- Malik Sealy
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Malik Sealy No. 2, 14, 21 Shooting guard Personal information Date of birth February 1, 1970 Place of birth The Bronx, New York Date of death May 20, 2000 (aged 30)Place of death St. Louis Park, Minnesota Listed height 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) Listed weight 200 lb (91 kg) Career information College St. John's NBA Draft 1992 / Round: 1 / Pick: 14th overall Selected by the Indiana Pacers Pro career 1992–2000 League NBA Career history 1992–1994 Indiana Pacers 1994–1997 Los Angeles Clippers 1997–1998 Detroit Pistons 1999–2000 Minnesota Timberwolves Career highlights and awards - Minnesota Timberwolves #2 retired
Career NBA statistics Points 4,995 Assists 816 Rebounds 1,585 Stats at NBA.com Stats at Basketball-Reference.com Malik Sealy (February 1, 1970 – May 20, 2000) was an American professional basketball player, active from 1992 until his death in an automobile accident at the age of 30. Sealy played eight seasons in the National Basketball Association (NBA) for the Indiana Pacers, Los Angeles Clippers, Detroit Pistons and Minnesota Timberwolves.
A native of the Bronx, New York, Sealy was named after noted African-American social activist Malik Shabazz, better known as Malcolm X, for whom Sealy's father had been a bodyguard.[1] Sealy played college basketball at St. John's University, and was selected by the Indiana Pacers as the 14th overall pick of the 1992 NBA Draft. When he was a rookie, he lost his playbook, which was turned over to WFAN radio personality Don Imus.[2]
Over the course of his NBA career, Sealy averaged 10.1 points per game in 23.8 minutes. His final season's highlights included his making a game-winning reverse putback shot at the buzzer against the Orlando Magic on December 29, 1999 which gave the Timberwolves a 107-105 road win. He also made a game-winning 3-pointer off the glass as time expired in a 101-100 Timberwolves win over the Indiana Pacers on January 17, 2000.
Sealy was also an aspiring actor, and had a major role as the talented but selfish basketball player 'Stacey Patton' in the 1996 motion picture Eddie starring Whoopi Goldberg. He also made appearances on TV shows such as The Sentinel and Diagnosis: Murder.[3] In addition to this, Sealy designed ties and clothing and owned "Malik Sealy XXI, Inc."[3]
Sealy was killed in St. Louis Park, Minnesota on May 20, 2000.[3] He was driving home from a birthday celebration for teammate and best friend Kevin Garnett in downtown Minneapolis when his sport utility vehicle was struck by a pickup truck traveling the wrong way down the highway.[3] The truck was driven by 43-year-old Souksangouane Phengsene, who survived the accident with head and chest injuries. Neither driver was wearing a seatbelt. Phengsene's airbag deployed, but Sealy's SUV did not have one.[3]
Blood tests indicated that at the time of the accident, Phengsene had been driving drunk; his blood alcohol content was 0.19%. The legal limit in Minnesota at the time was 0.1%. He pled guilty to a charge of vehicular manslaughter, was given a four-year prison term, and was released from prison in 2003.[4]
Although his plea bargain in Sealy's death had not included a conviction specifically on the charge of driving while intoxicated, Phengsene had been convicted of drunken driving in a separate incident three years prior to his fatal collision with Sealy. After his release from prison, Phengsene was convicted of drunken driving in a new incident in 2006. After serving a year in a workhouse on that conviction, he was freed and then was arrested and convicted of drunken driving yet again in 2008. This latest conviction garnered him an eight-year prison sentence.[5]
In Sealy's honor, the Minnesota Timberwolves retired his #2 jersey. [1] Kevin Garnett also paid a tribute to him, having written "2MALIK" in the inside of the tongue on the Adidas Garnett 3 shoes. Sealy was buried in Ferncliff Cemetery, the same cemetery as the slain civil rights leader for whom he was named.
See also
Notes
- ^ T'wolves' Sealy dies in car crash
- ^ http://www.nytimes.com/1993/05/01/sports/sports-of-the-times-imus-scores-on-turnover-by-sealy.html
- ^ a b c d e Sealy dies in collision with pickup truck, May 22, 2000
- ^ "Malik Sealy's killer admits drinking 8 beers before latest arrest", Minneapolis Star Tribune
- ^ http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=3366023 ESPN - Drunken driver convicted in Sealy's death sentenced to eight years
External links
- Malik Sealy Statistics - Basketball-Reference.com
- Malik Sealy at the Internet Movie Database
- Malik Sealy died on May 20, 2000.
- Pacers rookie Sealy loses playbook
1992 NBA Draft First round Shaquille O'Neal · Alonzo Mourning · Christian Laettner · Jim Jackson · LaPhonso Ellis · Tom Gugliotta · Walt Williams · Todd Day · Clarence Weatherspoon · Adam Keefe · Robert Horry · Harold Miner · Bryant Stith · Malik Sealy · Anthony Peeler · Randy Woods · Doug Christie · Tracy Murray · Don MacLean · Hubert Davis · Jon Barry · Oliver Miller · Lee Mayberry · Latrell Sprewell · Elmore Spencer · Dave Johnson · Byron HoustonSecond round Marlon Maxey · P. J. Brown · Sean Rooks · Reggie Smith · Brent Price · Corey Williams · Chris Smith · Tony Bennett · Duane Cooper · Isaiah Morris · Elmer Bennett · Litterial Green · Steve Rogers · Popeye Jones · Matt Geiger · Predrag Danilović · Henry Williams · Chris King · Robert Werdann · Darren Morningstar · Brian Davis · Ron Ellis · Matt Fish · Tim Burroughs · Matt Steigenga · Curtis Blair · Brett RobertsHaggerty Award winners 1936: Bender | 1937: Be. Kramer | 1938: Fliegel | 1939: Torgoff | 1940: Auerbach | 1941: Garfinkel | 1942: J. White | 1943: Levane | 1944: McGuire | 1945: Kotsores | 1946: Tannenbaum | 1947: Tannenbaum | 1948: Schayes | 1949: McGuire | 1950: S. White | 1951: Azary | 1952: MacGilvray | 1953: Dukes | 1954: Conlin | 1955: Conlin | 1956: Thieben | 1957: Forte | 1958: Cunningham | 1959: Seiden | 1960: Sanders | 1961: T. Jackson | 1962: Ellis | 1963: Ba. Kramer | 1964: Werkman | 1965: Isaac | 1966: Grant | 1967: Dove | 1968: McMillian | 1969: McMillian | 1970: McMillian | 1971: Yelverton | 1972: Garner & Sullivan | 1973: Schaeffer | 1974: Campion | 1975: Sellers | 1976: Sellers | 1977: Laurel | 1978: Johnson | 1979: Galis | 1980: Ruland | 1981: Springer | 1982: Callandrillo | 1983: Mullin | 1984: Burtt & Mullin | 1985: Mullin | 1986: Berry | 1987: Houston & M. Jackson | 1988: Bryant | 1989: Morton | 1990: Harvey | 1991: Sealy | 1992: Sealy | 1993: Dehere | 1994: Buchanan & Karnišovas | 1995: J. Griffin | 1996: A. Griffin | 1997: Jones | 1998: López | 1999: Artest | 2000: Claxton | 2001: Richardson | 2002: Hatten | 2003: Flores | 2004: Flores | 2005: Clark | 2006: Douby | 2007: Jordan | 2008: Thompson | 2009: Jenkins | 2010: Jenkins | 2011: Jenkins
1992 NCAA Men's Basketball Consensus All-Americans First Team
Jimmy Jackson • Christian Laettner • Harold Miner • Alonzo Mourning • Shaquille O'NealSecond Team
Byron Houston • Don MacLean • Anthony Peeler • Malik Sealy • Walt WilliamsCategories:- 1970 births
- 2000 deaths
- African American basketball players
- American basketball players
- People from the Bronx
- Burials at Ferncliff Cemetery
- Detroit Pistons players
- Indiana Pacers players
- Los Angeles Clippers players
- McDonald's High School All-Americans
- Parade High School All-Americans (boys' basketball)
- National Basketball Association players with retired numbers
- Minnesota Timberwolves players
- Road accident deaths in Minnesota
- St. John's Red Storm men's basketball players
- Small forwards
- Shooting guards
- Basketball players from New York
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