- John Stockton
Infobox NBAretired
name=John Stockton
width=200
caption=
position=Point guard
height_ft = 6 | height_in = 1
weight_lbs = 175
number=12
birthdate=birth date and age|mf=yes|1962|3|26Spokane, Washington
debutyear=1984
finalyear=2003
draftyear=1984
draftround=1
draftpick=16
college=Gonzaga
teams=
*Utah Jazz (1984-2003)
stat1label=Points
stat1value=19,711
stat2label=Assists
stat2value=15,806
stat3label=Steals
stat3value=3,265
bbr=stockjo01
letter=s
highlights=
* 10x NBA All-Star (1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2000)
*NBA's 50th Anniversary All-Time Team
* 2xAll-NBA First Team selection
* 6xAll-NBA Second Team selection
* 3xAll-NBA Third Team selection
* 5xNBA All-Defensive Second Team selection
* 2x Bausch and Lomb Court Vision Award winner
* 2xAllstate Good Hands Award winnerJohn Houston Stockton (born March 26, 1962) is a retired American professional
basketball player (NBA ) who spent his entire career (1984–2003) as apoint guard for theUtah Jazz of the NBA. Stockton is regarded as one of the best point guards of all time, holding the NBA records for most career assists and steals by considerable margins.Early years
Stockton was born in
Spokane, Washington to Clementine Frei and Jack Stockton. [ [http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~battle/celeb/stockton.htm 1 ] ] He attended grade school at St. Aloysius and moved on to high school at Gonzaga Prep, graduating in 1980. He then playedcollege basketball forGonzaga University in his hometown where he averaged 20.9 points per game while shooting 57% from the field in his senior year.NBA career
John Stockton averaged a career
double-double , with 13.1 points and 10.5 assists per game. He holds the NBA's record for most career assists (15,806) by a considerable margin, as well as the record for most career steals (3,265). He had five of the top six assists seasons in NBA history (the other belonging toIsiah Thomas ). He holds the NBA record for the most seasons and consecutive games played with one team, and is third in total games played, behindKareem Abdul-Jabbar andRobert Parish . He missed only 22 games during his career, 18 of them in one season. As a point of comparison, he played in 34 games where he tallied 20 or more assists.Stockton appeared in 10 All-Star games, and was named co-
MVP of the game in 1993 with Jazz teammateKarl Malone , which was held inSalt Lake City, Utah . He played with the 1992 and 1996 US Olympic basketball teams, known as Dream Team I and II, the first Olympic squads to feature NBA players, keeping the game ball from both Gold Medal games. He was selected to theAll-NBA First Team twice, theAll-NBA Second Team six times, theAll-NBA Third Team three times, and the NBA All-Defensive Second Team five times. He was named one of the50 Greatest Players in NBA history in 1996. Stockton's career highlight came in Game 6 of the 1997 Western Conference Finals, in which he hit the winning 3-point shot over theHouston Rockets 'Charles Barkley to send the Jazz to the first of its two consecutive NBA Finals appearances.For many years, he and Malone were the Jazz's 1-2 punch. The two played a record 1,412 regular-season games together as teammates. Many of Stockton's assists resulted from passes to Malone.
Stockton earned the "
old school " tag for his physical play (surveys of athletes and fans alike often judged him among the toughest players in the NBA, usually just behind teammate Karl Malone); his uniform "shortshorts " (he was the most recent notable NBA player to wear them, preferring the style long after the rest of the league had adopted today's baggy look); his simple dress off the court, which contrasted with many of his NBA contemporaries; and his reserved demeanor.On May 2, 2003, Stockton announced his retirement with a released statement instead of the customary news conference. The Jazz later held a retirement ceremony for him, in which Salt Lake City renamed the street in front of the
Energy Solutions Arena , where the Jazz play,John Stockton Drive .cite news|last=Buckley|first=Tim|title=The Long Goodbye|url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4188/is_20030608/ai_n11399445|format=Reprint|publisher=Deseret News|location=Salt Lake City|date=2003-06-08|accessdate=2008-08-20] His number-12 jersey was retired by the Jazz during a game on November 22, 2004. A statue of Stockton can be seen in front of the Energy Solutions Arena; an accompanying statue of Karl Malone was placed nearby on March 23, 2006. The Malone and Stockton statues stand on a bronze plaque commemorating their achievements together.Along with
Patrick Ewing ,Charles Barkley ,Dominique Wilkins ,Elgin Baylor ,Reggie Miller ,Pete Maravich , and his teammateKarl Malone , John Stockton is considered to be one of the best players never to have won a championshipwho.Stockton and his wife, the former Nada Stepovich (daughter of Matilda and
Michael Anthony Stepovich , the penultimate territorial governor ofAlaska ), have two daughters, Lindsay and Laura, and four sons, Houston, Michael, David and Samuel. Stockton and his family are devout Roman Catholics.Player profile
Stockton, a 10-time NBA All-Star commandingly holds the NBA record for career assists with 15,806 (10.5 per game), and had 5,483 more career assists than Mark Jackson, who is second all-time. To put this tremendous margin in context, only 33 (including Stockton and Jackson) players in NBA history have recorded more than 5,483 assists in their entire "careers". Stockton also holds the record for assists-per-game average over one season (14.5 in 1990), and is one of three players who have logged more than 1,000 assists in one season, joining
Kevin Porter (1,099 in 1979) andIsiah Thomas (1,123 in 1985) in the exclusive list. Stockton did this seven times, with season totals of 1164, 1134, 1128, 1126, 1118, 1031 and 1011 assists [http://www.databasebasketball.com/leaders/leadersseason.htm?stat=asts&lg=n] .He and Karl Malone are regarded as the quintessential
pick and roll duo. Apart from his passing skill, Stockton was also known for being a capable scorer (13.1 points per game career average, with a high .515 shooting percentage) with a reliable three-point shot (.384 lifetime average). He is 30th on the all-time NBA scoring list with 19,711 career points [http://www.databasebasketball.com/leaders/leaderscareer.htm?stat=pts&lg=n] . Despite the fact that he never pulled down more than 9 rebounds (or recorded more than 9 steals) during a "regular season" game, he recorded one careertriple double , in a playoff game against theDallas Mavericks on April 28, 2001. He scored 12 points, pulled down 11 rebounds and had 10 assists.On defense, Stockton holds the NBA record for career steals with 3,265, nearly 30 percent more than second placed
Michael Jordan , who had 2,514 [http://www.databasebasketball.com/leaders/leaderscareer.htm?stat=stl&lg=n] . Similar to his career-long partner Malone, Stockton was considered a "dirty" defender by some, but he was certainly effective, earning five NBA All-Defensive Second Team nominations.Stockton was known for his unassuming, no-nonsense approach to the game, hard-nosed defense, and fanatical work-ethic in preparation, which resulted in his extreme durability. He played 1,504 of 1,526 possible games in his 19-season career. In his first 13 seasons, he missed only four games until he missed the first 18 games of the 1997-98 season due to an injured MCL in his left knee sustained in the preseason. That was the only major injury in his career and he never missed another game after returning. In his last season at age 41, he started in all 82 games, and finished with more-than-respectable averages of 10.8 ppg and 7.7 apg.
Stockton avoided endorsements, and stayed loyal to Utah despite being offered significantly more money by other teams. In 1996 he agreed to a deal that made salary-cap space available so the team could improve, but insisted on guaranteed Delta Center ice time for his son's hockey team. [ [http://espn.go.com/nba/columns/smith_sam/1548627.html ESPN.com: NBA - Stockton let his game speak for him ] ]
On May 11, 2006, ESPN.com named Stockton the 4th best point guard of all time. [ [http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/dailydime?page=dailydime-GreatestPointGuards ESPN.com - NBA - DAILY DIME: SPECIAL EDITION
10 greatest point guards ever ] ]Footnotes
External links
* [http://www.nba.com/history/players/stockton_bio.html NBA History]
* [http://www.nba.com/playerfile/john_stockton/ NBA.com Profile]
* [http://www.basketballreference.com/players/playerpage.htm?ilkid=STOCKJO01 BasketballReference.com: John Stockton]
* [http://www.nbawire.com/retired-players/John-Stockton.html John Stockton]
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