Jerry Stackhouse

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Basketball player
Jerry Stackhouse
Jerry Darnell Stackhouse
Player information
Full name Jerry Darnell Stackhouse
birthday 5th November 1974 (age 45)
place of birth Kinston , North Carolina , United States
size 198 cm
position Shooting Guard / Small Forward
college North Carolina
NBA draft 1995 , 3rd Pick , Philadelphia 76ers
Clubs as active
1995–1998 Philadelphia 76ers 1999–2002 Detroit Pistons 2002–2004 Washington Wizards 2004–2009 Dallas Mavericks 2010 Milwaukee Bucks 2010 Miami Heat 2011–2012 Atlanta Hawks 2012–2013 Brooklyn NetsUnited StatesUnited States
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Clubs as coaches
2015–2016 Toronto Raptors (AC) 2016–2018 Raptors 905 2018–2019 Memphis Grizzlies (AC) Vanderbilt since 2019CanadaCanada
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Jerry Darnell Stackhouse (born November 5, 1974 in Kinston , North Carolina ) is a retired American basketball player and current basketball coach. Stackhouse attended the University of North Carolina for two years , where he successfully played basketball for the Tar Heels . In the early 2000s, Stackhouse was one of the best players in the NBA . In 2000 and 2001 he was invited to the NBA All-Star Game . After his professional career, he embarked on a career as a coach and has been coaching Vanderbilt University since 2019 .

NBA career

In 1995, Stackhouse was selected as third in the NBA Draft by the Philadelphia 76ers . In his first season in 1995/1996, he achieved a remarkable 19.6 points per game and was called up to the NBA All-Rookie First Team . Jerry Stackhouse was in his first season for a long time a sure contender for the title of NBA Rookie of the Year , until he fouled his opponent Jeff Hornacek in a game against Utah Jazz and assaulted him after the following exchange of words. Stackhouse was then banned from the NBA for two games and fined around US $ 7,500. In the 1996/97 season he formed a young and spectacular backcourt with Allen Iverson .

In the 1997/1998 season, Stackhouse was swapped with Eric Montross for Theo Ratliff and Aaron McKie at the Detroit Pistons . First, Stackhouse came off the bench for the first two years, where he averaged 15 points. In the 1999/2000 season he had his breakthrough, where he scored 23.6 and a year later 29.8 points per game. That season he set the Pistons' team record for the most points in a game against the Chicago Bulls with 57 points. This was also his career record. Stackhouse's only All-Star nomination fell during his time with the Pistons.

After another successful season in the Piston jersey, he was swapped from the Pistons to the Washington Wizards for Richard Hamilton and another 5 players in the summer of 2002 . In the 2003-2004 season Stackhouse scored 21.5 points and 4.5 assists per game. In the following season, due to an injury to the right knee, could only be used in 26 of 82 games and only got an average of 13.9 points.

In the summer of 2004, Jerry Stackhouse and Christian Laettner were sold to the Dallas Mavericks for Antawn Jamison . Stackhouse came on for the Mavericks as the "sixth man" from the bench because his knee injury was still not completely healed. He proved to be a profitable scorer from the bench, scoring almost 15 points on average, but repeatedly struggled with injuries and missed over 50 games over the next two seasons. In the 2005/2006 season, Stackhouse was used regularly in the play-offs . On June 16, 2006, Stu Jackson discovered in the 5th game of the NBA Finals a foul by Stackhouse on Shaquille O'Neal and banned Stackhouse (alongside Jason Terry and DJ Mbenga ) as the third player for the final. Dallas lost in the final to the Miami Heat with 4–2. Stackhouse played for the Mavericks until the end of the 2008/2009 season, but became more and more a substitute under the new coach Rick Carlisle and hardly got any playing time. He only scored 4.2 points on average in just under 16 minutes of playing time per game. In 2009 he therefore received no new contract in Dallas. He then completed a trial training with the New York Knicks , but was not committed. Despite good offers, he refused a move to Europe. In January 2010, the Milwaukee Bucks announced his commitment for the remainder of the 2009/2010 season. Stackhouse blossomed again and scored 8.5 points on average.

However, he only stayed there until the summer of 2010 and then moved to Miami Heat , where he was scheduled as a backup behind new stars such as LeBron James and Chris Bosh . On November 23, 2010, Stackhouse was released from the Heat after seven games to make way for Erick Dampier , who replaced the injured Udonis Haslem . During the season he worked as an analyst for NBA TV.

In the 2011/2012 season, Stackhouse played for the Atlanta Hawks . There he helped, in a small role, as a banker that the Hawks reached the play-offs again. After the season, Stackhouse signed a one-year contract with the Brooklyn Nets . It was only used sporadically by the Nets. However, his contract was not extended towards the end of the season, as he announced a resignation during the playoffs from the Nets.

Stackhouse came in 970 NBA season games on 16.9 points, 3.2 rebounds and 3.3 assists per game.

Coaching career

On November 15, 2013, it was announced that Stackhouse would work for Fox Sports Networks as a Detroit Pistons analyst. In July 2015, Stackhouse took on an assistant coach position with the Toronto Raptors . A year later he was named head coach of the Raptors D-League team Raptors 905 . With these, Stackhouse won the D-League championship in 2017 and was also NBA D-League Coach of the Year. In summer 2018 he became an assistant coach with the Memphis Grizzlies . He worked for a year, after which he got a coaching position at Vanderbilt University , where he signed a six-year contract.

Awards

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Raptors Announce Assistant Coaching Staff
  2. nba.com: Jerry Stackhouse joins Memphis Grizzlies as assistant coach , accessed November 28, 2018
  3. cbssports.com: Vanderbilt hires former NBA star Jerry Stackhouse

Web links