Avery Johnson

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-{{Colspan center}} '''Date of birth:''' [[March 25]], [[1965]]+{{Colspan center}} '''Date of birth:''' [[March 25]], [[1965]] <br> New Orleans, Louisina
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{{Colspan center}} '''Nationality:''' {{U.S Flag}} American {{Colspan center}} '''Nationality:''' {{U.S Flag}} American

Revision as of 04:35, 7 May 2012

Avery Johnson
no image
Brooklyn Nets
Head coach
Personal information
Date of Birth March 25, 1965
Place of Birth Image:U.S. Flag.png New Orleans, Louisina
Career information
Overall record 240-172
Titles none
Career 2004-present
Career history
2004-2005 Dallas Mavericks (asst.)
2005-2008 Dallas Mavericks
2010-present New Jersey/Brooklyn Nets
Career highlights and awards
  • 1x NBA champion
Avery Johnson
Image:Avery Johnson (player).jpg
Johnson playing for the Spurs.
No. 15, 6, 5
Point guard
Personal information
Date of birth: March 25, 1965
New Orleans, Louisina
Nationality: Image:U.S. Flag.png American
Height: 5 ft 10 Weight: 175 lbs
Career information
College: Southern
NBA Draft: 1988; Undrafted
Debut: 1988 for the Seattle SuperSonics
Final debut: 2004 for the Golden State Warriors
Career history
Career Highlights and Awards
  • 1x NBA champion
Avery Johnson at NBA.com
Stats @ basketball-reference.com

Avery Johnson (born March 25, 1965) is a retired American professional basketball player and current head coach of the Brooklyn Nets. On March 19, 2005, Don Nelson resigned as head coach of the Dallas Mavericks and Johnson was named the eighth coach in the history of the franchise. Johnson finished the season with a 16-2 mark and was named Western Conference Coach of the Month for April after guiding the Mavericks to their highest win total for that month in team history (10-1 mark).

He was also named Western Conference Coach of the Month in November 2005, becoming the first coach in league history to win the award in his first two full months of coaching. Johnson picked up the award again in January 2006 and was later named NBA Coach of the Year for 2005-06.

Johnson won 66 of his first 82 games, which was four more wins than any other coach in league history had through 82 games. He was also the fastest coach to reach the 50-win mark (62 games) and coached the Western Conference in the 2006 All-Star game. Last season, Johnson guided Dallas to a franchise-high tying 60 wins and its first appearance in the NBA Finals.

On April 30, 2008 the Mavericks fired Johnson after they were eliminated in the First Round of the playoffs.

Playing Career

As a high school senior in 1983, Johnson led New Orleans' St. Augustine High School to a 35-0 record and the Class 4A Louisiana State Championship.

Johnson matriculated at New Mexico Junior College before moving on to Cameron University, and finally Southern University, with whom in his senior season in 1988 he led the NCAA with 13.3 assists per game, an all-time record that still stands.

Upon graduation in 1988 Johnson was not selected in the 1988 NBA Draft. After a summer season with the United States Basketball League's Palm Beach Stingrays, however, Johnson was signed by the Seattle SuperSonics and managed to spend the next 16 years playing in the NBA, including stints with the Denver Nuggets, Houston Rockets, Golden State Warriors, and Dallas Mavericks. A true journeyman as a player, occasionally traded, or even waived, mid-season, Johnson is most well-known for his time with the San Antonio Spurs (1991, 1992-1993, 1994-2001), particularly his integral role on the 1999 Spurs team that won the NBA championship against the New York Knicks in which he hit the championship-clinching shot in Game 5. The Spurs retired Avery Johnson's number 6 on December 22, 2007 in a home game against the Los Angeles Clippers.

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