- Desmond Mason
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Desmond Mason Shooting guard/small forward Personal information Date of birth October 11, 1977 Place of birth Waxahachie, Texas Nationality American High school Waxahachie Listed height 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) Listed weight 222 lb (101 kg) Career information College Oklahoma State (1996–2000) NBA Draft 2000 / 17th overall Selected by the Seattle SuperSonics Pro career 2000–2009 Career history 2000–2003 Seattle SuperSonics 2003–2005 Milwaukee Bucks 2005–2007 New Orleans Hornets 2007–2008 Milwaukee Bucks 2008–2009 Oklahoma City Thunder 2009 Sacramento Kings Stats at NBA.com Desmond Tremaine Mason (born October 11, 1977) is an American former professional basketball player. He was designated as a shooting guard and small forward.
Contents
Career
Desmond Mason was drafted out of Oklahoma State University by the Seattle SuperSonics with the 17th pick of the 2000 NBA Draft. In 2001, he became the first Seattle player in franchise history to win the NBA Slam Dunk Contest. He also finished second place in the 2003 contest behind Jason Richardson.[1] In 2003, he and Gary Payton were traded to the Milwaukee Bucks in exchange for Ray Allen and Ronald "Flip" Murray. On October 26, 2005, he was traded along with a 2006 first-round draft pick to the New Orleans/Oklahoma City Hornets in exchange for Jamaal Magloire.[2] On July 23, 2007 Mason signed a contract with the Bucks after a two-season absence. Initially angry with Bucks general manager Larry Harris for trading him in 2005, Mason said he was happy to be back in Milwaukee.[2] On August 13, 2008, Mason was traded back to the Oklahoma City Thunder (formerly the Seattle SuperSonics) in a three-team, six-player deal involving the Thunder, the Milwaukee Bucks and the Cleveland Cavaliers, that sent Milwaukee's Mo Williams to Cleveland, Mason and Cleveland's Joe Smith to Oklahoma City, and Cleveland's Damon Jones and Oklahoma City's Luke Ridnour and Adrian Griffin to Milwaukee.[3] This marked his return to the former Sonics franchise.[2] On September 17, 2009, Mason signed a contract with the Sacramento Kings at league minimum.[4] After playing in just five games (and starting 4), he was waived by the Kings.[5]
Media appearances
In February 2007, Mason recorded a hip-hop video called We Dem Hornets in which he gave an inspirational roll-call of the entire 2006–07 Hornets team. He said: "Brandon (Bass) and I write a lot on the bus... I wrote a song about the team and let them listen to it. I rapped it to them on the bus and on the plane and a lot of the guys really liked it. I tweaked it, cleaned it up, and went over to (videographer intern and son of head coach Byron Scott) Thomas Scott's house and we put it down and then they wanted to put a video to it. It was just for fun."[6] Commenting on the fact that the Hornets started to win after the video was shown, Mason commented: "I think it went over well. They showed it in the locker room and everybody liked it, all of the players liked it. It was done well and (the highlights) fit together really well."[6]
Physical attributes
NBA career statistics
Legend GP Games played GS Games started MPG Minutes per game FG% Field-goal percentage 3P% 3-point field-goal percentage FT% Free-throw percentage RPG Rebounds per game APG Assists per game SPG Steals per game BPG Blocks per game PPG Points per game Bold Career high Regular season
Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG 2000–01 Seattle 78 14 19.5 .431 .269 .736 3.2 .8 .5 .3 5.9 2001–02 Seattle 75 20 32.3 .464 .271 .848 4.7 1.4 .9 .4 12.4 2002–03 Seattle 52 15 34.8 .436 .291 .740 6.4 1.8 .9 .4 14.1 2002–03 Milwaukee 28 25 34.0 .474 .294 .765 6.7 2.4 .7 .4 14.8 2003–04 Milwaukee 82 31 30.9 .472 .231 .769 4.4 1.9 .7 .3 14.4 2004–05 Milwaukee 80 71 36.2 .443 .125 .802 3.9 2.7 .7 .3 17.2 2005–06 NO/Oklahoma City 70 55 30.0 .399 .167 .682 4.3 .9 .6 .2 10.8 2006–07 NO/Oklahoma City 75 75 34.3 .452 .000 .663 4.6 1.5 .7 .3 13.7 2007–08 Milwaukee 59 56 28.8 .482 .000 .659 4.3 2.1 .7 .5 9.7 2008–09 Oklahoma City 39 19 27.3 .435 .000 .541 4.0 1.2 .4 .8 7.5 2009–10 Sacramento 5 4 13.2 .417 .000 .750 2.6 .4 .2 .2 2.6 Career 643 385 30.5 .449 .260 .740 4.5 1.6 .7 .3 12.1 Playoffs
Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG 2001–02 Seattle 5 5 41.0 .421 .333 .588 6.2 1.8 .8 .4 11.8 2002–03 Milwaukee 6 6 34.0 .509 .000 .710 7.0 .8 1.0 .7 13.0 2003–04 Milwaukee 5 5 39.6 .338 .000 .846 4.8 2.4 .8 .4 14.4 Career 16 16 37.9 .414 .111 .730 6.1 1.6 .9 .5 13.1 Notes
- ^ NBA.com: Desmond Mason bio
- ^ a b c Mason says he's happy to be back in Milwaukee July 23, 2007
- ^ Cavaliers Acquire Williams in Three-Team Trade, August 13, 2008
- ^ http://www.nba.com/kings/news/press_release_0917092.html
- ^ Kings waive G/F Mason
- ^ a b Mason Delivers Unique Motivational ‘Speech’
- ^ DraftExpress: Pre Draft Measurements
- ^ Highest Vertical Leap World Records
External links
2000 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 MickealNBA All-Star Weekend Slam Dunk Contest winners 1984: Nance | 1985: Wilkins | 1986: Webb | 1987: Jordan | 1988: Jordan | 1989: Walker | 1990: Wilkins | 1991: Brown | 1992: Ceballos | 1993: Miner | 1994: Rider | 1995: Miner | 1996: Barry | 1997: Bryant | 2000: Carter | 2001: Mason | 2002: Richardson | 2003: Richardson | 2004: Jones | 2005: Smith | 2006: Robinson | 2007: Green | 2008: Howard | 2009: Robinson | 2010: Robinson | 2011: GriffinCategories:- 1977 births
- Living people
- African American basketball players
- Basketball players from Texas
- Oklahoma State Cowboys basketball players
- Seattle SuperSonics draft picks
- Seattle SuperSonics players
- Milwaukee Bucks players
- New Orleans Hornets players
- Oklahoma City Thunder players
- NBA Slam Dunk Contest champions
- People from Waxahachie, Texas
- Sacramento Kings players
- Shooting guards
- Small forwards
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