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American basketball role player

JaVale McGee
JaVale McGee 2018 (cropped).jpg

McGee in 2018

No. 00 – Dallas Mavericks
Position Heart
League NBA
Personal data
Born (1988-01-nineteen) Jan nineteen, 1988 (age 35)
Flint, Michigan, U.Due south.
Listed superlative 7 ft 0 in (2.xiii yard)
Listed weight 270 lb (122 kg)
Career information
High school
  • Detroit Country Day
    (Beverly Hills, Michigan)
  • Providence Christian
    (Fremont, Michigan)
  • Hales Franciscan
    (Chicago, Illinois)
College Nevada (2006–2008)
NBA draft 2008 / Circular: 1 / Pick: 18th overall
Selected by the Washington Wizards
Playing career 2008–present
Career history
2008–2012 Washington Wizards
2012–2015 Denver Nuggets
2015 Philadelphia 76ers
2015–2016 Dallas Mavericks
2016–2018 Aureate State Warriors
2018–2020 Los Angeles Lakers
2020–2021 Cleveland Cavaliers
2021 Denver Nuggets
2021–2022 Phoenix Suns
2022–present Dallas Mavericks
Career highlights and awards
  • 3× NBA champion (2017, 2018, 2020)
StatsEdit this at Wikidata at NBA.com
StatsEdit this at Wikidata at Basketball-Reference.com

Medals

Men'southward basketball game
Representing the Us
Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place 2020 Tokyo Team

JaVale Lindy McGee (born Jan xix, 1988) is an American professional person basketball histrion who plays for the Dallas Mavericks of the National Basketball Association (NBA). He played college basketball for the Nevada Wolf Pack. He was selected 18th overall past the Washington Wizards in the 2008 NBA draft. He is a three-time NBA champion, having won consecutive titles with the Gilded Land Warriors in 2017 and 2018 before winning a tertiary championship with the Los Angeles Lakers in 2020. The son of Olympic gilded medalist Pamela McGee, he won a gold medal with the 2020 U.S. Olympic team.

Loftier school and college career

McGee was built-in in Flint, Michigan, and attended two high schools in Michigan, Detroit Country Day School and Providence Christian, before transferring to Hales Franciscan High School in Chicago.[1] Co-ordinate to Hales Franciscan coach Gary London, McGee's natural position in college was ideally small forward, and he could play both forward spots.[i] McGee was the starting center for the University of Nevada. Subsequently his sophomore entrada, in which he averaged 14.three points and 7.3 rebounds, shooting 53% from the field and 33% from iii-betoken range, McGee decided to hire an agent and declare for the 2008 NBA draft.[ii]

Professional career

Washington Wizards (2008–2012)

McGee was selected 18th overall by the Wizards in the 2008 NBA draft. On July 9, 2008, he signed a two-twelvemonth, $2.iv million bargain with the Wizards.[three]

McGee with the Wizards in November 2010

On January ix, 2010, McGee was fined $10,000 by the Wizards for participating in Gilbert Arenas' antics before a game on January 5, 2010, confronting the Philadelphia 76ers. Arenas was being investigated for a prior incident involving guns in the Wizards' locker room, but made light of the accusations by pointing his finger at his teammates, as if he were shooting them. His teammates were photographed smile and laughing with him.[4]

On January half dozen, 2011, McGee was chosen to participate in the 2011 NBA Slam Dunk Contest.[5] McGee was the first Sorcerer to ever participate in the competition. He finished in second place, losing to Blake Griffin. McGee was the first player to use three balls at 1 time in a dunk contest, which was later on cited by the Guinness World Records as the most basketballs dunked in a single jump. The 3rd ball was passed to him from teammate John Wall.

On March xv, 2011, in a 98–79 loss confronting the Chicago Bulls, McGee notched his get-go career triple-double, recording 11 points, 12 rebounds, and 12 blocks. His career-high 12 blocks was the nigh since Keon Clark had 12 on March 23, 2001.[6] Nevertheless, he received some criticism for taking ill-advised shots in the fourth quarter to ensure he reached 10 points while his team was beingness blown out, and even received a technical foul for excessive celebration by pulling himself on the rim after a dunk for his last points. Television receiver commentator Kevin McHale chosen it a "bad triple-double".[7] In response to the criticism, McGee said, "I got a triple-double. Who can say they got a triple-double? I'thousand not really worried about information technology."[8]

During the 2011 NBA lockout, NBPA leaders met with effectually 30 players on October 14 and stressed unity. McGee left the coming together early on and told reporters there were some players "proverb that they're prepare to fold", but the majority was united.[nine] McGee afterward denied mentioning that players were ready to fold, just his comment was recorded past reporters.[ten] Derek Fisher said McGee had "no ability to make that statement" based on the express time he spent at the coming together.[nine]

McGee averaged over 10 points and viii rebounds in 2010–11 and 2011–12 with the Wizards.[11]

Denver Nuggets (2012–2015)

On March xv, 2012, McGee was traded to the Nuggets along with Ronny Turiaf in a deal that sent Nenê to the Wizards.[12] As a member of the Wizards, he started 40 of 41 games in which he appeared; with the Nuggets, he would starting time in 5 of twenty games in which he appeared. His minutes would also be reduced, averaging 27.four with Washington only 20.6 with Denver.[13] On March 21, in his Nuggets debut, McGee made the game-winning dunk off an Arron Afflalo missed gratuitous throw with 5 seconds left on the clock. At the end of the regular season, the Nuggets earned the West's 6th seed, and McGee appeared in the 2012 NBA Playoffs, which was his kickoff playoff appearance in his career. McGee'southward serial-high was 21 points in Game 5 confronting first-round opponent Los Angeles Lakers.[14] McGee'due south numbers were up and down throughout the series, including Game 7, when he scored merely 6 points on one–7 shooting in 32 minutes of floor time.[xv] On July 18, 2012, McGee re-signed with the Nuggets on a four-year, $44 one thousand thousand contract.[16]

McGee's 2013–14 flavor was ended on February twenty, 2014, when he underwent surgery to repair a stress fracture in his left tibia in which he sustained on November 8, 2013.[17]

On October 29, 2014, McGee made his return for the Nuggets, recording 2 points and 2 rebounds in the season opening 89–79 win over the Detroit Pistons.[18]

Philadelphia 76ers (2015)

On February 19, 2015, McGee was traded, forth with the rights to Chukwudiebere Maduabum and a 2015 first-circular pick, to the Philadelphia 76ers in exchange for the rights to Cenk Akyol.[nineteen] On March 1, 2015, he was waived by the 76ers after appearing in half-dozen games.[20]

Dallas Mavericks (2015–2016)

On August 13, 2015, McGee signed with the Dallas Mavericks.[21] He missed the squad's first 13 games of the 2015–xvi season due to a stress fracture in his left tibia. On November 22, 2015, he fabricated his debut for the Mavericks, playing in only under 11 minutes off the bench, recording 8 points and six rebounds in a loss to the Oklahoma Metropolis Thunder.[22] On January 5, 2016, he recorded season highs of 13 points and 11 rebounds in a 117–116 double overtime win over the Sacramento Kings.[23]

On July 8, 2016, McGee was waived by the Mavericks.[24]

Gilt State Warriors (2016–2018)

On September 16, 2016, McGee signed with the Golden State Warriors.[25] [26] On Dec 15, 2016, he scored a season-loftier 17 points in a 103–xc win over the New York Knicks.[27] On March 31, 2017, he had xiii points and a season-all-time five blocked shots in a 107–98 win over the Houston Rockets.[28] The Warriors went on to win the 2017 NBA Championship after defeating the Cleveland Cavaliers iv–1 in the NBA Finals. He played in 77 of 82 regular season games, with a field goal percentage of .652, and xvi of 17 playoff games, with a percentage of .732, both the all-time in his career.

On August i, 2017, McGee re-signed with the Warriors on a one-year contract.[29] [xxx] His playing time increased when he was inserted into the starting lineup subsequently the all-star break.[31] In June 2018, he won his second directly championship after the Warriors defeated the Cavaliers in a four-game sweep in the Finals. He started the final three games of the series, and averaged eight.0 points in the four games.[32]

Los Angeles Lakers (2018–2020)

On July 10, 2018, McGee signed with the Los Angeles Lakers.[33] He missed seven games in December due to a respiratory infection.[34] On March 22, 2019, he had career highs of 33 points and twenty rebounds along with six blocked shots in a 111–106 loss to the Brooklyn Nets.[35]

During the 2019–20 flavour, McGee played in 68 games and averaged 6.6 points and 5.7 rebounds in 16.half-dozen minutes per game. He earned his tertiary NBA championship with the Lakers in 2020.[36]

Cleveland Cavaliers (2020–2021)

On November 23, 2020, McGee was traded from the Los Angeles Lakers to the Cleveland Cavaliers in exchange for Alfonzo McKinnie and Hashemite kingdom of jordan Bell.[37] On Dec 23, he made his competitive debut for the team in a 121–114 win against Charlotte Hornets and recorded thirteen points and 7 rebounds off the bench.[38]

Return to Denver (2021)

On March 25, 2021, McGee was traded to the Denver Nuggets in exchange for centre Isaiah Hartenstein and two hereafter 2nd-round picks.[39]

Phoenix Suns (2021–2022)

On Baronial sixteen, 2021, McGee signed with the Phoenix Suns.[40]

Return to Dallas (2022–present)

On July 9, 2022, McGee signed with the Dallas Mavericks.[41]

Career statistics

Legend
  GP Games played   GS Games started  MPG Minutes per game
 FG% Field goal percentage  3P% 3-indicate field goal percentage  FT% Free throw per centum
 RPG Rebounds per game  APG Assists per game  SPG Steals per game
 BPG Blocks per game  PPG Points per game Bold Career loftier
 † Won an NBA title  * Led the league

NBA

Regular season

Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
2008–09 Washington 75 14 15.2 .494 .660 iii.9 .3 .4 1.0 vi.5
2009–10 Washington 60 19 xvi.1 .508 .000 .638 iv.0 .2 .iii 1.seven 6.iv
2010–11 Washington 79 75 27.viii .550 .000 .583 8.0 .v .5 ii.4 x.ane
2011–12 Washington 41 40 27.iv .535 .500 viii.8 .6 .half dozen two.v 11.9
2011–12 Denver twenty five 20.6 .612 .373 v.eight .3 .5 1.6 x.3
2012–thirteen Denver 79 0 eighteen.1 .575 1.000 .591 4.viii .iii .iv 2.0 9.1
2013–fourteen Denver v 5 xv.8 .447 i.000 3.4 .4 .2 1.4 vii.0
2014–15 Denver 17 0 11.5 .557 .690 2.viii .i .i one.1 5.2
2014–15 Philadelphia 6 0 ten.two .444 .500 2.2 .3 .0 .ii iii.0
2015–16 Dallas 34 2 x.9 .575 .000 .500 3.9 .i .1 .viii 5.1
2016–17dagger Gilded State 77 10 9.six .652 .000 .505 3.ii .2 .two .9 6.1
2017–18dagger Golden Land 65 17 nine.5 .621 .000 .731 two.6 .five .3 .9 4.8
2018–19 L.A. Lakers 75 62 22.3 .624 .083 .634 vii.5 .7 .half-dozen 2.0 12.0
2019–20dagger Fifty.A. Lakers 68 68 16.vi .637 .500 .646 5.vii .5 .5 1.4 half-dozen.6
2020–21 Cleveland 33 1 15.2 .521 .250 .655 five.two i.0 .5 one.ii 8.0
2020–21 Denver xiii 1 thirteen.5 .478 .000 .667 5.iii .5 .two 1.1 5.5
2021–22 Phoenix 74 17 15.8 .629 .222 .699 6.7 .six .3 1.one nine.2
2022–23 Dallas 42 7 viii.v .640 .400 .585 2.five .3 .1 .6 4.4
Career 863 343 16.half-dozen .578 .197 .604 five.2 .4 .4 i.four vii.viii

Playoffs

Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
2012 Denver vii 0 25.9 .434 .538 9.6 .7 .7 three.i 8.half-dozen
2013 Denver six 2 18.7 .581 .389 5.2 .0 .7 ane.0 7.2
2016 Dallas two 0 vii.0 .500 .333 ane.5 .0 .5 .0 2.0
2017dagger Golden State 16 1 9.3 .732* .722 iii.0 .3 .1 .9 5.9
2018dagger Gilt State 13 9 12.2 .672 .000 .684 iii.2 .3 .2 i.3 vi.5
2020dagger 50.A. Lakers 14 xi 9.six .625 .000 .500 3.1 .5 .1 .7 ii.9
2021 Denver 4 0 8.v .300 .000 .333 three.0 .8 .3 1.3 2.0
2022 Phoenix 12 0 11.1 .700 .000 .846 4.0 .6 .3 .four 6.viii
Career 74 23 12.iv .616 .000 .571 4.0 .four .3 one.0 5.6

College

Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
2006–07 Nevada 33 0 10.0 .600 .667 .471 2.ii .one .2 .9 3.three
2007–08 Nevada 33 31 27.three .529 .333 .525 seven.3 .half dozen .viii 2.8 14.i
Career 66 31 xviii.7 .542 .356 .514 4.eight .three .5 1.8 8.vii

National team career

McGee during an exhibition match in 2009

McGee received an invite to the U.S. national team's mini camp in the summer of 2009 and again in the summertime of 2010.[42] McGee played with Team Us in a scrimmage at Radio City Music Hall during the 2010 World Basketball Festival[43] merely subsequently an uneven performance he did not play in the team'south scrimmage against Prc at Madison Square Garden and was cut on August fifteen, 2010.[44]

McGee visited the Philippines twice during the 2011 NBA lockout, showtime in exhibition games with NBA stars confronting players from the Philippine Basketball Association and the Smart Gilas national team, and then in a basketball clinic. Later that year, he expressed his involvement in playing for the Philippine national squad,[45] and in 2012, a bill was filed for his Filipino citizenship to make him eligible to play for Smart Gilas.[46] In 2014, McGee was asked again by the Gilas Pilipinas to take part as a naturalized thespian for the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup in Spain.[47] However, national teams were limited to i naturalized player apiece, and former Wizards teammate Andray Blatche made the World Cup team after he was granted citizenship.[48] [49]

McGee and frontwards Keldon Johnson of the San Antonio Spurs were announced as replacements for Bradley Beal and Kevin Dear on the 2020 U.S. Olympic team.[50] On August 7, 2021, he won an Olympic gold medal after United states of america defeated French republic in the last. With the medal, he and his female parent, Pamela McGee, became the first mother and son to win aureate medals in Olympic history.[51]

Philanthropy

In 2013, McGee started Juglife Foundation, an organization that brings sensation of drinking water and hydration. He has hosted celebrity softball games involving his NBA colleagues.[52] Juglife has partnered with Hope iv Kids International in building wells in Republic of uganda.[53]

Personal life

McGee's father, vi-foot-10-inch (2.08 chiliad) George Montgomery, was a 1985 draft 2nd-round selection past the Portland Trail Blazers, though he did not play for the squad.[1] His female parent, 6-human foot-iii-inch (1.91 m) Pamela McGee, was a University of Southern California standout, playing with her twin sis, Paula, with them, joined by Cheryl Miller, winning 2 NCAA Division One championships, in 1983 and 1984.[54] That had followed two Michigan state championships at Northern Flint Loftier School. She won an Olympic gold medal in 1984. Too playing in French republic, Italian republic and Brazil, she was drafted in the 1997 WNBA draft by the Sacramento Monarchs. She starred for the Los Angeles Sparks and Sacramento Monarchs.[3] McGee is the first son of a WNBA histrion to always play in the NBA.[55] His younger half-sister, Imani McGee-Stafford, is also a professional basketball player who previously played in the WNBA for both the Chicago Sky and the Atlanta Dream.[56] His mother, with a degree in economics, counterbalanced her international basketball career with raising both children, homeschooling, coaching and teaching school in the offseason, though the formidable tasks were not without controversy.[57] [58] McGee is as well cousins with old NFL defensive end Jarron Gilbert.[59]

In 2013, it was announced that McGee would be starring in his own reality idiot box show, Mom's Got Game, with his female parent.[60] McGee had the largest documented armspan of whatsoever electric current NBA player at 7 ft 6.5 in (2.30 m)[61] until the Nuggets drafted Rudy Gobert, with an armspan at seven ft viii.5 in (2.35 m) in the 2013 NBA typhoon. McGee has been featured regularly on Inside the NBA'southward basketball blooper characteristic "Shaqtin' a Fool", earning the nickname "Tragic Bronson", a play on Magic Johnson, from Shaquille O'Neal.[62] [63] McGee has expressed displeasure at his frequent appearance on the segment.[64] McGee became a total-fourth dimension vegan in the summertime of 2017. He had dabbled with the diet for a few years, using it before each season to lose weight. He committed to it full-time later seeing how his body responded during the Warriors' championship season in 2016–17.[65]

McGee is besides a record producer under the moniker Pierre. He has a studio in Inglewood and released his self-titled debut album in 2018.[66] In 2020, he co-produced "Bachelor" with Poo Bear and Sasha Sirota on Justin Bieber'southward record, Changes.

See too

  • Listing of National Basketball Association unmarried-game blocks leaders

References

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  2. ^ "'Large Secret' out at Nevada; McGee declares for typhoon". April 2008.
  3. ^ a b "Nevada C McGee signs rookie deal with Wizards". ESPN. July 9, 2008.
  4. ^ "Wizards fine 4 players involved in Arenas' antics". ESPN. January ix, 2010.
  5. ^ "Griffin, Ibaka, Jennings and McGee set for Sprite Slam Douse". National Basketball Clan. Archived from the original on January 9, 2011. Retrieved April five, 2014.
  6. ^ "Despite JaVale McGee'southward triple-double, Bulls all-time Wizards to gain control of first in Eastward". ESPN. March 15, 2011. Retrieved March 18, 2011.
  7. ^ Hoffman, Benjamin (March 19, 2011). "JaVale McGee'south Unusual Triple-Double". Off the Distill . Retrieved August 7, 2017.
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  9. ^ a b Adande, J.A.; McMenamin, Dave (October sixteen, 2011). "NBPA stresses unity in actor meeting". ESPN. Archived from the original on October 16, 2011.
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  13. ^ "JaVale McGee". Basketball-reference.com . Retrieved May 17, 2012.
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  40. ^ "SUNS SIGN JAVALE MCGEE". National Basketball Association. August 16, 2021.
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  51. ^ Ashton Edmunds (Baronial 7, 2021). "Pamela and JaVale McGee become the first mother-son gold-medal duo in Olympics history". ESPN. Retrieved August vii, 2021.
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  53. ^ "JUGLIFE: How JaVale McGee Is Saving Lives Through His Foundation". SLAM. Nov 19, 2018. Retrieved November 29, 2019.
  54. ^ PAM AND PAULA McGEE: DOUBLE FIGURES, Los Angeles Times, Mike DiGiovanna, April 20, 1985. Retrieved June 25, 2017.
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  56. ^ "Imani Boyette Follows in Mother'due south Footsteps, Finds Perfect Fit in Chicago – WNBA.com – Official Site of the WNBA".
  57. ^ Wnba'southward Mcgee, Daughter Deserve Better, Chicago Tribune, Melissa Isaacson, October 11, 1998. Retrieved June 25, 2017.
  58. ^ Like Female parent, Like Son, The Ringer, Katie Baker, June 7, 2017. Retrieved June 25, 2017.
  59. ^ Maloney, Jack (Baronial five, 2016). "Rookie Written report: Detest It Or Dearest It, Imani Boyette's On Top". wnba.com . Retrieved May 5, 2019. Between her mother, her male parent (Kevin Stafford, who played overseas) her brother (JaVale McGee, who plays in the NBA), her cousin (Jarron Gilbert, who played in the NFL)...
  60. ^ Highkin, Sean (December 23, 2013). "JaVale McGee is starring in a reality show with his mom". U.s. Today Sports . Retrieved August 11, 2021.
  61. ^ ESPN Actor (February eighteen, 2012). "Sport Science: JaVale McGee" – via YouTube.
  62. ^ "Shaqtin A Fool " NBA.com – Hang Time Blog". National Basketball Association. Archived from the original on May 28, 2014. Retrieved March 13, 2013.
  63. ^ jslv94 (April 25, 2012). "Shaqtin' A Fool – The Best of the Worst of JaVale McGee" – via YouTube.
  64. ^ "Wait, what did JaVale McGee say about Shaquille O'Neal?". USA Today.
  65. ^ Cason, Christopher (February 27, 2018). "The Real-Life Diet of JaVale McGee, Vegan". GQ . Retrieved March 4, 2018.
  66. ^ Sepkowitz, Leo. "JaVale McGee Releases New Vocal and Talks Well-nigh His Music and the New Lakers". Bleacher Report . Retrieved February 23, 2020.

External links

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JaVale_McGee

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