
Malone became
the first player in NBA history to earn five consecutive rebounding
titles in five years after the 1984-1985 season, when he averaged
13 rebounds per game.
During the latter
years of his basketball career, he was also known for wearing thick
glasses during games.
He did not foul
out during his final 1,212 games - the longest streak of games
played without a disqualification.
Moses Malone
played his final NBA game on 27 December 1994 in a Spurs 119-108
win over the Charlotte Hornets 23 games into the 1994-95 season.
He scored 6 points in 7 minutes of action with 1 rebound and 1
assist. He also hit a three-pointer at the halftime buzzer from
beyond midcourt which was the final basket of his long career.
He also sustained an injury during the game.
He is second
only to Karl Malone in overall (NBA & ABA) free throws made,
with a total of 9,018 and to Wilt Chamberlain in overall (NBA & ABA)
free throws attempted, with a total of 11,090.
Malone was named
one of the NBA's 50 greatest players in 1997. In 2001, he was inducted
into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame.
Lifetime statistics
- Games:
1,329
- Points: 27,409
- PPG: 20.6
- RPG: 12.2
- APG: 1.4
- BLK: 1,733
- FG%: .491
- FT%: .769
Moses Malone. (2007, January 3). In Wikipedia, The
Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 05:03, January 12, 2007, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Moses_Malone&oldid=98126445
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