- Derek Smith (basketball)
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Derek Smith No. 41, 18, 21, 43 Shooting guard / Small forward Personal information Date of birth November 1, 1961 Place of birth Hogansville, Georgia Nationality American Date of death August 10, 1996 (aged 34)High school Hogansville Listed height 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) Listed weight 205 lb (93 kg) Career information College Louisville (1978–1982) NBA Draft 1982 / Round: 2 / Pick: 35th overall Selected by the Golden State Warriors Pro career 1982–1991 Career history 1982–1983 Golden State Warriors 1983–1986 San Diego / Los Angeles Clippers 1986–1989 Sacramento Kings 1989–1990 Philadelphia 76ers 1990–1991 Boston Celtics Career highlights and awards Career NBA statistics Points 5,232 (12.8 ppg) Rebounds 1,300 (3.2 rpg) Assists 866 (2.1 apg) Stats at NBA.com Stats at Basketball-Reference.com Derek Ervin Smith (November 1, 1961 – August 9, 1996) was an American NBA player. He won a national championship with the Louisville Cardinals in 1980, and spent nine years in the NBA in a career shortened by a knee injury. He would later become an assistant coach for the Washington Bullets from 1994 until his death.
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Career
Smith attended the University of Louisville from 1979 to 1982. He was a member of the 1980 University of Louisville Cardinals basketball team which won the NCAA championship, defeating UCLA 59–54.
Smith is sometimes credited with popularizing the term "high five" during the 1979–80 basketball season.[1]
Smith was selected 35th overall, 13th in the second round, by the Golden State Warriors in the 1982 NBA Draft. He played for the Los Angeles Clippers from 1983 to 1986. He averaged 22 points per game in 1984-85. He started 1985-86 on a 23-ppg clip before his season ended with an ACL tear from which he would never fully recover. He played for the Sacramento Kings from 1986–1989, for the Philadelphia 76ers in 1989 and 1990, and the Boston Celtics in 1991. During his NBA career he scored over 5,000 points.
Smith became an assistant coach for the Washington Bullets in 1994.
Death
In August 1996, Smith went on a cruise on the Norwegian Cruise Line ship MS Dreamward for season ticketholders of the Bullets and the Washington Capitals. He took his family along. Smith and then-Bullets player Tim Legler volunteered to hold basketball clinics during the cruise.
On August 9, 1996, while the ship was near Bermuda and returning to New York City, Derek Smith suddenly suffered an apparent massive heart attack during a farewall cocktail party in the presence of members of his team. Ship medics attempted to resuscitate him for 25 minutes before declaring him dead.
Smith was buried at Cave Hill Cemetery in Louisville, Kentucky. His funeral was attended by the Bullets team and several former teammates.[2][3]
Family
Derek was married to Monica, who has since re-married, and had two children; a daughter, Sydney, and a son, Nolan. Nolan played college basketball for the Duke Blue Devils. Like his father 30 years before him, Nolan made it to the Final Four of the 2010 NCAA D-I tournament and he and his Duke Blue Devils won the 2010 National Championship just as his father did in 1980. Nolan has a tattoo of his father on his right arm.
References
- ^ Jack Welch (December 2000). "50 Things Every Louisvillian Should Know". Louisville Magazine. http://www.loumag.com/articledisplay.aspx?id=19109510. Retrieved 2009-12-16.
- ^ Mitch Lawrence (September 1, 1996). "Death of a Driven Man - Derek Smith's Mysterious Passing Claims True Competitor". http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/sports/1996/09/01/1996-09-01_death_of_a_drivien_man_derek.html. Retrieved April 3, 2010.
- ^ "Outside the Lines - Smith Following In Father's Footsteps". March 31, 2010.
External links
Louisville Cardinals Men's Basketball 1979–80 NCAA Champions 5 Jerry Eaves | 21 Scooter McCray | 22 Rodney McCray | 34 Roger Burkman | 35 Darrell Griffith (MOP) | 41 Wiley Brown | 43 Derek Smith
Coach Denny Crum
Assistant Coaches Wade HoustonMetro Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Year 1977: Yoder | 1978: Davis & Wilson | 1979: Cummings | 1980: Griffith | 1981: Burns & Smith | 1982: Lee | 1983: McCray | 1984: Williams | 1985: Lee | 1986: Curry | 1987: Crook | 1988: Coles & Ellison | 1989: McCloud | 1990: Weatherspoon | 1991: Weatherspoon | 1992: Weatherspoon | 1993: Rozier | 1994: Rozier | 1995: Lang
1982 NBA Draft First round James Worthy · Terry Cummings · Dominique Wilkins · Bill Garnett · LaSalle Thompson · Trent Tucker · Quintin Dailey · Clark Kellogg · Cliff Levingston · Keith Edmonson · Fat Lever · John Bagley · Sleepy Floyd · Lester Conner · David Thirdkill · Terry Teagle · Brook Steppe · Ricky Pierce · Rob Williams · Paul Pressey · Eddie Phillips · Mark McNamara · Darren TillisSecond round Oliver Robinson · Bryan Warrick · Ricky Frazier · Fred Roberts · David Magley · Scott Hastings · Wallace Bryant · Rod Higgins · Richard Anderson · Linton Townes · Vince Taylor · Derek Smith · Mitchell Anderson · Audie Norris · Wayne Sappleton · Kevin Magee · Guy Morgan · Dwight Anderson · Jeff Taylor · Jose Slaughter · Mike Gibson · Russ Schoene · Tony GuyCategories:- 1961 births
- 1996 deaths
- African American basketball players
- Boston Celtics players
- Golden State Warriors draft picks
- Golden State Warriors players
- Los Angeles Clippers players
- Louisville Cardinals men's basketball players
- Philadelphia 76ers players
- Sacramento Kings players
- San Diego Clippers players
- Shooting guards
- Burials at Cave Hill Cemetery
- Basketball players from Georgia (U.S. state)
- People from Troup County, Georgia
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