Thursday 5 March 2015

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRICAN AMERICAN " ANTHONY MASON " WAS AN AMERICAN PROFESSIONAL BASKET BALL PLAYER - REST IN PEACE DUDE : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK GENIUS "

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Anthony Mason (basketball)


Anthony Mason
Personal information
BornDecember 14, 1966
MiamiFlorida
DiedFebruary 28, 2015 (aged 48)
ManhattanNew York CityNew York
NationalityAmerican
Listed height6 ft 7 in (2.01 m)
Listed weight250 lb (113 kg)
Career information
High schoolSpringfield Gardens
(Queens, New York)
CollegeTennessee State (1984–1988)
NBA draft1988 / Round: 3 / Pick: 53rd overall
Selected by the Portland Trail Blazers
Pro career1988–2003
PositionForward
Number2, 14, 17
Career history
1988–1989Efes Pilsen
1989–1990New Jersey Nets
1990–1991Tulsa Fast Breakers (CBA)
1990–1991Marinos de Anzoátegui (Venezuela)
1990Denver Nuggets
19911996New York Knicks
19962000Charlotte Hornets
2000–2001Miami Heat
20012003Milwaukee Bucks
Career highlights and awards
Career NBA statistics
Points9,656
Rebounds7,279
Assists2,963
Stats at Basketball-Reference.com
Anthony George Douglas Mason (December 14, 1966 – February 28, 2015) was an American professional basketballplayer. In his 13-year career he played with the New Jersey NetsDenver NuggetsNew York KnicksCharlotte Hornets,Milwaukee Bucks and Miami Heat of the National Basketball Association. He averaged 10.8 points and 8.3 rebounds in his 13-year NBA career. During the prime of his career in the mid-1990s, he earned the NBA Sixth Man of the Year Award in 1995 and then led the NBA in minutes played in the subsequent two seasons. In 1997, he earned All-NBA (3rd team) andNBA All-Defensive Team (2nd team). He was selected to the 2001 NBA All-Star Game.
Mason played collegiately for Tennessee State University and played professionally in TurkeyVenezuela, the Continental Basketball Association (CBA) and the United States Basketball League (USBL).

Basketball career

Mason attended Tennessee State University and was drafted by the Portland Trail Blazers in the third round of the 1988 NBA Draft (53rd pick), but was cut shortly afterwards. He then played for the Efes Pilsen basketball club in TurkeyMarinos de Oriente in Venezuela, and teams in the CBA and the USBL for about a year. He had brief stints with the New Jersey Nets, where he averaged 1.8 points, and the Denver Nuggets, where he played only 3 games. Mason then signed with the New York Knicks in the summer of 1991. In the 1990–91 season, Mason played 26 games for the CBA's Tulsa Fast Breakers, with whom he averaged 29.9 points and 14.8 rebounds per game in his only season in the league.[1]
Under coach Pat Riley, Mason blossomed in New York, where he made up a strong front court alongside Patrick Ewing,Charles Oakley and Charles Smith. In 1994, the Knicks reached the NBA Finals for the first time since 1973 but lost in seven games to the Hakeem Olajuwon-led Houston Rockets. Mason was traded in 1996 to the Charlotte Hornets with Brad Lohausfor Larry Johnson. In 2000, he was sent to the Miami Heat with Eddie JonesRicky Davis and Dale Ellis for Jamal Mashburn,P.J. BrownTim JamesRodney Buford and Otis Thorpe, and finished his career with the Milwaukee Bucks. He retired in 2003, and fixed residence in Memphis, Tennessee.
Mason won the NBA Sixth Man of the Year award in 1995. He was named to the 1996-'97 All-NBA Third Team and to the NBA All-Defensive Second Team. He led the league in minutes played in 1995-'96 (3,457), also setting a Knicks record with the number. He also led the league in minutes played per game in 1996-97 (43.1).
His first season with the Hornets was the best in his NBA career. He recorded career-highs in minutes played (43.1), points (16.2), rebounds (11.4) and assists (5.7) and also 4 triple-doubles (the first in his career). He missed the entire 1998-'99 season due to a ruptured biceps injury [1], then averaged 11.6 points and 8.5 rebounds the following one.
In Miami, although Mason had been brought over by Miami coach Pat Riley to be a role player on a contender Heat team, the kidney ailment of Alonzo Mourning forced Mourning to sit out and made Mason a primary contributor for the team. Mason would respond by finishing second on the team in scoring with 16.1 points per game and would also average 9.6 rebounds. With Mourning and Grant Hill selected but unable to play due to injury in the 2001 NBA All Star Game, Mason was chosen to represent the Heat in his first and only selection to an All-Star team. Mason helped the Heat make the playoffs with a surprising 50 win season for the injury ravaged Heat. Mason however virtually disappeared in the playoffs, taking only 13 shots and averaging a mere 5.3 points and 3 rebounds in three games. Mason was not re-signed and was waived during the offseason.
He signed with the Milwaukee Bucks for the 2001-02 season. In Mason's first season with the Bucks, the team stumbled to a 41-41 record (11 games worse than the previous season) and missed the playoffs altogether. Mason's numbers went down as well: 9.6 ppg, 7.9 rpg. Nonetheless Milwaukee stuck with Mason for another year, waiving him after the 2002-2003 season.

Personal life

Mason's son, Anthony Mason Jr., played on the St. John's University Red Storm basketball team.[2] He completed his eligibility for the 2009-10 St. John's Red Storm, and he went on to try out with the Miami Heat,[3] before playing for teams such as the Sioux Falls Skyforce and Cholet Basket.[4][5] His other son, Antoine, plays basketball at Auburn Universityafter transferring there from Niagara University,[6] where he led the 2012–13 Niagara Purple Eagles in scoring as a redshirt sophomore.[7][8] Antoine was also the second leading scorer in the NCAA as a redshirt junior (only behind Creighton's Doug McDermott).

Death

Mason suffered a massive heart attack in early February 2015[9] and was diagnosed with congestive heart failure. He later succumbed to the condition, dying on February 28, 2015 in Manhattan at the age of 48.[10][11]

TV/film/music appearances

In the TV series New York Undercover, Mason appeared in two different episodes, playing himself in one. He also plays a pickup player in the 1996 film Eddie, and himself inWoody Allen's Celebrity.
In addition, Mason appears in the Diamond D rap video "Best Kept Secret," dunking his way through the video on a New York City playground basketball court.[12]
The Beastie Boys song "B-Boys Makin' With The Freak Freak" from 1994's "Ill Communication" LP mentions him with the lyric "I got my hair cut correct like Anthony Mason" - the Beasties being NY Knicks fans.[13]
He also appeared in the Beastie Boys music video "Root Down".

Career statistics

Regular season

YearTeamGPGSMPGFG%3P%FT%RPGAPGSPGBPGPPG
1989–90New Jersey2105.1.350.000.6001.60.30.10.11.8
1990–91Denver307.0.500.000.7501.70.00.30.03.3
1991–92New York82026.8.509.000.6427.01.30.60.37.0
1992–93New York81030.6.502.000.6827.92.10.50.210.3
1993–94New York731226.1.476.000.7205.82.10.40.17.2
1994–95New York771132.4.566.000.6418.43.10.90.39.9
1995–96New York828242.2.563.000.7209.34.40.80.414.6
1996–97Charlotte737343.1.525.333.74511.45.71.00.516.2
1997–98Charlotte818038.9.509.000.64910.24.20.80.212.8
1999–00Charlotte828138.2.480.000.7468.54.50.90.411.6
2000–01Miami808040.7.482.000.7819.63.11.00.316.1
2001–02Milwaukee828238.3.5051.000.6977.94.20.70.39.6
2002–03Milwaukee655832.6.486.000.7186.43.20.50.27.2
Career88255934.7.509.167.7098.33.40.70.310.9
All-Star1020.0.000.000.0004.01.01.00.00.0

Playoffs


YearTeamGPGSMPGFG%3P%FT%RPGAPGSPGBPGPPG
1991–92New York12024.0.442.000.7866.30.80.20.75.0
1992–93New York15034.0.590.000.6327.32.70.70.412.5
1993–94New York25026.4.489.000.7145.81.80.60.27.6
1994–95New York11032.0.608.000.6236.22.20.50.59.5
1995–96New York8843.8.526.000.6797.83.30.50.112.6
1996–97Charlotte3343.7.421.000.53812.03.00.30.313.0
1997–98Charlotte9940.8.576.000.5957.93.40.90.015.4
1999–00Charlotte4444.8.474.000.7009.85.51.00.512.5
2000–01Miami3332.7.385.0001.0003.01.30.30.05.3
2002–03Milwaukee6026.2.412.000.6923.30.20.50.23.8
Career962732.2.524.000.6686.62.20.60.39.5

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