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Jim McDaniels

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Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Basketball player

Career end
  
1978

Name
  
Jim McDaniels

Career start
  
1971


Listed weight
  
228 lb (103 kg)

Weight
  
103 kg

Height
  
2.11 m

Position
  
Center, Power forward

Jim McDaniels wwwlatimescomincludesprojectsimglakersbiop

Born
  
April 2, 1948 (age 76) Scottsville, Kentucky (
1948-04-02
)

High school
  
Allen County Scottsville(Scottsville, Kentucky)

College
  
Western Kentucky (1968–1971)

NBA draft
  
1971 / Round: 2 / Pick: 23rd overall


Listed height
  
6 ft 11 in (2.11 m)

Died at 69 american basketball player jim mcdaniels


James Ronald McDaniels (April 2, 1948 – September 6, 2017) was an American professional basketball player.

Contents

Jim McDaniels Jim McDaniels Wikipedia

A 6'11" power forward/center, McDaniels averaged nearly 40 points per game as a senior at Allen County High School in Scottsville, Kentucky. From 1967 to 1971, he played at Western Kentucky University, leading his team to a third-place finish in the 1971 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament. (The NCAA later voided Western Kentucky's participation in the tournament, accusing McDaniels of signing with an agent while still in college.) He also set WKU school records with 2,238 career points (now tied with Courtney Lee) and 1,118 career rebounds.

Jim McDaniels Jim McDaniels Wikipedia

McDaniels was drafted by the Seattle SuperSonics in the second round of the 1971 NBA draft and by the Utah Stars in the ABA Draft, but he began his professional career with the Carolina Cougars of the American Basketball Association, who offered him a $1.35 million contract to be paid over twenty-five years. Reportedly, the Cougars first approached McDaniels during November 1970, while he was still playing for Western Kentucky. McDaniels averaged 26.8 points and 14 rebounds in 58 games with the Cougars during the 1971–72 season and appeared in the 1972 ABA All-Star Game. However, he feuded with the Cougars while trying to renegotiate his contract – he wanted his salary to be spread over fifteen years, rather than twenty-five – and near the end of his rookie season he decided to leave the Cougars for the SuperSonics.

Jim McDaniels Hilltopper basketball legend McDaniels dies at 69 WKU Sports

McDaniels remained with Seattle for the next two full seasons. However, he struggled to maintain the same level of production he had achieved in the ABA, and by the 1973–74 NBA season, McDaniels was averaging just 5.5 points per game. During that time, McDaniels was dogged by off-court troubles as the Cougars questioned the legality of his jump to the NBA. He later admitted in an interview, "I should have stayed in the ABA for a couple of years. I was just young and things started going bad for me there and I didn't know how to handle them." SuperSonics coach and general manager Bill Russell ultimately released McDaniels in fall 1974. For the next four years, McDaniels bounced from team to team, playing for the Los Angeles Lakers and Buffalo Braves of the NBA, the Kentucky Colonels of the ABA, and Snaidero Udine of Italy. He finally decided to retire from basketball in 1978.

Jim McDaniels ABA American Basketball Association Players

McDaniels had two sons (Eskias McDaniels, Shannon Martin). His #44 jersey was retired by Western Kentucky in January 2000. McDaniels died in Bowling Green, Kentucky at the age of 69 due to complications from diabetes

Jim McDaniels Jim McDaniels Kentucky High School Basketball Hall of Fame KHSBHF

Funeral photos basketball legend jim mcdaniels dies at age 69



Jim McDaniels Jim McDaniels WKU Sports bgdailynewscom

Jim McDaniels Western Kentucky basketball great Jim McDaniels dies at age 69

Jim McDaniels Kentucky vs Western Kentucky March 18 1971

References

Jim McDaniels Wikipedia


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