Jump to content

Darryl Dawkins: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
mNo edit summary
Line 11: Line 11:
| weight_lbs = 251
| weight_lbs = 251
| nationality = American
| nationality = American
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|df=yes|1957|1|11}}
| birth_date = {{birth date|df=yes|1957|1|11}}
| birth_place = [[Orlando, Florida]]
| birth_place = [[Orlando, Florida]]
| death_date = {{Death date and age|2015|8|27|1957|1|11}}
| death_date = {{Death date and age|2015|8|27|1957|1|11}}

Revision as of 18:49, 27 August 2015

Darryl Dawkins
Dawkins in 2009
Personal information
Born(1957-01-11)11 January 1957
Orlando, Florida
DiedAugust 27, 2015(2015-08-27) (aged 58)
NationalityAmerican
Listed height6 ft 11 in (2.11 m)
Listed weight251 lb (114 kg)
Career information
High schoolMaynard Evans (Orlando, Florida)
NBA draft1975: 1st round, 5th overall pick
Selected by the Philadelphia 76ers
Playing career1975–2000
PositionCenter
Number53, 45, 50
Career history
19751982Philadelphia 76ers
19821987New Jersey Nets
1987Utah Jazz
1987–1989Detroit Pistons
1989–1991Auxilium Torino (Italy)
1991–1992Olimpia Philips Milano (Italy)
1992–1994Libertas Forlì (Italy)
1994–1995Harlem Globetrotters
1995–1996Sioux Falls Skyforce (CBA)
1999–2000Winnipeg Cyclone (IBA)
Career NBA statistics
Points8,733 (12.0 ppg)
Rebounds4,432 (6.1 rpg)
Blocks1,023 (1.4 bpg)
Stats Edit this at Wikidata at NBA.com
Stats at Basketball-Reference.com

Darryl Dawkins (January 11, 1957 — August 27, 2015) was an American professional basketball player, most noted for his days with the NBA's Philadelphia 76ers and New Jersey Nets, although he also played briefly for the Detroit Pistons and Utah Jazz late in his career. His nickname, "Chocolate Thunder", was bestowed upon him by Stevie Wonder.[1] He was known for his powerful dunks, which notably led to the NBA adopting breakaway rims due to him shattering the backboard on two occasions in 1979.[2]

Biography

Dawkins averaged double figures in scoring nine times in his 14 years in the NBA, often ranking among the league leaders in field-goal percentage. He also played in the NBA Finals three times as a member of the Philadelphia 76ers in the late 1970s and early 1980s. On the flip side, Dawkins set an NBA record for fouls in a season (386 in 1983–84), and he never quite lived up to the expectations that had been heaped upon him when he was drafted out of high school.

"Many of us will judge him solely on what he could have been," said Dave Wohl, who played against (and coached) Dawkins in Sports Illustrated. "Too many will be blinded by the flashes of brilliance that never materialized into consistent greatness. There were times when he teased us with a hint of how he could dominate a game. And we went home in awe and yet sad because we knew of no spell to make it happen more frequently. But few players could make us feel that way even once."

High school career

At Maynard Evans High School in Orlando, Dawkins was "probably the best high school basketball player ever and one of the best people I ever met," his prep coach, Fred Pennington, told Inside Sports. The team won the state championship in 1975, a year after the ABA's Utah Stars had plucked Moses Malone right out of Petersburg (Virginia) High School.

NBA career

Hoping to follow in Malone's footsteps, the 18-year-old Dawkins renounced his college eligibility and applied for the 1975 NBA draft as a hardship candidate. The Philadelphia 76ers made him the fifth overall pick, behind David Thompson, David Meyers, Marvin Webster, and Alvan Adams. According to the New York Daily News, when Dawkins made his debut with the 76ers, New York Knicks guard Walt Frazier took one look and said, "I bet his teachers called him 'Mr. Darryl.'"

With his size, speed, and touch, Dawkins was expected to take over the league. But he handled the expectations in typical fashion. "When I walked into the league, they wanted me to be Wilt Chamberlain right away—without one minute of college ball," he told The Daily News. "I can't be Wilt Chamberlain. Wilt is much taller than me."

A raw talent who needed time to develop, Dawkins languished on the Sixers' bench for his first two seasons. As a rookie in 1975–76 he played in only 37 games, averaging 2.4 points in 4.5 minutes per game. The next year he played a limited role during the regular season but began to emerge during the playoffs. The Sixers advanced all the way to the NBA Finals that year, and Dawkins was called upon to help battle Portland's Bill Walton. The Trail Blazers won the series in six games, but Dawkins earned respect among the Philadelphia coaching staff with 7.3 points and 5.4 rebounds per contest in the postseason.

In the 1977–78 season Dawkins finally found a regular role, coming off the bench for nearly 25 minutes per game. Now a robust 20 years old, he averaged 11.7 points and 7.9 rebounds and ranked second in the league in field-goal percentage at .575. With a club that included Julius Erving, George McGinnis, Lloyd Free, and Doug Collins, the Sixers made another solid postseason run, advancing to the Eastern Conference Finals before losing to the Washington Bullets in six games.

Prior to the 1978–79 season Philadelphia traded McGinnis to the Denver Nuggets for Bobby Jones and Ralph Simpson. The move was made in part to clear space for Dawkins on the Sixers' front line, which also included 6-foot-11 Caldwell Jones. Over the next three seasons Dawkins and Caldwell Jones split time at the center and power forward positions, and Dawkins had the most productive stretch of his career. In 1979–80 he averaged 14.7 points and a career-high 8.7 rebounds, helping the Sixers back to the NBA Finals, which they lost to the Los Angeles Lakers in six games.

Breaking the backboard

In a game against the Kansas City Kings at Kemper Arena on November 11, 1979, Dawkins threw down such a massive dunk that the backboard shattered, sending the Kings' Bill Robinzine ducking. Three weeks later he did it again, this time at home against the San Antonio Spurs at the Spectrum. A few days after that the NBA ruled that breaking a backboard was an offense that would result in a fine and suspension.

Dawkins named the first backboard-breaking dunk "The Chocolate-Thunder-Flying, Robinzine-Crying, Teeth-Shaking, Glass-Breaking, Rump-Roasting, Bun-Toasting, Wham-Bam, Glass-Breaker-I-Am-Jam."[3]

He named other dunks as well: the Rim Wrecker, the Go-Rilla, the Look Out Below, the In-Your-Face Disgrace, the Cover Your Head, the Yo-Mama, the Spine-Chiller Supreme, and the Greyhound Special (for the rare occasions when he went coast to coast). The 76ers also kept a separate column on the stat sheet for Dawkins’s self-created nicknames: "Sir Slam", "Dr. Dunkenstein", and "Chocolate Thunder."

At one point, Dawkins claimed to be an alien from the planet Lovetron, where he spent the off-season practicing "interplanetary funkmanship" and where his girlfriend Juicy Lucy lived.[4]

Postseason disappointments

In the 1981 season Dawkins produced a .607 field-goal percentage, second in the NBA to Artis Gilmore's .670. Dawkins averaged 14 points and 7.2 rebounds for the year, but Philadelphia failed to return to the Finals. The club met the Boston Celtics in the Eastern Conference Finals and lost in seven games.

The 76ers suffered another postseason disappointment in 1982 when they reached the Finals but lost to the Los Angeles Lakers in six games. Frustrated with the team's inability to handle Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Sixers management began to shake up the center position. First Philadelphia traded Dawkins, who missed nearly half of the 1981–82 season campaign with injuries, to the New Jersey Nets for a first-round draft pick. Then the Sixers sent Caldwell Jones and a first-round pick to the Houston Rockets in exchange for Moses Malone.

Injury-plagued final seasons

At age 25, Dawkins joined a Nets club that included Albert King, Buck Williams, and Otis Birdsong. He had two productive seasons in a Nets uniform, but injuries severely impacted the rest of his career. In the 1982–83 season Dawkins averaged 12.0 points and shot .599 from the floor, ranking third in the league in field-goal percentage behind Gilmore and Steve Johnson. The next season he poured in a career-high 16.8 points per game on .593 field-goal shooting and grabbed 6.7 rebounds per contest. Dawkins also set a dubious NBA record that year when he committed 386 personal fouls for the season.[5] He committed one more personal foul during his career than Michael Jordan, despite playing nearly 350 fewer games.[5]

The 1983–84 campaign was Dawkins's last full season. Injuries limited him to only 39 games in 1984–85. Midway through the 1985–86 season, he slipped in his bathtub and injured his back. At the time, Dawkins was averaging 15.3 points and shooting .644 from the floor, but the injury sidelined him for 31 of the Nets' final 32 games. Dawkins tried to come back over the next three seasons with the Nets, the Utah Jazz, and the Detroit Pistons, but back problems limited him to only 26 games during that time. He attempted a comeback in 1994, attending Denver Nuggets training camp, and again in 1995 with the Boston Celtics. Dawkins also spent several seasons overseas after his NBA career, playing in the Italian league for Torino, Olimpia Milano and Telemarket Forli.

Post-NBA career

Following his NBA career, Dawkins had a brief stint with the Harlem Globetrotters, followed by a season spent with the Sioux Falls Skyforce of the Continental Basketball Association in 1995–1996. During this season, the Skyforce games versus the Florida Beach Dogs were covered by ESPN as Florida featured former NBA center Manute Bol, and ESPN could not resist the novelty of Darryl Dawkins versus Manute Bol. In 2005, along with other former pro basketball players, Dawkins auditioned for an NBA analyst position with ESPN as part of the network's reality series Dream Job.

He was the head coach of the American Basketball Association's Newark Express. He was also the player/coach of the short-lived Winnipeg Cyclone.

He was the head coach of the Allentown, Pennsylvania-based Pennsylvania ValleyDawgs of the United States Basketball League until they folded.

On 20 August 2009, Lehigh Carbon Community College (located in Schnecksville, PA) announced that Dawkins would be the head coach of their men's basketball team for the upcoming 2009–2010 season.

Personal

Dawkins' autobiography Chocolate Thunder: The Uncensored Life and Times of Darryl Dawkins (co-authored with Charley Rosen)[6] chronicles his on- and off-the-court life as an NBA star. In the book, Dawkins chronicles some of the racism he encountered during his NBA career, playing alongside 76ers superstar Julius Erving, and his off-the-court experiences with drugs, partying and women.

In September 1986, Dawkins eloped with Kelly Barnes of Trenton, New Jersey.[7] The following autumn, the two were planning to divorce when she committed suicide on 1 November 1987 at her parents' home in New Jersey; Darryl was in Utah with his team at the time.[7] In 1988, Dawkins married a former Nets cheerleader, Robbin Thornton, but they divorced after 10 years.[8] Dawkins later remarried. He and his wife Janice have three children: Nick, Alexis, and Tabitha, a daughter from Janice's previous marriage[9] who has Down syndrome.[8]

Dawkins appears in NBA Ballers and the NBA 2K video games as a reserve member of the 1980s Legends East Team. In 1999, Saturday Night Live named Dawkins the "Man of the Millennium" in a Weekend Update sketch.[10]

Death

On August 27, 2015, multiple reports stated that Dawkins had died at the age of 58.[11][12][13] However, the reports did not provide a cause of death.

See also

References

  1. ^ "'Chocolate Thunder' name came from Stevie Wonder". Eye on Basketball. CBS Sports. 6 August 2011. Retrieved 3 June 2012.
  2. ^ Broussard, Chris (15 February 2004). "A Game Played Above the Rim, Above All Else". The New York Times.
  3. ^ Darryl Dawkins shatters... on YouTube[dead link]
  4. ^ Karabell, Eric (2008). "66: Center: Wilt Chamberlain". Best Philadelphia Sports Arguments: The 100 Most Controversial, Debatable Questions for Die-Hard Fans. Sourcebooks, Inc. p. 212. ISBN 1402248040. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  5. ^ a b NBA & ABA Single Season Leaders and Records for Personal Fouls at basketball-reference.com
  6. ^ Chocolate Thunder profile at sportclassicbooks.com
  7. ^ a b Heine, Kurt (3 November 1987). "Kelly Dawkins' Death Called Apparent Suicide". Philadelphia Daily News. Retrieved 3 May 2013.
  8. ^ a b Friend, Tom. "Old College Try". Outside The Lines. ESPN.com. Retrieved 3 May 2013.
  9. ^ Hayes, Marcus (25 January 2010). "Darryl Dawkins: To Lehigh Carbon Community College, by way of Planet Lovetron". Schnecksville, Pennsylvania: philly.com. Retrieved 3 May 2013.
  10. ^ Weekend Update transcript, JT.org
  11. ^ http://www.tmz.com/2015/08/27/darryl-dawkins-dies-nba-dunk-legend-dead-at-58/
  12. ^ http://www.lehighvalleylive.com/news/index.ssf/2015/08/darryl_dawkins_dead_at_58_repo.html
  13. ^ http://www.wfmz.com/news/news-regional-lehighvalley/former-nba-star-darryl-dawkins-dead/34950546

Template:Florida Sports Hall of Fame

Template:Persondata