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Clifford Ray

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Nationality
  
American

Name
  
Clifford Ray

Career start
  
1971

Listed height
  
6 ft 9 in (2.06 m)

Role
  
Basketball Coach

Career end
  
1981

Listed weight
  
230 lb (104 kg)

Height
  
2.06 m

Education
  
University of Oklahoma

College
  
Oklahoma (1968–1971)

Weight
  
104 kg


Clifford Ray icdnturnercomdrpnbawarriorssitesdefaultfi

Born
  
January 21, 1949 (age 75) Union, South Carolina (
1949-01-21
)

High school
  
Sims (Union, South Carolina)

NBA draft
  
1971 / Round: 3 / Pick: 40th overall

Number
  
14 (Chicago Bulls / Forward-center)

Classic warriors clifford ray


Clifford Ray (born January 21, 1949) is an American basketball coach and former professional basketball player. A 6–9 center, he played three of his ten seasons in the National Basketball Association (NBA) with the Chicago Bulls (1971 to 1974) and the other seven with the Golden State Warriors (1974 to 1981).

Contents

Clifford Ray Clifford Ray A Big Loss CelticsLifecom Boston

Robert parish pays homage to clifford ray


Career

Clifford Ray A Clifford Ray Return to Boston Would Benefit Celtics

Ray played his college basketball at the University of Oklahoma, graduating with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree (he can play most woodwind instruments). Selected in the third round of the 1971 NBA draft by the Chicago Bulls, Ray was, from the start, a very effective defender and rebounder. Ray was named to the 1972 NBA All-Rookie Team, and led the NBA in rebounds per minute played in each of his first two seasons. He spent three seasons with the Bulls, his best being 1973–74 during which Ray averaged 9.3 points and 12.2 rebounds per game, and the Bulls reached the NBA Western Conference Finals for the first time.

Clifford Ray Clifford Ray Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Ray and $100,000 were sent to the Golden State Warriors for Nate Thurmond in an exchange of centers just prior to the 1974–75 season on September 3, 1974. The trade resulted in the Warriors receiving a quality ballplayer who was eight years younger than Thurmond and additional fiscal stability. In 1975 the Warriors, led by Rick Barry and coached by Al Attles, won the NBA championship. Ray led the team in rebounding and anchored the defense, finishing second in minutes played per game, after Barry. The Warriors defeated Ray's former team, the Chicago Bulls, in the Western Conference finals before sweeping the Washington Bullets in the NBA Finals.

Clifford Ray Classic Warriors Clifford Ray Golden State Warriors

Ray is one of a handful of players to have played at least ten seasons in the pros and to have recorded more rebounds (6953 over 784 games for an 8.9 average) than points (5821, for a 7.4 average) for his career.

After his playing career, Ray worked as an assistant coach with the Dallas Mavericks in 1987. He also coached in the Continental Basketball Association, where he landed his first head coaching job with the Fort Wayne Fury, replacing former teammate Rick Barry as head coach at the end of the season. Later, he worked as a New Jersey Nets assistant before returning to Golden State as an assistant coach. He also worked as an assistant coach with the Orlando Magic and from 2005–2010 was an assistant coach for the Boston Celtics, who won an NBA championship in 2008. He was hired by the Sacramento Kings in 2012.

On June 5, 2013, new Kings coach Michael Malone announced that the 2012–13 assistant coaches would not be retained for the 2013–14 season. In 2016, Coach Ray was hired by the Houston Rockets as a consultant.

Dolphin rescue

In 1978, Ray was in the news for an entirely different reason: he helped save a dolphin's life. At Marine World (then located in Redwood City, California and now in Vallejo, California), during maintenance in the tank of a bottlenose dolphin named "Mr. Spock", the dolphin swallowed a bolt with a protruding sharp screw. The veterinarian was unwilling to perform a risky operation while the screw was still in the dolphin's first stomach, just inches beyond his reach. His frustrated suggestion that he needed longer arms led Marine World President Mike Demetrios, a big basketball fan, to ask local star Ray (whose arms are 3 feet 9 inches, or 114 centimeters, long) if he could help. With gloves, lubrication, and guidance, he was able to reach down Spock's throat and retrieve the screw before it could cause more damage.

References

Clifford Ray Wikipedia