- Mitch Kupchak
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Mitch Kupchak No. 25, 41 Power forward / Center Personal information Date of birth May 24, 1954 Place of birth Hicksville, New York Nationality American High school Brentwood (New York) Listed height 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) Listed weight 230 lb (104 kg) Career information College North Carolina (1972–1976) NBA Draft 1976 / Round: 1 / Pick: 13th overall Selected by the Washington Bullets Pro career 1976–1986 Career history 1976–1981 Washington Bullets 1981–1986 Los Angeles Lakers Career highlights and awards - 3× NBA Champion (1978, 1982, 1985)
- NBA All-Rookie First Team (1977)
- ACC Player of the Year (1975)
- Consensus NCAA All-American Second Team (1975)
Career statistics Points 5,202 (10.2 ppg) Rebounds 1,767 (5.4 rpg) Assists 2,730 (0.7 apg) Stats at NBA.com Stats at Basketball-Reference.com MedalsCompetitor for United States Men's Basketball Olympic Games Gold Montreal 1976 National team Mitchell "Mitch" Kupchak (born May 24, 1954) is a retired American basketball player and current general manager of the Los Angeles Lakers since the 2000–01 NBA season after predecessor Jerry West moved to the Memphis Grizzlies organization.
Contents
High school career
Kupchak played for Brentwood High School, Brentwood, Long Island, NY, and was instrumental in Brentwood's Division Titles from 1970-72.
College career
Kupchak was an All-American on the North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team. Kupchak played on the gold medal winning team at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal.
NBA career
Kupchak was drafted by the Washington Bullets in 1976 and was named to the NBA All-Rookie Team. He had four productive seasons with Washington and was part of the team that won the NBA Championship in 1978. He signed a long term contract with the Lakers in 1981 on the behest of Earvin "Magic" Johnson, who told owner Jerry Buss, "If we could get Mitch Kupchak, I know we could win," after the team's playoff upset.[1] Unfortunately, 26 games into the season, Kupchak injured his knee and did not play again until the 1983-84 season. However, Kupchak played a key role in the Lakers' 1985 championship team against the Boston Celtics, who had intimidated them in the prior year's Finals. Kupchak retired after the 1985-86 season, having played 510 regular season and 68 playoff games, with regular season averages of 10.2 points per game and 5.4 rebounds per game (7.7 points per game and 4.7 rebounds per game in the playoffs).
Transition to NBA management
Kupchak showed remarkable forethought in planning for his "life after" being an NBA player—pursuing a focused program to learn the trade of running NBA team operations. While still under his initial player contract, he worked with the "front office", developing strong working relationships with Laker management, beginning to "apprentice" with Jerry West, and starting studies that led to his MBA from the UCLA Anderson School of Management in 1987.
General Manager
He retired in 1986 to become Assistant General Manager under Jerry West. Kupchak took over as general manager but was not considered to have the traditional power of a GM until 2000 when West left his post as VP of Basketball Operations for the challenge of the Memphis Grizzlies. His first major transaction was the acquisition of former superstars Karl Malone and Gary Payton. After a number of controversial trade transactions over the years, including the trade of Shaquille O'Neal to the Miami Heat for Lamar Odom, Caron Butler, and Brian Grant, as well as the decision not to trade Andrew Bynum for Jason Kidd, Kupchak faced severe criticism from Lakers star Kobe Bryant, although he still had the support of Buss. However, after his February 2008 deal to obtain Pau Gasol from the Memphis Grizzlies for Kwame Brown, other players and draft picks, Bryant conceded, "He goes from an F to an A-plus."[1] Alongside the 2007 trade to obtain Trevor Ariza for Brian Cook and Maurice Evans and the free-agent signing of Ron Artest in 2009, these decisions helped the Lakers win back to back NBA Championships in 2009 and 2010.
References
- ^ a b Springer, Steve (April 28, 2008). "Lakers' Kupchak can deal with it". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 2008-05-01. http://web.archive.org/web/20080501141016/http://www.latimes.com/sports/basketball/nba/lakers/la-sp-kupchak28apr28,1,4644248,full.story. Retrieved 2008-04-30.
External links
1976 Olympic Champions Men's Basketball team - United States 1976 NCAA Men's Basketball Consensus All-Americans First Team
Kent Benson • Adrian Dantley • John Lucas • Scott May • Richard WashingtonSecond Team
Phil Ford • Bernard King • Mitch Kupchak • Phil Sellers • Earl TatumAtlantic Coast Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Year 1954: Hemric | 1955: Hemric | 1956: Shavlik | 1957: Rosenbluth | 1958: Brennan | 1959: Pucillo | 1960: Shaffer | 1961: Chappell | 1962: Chappell | 1963: Heyman | 1964: Mullins | 1965: Cunningham | 1966: Vacendak | 1967: Miller | 1968: Miller | 1969: Roche | 1970: Roche | 1971: Davis | 1972: Parkhill | 1973: Thompson | 1974: Thompson | 1975: Thompson | 1976: Kupchak | 1977: Griffin | 1978: Ford | 1979: Gminski | 1980: King | 1981: Sampson | 1982: Sampson | 1983: Sampson | 1984: Jordan | 1985: Bias | 1986: Bias | 1987: Grant | 1988: Ferry | 1989: Ferry | 1990: Scott | 1991: Monroe | 1992: Laettner | 1993: Rogers | 1994: Hill | 1995: J. Smith | 1996: Duncan | 1997: Duncan | 1998: Jamison | 1999: Brand | 2000: Carrawell | 2001: Battier & Forte | 2002: Dixon | 2003: Howard | 2004: Hodge | 2005: Redick | 2006: Redick | 2007: Dudley | 2008: Hansbrough | 2009: Lawson | 2010: Vásquez | 2011: N. Smith
1976 NBA Draft First round John Lucas · Scott May · Richard Washington · Leon Douglas · Wally Walker · Adrian Dantley · Quinn Buckner · Robert Parish · Armond Hill · Ron Lee · Bob Wilkerson · Terry Furlow · Mitch Kupchak · Larry Wright · Chuckie Williams · Norm Cook · Sonny ParkerSecond round Willie Smith · Bayard Forrest · Major Jones · Earl Tatum · Johnny Davis · Alex English · Scott Lloyd · Lonnie Shelton · Jacky Dorsey · Phil Hicks · Bob Carrington · Dennis Johnson · Al Fleming · Joe Pace · Mo Howard · Butch Feher · Marshall RogersWashington Bullets 1977–78 NBA Champions 10 Bob Dandridge | 11 Elvin Hayes | 14 Tom Henderson | 15 Charles Johnson | 20 Phil Walker | 25 Mitch Kupchak | 32 Larry Wright | 35 Kevin Grevey | 41 Wes Unseld (Finals MVP) | 42 Greg Ballard | 44 Joe Pace | 45 Phil Chenier
Head coach Dick Motta
Assistant coach Bernie BickerstaffRegular season • Playoffs Los Angeles Lakers 1981–82 NBA Champions 5 Eddie Jordan | 8 Jim Brewer | 10 Norm Nixon | 11 Bob McAdoo | 21 Michael Cooper | 30 Kevin McKenna | 31 Kurt Rambis | 32 Magic Johnson (Finals MVP) | 33 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar | 34 Clay Johnson | 40 Mike McGee | 41 Mitch Kupchak | 52 Jamaal Wilkes | 54 Mark Landsberger
Head coach Pat Riley
Assistant coaches Bill Bertka | Mike ThibaultRegular season • Playoffs Los Angeles Lakers 1984–85 NBA Champions 1 Earl Jones | 4 Byron Scott | 11 Bob McAdoo | 12 Ronnie Lester | 21 Michael Cooper | 25 Mitch Kupchak | 31 Kurt Rambis | 32 Magic Johnson | 33 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (Finals MVP) | 35 Larry Spriggs | 40 Mike McGee | 42 James Worthy | 43 Chuck Nevitt | 52 Jamaal Wilkes
Head coach Pat Riley
Assistant coaches Bill Bertka | Dave WohlRegular season • Playoffs Los Angeles Lakers Formerly the Detroit Gems and the Minneapolis Lakers • Founded in 1946 • Based in Los Angeles, California The Franchise Franchise • Team History • All-Time roster • Draft history • Seasons • Records • Head coaches • Current seasonArenas D-League Affiliate Administration Dr. Jerry Buss (Majority Owner) • Anschutz Entertainment Group (Minority Owner) • Patrick Soon-Shiong (Minority Owner) • Mitch Kupchak (Vice President & GM of Basketball Ops.) • Mike Brown (Head Coach)Retired Numbers 13 • 22 • 25 • 32 • 33 • 42 • 44 • Chick Hearn (Microphone)
Minneapolis Lakers Hall of Famers (Mikan, Mikkelsen, Martin, Lovellette, Pollard, Coach Kundla)NBA Championships (16) Rivals Boston Celtics • Philadelphia 76ers • San Antonio Spurs • Houston Rockets • Detroit Pistons • Los Angeles ClippersCulture and Lore "Showtime" • Wilt the Stilt • Mr. Clutch • Elgin Baylor • The Captain • Magic • Lakers vs. Celtics • Chick Hearn • Riles • Jack Kent Cooke • The Fabulous Forum • Staples Center • The Punch • Big Game James • Bryant–O'Neal feud • 81 • Black Mamba • The Diesel • Lawrence Tanter • Jack Nicholson • I Love L.A. • 0.4 • The Zen Master • 33-game win streakMedia TVKCAL • Fox Sports West • New Lakers Networks (coming fall 2012)RadioNorth Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball retired and honored jerseys Retired Jack Cobb • #10 Lennie Rosenbluth • #12 Phil Ford • #20 George Glamack • #23 Michael Jordan • #33 Antawn Jamison • #50 Tyler Hansbrough • #52 James WorthyHonored #0 Cartwright Carmichael • #00 Eric Montross & Brendan Haywood • #2 Raymond Felton • #5 Jim Jordan & Ty Lawson • #11 Larry Brown • #12 Lee Shaffer • #13 John Dillon • #15 Vince Carter • #21 Mitch Kupchak & Donald Williams • #22 Wayne Ellington, York Larese & Bob Lewis • #24 Walter Davis • #30 Al Wood, Kenny Smith & Rasheed Wallace • #31 Bill Chamberlain & Mike O'Koren • #32 Billy Cunningham & Rashad McCants • #33 Charlie Scott • #34 Bobby Jones, J. R. Reid & George Lynch #35 Pete Brennan, Doug Moe & Robert McAdoo • #40 Tommy Kearns & Joseph Forte • #41 Sam Perkins • #42 Brad Daugherty, Jerry Stackhouse & Sean May • #44 Larry Miller & Dennis Wuycik • #45 Tom LaGardeCategories:- 1954 births
- Living people
- American basketball players
- American people of Polish descent
- Basketball players from New York
- People from Nassau County, New York
- Los Angeles Lakers players
- Los Angeles Lakers executives
- National Basketball Association general managers
- National Basketball Association executives
- North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball players
- Washington Bullets draft picks
- Washington Bullets players
- Olympic basketball players of the United States
- Olympic gold medalists for the United States
- Basketball players at the 1976 Summer Olympics
- University of California, Los Angeles alumni
- Brentwood High School (Brentwood, New York) alumni
- Olympic medalists in basketball
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