- Mateen Cleaves
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Mateen Cleaves No. 24, 8 Guard Personal information Date of birth September 7, 1977 Place of birth Flint, Michigan Nationality U.S. High school Flint Northern HS
(Flint, Michigan)Listed height 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) Listed weight 205 lb (93 kg) Career information College Michigan State NBA Draft 2000 / Round: 1 / Pick: 14th overall Selected by the Detroit Pistons Pro career 2000–2009 Career history Detroit Pistons (2000–2001)
Sacramento Kings (2001–2003)
Huntsville Flight (NBDL) (2003–2004)
Cleveland Cavaliers (2004)
Seattle SuperSonics (2004–2006)
Fayetteville Patriots (NBDL) (2006)
UNICS Kazan (Russia) (2006–2007)
Bakersfield Jam (NBDL) (2007, 2008–2009)
Panionios (Greece) (2007–2008)Career highlights and awards Bronze medal at the FIBA World Championship (1998)
NCAA Champion (2000)
NCAA Final Four Most Outstanding Player (2000)
2× Big Ten Conference Player of the Year (1998, 1999)
Consensus NCAA All-American First Team (1999)
2× Consensus NCAA All-American Second Team (1998, 2000)
McDonald's All-American (1996)Stats at NBA.com Medal record Competitor for United States Men's basketball FIBA World Championship Bronze 1998 Greece National team Mateen Ahmad Cleaves (born September 7, 1977 in Flint, Michigan) is an American former professional basketball player who played in six NBA seasons. He is currently a music talent manager.[1]
Cleaves is best remembered for his career with the Michigan State University Spartans (MSU).
Contents
College career
He was a heavily recruited high school athlete. His recruiting trip with the Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team touched off a major scandal after he was a passenger in a rollover accident. Cleaves eventually agreed to attend Michigan State University, the University of Michigan's in-state rival.
Cleaves, a three-time Michigan State University captain, led the Spartans to the 2000 national championship, and was named Most Outstanding Player of the Final Four.
The school's only three-time All-American, Cleaves was named Big Ten Player of the Year twice. He led MSU and the conference in career assists with 816, and is Michigan State's all-time steals leader (193). In his final home game on senior night in East Lansing, Cleaves dished out 20 assists, breaking the Big Ten single-game and career assist marks.
On February 3, 2007, Cleaves became the eighth MSU player to have his number retired.
Professional career
In 2000, Cleaves was drafted by the Detroit Pistons with the fourteenth pick. During his rookie season, he played in 78 games, averaging 5.4 points and 2.7 assists.
During his rookie year, Cleaves was ticketed for speeding and driving with a suspended license. Cleaves was cited for driving 85 mph in a 70 mph zone, and a routine check showed his license was suspended. The suspension was dropped once Cleaves paid the fines.[2]
Cleaves was traded to the Sacramento Kings shortly before the 2001–02 season for Jon Barry and a first-round draft pick. After two seasons playing sparingly, he signed as a free agent with the Boston Celtics,[3] but was waived before 2003–04's regular season began. He played with the Cleveland Cavaliers in four games. He was then signed by the Seattle SuperSonics, was cut during 2004–05, and re-signed during the following campaign.
Following his NBA stint, Cleaves appeared for the Fayetteville Patriots and the Bakersfield Jam of the D-League, also playing abroad with Russia's Unics Kazan and Greece's Panionios BC. In 2008, he played with the Denver Nuggets in their pre-season, but was waived before the October 29 tip-off.[4]
Post-playing career
On March 14, 2010, it was announced that Cleaves had joined Fox Sports Detroit as a Detroit Pistons studio analyst.[5] In addition Cleaves has branched out into music as an owner of the record label All Varsity Entertainment, featuring Jon Connor.[1]
See also
- List of NCAA Division I men's basketball players with 20 or more assists in a game
References
- ^ a b Hayes, Patrick (November 21, 2009). "Basketball star Mateen Cleaves gets into the music business, managing Flint hip-hop artist Jon Connor". Flint Journal (Flint, Michigan). http://www.mlive.com/news/flint/index.ssf/2009/11/basketball_star_mateen_cleaves.html. Retrieved June 26, 2010.
- ^ Mateen Cleaves character issues; at ShamSports.com
- ^ Cleaves waiting for the call
- ^ Nuggets waive five players
- ^ FOX Sports Detroit adds Mateen Cleaves
External links
Michigan State Spartans Men's Basketball 1999–2000 NCAA Champions 11 David Thomas | 12 Mateen Cleaves (MOP) | 14 Charlie Bell | 20 Mike Chappell | 23 Jason Richardson | 25 Aloysius Anagonye | 34 Andre Hutson | 42 Morris Peterson | 43 A. J. Granger | 55 Adam Ballinger
Coach Tom Izzo
Assistant Coaches: Stan Heath | Brian Gregory | Mike GarlandNCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament Most Outstanding Player 1939: Hull | 1940: Huffman | 1941: Kotz | 1942: Dallmar | 1943: Sailors | 1944: Ferrin | 1945: Kurland | 1946: Kurland | 1947: Kaftan | 1948: Groza | 1949: Groza | 1950: Dambrot | 1951: Spivey | 1952: Lovellette | 1953: Born | 1954: Gola | 1955: Russell | 1956: Lear | 1957: Chamberlain | 1958: Baylor | 1959: West | 1960: Lucas | 1961: Lucas | 1962: Hogue | 1963: Heyman | 1964: Hazzard | 1965: Bradley | 1966: Chambers | 1967: Alcindor | 1968: Alcindor | 1969: Alcindor | 1970: Wicks | 1971: Porter * | 1972: Walton | 1973: Walton | 1974: Thompson | 1975: Washington | 1976: Benson | 1977: Lee | 1978: Givens | 1979: Johnson | 1980: Griffith | 1981: Thomas | 1982: Worthy | 1983: Olajuwon | 1984: Ewing | 1985: Pinckney | 1986: Ellison | 1987: Smart | 1988: Manning | 1989: Rice | 1990: Hunt | 1991: Laettner | 1992: Hurley | 1993: Williams | 1994: Williamson | 1995: O'Bannon | 1996: Delk | 1997: Simon | 1998: Sheppard | 1999: Hamilton | 2000: Cleaves | 2001: Battier | 2002: Dixon | 2003: Anthony | 2004: Okafor | 2005: May | 2006: Noah | 2007: Brewer | 2008: Chalmers | 2009: Ellington | 2010: Singler | 2011: Walker
*Ruled ineligible after tournament1998 NCAA Men's Basketball Consensus All-Americans First Team
Mike Bibby • Antawn Jamison • Raef LaFrentz • Paul Pierce • Miles SimonSecond Team
Vince Carter • Mateen Cleaves • Pat Garrity • Richard Hamilton • Ansu Sesay1999 NCAA Men's Basketball Consensus All-Americans First Team
Elton Brand • Mateen Cleaves • Richard Hamilton • Andre Miller • Jason TerrySecond Team
Evan Eschmeyer • Steve Francis • Trajan Langdon • Chris Porter • Wally Szczerbiak2000 NCAA Men's Basketball Consensus All-Americans First Team
Chris Carrawell • Marcus Fizer • A. J. Guyton • Kenyon Martin • Chris Mihm • Troy MurphySecond Team
Courtney Alexander • Shane Battier • Mateen Cleaves • Scoonie Penn • Morris Peterson • Stromile SwiftBig Ten Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Year 1985: Tarpley | 1986: Skiles | 1987: Hopson | 1988: Grant | 1989: Edwards & Rice | 1990: Scheffler | 1991: J. Jackson | 1992: J. Jackson | 1993: Cheaney | 1994: Robinson | 1995: Respert | 1996: Evans | 1997: B. Jackson* | 1998: Cleaves | 1999: Cleaves & Penn | 2000: Guyton & Peterson | 2001: Williams | 2002: Jeffries | 2003: Cook | 2004: Harris | 2005: Brown | 2006: Dials | 2007: Tucker | 2008: White | 2009: Lucas | 2010: Turner | 2011: Johnson
*Selection later vacated2000 NBA Draft First round Kenyon Martin · Stromile Swift · Darius Miles · Marcus Fizer · Mike Miller · DerMarr Johnson · Chris Mihm · Jamal Crawford · Joel Przybilla · Keyon Dooling · Jérôme Moïso · Etan Thomas · Courtney Alexander · Mateen Cleaves · Jason Collier · Hedo Türkoğlu · Desmond Mason · Quentin Richardson · Jamaal Magloire · Speedy Claxton · Morris Peterson · Donnell Harvey · DeShawn Stevenson · Dalibor Bagarić · Jake Tsakalidis · Mamadou N'Diaye · Primož Brezec · Erick Barkley · Mark MadsenSecond round Marko Jarić · Dan Langhi · A. J. Guyton · Jake Voskuhl · Khalid El-Amin · Mike Smith · Soumaila Samake · Eddie House · Eduardo Nájera · Lavor Postell · Hanno Möttölä · Chris Carrawell · Olumide Oyedeji · Michael Redd · Brian Cardinal · Jabari Smith · DeeAndre Hulett · Josip Sesar · Mark Karcher · Jason Hart · Kaniel Dickens · Igor Rakočević · Ernest Brown · Dan McClintock · Cory Hightower · Chris Porter · Jaquay Walls · Scoonie Penn · Pete MickealCategories:- 1977 births
- Living people
- People from Flint, Michigan
- African American basketball players
- Point guards
- Basketball players from Michigan
- McDonald's High School All-Americans
- Michigan State Spartans men's basketball players
- Parade High School All-Americans (boys' basketball)
- Detroit Pistons draft picks
- Detroit Pistons players
- Sacramento Kings players
- Cleveland Cavaliers players
- Seattle SuperSonics players
- Panionios B.C. players
- Huntsville Flight players
- Bakersfield Jam players
- Fayetteville Patriots players
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