- Ralph Sampson
Infobox NBAretired
width=
caption=
position=Center
height_ft=7 |height_in=4
weight_lbs=228
number=50
birthdate=birth date and age|1960|7|7
Harrisonburg,Virginia
debutyear=1983
finalyear=1992
draftyear=1983
draftround=1
draftpick=1
college=Virginia
teams=
*Houston Rockets (1983-1988)
*Golden State Warriors (1988-1989)
*Sacramento Kings (1989-1991)
* Washington Bullets (1991-1992)
letter= s
bbr= sampsra01
stat1label=Points
stat1value=7,039
stat2label=Rebound
stat2value=4,011
stat3label=Assists
stat3value=1,038
stat4label=Steals
stat4value=390
highlights=
* 4x NBA All-Star (1984-1987)
* 1x All-NBA Second Team Selection (1985)
* 1984 NBA Rookie of the Year
* 1984NBA All-Rookie Team
* 1xNBA All-Star Game MVP (1985)
* 3x USBWA College Player of the Year (1981-1983)
* 3xNaismith College Player of the Year (1981-1983)
* 2xJohn R. Wooden Award (1982-1983)
* 3xAdolph Rupp Trophy (1981-1983)
HOF=Ralph Lee Sampson (born
July 7 1960 inHarrisonburg, Virginia ) is a retired American college andprofessional basketball player. He is one of only 98 players on thelist of college men's basketball players with 2000 points and 1000 rebounds .Biography
Ralph Sampson came into the
NBA as a 7-foot-4 phenom, a three-time College Player of the Year, and the No. 1 pick in the1983 NBA Draft . Accordingly, expectations for Sampson were very high.For his first three years with the
Houston Rockets , Sampson averaged 20.7 points and 10.9 rebounds. He was NBA Rookie of the Year and a four-time All-Star, and he played on a team that dethroned theLos Angeles Lakers from atop the Western Conference and reached the NBA Finals in1986 . But his long, gangly frame proved too much for his knees to bear, and Sampson eventually faded away among injury-plagued seasons and mumblings that he had come up short of his potential.Sampson was already 6-foot-7 by the ninth grade and was 7-foot-3 in high school in
Harrisonburg, Virginia . He averaged nearly 30 points, 19 rebounds, and 7 blocked shots as a high school senior.He lost the player of the year award to another talented center,Sam Bowie .At the
University of Virginia he was voted National Player of the Year in three of his four seasons. But even though the Cavaliers made it to the Final Four during his sophomore year, Sampson was criticized for not living up to expectations because his team never won an NCAA Championship. His Virginia team was also criticized for an unpredictable loss to smallChaminade University .Sampson was arguably the most heavily recruited (for both college and the NBA) basketball prospect of his generation. Playing for the
University of Virginia , he was one of only two male players in the history ofcollege basketball to receive theNaismith Award as the National Player of the Year three times (Bill Walton ofUCLA was the other male,Cheryl Miller of USC won three times, as well). He was the only player to win theWooden Award twice.Still, with his size and agility—he could dribble with guards and run the floor as well as anyone—he was expected to score like
Wilt Chamberlain and win championships likeBill Russell . TheHouston Rockets made him the No. 1 pick in the1983 NBA Draft . As a rookie he averaged 21.0 points and 11.1 rebounds, played in the All-Star Game, and won theNBA Rookie of the Year Award .The Rockets managed only a 29-53 record in 1983-84 and again earned the right to pick first in the
1984 NBA Draft . This time they chose the 7-foot Olajuwon out of theUniversity of Houston . Many observers felt that the Rockets had made a mistake because it was believed that two 7-footers couldn’t play effectively together. But others thought the combination would be overpowering. Sampson, playing a new style of power forward, had new expectations placed upon him. At the time,Dallas Mavericks CoachDick Motta said, "That front line, when history is written, when they’ve grown up, might be the best ever assembled on one team. Ever." Houston guardJohn Lucas said of Sampson’s move to forward, "He’ll revolutionize the game."The so-called "Twin Towers" worked out pretty well. In 1984-85 the Rockets improved by 19 games to 48-34 and made the playoffs for the first time in three seasons. Sampson had his best individual campaign, averaging 22.1 points and 10.4 rebounds and earning a berth on the All-NBA Second Team. He and Olajuwon both played in the
1985 NBA All-Star Game , and Sampson, after scoring 24 points and grabbing 10 rebounds, earned the game’s MVP Award.The next season Houston won the Midwest Division with a 51-31 record and defeated Los Angeles, four games to one, in the Western Conference Finals. In Game 5 of that series in Los Angeles, Sampson provided one of the most memorable moments in NBA Playoff history. With the score tied at 112 apiece and a mere second remaining on the clock, Sampson took an inbounds pass and launched a miraculous, twisting turnaround jumper that sailed through the hoop at the buzzer, giving the Rockets a 114-112 victory and a shocking series upset.
In the NBA Finals against Boston, Sampson suffered a jarring fall on his back and had a disappointing series. His difficulties were compounded by an incident in Game 5 in which he swung at 6-foot-1 Boston guard
Jerry Sichting and was ejected from the game.Injured halfway into the 1986-87 season, Sampson fell out of favor with Rockets Coach
Bill Fitch and was traded, along with guard Steve Harris, to theGolden State Warriors for Eric "Sleepy" Floyd andJoe Barry Carroll . But Sampson’s knee and back troubles worsened, and he never played a full slate in the next four seasons. He averaged 6.4 points and 5.0 rebounds with Golden State in 1988-89 and was traded to theSacramento Kings forJim Petersen .Sampson’s days at Sacramento were disheartening. He totaled 51 games in two seasons, averaging 4.2 and 3.0 points, respectively. The player once predicted to be the greatest the
NBA had ever seen was waived by the Kings before the 1991–92 season.Sampson, who underwent three knee operations during his career, signed as a free agent with the
Washington Bullets in a last-ditch effort to salvage his career. But he logged only 10 games with Washington in 1991-92 before the Bullets waived him in January. He finished out the year in Europe, playing eight games for Unicaja Ronda of the Spanish League.Sampson finally gave up his playing career at age 32 and decided to try his hand at coaching. He spent the 1992–93 season as a $16,000-per-year assistant to
Lefty Driesell atJames Madison University .Looking back on his career, Sampson admitted that he had attempted to come back too quickly from the knee injuries, and said that he tried not to think about what could have been.
In 1996, Sampson was inducted into the
Virginia Sports Hall of Fame .Basketball statistics
College
NBA Draft: Selected in the 1st round (1st overall).
NBA
Post-NBA life
Sampson served one year as an Assistant Coach at
James Madison University before coaching aminor league professional team inRichmond, Virginia .In
2006 , Sampson was indicted onperjury charges in a federalchild support case. Sampson was held liable for over $300,000 in payments to support children that he fathered with two women.On September 7, 2006, Sampson pleaded guilty to
mail fraud in theU.S. District Court in Richmond and received a two monthprison sentence. The plea to mail fraud was part of the agreement with federal prosecutors. Also as part of the agreement, charges of making a false claim, making a false statement about his finances in a child support case, and perjury were dropped. Sampson asked to postpone his two month incarceration until April 2,2007 , and U.S. District Judge James Spencer allowed the delay.Sampson now lives in a suburb of Atlanta along with his fiancee and their three year old daughter. He will serve his sentence in a facility located in or near Atlanta. His ex-wife, Aleize from whom he was
divorce d in2003 , and their four children also live in the Atlanta area. His son Ralph Sampson III is a highly recruited senior from Duluth, GA, and has committed to play at the University of Minnesota.Trivia
*Ralph Sampson is referred to in the sitcom "
Full House ", when D.J.'s cousin Steve refers to Sampson as "a building," andBob Saget 's character refers to theGolden State Warriors , his team at the time, as "a city."
*In his senior year at theUniversity of Virginia , Sampson lived in one of the prestigious yet small rooms onThe Lawn , and had to have hisdormitory room bed custom-built due to his height.
*He was on the cover of "Sports Illustrated " an unprecedented six times in a span of less than four years (issues ofDecember 17 ,1979 ;December 1 ,1980 ;March 30 ,1981 ;November 29 ,1982 ;December 20 , 1982; andOctober 31 ,1983 ).
* During the 2008 NBA Playoffs the NBA ran a short promo ad that only featured the 2008 NBA Playoffs logo, with an announcer in the background yelling "what a magnificent shot by Ralph Sampson."External links
* [http://www.nba.com/historical/playerfile/index.html?player=ralph_sampson nba.com historical playerfile]
*" [http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/features/cover/2002/then_now/flashbacks/sampson_121779/ His Future is Up in the Air] " "Sports Illustrated " (Dec. 17, 1979)
* [http://www.clutchfans.net/players/ralph_sampson/ ClutchFans.net Ralph Sampson Profile] - Houston Rocket Fan Site
* [http://www.oscarrobertsontrophy.org/content/view/14/17/ Oscar Robertson Trophy]USBWA College Player of the Year
* [http://www.readthehook.com/stories/2007/07/05/NEWS-Sampson-B.rtf.aspx "The prodigal Sampson: Ralph returns to UVA"] 2007 article inthe Hook weekly Notes
Bibliography
*University of Virginia Basketball Media Guide (PDF copy available at [http://www.virginiasports.com www.virginiasports.com] )
Persondata
NAME = Sampson, Ralph
ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
SHORT DESCRIPTION = American basketball player
DATE OF BIRTH =July 7 ,1960
PLACE OF BIRTH = Harrisonburg,Virginia
DATE OF DEATH =
PLACE OF DEATH =
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