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Dennis Rodman

 
Dennis Rodman
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basketball player; actor; writer

Personal Information

Born Dennis Keith Rodman on May 13, 1961, in Trenton, NJ; son of Philander and Shirley Rodman; married Annie Bakes (model), 1993 (divorced); married Carmen Electra (actress), 1998 (divorced 1999); children: (with Bakes) Alexis
Education: Attended Cooke County Junior College, 1982-83, and Southeastern Oklahoma State University, 1983-86.

Career

Detroit Pistons, professional basketball player, 1986-93; San Antonio Spurs, professional basketball player, 1993-95; writer, 1994-97; Chicago Bulls, professional basketball player, 1995-98; actor, 1996-; Los Angeles Lakers, professional basketball player, 1999; Dallas Mavericks, professional basketball player, 2000.

Life's Work

Dennis Rodman is one of the greatest rebounders ever to play professional basketball. His rebounding exploits have drawn comparisons with such legends as Wilt Chamberlain, Moses Malone, and Bill Russell, all of whom were taller and heavier. Sports Illustrated once called Rodman "a sort of basketball genius." A dedicated analyst of the game and a tenacious defender, Rodman led the National Basketball Association (NBA) in rebounding for four consecutive years and helped lead his teams to five NBA championships. As his career went on, however, Rodman drew ever more attention for his off-court antics. With his rainbow-colored hair and multiple tattoos, his penchant for conducting interviews in gay bars, and tumultuous romances with the singer Madonna and the actress Carmen Electra, Rodman landed headlines far outside the sports pages.

Rodman revels in the outsider image. The hair, the tattoos, the numerous body piercings, and the episodes of cross-dressing are all the product of a man who is as much entertainer as athlete. "I tried something bold," Rodman explained in Playboy. "I created something that everyone has been afraid of ... the Dennis Rodman I was born to be." However flamboyant his behavior might be, Rodman offers no apologies. He feels that he is fulfilling his mission in the NBA as well--or better--than anyone. "I don't like people to get inside Dennis Rodman," he admitted in the Atlanta Journal. "But once I get on the court, I'm just taking the 22,000 fans that are in the stands and putting them inside me. I like to see people excited and happy, and when they leave the arena they say, 'God, that was a great game.'"

Renounced by Mother

Dennis Keith Rodman was born on May 13, 1961, in Trenton, New Jersey, the son of Philander and Shirley Rodman. When he was just three years old, his father--an Air Force enlistee--deserted the family, leaving Dennis and his two younger sisters without a father figure. Despite his success in the NBA, Rodman has not seen his father in 25 years. No one is more surprised by Rodman's success than Rodman himself. "I'm something I shouldn't have been," he told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. "I should be an average Joe Blow, nine to five." Rodman says this because as a child he was frail and shy, often taking the brunt of beatings by his bigger, more aggressive schoolmates.

Rodman was only five-foot-eleven during high school. He did not even make the varsity basketball team at the Dallas, Texas high school he attended. After graduating from high school he drifted through a series of jobs, including serving as a janitor at the Dallas-Fort Worth Airport. According to Mark Seal in Playboy, the part-time airport job led Rodman into trouble: "On a dare, he stuck his broom handle through a gift shop grate and stole 15 watches. He was arrested, jailed for a night, and released after he told the cops where the watches were." No charges were ever filed in the incident, but it added to the growing strain between Rodman and his mother.

Shortly after the incident with the watches, Rodman's mother issued him an ultimatum: he was to go to college, enlist in the armed services, or get another job. Rodman ignored her. Exasperated, she packed his bags and kicked him out. Their relationship has been cordial but distant ever since. "I'll just say this," Rodman told the Post-Dispatch. "It left a hole in my life I can't fill up."

Rescued by Basketball

Rescue came in the form of a phenomenal growth spurt. Rodman grew almost a foot in a single year, topping out at six-foot-eight. After a year at Cooke County Junior College in Dallas, he won a basketball scholarship to Southeastern Oklahoma State University. He arrived there, shy and uncertain about his skills, in 1983.

At a basketball camp that Rodman helped to coach, he met a young boy named Bryne Rich. Bryne was suffering deeply from the consequences of an accident that had occurred while he was hunting--his gun had discharged while he was reloading, killing his best friend. Rodman helped Bryne talk through his pain, and in return Bryne introduced Rodman to the Rich family, who practically adopted the soft-spoken college player. Rodman moved in with the Rich family, who offered emotional support and encouragement as his basketball career caught fire.

As a college junior and senior Rodman led the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) in rebounding, with 16.1 per game in 1985 and 17.8 in 1986. He was named an All-American as a senior and was chosen in the second round of the 1986 NBA draft by the Detroit Pistons. Rodman joined the Pistons for the 1986-87 season as a forward, finding a congenial atmosphere with coach Chuck Daly and a no-holds-barred group of fellow players who would come to be known as the "Bad Boys." A brief marriage during the period to model Annie Bakes ended in divorce after only 82 days, but it produced Rodman's only child to date, a daughter named Alexis. Bakes's only lasting influence on Rodman's life was her penchant for getting tattoos--Rodman has since covered much of his body with them.

Professionally, Rodman became a force to be reckoned with. The Pistons won back-to-back national championships in 1989 and 1990, taking their "Bad Boy" image to a worldwide audience. Rodman established himself as a solid rebounder and important defensive cog in the Pistons lineup, earning NBA Defensive Player of the Year honors in both 1990 and 1991. He had a good relationship with his teammates and coach Daly, and by all reports he was infuriated when some of his friends got traded and Daly left the team. "Dennis kind of grew up with us," Daly explained in USA Today. "The Pistons were Dennis's first professional family, and he really liked what the team stood for.... It was a family to him, and when it disintegrated around him, it was tough for him to deal with."

It was during this time that Rodman developed his philosophy on the NBA--that professional basketball exploits its players, forcing them to play more for money than for a sense of team, and expecting them to adhere to a squeaky-clean image at odds with the demands of the game. Asked why he had become so uncommunicative with his coaches and fellow players in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Rodman had a simple answer: "This business is rotten."

Became Rebounder for Hire

In 1993 Rodman signed a three-year contract with the San Antonio Spurs, bringing him home to Texas. There he helped the Spurs to advance to the playoffs by leading the league in rebounding in 1993, 1994, and 1995 (he had been top rebounder with the Pistons in 1992 as well). It was also in San Antonio that Rodman began coloring his hair the many shades that have made him a star beyond the bounds of basketball. Rodman put himself in the hands of hairdresser David Chapa, who created the classic Rodman look by first applying peroxide until the player's hair turned white, then coloring it with bright hair color in shades of Rodman's choosing. On occasion Rodman and Chapa collaborated on designs that are colored onto the crown of Rodman's head. The painful process took up to three hours and carried the threat of future baldness. Rodman suggested that if his hair falls out, he would just tattoo his head.

With the Spurs, Rodman established himself as a rebounding specialist on a par with the likes of Bill Russell and Wilt Chamberlain--both of whom were centers, far taller and heavier than Rodman. In fact, at six-foot-eight and 215 pounds, Rodman is definitely short and slight for his specialty. "I'm surprised that I can even get to the ball compared to most guys who are 6-10 and 7 feet tall," he told the Chicago Tribune. "Especially when I've got guys grabbing me and holding me and doing all kinds of things to keep me away from the ball. They don't even know me well enough to be doing some of the things they do." Rodman compensated for his relative lack of stature by analyzing the behavior of the basketball as it arches toward the hoop and then caroms off in various directions. He can often anticipate how a ball will behave when it fails to fall through the basket--and he responds accordingly. "People think I just go get the damn ball, because they don't take the time to really look at what I do," he said in Sports Illustrated. "Rebounding isn't brain surgery, but there's more to it than being able to jump higher than the next guy. A lot of work is done before you ever even jump."

It was during his tenure with the Spurs that Rodman met singer-actress Madonna on a photo shoot. They began a highly-publicized courtship that added spice to the tabloids for months. While Rodman refused to comment on the relationship, his Spurs teammate Jack Haley--one of his few close friends--said that Madonna was very serious about Rodman. "I went out with Dennis and Madonna several times," Haley told the Detroit News. "It's not rumor. It's true. I was there. She was dead serious. She wanted Dennis Rodman to marry her. She asked Dennis several times to marry her. I was there, I heard it with my own ears. She wanted to have a baby." Haley added that Rodman was more cautious and unwilling to enter into a serious commitment after such a short courtship. After several months, the pair split up.

Played with the Bulls and Beyond

When the Spurs failed to make the championship finals in the 1994-95 season, Rodman's image as a nonconformist became an issue. During contract renegotiations, Rodman was traded to the Chicago Bulls--a move that he welcomed, since the Bulls were the dominant team of the 1990s. With the Bulls, Rodman continued his outrageous behavior. He appeared at Bulls games with green hair, red hair surrounding a black Bulls emblem, and canary yellow hair. In his first season with the Bulls he drew a two-week suspension after head-butting a referee and was suspended for 11 games after kicking a courtside TV photographer. And yet somehow, he helped the team win. "My sole aim ...," Rodman told the Associate Press, "will be to help bring the NBA championship back home to Chicago." He continued improving as a rebounder, learning the shooting styles of Bulls stars Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen so he could better react to their missed shots. Though his teammates sometimes disliked his attention-grabbing behavior, Rodman helped the team win. In fact, the Bulls won the NBA title three years in a row, in 1996, 1997, and 1998.

Playing with the championship Bulls put Rodman in the spotlight, and he adored the attention. In 1996 he published his autobiography, Bad As I Wanna Be, which spent 20 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list. New Yorker reviewer David Remnick remarked that, in Bad As I Wanna Be, Rodman gets "in our collective face with an absolute, and desperate, authenticity. There is no whimsy. Here we are on the edge of a new sports form: autopathography." As if the book--in which Rodman revealed his secret longing to be a woman--wasn't revealing enough, Rodman showed up at book signings riding a Harley Davidson motorcycle and wearing women's clothes. Rodman's personal behavior drew national headlines, whether he was being arrested for public drunkenness, briefly marrying former Baywatch star Carmen Electra, starring in action films like 1997's Double Team, hosting an MTV program Dennis Rodman's World Tour '96, or appearing in World Championship Wrestling matches. No act was too outrageous for Rodman, no stage too big.

Following the 1998 season the Bulls set out to rebuild, and Rodman was released. Though most NBA players were ready to retire by their late 30s, Rodman remained willing to offer a team his prodigious rebounding skills if only they would tolerate his increasingly outrageous behavior. For a brief period, the Los Angeles Lakers were willing to give Rodman a try. He joined the team for 23 games in 1999, at one point spurring them to 11 straight wins. Team officials soon grew disgusted with Rodman's antics, however, which included missing practices and refusing to follow directions from coaches. Rodman was fired, and didn't play again until the next season, when he signed with the Dallas Mavericks. Rodman played just 12 games for the Mavs in 2000 before being dumped from the team. As of 2004, Rodman's attempts to revive his NBA career have consisted primarily of rumors.

Rodman once told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch: "I'm a free, wild, exotic animal loving life, such as it is in the confines of the rules and laws of the universe." But Rodman has continually bumped up against the rules and laws of the universe. Since buying a home and opening a restaurant/bar in Newport Beach, California, in 1998, police have visited his home 50 times responding to complaints about excessive partying and public drunkenness. Rodman was jailed for public drunkenness in September of 2003, and a rumored NBA comeback was derailed in the fall of 2003 when he crashed a motorcycle while allegedly driving drunk. Friends worried that Rodman was out of control: "He's way out of control," friend and former pro football player Floyd Raglin told Sports Illustrated. "Everybody likes to have fun, but I don't want to see him get seriously hurt or kill himself--because that's where he's headed." Reports in early 2004 indicated that Rodman had addressed his problems with alcohol abuse, but it remains to be seen whether the aging wildman can revive his career once more.

Awards

NBA All-Defensive first team, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996; NBA defensive player of the year, 1990, 1991; NBA All-Star team, 1990, 1992; IBM Award for all-around contributions to team's success, 1992.

Works

Selected writings

  • (With Pat Rich and Alan Steinberg) Rebound: The Dennis Rodman Story, Crown, 1994.
  • (With Tim Keown) Bad As I Wanna Be, Delacorte, 1996.
  • (With Michael Silver) Walk on the Wild Side, Delacorte, 1997.
  • Words from the Worm: An Unauthorized Trip through the Mind of Dennis Rodman, David Whitaker, compiler, Bonus Books, 1997.

Further Reading

Books

  • Bickley, Dan, No Bull: The Unauthorized Biography of Dennis Rodman, St. Martin's Press, 1997.
  • Rodman, Dennis, with Pat Rich and Alan Steinberg, Rebound: The Dennis Rodman Story, Crown, 1994.
Periodicals
  • Associated Press, March 19, 1996.
  • Atlanta Journal and Constitution, February 22, 1996, p. Sports 1.
  • Chicago Sun-Times, October 4, 1995, p. 122.
  • Chicago Tribune, February 29, 1996, p. 1.
  • Detroit News, May 18, 1995, p. D1.
  • New Yorker, June 10, 1996, pp. 84-88.
  • People Weekly, September 11, 2000, p. 20.
  • Philadelphia Daily News, January 11, 1996, p. S6.
  • Playboy, January 1996, p. 98.
  • St. Louis Post-Dispatch, March 12, 1995, p. F3.
  • Sports Illustrated, March 4, 1996, p. 30; March 8, 1999, p. 38; Nov. 3, 2003, p. 23.
  • Texas Monthly, September 1998, pp. 106-111.
  • USA Today, May 26, 1995, p. A1.
On-line
  • Dennis Rodman: The Official Web Site, www.drodman.com (April 12, 2004).

— Mark Kram and Tom Pendergast

Quotes By:

Dennis Rodman

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Quotes:

"Fifty percent of life in the N.B.A. is sex. The other fifty percent is money."

AMG AllMovie Guide:

Dennis Rodman

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Biography

Instantly recognizable thanks to ever-changing brightly hued hair, multiple piercings, and flamboyant personal style, eccentric basketball superstar-cum-pro-wrestler-cum action film star Dennis Rodman has attempted to translate his remarkable on-court talents to numerous other venues, often with varying results.

Born in Trenton, NJ, in 1961, Rodman's early prominence on the court with such teams as the Detroit Pistons led the justifiably cocky hoop master to fame with both the Chicago Bulls and the Los Angeles Lakers. As Rodman's frantic moves and wild behavior both on and off the court began to draw attention outside of the world of the NBA, Rodman began to branch out with a career in the WCW (World Championship Wrestling) in 1997. Taking his first starring film role in Double Team the same year, Rodman's cinematic turn didn't exactly spawn the celluloid career some may have anticipated, and its follow up (Simon Sez [1999]) made a brief bow in theaters before its hasty retreat to the home video market. A role in Cutaway followed in 2000, with Rodman once again donning his action film persona alongside veterans Tom Berringer and Stephen Baldwin. On the small screen, Rodman joined the cast of Soldier of Fortune, Inc. in 1997. Married to actress Carmen Electra in 1998, the couple remained an outwardly happy item until filing for divorce shortly after the new millennium. As a writer, Rodman's autobiography, As Bad as I Wanna Be, proved a popular read when published in 1996. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Dennis Rodman

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Dennis Rodman

Rodman with the Chicago Bulls during the 1995–1996 season.
No. 10, 91, 73, 70
Small forward / Power forward
Personal information
Born (1961-05-13) May 13, 1961 (age 51)
Trenton, New Jersey
Nationality American
High school South Oak Cliff
Listed height 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)
Listed weight 220 lb (100 kg)
Career information
College Cooke County (1983)
Southeastern Oklahoma State (1983–1986)
NBA Draft 1986 / Round: 2 / Pick: 27th overall
Selected by the Detroit Pistons
Pro career 1986–2006
Career history
19861993 Detroit Pistons
19931995 San Antonio Spurs
19951998 Chicago Bulls
1999 Los Angeles Lakers
2000 Dallas Mavericks
2003–2004 Long Beach Jam (ABA)
2004–2005 Orange County Crush (ABA)
2005, 2005–2006 Tijuana Dragons (ABA)
2005 Torpan Pojat (Finland)
2006 Brighton Bears (United Kingdom)
Career highlights and awards
Career NBA statistics
Points 6,683
Rebounds 11,954
Assists 1,600
Stats at Basketball-Reference.com
Basketball Hall of Fame as player

Dennis Keith Rodman (born May 13, 1961) is a retired American Hall of Fame professional basketball player of the National Basketball Association's (NBA) Detroit Pistons, San Antonio Spurs, Chicago Bulls, Los Angeles Lakers and Dallas Mavericks. Born in Trenton, New Jersey, he was nicknamed "Dennis the Menace" and "The Worm" and was known for his fierce defensive and rebounding abilities. Playing small forward in his early years before becoming a power forward, Rodman earned NBA All-Defensive First Team honors seven times and was voted NBA Defensive Player of the Year twice. He also led the NBA in rebounds per game for a record seven consecutive years and won five NBA championships (1989, 1990, 1996, 1997, 1998). His biography at NBA.com states that he is "arguably the best rebounding forward in NBA history". On April 1, 2011, the Pistons retired Rodman's #10 jersey.[1] Later that same year, Rodman was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.[2]

Rodman experienced an unhappy childhood and was shy and introverted in his early years. After aborting a suicide attempt in 1993, he reinvented himself as a "bad boy" and became notorious for numerous controversial antics. He dyed his hair in artificial colors, presented himself with many piercings and tattoos and regularly disrupted games by clashing with opposing players and officials. He famously wore a wedding dress to promote his autobiography. Rodman pursued a high-profile affair with singer Madonna and was briefly married to actress Carmen Electra.

Apart from basketball, Rodman is a retired part-time professional wrestler and actor. He was a member of the nWo and fought alongside Hulk Hogan at two Bash at the Beach events. He had his own TV show, The Rodman World Tour, and had lead roles in the action films Simon Sez and Double Team alongside Jean-Claude Van Damme. Both films were severely critically panned, with the latter earning Rodman a triple Razzie Award. He appeared in several reality TV series and was the winner of the $222,000 main prize of the 2004 edition of Celebrity Mole. Rodman also won the first ever Celebrity Championship Wrestling tournament.

Contents

Early life and education

Dennis Rodman was born in Trenton, New Jersey, the son of Shirley and Philander Rodman, Jr., an Air Force pilot, later a veteran of the Vietnam War after Rodman's birth. When he was young, his father left his family, eventually settling in The Philippines.[3] Rodman has many brothers and sisters: according to his father, he has either 26 or 28 siblings on his father's side; however, Rodman himself has stated that he is the oldest of a total of 47 children.[3][4][5] After his father left, Shirley took many odd jobs — at times, four at the same time — to support her family.[6] In his 1997 biography Bad As I Wanna Be, he expresses his disgust and hate for his father: "I haven't seen my father in more than 30 years, so what's there to miss ... I just look at it like this: Some man brought me into this world. That doesn't mean I have a father."[3] The impoverished Rodman and his two sisters, Debra and Kim,[7] grew up in the Oak Cliff section of Dallas, Texas,[8] considered one of the worst areas of Dallas in those times.[9] Rodman was so attached to his mother that he refused to move when she sent him to a nursery when he was four years old. According to Rodman, Shirley Rodman was more interested in his two sisters Debra and Kim, who were both considered more talented than he was in basketball, and made him a laughingstock whenever he tagged along with them. He felt generally "overwhelmed" by the all-female household.[10] Debra and Kim would go on to become All-Americans at Louisiana Tech and Stephen F. Austin, respectively, as Debra would win two national titles with the Lady Techsters.[7]

When Rodman experienced his growth spurt, he became even more withdrawn because he felt odd in his own body.[10] Rodman was so insecure around women that he thought he was homosexual in his teens. He lost his virginity when he was 20 years old and had his first sexual experience with a prostitute; he described this as an unpleasant experience.[11]

While attending South Oak Cliff High School, Rodman played under future Texas A&M coach Gary Blair.[7] However, Rodman was not considered an athletic standout. According to himself, he was "unable to hit a layup" and was listed in the high school basketball teams, but was either benched or cut from the squads. Measuring only 5 ft 6 in (1.68 m) as a freshman in high school,[6] he also failed to make the football teams and was "totally devastated".[10] After finishing school, Rodman worked as an overnight janitor at Dallas Fort Worth International Airport. He experienced a sudden growth spurt, and decided to give basketball another shot.[12]

A family friend tipped off the head coach of Cooke County College in Gainesville, Texas. In his single semester there, he averaged 17.6  points and 13.3 rebounds, before flunking out due to poor academic performance.[6] After his short stint in Gainesville, he transferred to Southeastern Oklahoma State University, an NAIA school. There, Rodman was a three-time NAIA All-American and led the NAIA in rebounding in both the 1984–1985 and 1985–1986 seasons. In three seasons there, 1983–1984 through 1985–1986, he averaged 25.7 points and 15.7 rebounds,[13] led the NAIA in rebounding twice and registered a .637 field goal percentage.[12] At the Portsmouth Invitational, a pre-draft camp for NBA hopefuls, he won Most Valuable Player honors and caught the attention of the Detroit Pistons.[6]

During this time, Rodman worked at a summer youth basketball camp, where he befriended camper Bryne Rich, who was shy and withdrawn, following a hunting accident in which he mistakenly shot and killed his best friend. The two became almost inseparable and formed a bond. Rich invited Rodman to his rural Oklahoma home; at first, Rodman was not well-received by the Riches due to being an African-American. But, the Riches were so grateful to him for bringing their son out of his shell that they were able to set aside their prejudices.[14] Although Rodman had severe family and personal issues himself, he "adopted" the Riches as his own in 1982 and went from the city life to "driving a tractor and messing with cows."[14] Rodman credits the Riches as his "surrogate family" that helped him through college.

Basketball career

Detroit Pistons

Rodman made himself eligible for the 1986 NBA Draft. He was drafted by the Detroit Pistons as the 3rd pick in the second round (27th overall), joining the rugged team of coach Chuck Daly that was called "Bad Boys" for their hard-nosed approach to basketball. The squad featured Isiah Thomas and Joe Dumars at the guard positions, Adrian Dantley and Sidney Green at forward, and center Bill Laimbeer. Bench players who played more than 15 minutes per game were sixth man Vinnie Johnson and the backup forwards Rick Mahorn and John Salley.[15] Rodman fit well into this ensemble, providing 6.5 points, 4.7 rebounds and some tough defense in 15.0 minutes of playing time per game.[13] Winning 52 games, the Pistons comfortably entered the 1987 NBA Playoffs. They swept the Washington Bullets and soundly beat the Atlanta Hawks in five games, but bowed out in seven matches against the archrival Boston Celtics in what was called one of the physically and mentally toughest series ever. Rodman feuded with Celtics guard Dennis Johnson and taunted Johnson in the closing seconds when he waved his right hand over his own head. When the Celtics took Game Seven, Johnson went back at Rodman in the last moments of the game and mimicked his taunting gesture.[16] After the loss, Rodman made headlines by directly accusing Celtics star Larry Bird of being overrated because he was white: "Larry Bird is overrated in a lot of areas. ... Why does he get so much publicity? Because he's white. You never hear about a black player being the greatest." Although teammate Thomas supported him, he endured harsh criticism, but avoided being called a racist because, according to him, his own girlfriend Anicka "Annie" Bakes was white.[6][10]

In the following 1987–1988 season, Rodman steadily improved his stats, averaging 11.6 points and 8.7 rebounds and starting in 32 of 82 regular season games.[13] The Pistons fought their way into the 1988 NBA Finals, and took a 3–2 lead, but lost in seven games against the Los Angeles Lakers. In Game Six, the Pistons were down by one point with eight seconds to go; Dumars missed a shot, and Rodman just fell short of an offensive rebound and a putback which could have won the title. In Game Seven, L.A. led by 15 points in the fourth quarter, but Rodman’s defense helped cut down the lead to six with 3:52 minutes to go and to two with one minute to go. But then, he fouled Magic Johnson, who hit a free throw, missed an ill-advised shot with 39 seconds to go, and the Pistons never recovered.[17] In that year, his girlfriend Annie bore him a daughter named Alexis.[6]

Rodman remained a bench player during the 1988–1989 season, averaging 9.0 points and 9.4 rebounds in 27 minutes, yet providing such effective defense that he was voted into the All-Defensive Team, the first of eight times in his career.[13] He also began seeing more playing time after Adrian Dantley was traded at midseason to Dallas for Mark Aguirre. In that season, the Pistons finally vanquished their playoffs bane by sweeping the Boston Celtics, winning in six games versus the Chicago Bulls and scoring champion Michael Jordan then easily defeating the Lakers 4–0 in the 1989 NBA Finals. Although he was hampered by back spasms, Rodman dominated the boards, grabbing 19 rebounds in Game 3 and providing tough interior defense.[18]

In the 1989–1990 season, Detroit lost perennial defensive forward Rick Mahorn when he was taken by the Minnesota Timberwolves in that year's expansion draft and ended up on the Philadelphia 76ers when the Pistons could not reacquire him. It was feared that the loss of Mahorn – average in talent, but high on hustle and widely considered a vital cog of the "Bad Boys" teams – would diminish the Pistons’ spirit, but Rodman seamlessly took over his role.[19] He went on to win his first big individual accolade. Averaging 8.8 points and 9.7 rebounds while starting in the last 43 regular season games, he established himself as the best defensive player in the game; during this period, the Pistons won 59 games, and Rodman was lauded by the NBA "for his defense and rebounding skills, which were unparalleled in the league".[12] For his feats, he won the NBA Defensive Player of the Year Award; he also connected on a .595 field goal percentage, which made him the most precise shooter of the league.[13] In the 1990 NBA Playoffs, the Pistons beat the Bulls again, and in the 1990 NBA Finals, Detroit met the Portland Trail Blazers. Rodman suffered from an injured ankle and was often replaced by Mark Aguirre, but even without his defensive hustle, Detroit beat Portland in five games and claimed their second title.[19]

During the 1990–1991 season, Rodman finally established himself as the starting small forward of the Pistons. He played such strong defense that the NBA stated he "could shut down any opposing player, from point guard to center".[12] After coming off the bench for most of his earlier years, he finally started in 77 of the 82 regular season games, averaged 8.2 points and 12.5 rebounds and won his second Defensive Player of the Year Award.[13] In the 1991 NBA Playoffs, however, the Pistons were swept by the championship-winning Chicago Bulls in the Eastern Conference Finals. It was the 1991–1992 season where Rodman made a remarkable leap in his rebounding, collecting an astounding 18.7 rebounds per game (1,530 in total), winning his first of seven consecutive rebounding crowns, along with scoring 9.8 points per game, and making his first All-NBA Team.[13] His 1,530 rebounds (the most since Wilt Chamberlain's 1,572 in the 1971–1972 season) have never been surpassed since then; the best mark not set by Rodman is by Kevin Willis, who grabbed 1,258 boards in 1991–1992.[20] In a March 1992 game, Rodman totaled a career high 34 rebounds.[21] However, the aging Pistons were eliminated by the upcoming New York Knicks in the First Round of the 1992 NBA Playoffs.

Rodman experienced a tough loss when coach Chuck Daly, whom he had admired as a surrogate father, resigned in May; Rodman skipped the preseason camp and was fined $68,000.[6] The following 1992–1993 season was even more tumultuous. He finally married Annie Bakes, the mother of his four year old daughter Alexis, in September 1992. The marriage went sour quickly and Bakes divorced him in December, an experience which left him traumatized.[22] The Pistons won only 40 games and missed the 1993 NBA Playoffs entirely. One night in February 1993, Rodman was found asleep in his car with a loaded rifle. Four years later in his biography As Bad As I Wanna Be, he confessed having thought about suicide and described that night as an epiphany: "I decided that instead [of killing myself] I was gonna kill the impostor that was leading Dennis Rodman to a place he didn't want to go ... So I just said, 'I'm going to live my life the way I want to live it and be happy doing it.' At that moment I tamed [sic] my whole life around. I killed the person I didn't want to be."[9] Although he had three years and $11.8 million remaining on his contract, Rodman demanded a trade. On October 1, 1993, the Pistons dealt him to the San Antonio Spurs.[6]

San Antonio Spurs

In the 1993–1994 NBA season, Rodman joined a Spurs team which was built around perennial All-Star center David Robinson, with a supporting cast of forwards Dale Ellis, Willie Anderson and guard Vinnie Del Negro.[23] On the hardwood, Rodman now was played as a power forward and won his third straight rebounding title, averaging 17.3 boards per game along with a career-low 4.7 points, but yet another All-Defensive Team call-up.[13] Living up to his promise of killing the "shy imposter" and "being himself" instead, Rodman began to show first signs of bizarre behaviour: before the first game, he shaved his hair and dyed it blonde, which was followed up by stints with red, purple, blue hair and a look inspired from the film Demolition Man.[12] During the season, he headbutted Stacey King and John Stockton, refused to leave the hardwood once after being ejected, and had a highly-publicized two month affair with Madonna.[6][24] The only player to whom Rodman related was reserve center Jack Haley, who won his trust by not being shocked after a visit to a gay bar.[25] However, despite a 55-win season, Rodman and the Spurs did not survive the First Round of the 1994 NBA Playoffs and bowed out against the Utah Jazz in four games.

In the following 1994–1995 NBA season, Rodman clashed with the Spurs front office. He was suspended for the first three games, took a leave of absence on November 11, and was suspended again on December 7. He finally returned on December 10 after missing 19 games.[12] After joining the team, he suffered a shoulder separation in a motorcycle accident, limiting his season to 49 games. Normally, he would not have qualified for any season records for missing so many games, but by grabbing 823 rebounds, he just surpassed the 800-rebound limit for listing players and won his fourth straight rebounding title by averaging 16.8 boards per game and made the All-NBA Team.[12] In the 1995 NBA Playoffs, the 62-win Spurs with reigning NBA Most Valuable Player Award winner Robinson entered the Western Conference Finals and were considered favorites against the reigning champions Houston Rockets who had only won 47 games. It was thought that Rockets center Hakeem Olajuwon would have a hard time asserting himself versus Robinson and Rodman, who had both been voted into the NBA All-Defensive Teams. However, neither Robinson nor Rodman, who had disrupted a playoff game against the Lakers by sitting down on the court,[12] could stop Olajuwon, who averaged 35.3 points against the elite defensive Spurs frontcourt, and helped eliminate the Spurs in six games.

Rodman admitted his frequent transgressions, but asserted that he lived his own life and thus a more honest life than most other people:

"I just took the chance to be my own man ... I just said: 'If you don't like it, kiss my ass.' ... Most people around the country, or around the world, are basically working people who want to be free, who want to be themselves. They look at me and see someone trying to do that ... I'm the guy who's showing people, hey, it's all right to be different. And I think they feel: 'Let's go and see this guy entertain us.'"[9]

Chicago Bulls

The United Center, home of the Chicago Bulls. Rodman wrote history in the 1996 NBA Finals when he twice secured 11 offensive rebounds in this building, tying an all-time NBA record.

Prior to the 1995–1996 NBA season, Rodman was traded to the Chicago Bulls of perennial scoring champion Michael Jordan for center Will Perdue and cash considerations to fill a large void at power forward left by Horace Grant, who left the Bulls prior to the 1994–1995 season.[26] Although the trade for the already 34 year old and volatile Rodman was considered a gamble at that time,[12] the power forward quickly adapted to his new environment, helped by the fact that his best friend Jack Haley was also traded to the Bulls. Under coach Phil Jackson, he averaged 5.5 points and 14.9 rebounds per game, winning yet another rebounding title, and was part of the great Bulls team that won 72 of 82 regular season games, an all-time NBA record.[27] About playing next to iconic Jordan and hard-working Scottie Pippen, Rodman said:

"On the court, me and Michael are pretty calm and we can handle conversation. But as far as our lives go, I think he is moving in one direction and I'm going in the other. I mean, he's goin' north, I'm goin' south. And then you've got Scottie Pippen right in the middle. He's sort of the equator."[9]

Although struggling with calf problems early in the season, Rodman grabbed 20 or more rebounds 11 times and had his first triple-double against the Philadelphia 76ers on January 16, 1996 scoring 10 points and adding 21 rebounds and 10 assists; by playing his trademark tough defense, he joined Jordan and Pippen in the All-NBA Defense First Team, making it the first time that three players from the same NBA team made the All-NBA Defensive First Team.[12] Ever controversial, Rodman made negative headlines after a head butt of referee Ted Bernhardt during a game in New Jersey on March 16, 1996; he was suspended for six games and fined $20,000, a punishment that was criticized as too lenient by the local press.[28] In the 1996 NBA Playoffs, Rodman scored 7.5 points and grabbed 13.7 rebounds per game and had a large part in the six-game victory against the Seattle SuperSonics in the 1996 NBA Finals: in Game Two at home in the Bulls' United Center, he grabbed 20 rebounds, among them a record-tying 11 offensive boards, and in Game Six, again at the United Center, the power forward secured 19 rebounds and again 11 offensive boards, scored five points in a decisive 12–2 Bulls run, unnerved opposing power forward Shawn Kemp and caused Seattle coach George Karl to say: "As you evaluate the series, Dennis Rodman won two basketball games. We controlled Dennis Rodman for four games. But Game 2 and tonight, he was the reason they were successful."[29] His two games with 11 offensive rebounds each tied the NBA Finals record of Elvin Hayes.[12]

In the 1996–1997 NBA season, Rodman won his sixth rebounding title in a row with 16.7 boards per game, along with 5.7 points per game, but failed to rank another All-Defensive Team call-up.[13] However, he made more headlines for his notorious behavior: on January 15, 1997, he was involved in another incident during a game against the Minnesota Timberwolves. After tripping over cameraman Eugene Amos, Rodman kicked Amos in the groin. Though he was not assessed a technical foul at the time, he ultimately paid Amos a $200,000 settlement, the league suspended Rodman for 11 games without pay, thus he effectively lost $1 million.[30] Missing another three games to suspensions, often getting technical fouls early in games[12] and missing an additional 13 matches due to knee problems, Rodman was not as effective in the 1997 NBA Playoffs, in which the Bulls reached the 1997 NBA Finals against the Utah Jazz. There, he struggled to slow down Jazz power forward Karl Malone, but did his share to complete the six-game Bulls victory.[31]

The regular season of the 1997–1998 NBA season ended with Rodman winning his seventh consecutive rebounding title with 15.0 boards per game, along with 4.7 points per game.[13] He grabbed 20 or more rebounds 11 times, among them a 29-board outburst against the Atlanta Hawks and 15 offensive boards (along with ten defensive) versus the Los Angeles Clippers.[12] Led by the aging Jordan and Rodman (respectively 35 and 37 years old), the Bulls reached the 1998 NBA Finals, again versus the Jazz. After playing strong defense on Karl Malone in the first three games,[32] he caused major consternation when he left his team prior to Game Four to go wrestling with Hulk Hogan. He was fined $20,000, but it was not even ten percent of what he earned with this stint.[24] However, Rodman’s on-court performance remained top-notch, again shutting down Malone in Game Four until the latter scored 39 points in a Jazz Game Five win, bringing the series to 3–2 from the Bulls perspective. In Game Six, Jordan hit the decisive basket after a memorable drive on Jazz forward Bryon Russell, the Bulls won their third title in a row and Rodman his fifth ring.[32]

Rodman garnered as much publicity for his public antics as he did for his basketball playing. He dated Madonna and claimed she tried to conceive a child with him.[24] Shortly after, Rodman famously wore a wedding dress to promote his autobiography Bad As I Wanna Be, claimed that he was bisexual and that he was "marrying himself".[24]

Twilight years

After the 1997–1998 NBA season, the Bulls started a massive rebuilding phase, largely at the behest of then-general manager Jerry Krause. Head coach Phil Jackson and several members of the team left via free agency or retirement, including Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen, Steve Kerr and Jud Buechler.[33] Rodman was released by the Bulls on January 21, 1999, before the start of the lockout-shortened 1998-99 NBA season. With his sister acting as his agent at the time Rodman joined the Los Angeles Lakers, for a pro-rated salary for the remainder of the 1998–1999 season. With the Lakers he only played in 23 games and was released.[13] In the 1999–2000 NBA season, the then 38 year old power forward was signed by the Dallas Mavericks, meaning that Rodman returned to the place where he grew up. For the Mavericks, he played 12 games, was ejected twice and alienated the franchise with his erratic behavior until he was waived again; Dallas guard Steve Nash commented that Rodman "never wanted to be [a Maverick]" and therefore was unmotivated.[34]

NBA career statistics

NBA Championship
Led the league
Bold Denotes career highs
  GP Games played   GS  Games started  MIN  Minutes per game
 FG%  Field-goal percentage  3P%  3-point field-goal percentage  FT%  Free-throw percentage
 OFF  Offensive rebounds per game  DEF  Defensive rebounds per game  RPG  Total rebounds per game
 APG  Assists per game  SPG  Steals per game  BPG  Blocks per game
 TOV  Turnovers per game  PF  Fouls per game  PPG  Points per game

Averages

Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
1986–87 Detroit Pistons 77 1 15.0 .545 .000 .587 4.3 .7 .5 .6 6.5
1987–88 Detroit Pistons 82 32 26.2 .561 .294 .535 8.7 1.3 .9 .5 11.6
1988–89 Detroit Pistons 82 8 26.9 .595 .231 .626 9.4 1.2 .7 .9 9.0
1989–90 Detroit Pistons 82 43 29.0 .581 .111 .654 9.7 .9 .6 .7 8.8
1990–91 Detroit Pistons 82 77 33.5 .493 .200 .631 12.5 1.0 .8 .7 8.2
1991–92 Detroit Pistons 82 80 40.3 .539 .317 .600 18.7 2.3 .8 .9 9.8
1992–93 Detroit Pistons 62 55 38.9 .427 .205 .534 18.3 1.6 .8 .7 7.5
1993–94 San Antonio Spurs 79 51 37.8 .534 .208 .520 17.3 2.3 .7 .4 4.7
1994–95 San Antonio Spurs 49 26 32.0 .571 .000 .676 16.8 2.0 .6 .5 7.1
1995–96 Chicago Bulls 64 57 32.6 .480 .111 .528 14.9 2.5 .6 .4 5.5
1996–97 Chicago Bulls 55 54 35.4 .448 .263 .568 16.1 3.1 .6 .3 5.7
1997–98 Chicago Bulls 80 66 35.7 .431 .174 .550 15.0 2.9 .6 .2 4.7
1998–99 Los Angeles Lakers 23 11 28.6 .348 .000 .436 11.2 1.3 .4 .5 2.1
1999–2000 Dallas Mavericks 12 12 32.4 .387 .000 .714 14.3 1.2 .2 .1 2.8
Career 911 573 31.7 .521 .231 .584 13.1 1.8 .7 .6 7.3
Playoffs 169 89 28.3 .490 .149 .540 9.9 1.2 .6 .6 6.4
All-Star 1990, 1992 2 0 18.0 .364 8.5 .5 .5 .5 4.0

Post-NBA years

In 2005, Rodman played for Torpan Pojat of Finland's basketball league, the Korisliiga.

After his NBA career, Rodman took a long break from basketball and concentrated on his film career and on wrestling.

After a longer hiatus, Rodman returned to play basketball for the Long Beach Jam of the newly-formed American Basketball Association during the 2003–2004 season, with hopes of being called up to the NBA midseason.[35] In the following 2004–2005 season, he signed with the ABA's Orange County Crush[36] and the following season with the league's Tijuana Dragons.[37] After retiring from wrestling, Rodman became Commissioner of the Lingerie Football League in 2005.[24] The return to the NBA never materialized, but on January 26, 2006, it was announced that Rodman had signed a one-game "experiment" deal for the UK basketball team Brighton Bears of the British Basketball League to play Guildford Heat on January 28,[38] and went on to play three games for the Bears.[37] In spring 2006, he played two exhibition games in the Philippines along with NBA ex-stars Darryl Dawkins, Kevin Willis, Calvin Murphy, Otis Birdsong and Alex English. On April 27, they defeated a team of former Philippine Basketball Association stars in Mandaue City, Cebu and Rodman scored five points and grabbed 18 rebounds.[39] On May 1, 2006, Rodman's team played their second game and lost to the Philippine national basketball team 110–102 at the Araneta Coliseum, where he scored three points and recorded 16 rebounds.[40]

In 2005, Rodman made two visits to Finland. At first, he was present at Sonkajärvi in July in a wife-carrying contest. However, he resigned from the contest due to health problems.[41] In November, he played one match for Torpan Pojat of the Finland's basketball league, Korisliiga.[24][42]

That same year, Rodman published his second autobiography I Should Be Dead By Now and promoted this by sitting in a coffin.[24]

On April 4, 2011, it was announced that Rodman would be inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.[43]

Awards, records and achievements

Legacy

^ Active NBA player
* Enshrined for the Basketball Hall of Fame

Top career rebounding averages since 1973

Player Height [44] Minutes per
game
Offensive
rebounds
Defensive
rebounds
Total
rebounds
Games
played
Rebounds per
game
Rebounds per
48 minutes
Rodman, DennisDennis Rodman* 6'6" 31.7 4,329 7,625 11,954 911 13.1 19.9
Malone, MosesMoses Malone* 6'10" 33.9 6,731 9,481 16,212 1,329 12.2 17.3
Howard, DwightDwight Howard^ 6'11" 36.0 2,066 5,221 7,287 567 12.9 17.1
Barkley, CharlesCharles Barkley* 6'6" 36.7 4,260 8,286 12,546 1,073 11.7 15.3
Duncan, TimTim Duncan^ 6'11" 35.8 3,182 8,831 12,013 1,053 11.4 15.3

Top rebounding seasons since 1973

Season Player Team Rebounds
per game
1991–92 Rodman, DennisDennis Rodman Detroit Pistons 18.7
1992–93 Rodman, DennisDennis Rodman Detroit Pistons 18.3
1973–74 Hayes, ElvinElvin Hayes* Capital Bullets 18.1
1978–79 Malone, MosesMoses Malone* Houston Rockets 17.6
1993–94 Rodman, DennisDennis Rodman San Antonio Spurs 17.3
1975–76 Abdul-Jabbar, KareemKareem Abdul-Jabbar* Los Angeles Lakers 16.9
1994–95 Rodman, DennisDennis Rodman San Antonio Spurs 16.8
1996–97 Rodman, DennisDennis Rodman Chicago Bulls 16.1

From the beginning of his career Rodman was known for his defensive hustle, which was later accompanied by his rebounding prowess. In Detroit, he was mainly played as a small forward, and his usual assignment was to neutralize the opponent's best player; Rodman was so versatile that he could guard centers, forwards or guards equally well[12] and won two NBA Defensive Player of the Year Awards. From 1991 on, he established himself as one of the best rebounders of all time, averaging at least 15 rebounds per game in six of the next seven years.[13] Playing power forward as member of the Spurs and the Bulls, he had a historical outburst in the 1996 NBA Finals: he twice snared 11 offensive rebounds, equalling an all-time NBA record. In addition, his career-high 34-rebound game on March 4, 1992, is the third-highest number of rebounds in a game since the 1972–73 season, topped only by Charles Oakley's 35-rebound game on April 22, 1988, and Moses Malone's 37-rebound game on February 9, 1979.[45]

On offense, Rodman's output was mediocre. He averaged 11.6 points per game in his sophomore season, but his average steadily dropped: in the three championship seasons with the Bulls, he averaged five points per game and connected on less than half of his field goal attempts.[13] His free throw shooting (lifetime average: .584) was considered a big liability: on December 29, 1997, Bubba Wells of the Dallas Mavericks committed six intentional fouls against him in only three minutes, setting the record for the fastest foul out in NBA history. This was Dallas coach Don Nelson's early version of what would later develop into the famous "Hack-a-Shaq" method that would be implemented against Shaquille O'Neal and other poor free throw shooters. The intention was to force him to attempt free throws, which in theory would mean frequent misses and easy ball possession without giving up too many points. However, this plan backfired, as Rodman hit 9 of the 12 attempts.[46]

In 14 NBA seasons, Rodman played in 911 games, scored 6,683 points and grabbed 11,954 rebounds, translating to 7.3 points and 13.1 rebounds per game in only 31.7 minutes played per game.[13][20] NBA.com lauds Rodman as "arguably the best rebounding forward in NBA history and one of the most recognized athletes in the world" but adds "enigmatic and individualistic, Rodman has caught the public eye for his ever-changing hair color, tattoos and unorthodox lifestyle".[12] On the hardwood, he was recognized as one of the most successful defensive players ever, winning the NBA championship five times in six NBA Finals appearances (1989, 1990, 1996–1998; only loss 1988), being crowned NBA Defensive Player of the Year twice (1990–1991) and making seven NBA All-Defensive First Teams (1989–1993, 1995–1996) and NBA All-Defensive Second Teams (1994). He additionally made two All-NBA Third Teams (1992, 1995), two NBA All-Star Teams (1990, 1992) and won seven straight rebounding crowns (1992–1998) and finally led the league once in field goal percentage (1989).[13] However, he was recognized as the prototype bizarre player, stunning basketball fans with his artificial hair colors, numerous tattoos and body piercings, multiple verbal and physical assaults on officials, frequent ejections, and his tumultuous private life.[12] He was ranked #48 on the 2009 revision of SLAM Magazine's Top 50 Players of All-Time.

Wrestling career

Dennis Rodman
Ring name(s) Impostor Sting
Dennis Rodman
Billed height 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)
Billed weight 220 lb (100 kg)
Born (1961-05-13) May 13, 1961 (age 51)
Trenton, New Jersey
Billed from Chicago, Illinois
Los Angeles, California
Debut March 10, 1997[47]
Retired July 30, 2000[24][47][48]

World Championship Wrestling (1997–1999)

Debut and New World Order (1997–1998)

After getting suspended for the rest of the 1996–1997 NBA season, Rodman seriously took up his hobby of professional wrestling and appeared on the March 10 edition of Monday Nitro with his friend Hollywood Hulk Hogan in World Championship Wrestling. At the March 1997 Uncensored event, he appeared as a member of the nWo. His first match was at the July 1997 Bash at the Beach event, where he teamed with Hogan in a loss to Lex Luger and The Giant.[37] At the August 1997 Road Wild event, Rodman appeared as the Impostor Sting hitting Luger with a baseball bat to make Hogan win back the WCW World Heavyweight Championship.

After the 1997–1998 NBA season, Rodman and Malone squared off again, this time in wrestling at the July 1998 edition of Bash at the Beach. He fought alongside Hulk Hogan, and Malone tagged along with Diamond Dallas Page. In a poorly-received match, the two power forwards exchanged "rudimentary headlocks, slams and clotheslines" for 23 minutes.[49]

Feud with Randy Savage (1999)

In 1999, Rodman began a feud with "Macho Man" Randy Savage. They had a match at the August 1999 Road Wild event, during which Savage shoved him in a portable toilet and eventually won the match after hitting Rodman with a chain.[50]

i-Generation Superstars of Wrestling and retirement (2000)

On July 30, 2000, for the i-Generation Superstars of Wrestling pay-per-view event, he fought against i-Generation Champion Curt Hennig in a Australian Outback match. The event was subtitled Rodman Down Under.[51] Hennig won the match by disqualification. Rodman refrained from wrestling at the top level and retired.[24]

Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (2004)

On the July 2, 2004, edition of Impact!, Rodman made an appearance in Total Nonstop Action Wrestling, where he sat at ringside during a match between the 3 Live Kru and Team Canada.[47]

In wrestling

Media appearances

Dennis Rodman, 2001

In 1996, Rodman had his own MTV reality talk show called The Rodman World Tour, which featured him in a series of odd-ball situations.[52] This show was produced by Patrick Byrnes and written by Tom Cohen and Matt Price. A year later, he made his feature film debut in the action film Double Team alongside Jean-Claude Van Damme. The film was critically panned and his performance earned him three Golden Raspberry Awards: Worst New Star, Worst Supporting Actor and Worst Screen Couple (shared with Van Damme).[53] Rodman starred in Simon Sez, a 1999 action/comedy and co-starred with Tom Berenger in a 2000 action film about skydiving titled Cutaway.[54] In 1998, he joined the cast of the syndicated TV show Special Ops Force, playing 'Deke' Reynolds, a flamboyant but skilled ex-Army helo pilot and demolitions expert.

In 2005, Rodman, a long-time vegetarian,[55] became the first man to pose naked for PETA's advertisement campaign "Rather Go Naked Than Wear Fur".[56]

Since then he has appeared in few acting roles outside of playing himself. Rodman voiced Zack, a character resembling him, in Dead or Alive Xtreme Beach Volleyball. He has made an appearance in an episode of 3rd Rock from the Sun playing the character of himself, except being a fellow alien with the Solomon family.[54] He also appeared in several reality soaps: in January 2006, Rodman appeared on the fourth version of Celebrity Big Brother in the UK, and on July 26, 2006, in the UK series Love Island as a houseguest contracted to stay for a week.[54] Finally, he appeared on the show Celebrity Mole on ABC. He wound up winning the $222,000 grand prize.[57] Rodman was the winner of Hulk Hogan's Celebrity Championship Wrestling title defeating other challengers such as Butterbean and Dustin Diamond.

In 2008, Rodman joined as a spokesman for a sports website OPENSports.com, the brainchild of Mike Levy founder and former CEO of CBS Sportsline.com. Rodman also writes a blog and occasionally answers members' questions for OPEN Sports.[58]

In 2009, he appeared as a contestant on Celebrity Apprentice. Throughout the season, each celebrity raised money for a charity of their choice; Rodman selected the Court Appointed Special Advocates of New Orleans. He was the fifth contestant eliminated, on March 29, 2009.

Personal life

Rodman has cited Pearl Jam as his favorite band and befriended them in the mid-1990s. During their No Code Tour, on September 26, 1996, he briefly came onstage to the excitement of the crowd and gave frontman Eddie Vedder a piggyback ride. Rodman later received a Walkman carved with Vedder's initials and containing the concert recording. He has since cited this as one of his most thrilling experiences and claimed, "If it wasn't for Pearl Jam, my life would be a hell of a lot less fulfilling." Not long after, Rodman also gave his unworn #69 Lakers jersey to Eddie Vedder,[59] and he cited Pearl Jam song lyrics in his 1996 autobiography, Bad As I Wanna Be. In I Should Be Dead By Now, Rodman said that he had found a new favorite band in Rascal Flatts.[60]

Marriages

Rodman married Annie Bakes, with whom he had a daughter, Alexis, in September 1992. Bakes divorced him in December 1993. The divorce left Rodman traumatized.[22]

Rodman married model Carmen Electra in November 1998 at the Little Chapel of the Flowers in Las Vegas, Nevada.[61][62] Electra filed for divorce in April 1999.[63]

In 1999 Rodman met Michelle Moyer, with whom he had a son, D.J. (born 2000) and a daughter, Trinity (born 2001). Moyer and Rodman married in 2003 on his 42nd birthday.[64] Michelle Rodman filed for divorce in 2004, although the couple spent several years attempting to reconcile. The marriage was officially dissolved in 2012 when Michelle Rodman again petitioned the court to grant a divorce. Rodman owes $860,376 in child and spousal support, and he could face 20 days in prison if he does not make payments by May 29, 2012.[65]

Alcohol issues

Rodman entered an outpatient rehab center in Florida in May 2008.[66] In May 2009, his behavior on Celebrity Apprentice led to an intervention which included Phil Jackson as well as Rodman's family and other friends. Rodman initially refused to enter rehabilitation because he wanted to attend the Celebrity Apprentice reunion show.[67][68] In 2009, Rodman agreed to appear on the third season of Celebrity Rehab with Dr. Drew.[69][70] Rodman remained a patient at the Pasadena Recovery Center for the 21-day treatment cycle. A week after completion he entered a sober-living facility in the Hollywood Hills, which was filmed for the second season of Sober House. During episode seven of Sober House, Rodman was shown being reunited with his mother Shirley, from whom he had been estranged for seven years.[71] During this same visit Shirley also met Rodman's two children for the first time.[72] On January 10, 2010, on the same day that Celebrity Rehab premiered, Rodman was removed from an Orange County, California restaurant for disruptive behavior.[73] In March 2012, Rodman's financial advisor said, "in all honesty, Dennis, although a very sweet person, is an alcoholic. His sickness impacts his ability to get work."[74]

Legal troubles

On November 5, 1999, Rodman and his then-wife, Carmen Electra, were charged with misdemeanors after police were notified of a domestic disturbance. Each posted $2,500 in bail and were released with a temporary restraining order placed on them.[75]

In December 1999 Rodman was arrested for drunken driving and driving without a valid license. In July 2000, Rodman pled guilty to both charges and was ordered to pay $2,000 in fines and was required to attend a three-month treatment program.[76]

He was arrested in 2002 for interfering with police investigating a code violation at a restaurant he owned; the charges were eventually dropped.[6]

After settling down in Newport Beach, California, the police appeared over 70 times at his home because of loud parties.[6]

In early 2003, Rodman was arrested and charged with domestic violence at his home in Newport Beach for allegedly assaulting his then-fiancee.[77]

In April 2004, Rodman pled nolo contendere to drunken driving in Las Vegas and was fined $1,000 and served 30 days of home detention.[78]

On April 30, 2008, Rodman was arrested following a domestic violence incident at a Los Angeles hotel.[79] On June 24, 2008, he pled no contest to the misdemeanor spousal battery charges and was sentenced to one year of domestic violence counseling and three years probation. He received 45 hours of community service, which were to involve some physical labor activities.[80][81]

Books

See also

References

  1. ^ "Pistons to retire Dennis Rodman's number, acquire new owner?". "Yahoo Sports". 2011-02-12. http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/blog/ball_dont_lie/post/Pistons-to-retire-Dennis-Rodman-s-number-acquir?urn=nba-320150. Retrieved 2011-02-12. 
  2. ^ "Rodman, Mullin enshrined in Hall of Fame". "Fox Sports". 2011-08-12. http://msn.foxsports.com/nba/story/basketball-hall-of-fame-enshrines-chris-mullin-dennis-rodman-arvydas-sabonis-tex-winter-081211. Retrieved 2011-08-12. 
  3. ^ a b c "Dennis Rodman's dad has 27 kids and runs bar in the Philippines". Jet. 1996-09-23. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1355/is_n19_v90/ai_18709829. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  4. ^ "Dennis Rodman Emotional Hall of Fame Speech". YouTube. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NQQu-JWzBug. Retrieved 28 Mar 2012.  at 5:30 mins.
  5. ^ "Just for the record, Rodman only has 28 siblings". NBC Sports. 15 August 2011. http://probasketballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/08/15/just-for-the-record-rodman-only-has-28-siblings/. Retrieved 28 Mar 2012. 
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Puma, Mike (2006-02-21). "Rodman, King or Queen of Rebounds?". ESPN.com. http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/classic/bio/news/story?page=Rodman_Dennis. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  7. ^ a b c "Big Hopes In Big Dance For Big 12 Champion and No. 4 Seeded Aggies". Texas A&M Athletic Department. 2007-03-15. http://www.aggieathletics.com/sports/w-baskbl/spec-rel/031507aaa.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. [dead link]
  8. ^ "Neighborhood Profiles: Oak Cliff". Dallas Morning News. http://www.dallasnews.com/classifieds/homecenter/profiles/oakcliff.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  9. ^ a b c d Ramrodman – interview with basketball player Dennis Rodman – Interview, Mark Marvel, Feb. 1997, accessed September 1, 2008
  10. ^ a b c d Bruce, Newman (1988-05-02). "Black, White — and Gray: Piston Dennis Rodman's life was complicated by racial matters long before his inflammatory words about Larry Bird". Sports Illustrated. http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1067269/index.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  11. ^ Dennis the menace – interview with basketball star Dennis Rodman – Interview – Cover Story, Peter Galvin, The Advocate, January 21, 1997, accessed August 31, 2008
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "Dennis Rodman bio". NBA.com. http://www.nba.com/playerfile/dennis_rodman/bio.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Dennis Rodman Statistics". Basketball-Reference.com. http://www.basketball-reference.com/players/r/rodmade01.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  14. ^ a b Black, White – and Gray (Part 2), www.sportsillustrated.cnn.com, published May 2, 1988, retrieved August 31, 2008
  15. ^ "1986–87 Detroit Pistons". Basketball-Reference.com. http://www.basketball-reference.com/teams/DET/1987.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  16. ^ Simmons, Bill (2007-02-23). "Page 2 – DJ should have made Springfield while still alive". ESPN.com. http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=simmons/070222. Retrieved 2007-08-17. 
  17. ^ Lakers Capture the Elusive Repeat, www.nba.com, accessed August 31, 2008
  18. ^ Waiting Game Ends for Impatient Pistons, www.nba.com, accessed August 31, 2008
  19. ^ a b Bad Boys Still the Best, www.nba.com, accessed August 31, 2008
  20. ^ a b Season Leaders and Records for Total Rebounds, www.basketball-reference.com, accessed August 31, 2008
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