David O'Neil Thompson (born July 13, 1954) is an American former professional basketball player. He played with the Denver Nuggets of both the American Basketball Association (ABA) and National Basketball Association (NBA), as well as the Seattle SuperSonics of the NBA. He was previously a star in college for North Carolina State, leading the Wolfpack to its first NCAA championship in 1974. Thompson is one of the six players to score 70 or more points in an NBA game. He was inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 1996.
Thompson was known for his exceptional leaping ability that enabled him to become one of the game's premier dunkers in the 1970s and earned him the nickname of "Skywalker". Michael Jordan said, "The whole meaning of vertical leap began with David Thompson."[1]Bill Walton described Thompson as "Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant, Tracy McGrady, and LeBron James rolled into one".[1]
High school career
Thompson attended Crest Senior High School and he played for the school's Varsity Basketball team for four years. He starred in the North Carolina Coaches Association's East-West All-Star Basketball Game in 1971. Thompson is a first cousin of Alvin Gentry, both growing up in Shelby, North Carolina.
College career
Thompson led North Carolina State University to an undefeated season (27-0) in 1973, but the Wolfpack was banned from post-season play that year due to NCAA rules violations involving the recruiting of Thompson.[2]
He then led the Wolfpack to a 30–1 season and the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship in 1974. In the semifinal game NCSU defeated the reigning national champions, UCLA, in double overtime. In the championship game they won easily over Marquette 76–64.[3] His nickname was "Skywalker" because of his incredible vertical leap. The alley-oop pass, now a staple of today's high-flying, above-the-rim game, was "invented" by Thompson and his NC State teammate Monte Towe, and first used as an integral part of the offense by NC State coach Norm Sloan to take advantage of Thompson's leaping ability.
NC State's game against the nationally 4th-ranked University of Maryland Terrapins in the 1974 ACC Tournament finale, in an era in which only conference champions were invited to the NCAA tournament, is considered one of the best college basketball games of all time. Thompson and teammate Tommy Burleson led the #1-ranked Wolfpack to a 103–100 win in overtime, in a game played with no shot clock and no three point field goal. Maryland shot 63% from the field for the game, and lost. Thompson and the Wolfpack would go on to win the national championship that year. Maryland's exclusion from the NCAA Tournament due to the loss, despite their high national ranking, would lead to the expansion of the NCAA Tournament the very next season to include teams other than the league champions.
Thompson played basketball while the slam dunk was outlawed from 1967 to 1977 by the "Lew Alcindor" rule.[4] In 1975, playing his final home game at NC State against UNC-Charlotte, late in the second half Thompson on a breakaway received a long pass from a teammate, resulting in the first and only dunk of his collegiate career,[5] a goal that was promptly disallowed by a technical foul.
Thompson's number 44 remains the lone number retired by the school in men's basketball.
Season
Points/G
Rebounds/G
FG%
1972–73
24.7
8.1
.569
1973–74
26.0
7.9
.547
1974–75
29.9
8.2
.546
Professional career
Thompson (left) and Julius Erving, 1976 ABA All-Star Game, January 27, 1976
Thompson was the No. 1 draft pick of both the American Basketball Association (Virginia Squires) and the National Basketball Association (Atlanta Hawks) in the 1975 drafts of both leagues. He eventually signed with the ABA's Denver Nuggets. He finished runner-up to Julius Erving in the first-ever Slam-Dunk Competition, held at the 1976 ABA All-Star Game in Denver, but was named MVP of the ABA All-Star Game. As a prize, he received a credenza television set.[citation needed]
That season, the Nuggets finished 60–24, and beat the Kentucky Colonels in a hard-fought seven-game series to advance to the 1976 ABA Finals. In the finals, the Nuggets faced Erving and the New York Nets, and Thompson averaged 28.3 points and 6.3 rebounds per game in a tightly contested 4–2 series loss,[6] including an almost-heroic 42 point effort to lead all scorers in a narrow 112-106 Game 6 loss.[7] After the season ended, Thompson was awarded the 1976 ABA Rookie of the Year award. When Alvan Adams accepted the 1976 NBA Rookie of the Year Award, he thanked David Thompson for choosing to play in the ABA.[8]
Only a few months later, the two biggest basketball leagues in the United States combined in the ABA–NBA merger, and Thompson continued with the Nuggets. He went on to make the NBA All-Star Game four times. On April 9, 1978, the last day of that year's regular season, Thompson scored 73 points against the Detroit Pistons in an effort to win the NBA scoring title, which he lost by percentage points to the San Antonio Spurs' George Gervin, who scored 63 points in a game played later that same day.
After the 1977–78 season, Thompson signed a then-record[1] contract extension that paid him $4 million over five years.[9] After a foot injury caused him to miss the final 36 games of the 1979–80 season, he returned to average 25.5 points in 77 games the next year. However, after he dipped to 14.9 points in 1981–82, the Nuggets traded him to the Seattle SuperSonics on June 17, 1982, for Bill Hanzlik and a draft pick.
Thompson experienced somewhat of a career revival during his first year in Seattle, making the 1982-83 All-Star game after averaging 15.9 points, 3.6 rebounds, and 3 assists, which were comparatively low totals when contrasted with the stats from his prime in Denver.[10] During that year's playoffs, in his last postseason appearance, Thompson averaged just 12 points in a two-game series loss to the Portland Trail Blazers.[11] The next year, Thompson missed nearly all of the 1983–84 season due to drug rehabilitation. Following his release, the Sonics resigned him for the remaining nineteen games of the 1983–84 season, in which he averaged a career low of 12.6 points before an off-court 1984 knee injury forced him into retirement.[12]
Drug addiction
Thompson's substance abuse problems began due to feelings of "loneliness and isolation" after his 1979–80 foot injury.[13] They first became public after his erratic debut season in Seattle, after which he checked into a Denver rehabilitation facility in 1983.[14] His career-ending 1984 knee injury resulted from him being shoved down a stairwell during a fight at Studio 54,[12] and later factored into his failed 1985 tryout with the Indiana Pacers, after which he was arrested that night for public intoxication.[12] By 1986, Thompson was reportedly spending $1,000 daily on cocaine, for which he checked into rehab that year in Kirkland, Washington.[12] After he was sentenced to 180 days in jail in 1987 for assaulting his wife, Thompson became a committed Christian and reorganized his life.
Life after the NBA
Thompson worked with the Charlotte Hornets' community-relations department in 1990,[15] and, at age 37, played in the Legends Classic during the 1992 NBA All-Star Weekend, but he was one of two participants (with Norm Nixon) who were taken off the court on stretchers with serious leg injuries.[16] This resulted in the league retiring the event after the 1993 festivities.
Thompson returned to North Carolina State in 2003 to complete his degree in sociology. The next year, he shot an autobiographical film titled Skywalker. He was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame on May 6, 1996, and introduced Michael Jordan for the latter's 2009 induction.[17] He currently works as a motivational speaker and participates in events with the Hornets and Denver Nuggets.[1]
Personal life
Thompson and his wife Cathy had two daughters, Erika and Brooke. He shared the stage with his daughter Erika when the two graduated together on December 17, 2003, after he returned to earn his sociology degree.[18] His daughter, Brooke, was a participant on Global GUTS. Cathy died in August 2016.[19]
Career statistics
Thompson's first professional year (1975–1976) was spent in the ABA. The rest of his career he played in the NBA due to the ABA–NBA merger in 1976.
Regular season
Bold
Denotes career highs
Season
Team
GP
GS
MIN
PTS
REB
AST
STL
BLK
FG%
1975–76
Denver (ABA)
83
—
37.4
26.0
6.3
3.7
1.6
1.2
.515
1976–77
Denver
82
—
36.6
25.9
4.1
4.1
1.4
0.6
.507
1977–78
Denver
80
—
37.8
27.2
4.9
4.5
1.2
1.2
.521
1978–79
Denver
76
—
35.1
24.0
3.6
3.0
0.9
1.1
.512
1979–80
Denver
39
—
31.8
21.5
4.5
3.2
1.0
1.0
.468
1980–81
Denver
77
—
34.0
25.5
3.7
3.0
0.7
0.8
.506
1981–82
Denver
61
5
34.0
14.9
2.4
1.9
0.6
0.5
.486
1982–83
Seattle
75
64
20.4
15.9
3.6
3.0
0.6
0.4
.481
1983–84
Seattle
19
0
28.7
12.6
2.3
0.7
0.5
0.7
.539
Career
592
69
32.8
22.7
4.1
3.3
1.0
0.9
.505
Playoffs
Year
Team
GP
MIN
PTS
REB
AST
STL
BLK
FG%
1976
Denver (ABA)
13
39.1
26.4
6.4
3.0
1.2
0.4
.536
1977
Denver
6
39.5
24.7
5.2
4.0
1.5
0.7
.463
1978
Denver
13
37.0
25.2
4.1
4.0
0.7
1.6
.450
1979
Denver
3
40.7
28.0
7.0
4.0
1.3
0.3
.551
1982
Denver
3
22.0
11.7
3.3
2.0
0.3
0.0
.455
1983
Seattle
2
32.5
12.0
0.0
3.5
0.5
0.5
.360
Career
40
37.0
24.1
5.0
3.5
1.0
0.8
.485
College highlights
The Sporting News national Player of the Year (1975)
USBWA College Player of the Year (1975)
Consensus First-Team All-America (1973, 1974, 1975) by Associated Press (AP), United Press International (UPI), Eastman Kodak, The Sporting News
AP National Player of the Year (1974, 1975)
UPI Player of the Year (1975)
Eastman Kodak Award (1975)
Naismith Award (1975)
Adolph Rupp Trophy (1975)
2× AP Player of the Year (1974, 1975)
Helms Foundation Player of the Year (1974, 1975)
National Association of Basketball Coaches Player of the Year (1975)
United States Basketball Writers Association Player of the Year (1975)
Sullivan Award finalist (1974, 1975)
Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) Player of the Year (1973, 1974, 1975)
ACC Athlete of the Year (1973, 1975)
All-ACC First Team (1973, 1974, 1975)
North Carolina State retired his jersey number 44 (1975)
Led North Carolina State to the 1974 NCAA championship (30-1 record), 76–64 over Marquette University
Most Valuable Player (MVP), NCAA Tournament (1974)
Led Wolfpack to a 79–7 record during his final three season (freshmen were ineligible then) including 57-1 during his sophomore and junior seasons (27-0, 30–1), the best in ACC history. His senior year record was 22–6.
Scored 2,309 points (26.8 ppg) in 86 varsity games; including highs of 57 points as a senior, 41 as a junior and 40 as a sophomore
Averaged 35.6 ppg, including a 54-point high on the North Carolina State freshman team
World University Games MVP (1973)
Enshrined in North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame (1982)
NCAA All-Decade Team of the 1970s
Named to the ACC 50th Anniversary men's basketball team as one of the fifty greatest players in ACC history
ABA/NBA highlights
The Sporting News ABA Rookie of the Year (1976)
ABA Rookie of the Year (1976)
All-ABA (1976)
MVP, 1976 ABA All-Star Game
All-NBA First Team (1977, 1978)
Four-time NBA All-Star
MVP, 1979 NBA All-Star Game
Only player in history named MVP of both the ABA and NBA All-Star Games
Scored a career-high 73 points against Detroit (April 9, 1978)
Scored a then-NBA record 32 points in the second quarter against Detroit Pistons, a record that was broken by George Gervin (33 against New Orleans Jazz on the same day ) when Gervin won the 1978 scoring title with a 63-point output
The Nuggets retired his jersey number 33 (November 2, 1992)
Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.
2019-2025 WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии