Mark Jackson

From Hoopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Revision as of 05:10, 12 September 2011
Jdh87 (Talk | contribs)
(Personal)
← Previous diff
Revision as of 16:50, 23 May 2012
Jdh87 (Talk | contribs)

Next diff →
Line 4: Line 4:
{{Colspan center}} no image {{Colspan center}} no image
|- |-
-{{Blank 2 team color}} Career information+{{Blank 2 team color}} Current position
|- |-
{{Colspan left}} Title {{Colspan left}} Title
Line 11: Line 11:
{{Colspan left}} Team {{Colspan left}} Team
|[[Golden State Warriors]] |[[Golden State Warriors]]
-|- 
-{{Colspan left}} League 
-|{{U.S Flag}} [[NBA]] 
|- |-
{{Blank 2 team color}} Personal information {{Blank 2 team color}} Personal information
Line 56: Line 53:
|- |-
{{Colspan left}} Date of birth {{Colspan left}} Date of birth
-| [[April 1]], [[1965]]+| [[April 1]], [[1965]]<Br> Brooklyn, New York
-|-+
-{{Colspan left}} Place of birth+
-| Brooklyn, New York +
|- |-
{{Colspan left}} Nationality {{Colspan left}} Nationality

Revision as of 16:50, 23 May 2012

Mark Jackson
no image
Current position
Title Head coach
Team Golden State Warriors
Personal information
Date of birth April 1, 1965
Place of birth Image:U.S. Flag.png Brooklyn, New York
Coaching career
Overall record n/a
Titles 0
Career 2011-present
Coaching career
Golden State Warriors (2011-present)
Career highlights and awards
  • none
Mark Jackson
Image:Jackson1.jpg
Jackson with the New York Knicks.
No. 13, 31
Shooting guard/Point guard
Personal information
Date of birth April 1, 1965
Brooklyn, New York
Nationality Image:U.S. Flag.png American
Listed height 6 ft 1 in
Listed weight 180 lbs
Career information
College St. John's
NBA Draft 1987; Round: 1 / Pick: 18th
Selected by the New York Knicks
Pro career 1987-2004
Career history
1987-1992 New York Knicks
1992-1994 Los Angeles Clippers
1994-1996 Indiana Pacers
1996-1997 Denver Nuggets
1997-2000 Indiana Pacers
2000-2001 Toronto Raptors
2001-2002 New York Knicks
2002-2003 Utah Jazz
2003-2004 Houston Rockets
Career highlights and awards
  • 1x NBA All-Star
  • 1987-88 Rookie of the Year
  • 3x NBA Rookie of the month award
  • 1986-87 NCAA AP All-America (2nd)
Mark Jackson at NBA.com

Mark "Action" Jackson (born April 1 1965 in Brooklyn, New York) is a retired American professional basketball player and current Head coach of the Golden State Warriors. Playing at Point guard Jackson played for the New York Knicks, Indiana Pacers, Los Angeles Clippers, Denver Nuggets, Toronto Raptors, Utah Jazz in a career spanning from 1987 to 2004. He is currently an NBA analyst for The YES Network's New Jersey Nets games, ESPN and ABC. He currently rank 2nd in (10334) Assists and 13th in (8.0) Assists Per Game. In 1996-97 he led the NBA in (935) Assists and (11.4) Assists Per Game.

Contents

Early Years

Mark was regarded as one of the nation's elite point guards while attending Bishop Loughlin Memorial High School in the Fort Greene section of Brooklyn under Coach Patrick Quigley. Mark gained a reputation as a streetballer in New York and a college hoops star at St. John's University, and was made the 18th pick of the 1987 NBA Draft by the New York Knicks.

NBA Career

Jackson teamed with Patrick Ewing and Charles Oakley to turn the Knicks into a prime playoff team in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Before the Knicks peaked and became regular playoff contenders, however, he was traded to the Los Angeles Clippers in 1992.

Jackson had a steady career with the Knicks, averaging 13.6 points in his rookie season. His 868 assists destroyed Oscar Robertson's previous Rookie record of 690 assists in 1960-61. He also setting a Rookie record of 10.6 assists per game, earning him the 1988 Rookie of the Year award, the lowest overall draft pick ever to be so named since 1958.

After the 1992 season, he was traded to the Los Angeles Clippers, a trade that saw Charles Smith and Doc Rivers go to the Knicks. While with the Clippers, Jackson teamed with Danny Manning, Ron Harper and Coach Larry Brown to lead the Clippers to two of their few playoff appearances of the 1990s (a feat that would not be repeated until 1997 and 2006).

Jackson later was traded to the Indiana Pacers for younger (and some say less talented) point guard Pooh Richardson, where he teamed with Reggie Miller, Rik Smits, Antonio Davis, and Dale Davis for six seasons to make the Indiana Pacers a strong contender. Jackson was traded to the Denver Nuggets before the 1996-97 season started for Jalen Rose. This trade was a disaster for the Pacers, as the Pacers fell to 10th place in the East halfway through the seaon and out of the playoff race. Feeling the heat, Pacer's GM Donnie Walsh "retraded" for Jackson at the deadline, giving up Vincent Askew, Eddie Johnson and a couple of 2nd round picks. The return of Jackson sparked the Pacers, but they still missed the playoffs for the only time in the last decade and a half. Jackson would eventually appear in his only NBA Finals as the Pacers starting point guard in 2000, when they lost to the Los Angeles Lakers in six games.

Jackson would leave the Pacers that offseason for the Toronto Raptors, who needed a floor general and had extra money to spend with the departure of Tracy McGrady earlier that offseason. Jackson would only play 54 games for the Raptors before being traded at the deadline back to the Knicks. The return was short-lived as the Knicks were bounced out of the playoffs by Jackson's former team, the Pacers.

In the offseason, he was involved in a trade back to the Nuggets, where he was immediately waived. Jackson played for the Utah Jazz for the 2002-03 season as John Stockton's backup. It was this season that Jackson moved into second place on the list of all time assists leaders behind, ironically, his teammate Stockton, with whom he didn't get along very well. Jackson would play every single game that season without starting one before moving on to the Houston Rockets in 2004. Jackson would only play in 42 games as a Rocket and, experiencing a large drop off in skills, would call it a career at season's end.

He is currently ranked 13th on the NBA all-time games list (1,296), 26th on the all-time minutes played list (39,121), 77th on the all-time 3-point field goals made list (734), 65th on the all-time 3-point field goal attempts list (2,213), 2nd on the all-time assists list (10,323) and 23rd on the all-time steals list (1,608). While many fans feel Jackson deserves a place in the Basketball Hall of Fame, many believe the fact that he played for so many different teams hurt his chances of induction (a problem also shared by Adrian Dantley). Additionally, Jackson never achieved great individual success; despite winning Rookie of the Year in 1988, he only made one All-Star appearance in his career (1989).

Post-Retirement

Jackson currently works as an analyst for New Jersey Nets telecasts on YES Network, most often teaming up with Marv Albert. As of the 2007 NBA Playoffs, he also works as an analyst for ABC teaming with Mike Breen on these telecasts. Mark Jackson also adds his voice for some games of the NBA Conference semis on ESPN.

As an analyst, he also does a weekly segment called You're Better Than That, which focuses on the NBA's best players in their not-so-great moments during the previous week.

Personal

Jackson married singer/actress Desiree Coleman on July 29, 1990. The couple have three children. He is the older brother of the late Streetball player Troy Jackson, better known as "Escalade". His older brother, Kevin Jackson, is a security guard at Deer Park High School in New York.

On February 20, 2011, Jackson's younger brother Troy Jackson passed away at the age of 35.

External Links

Personal tools