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A. C. Green

 
Black Biography: A. C. Green

basketball player

Personal Information

Born on October 4, 1963, in Portland, Oregon.
Education: graduated from Oregon State University.
Religion: Christian.
Memberships: A. C. Green Youth Foundation, founder; Athletes for Abstinence.

Career

Professional basketball player, position of forward. Los Angeles Lakers, 1986-94; Phoenix Suns, 1994-96; Dallas Mavericks, 1996-99; Los Angeles Lakers, 1999-00; Miami Heat, 2000-01; broke NBA record for most consecutive games played, 1997; holder of all-time record of 1,192 consecutive games played at retirement, 2001; worked to promote sexual abstinence.

Life's Work

A. C. Green played in 1,192 consecutive National Basketball Association games between 1986 and 2001, an all-time record that some observers think may never be broken. But he stood apart from his fellow NBA players in other respects as well. Green startled the public in the 1990s by announcing--close to the time former Philadelphia 76ers center Wilt Chamberlain was bragging of his 20,000 sexual conquests--that he had never engaged in sexual intercourse. In an age when prodigious sexual activity among professional basketball players was common enough to be almost a stereotype, Green stated that he planned to enter into a sexual relationship only after marriage. He devoted much of his time and energy to trying to convince young people to follow the same course.

Born in Portland, Oregon, on October 4, 1963, Green grew up in a religious family. By high school he was already a top-flight basketball player. When he was 17, he was named Oregon's Player of the Year and a high school All-American, and he led his team, Benson Tech High School, to a state championship. Heavily recruited by college scouts, he seemed on top of the world in the brand new car he was driving and a bright future as a basketball star ahead. Like his teammates he bragged about his sexual activities, keeping his virginity a secret.

Then, at a church in Hermiston, Oregon, on August 2, 1981, Green heard a preacher give a sermon entitled "Do You Want to go to Heaven or Hell?" Three times the preacher asked for congregants to come forward and accept Jesus Christ as savior, and after the third exhortation Green went up to the altar. "Since then the golden rule has come alive in my life," Green told Vibrant Life.

Joined Los Angeles Lakers

Green's strength under the boards--he stands six feet nine inches and weighs about 225 pounds--once again impressed the scouts who saw him play at Oregon State, but, he believed, they were unnerved by his religious fervency. Sometimes touted as a potential top draft pick for 1985, he was selected 23rd, at the end of the first round of the draft, by Los Angeles Lakers coach Jerry West. On the court, Green's performance was solid from the start; he played in every game in the 1985-86 season, averaging 6.4 points and 4.6 rebounds per game while playing just under 19 minutes per game on average.

Coming to the Lakers in the midst of the team's years of greatness, Green was never intimidated by the presence of legendary players such as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Earvin "Magic" Johnson; he often attempted to share his religious enthusiasm with his teammates. "Kareem and I talked to him," Johnson recalled to the Los Angeles Times. "We told him, 'Everybody might not have the same beliefs as you. You have to understand them, and they have to understand you.'" Soon Green was a functioning part of the well-oiled Lakers machine, and though he missed two games in the 1986-87 season, he joined the starting five the following year. It was 15 years before he would miss another game.

Aggressive Style on Court

Even if he never became a star on Johnson's level, Green was often noted as a mainstay of the Lakers' winning efforts in the late 1980s. Averaging well over 10 points per game every year between 1986 and 1993 (with the exception of the 1990-91 season), Green was the team's second-leading rebounder and a consistent defensive player. An aggressive player on the court, he justified his physicality with a reference to Scripture. "I look in the Bible in the Old Testament," he said in an interview with Sport. "That's where I find most of the butt-kicking going on in a sense of God's army." He was a member of two Lakers' NBA championship teams, in 1987 and 1988, and was briefly the subject of controversy in 1990 when enthused Laker fans voted him to the NBA All-Star Game starting team over legendary Utah Jazz forward Karl Malone.

Green's importance as a player was underlined in 1993 when he signed a five-year contract, worth more than $15 million, that induced him to move from the Lakers to the Phoenix Suns. That contract would have been even larger had it not been for the NBA's recently instituted salary cap rules, but in addition to the money Green was drawn by the possibility of winning another NBA championship with the up-and-coming Suns. Green's salary negotiations, however, were knocked off the sports pages when journalists discovered some of his old pronouncements about sexual abstinence, questioned him anew about them, and found the 30-year-old player undiminished in his commitment to his philosophy.

A fresh round of articles and interviews in 1998 yielded the same result. In an essay published that year in Ebony, Green wrote, "Being different, being unusual, being odd is not a problem for me. I am who and what I am, and I'm quite comfortable with that. I'm a virgin because, first of all, that's what God has designated for me at this time, being a single man... . Secondly, I choose to be abstinent because of the self-respect and high regard I have for my body." Green pointed out that he was not taking a lifetime vow of abstinence but was simply saving himself for marriage. Hoping to propagate his views, Green founded an organization of his own, A. C. Green Programs for Youth, joined with two other NBA players to form Athletes for Abstinence, and released a video entitled "It Ain't Worth It" that included an abstinence rap of the same title.

Approached Record for Consecutive Games

During the 1996-97 season Green jumped to the Dallas Mavericks, and soon his growing streak of consecutive games pushed even the abstinence talk out of the headlines. Even losing two teeth in a collision with New York Knickerbockers player J. R. Reid did not sideline him--he underwent emergency root canal surgery and returned to the lineup the next day. Green broke the record with his 907th consecutive game on November 20, 1997. Hairsplitters quibbled that another player who had played part of his career in the defunct American Basketball Association had notched yet a longer streak, but Green pressed on and passed that record as well. Despite his physical style on the court, he fouled out of only three games over his entire career.

Dubbed the NBA's "Iron Man," Green finally began to slow down near the end of the century as he approached his late 30s, playing fewer minutes per game and scoring less. But he was still signed to multi-million-dollar contracts as he returned to the Lakers in 1999, and then moved to the Miami Heat in 2000. With the Lakers he finally had the satisfaction of contributing to a third championship team. After Green scored only 4.5 points per game with the Heat in the 2000-01 season, the streak came to an end at 1,192 games when he found himself without a contract the following fall.

Accepting the end of his career with his usual placid confidence, Green became involved with the marketing of a sports drink and with a Los Angeles-area auto dealership. He continued his active involvement with his youth activities--the A. C. Green Programs for Youth had grown into the A. C. Green Youth Foundation, with offices in three cities. "I'm at peace," he told the Los Angeles Times. "That's honestly how I feel. I thank God for [the streak] more than anything."

Awards

NBA All-Star, 1990.

Works

Selected works

  • "It Ain't Worth It" (abstinence video).
  • "Why I Have Refused Sex," Ebony, August 1998, p. 138 (essay).

Further Reading

Periodicals

  • Chicago Sun-Times, November 5, 2000, p. 142.
  • Jet, January 10, 1994, p. 48; December 8, 1997, p. 51.
  • Los Angeles Times, December 26, 1991, p. C9; February 2, 1993, p. C1; September 29, 1993, p. C1; November 30, 1999, p. D1; October 31, 2001, p. Sports-10.
  • Plain Dealer (Cleveland, Ohio), March 17, 1994, p. B9.
  • Sport, March 1993, p. 64.
  • Sports Illustrated, November 17, 1997, p. 42; December 13, 1999, p. 100.
  • Times-Picayune (New Orleans, Louisiana), August 3, 1994, p. D4.
  • Vibrant Life, November 1998, p. 20.

— James M. Manheim

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Wikipedia: A. C. Green
Top
A. C. Green
Position(s) Power forwardcenter
Jersey #(s) 45
Born October 4, 1963 (1963-10-04) (age 46)
Portland, Oregon, USA
Career information
Year(s) 1986–2001
NBA Draft 1985 / Round: 1 / Pick: 23
College Oregon State
Professional team(s)
Career stats
Points     12,331
Rebounds     9,473
Steals     1,033
Stats @ Basketball-Reference.com
Career highlights and awards

A.C. Green, Jr., (born October 4, 1963) is a retired American NBA basketball player who played in more consecutive games than any other player in NBA and ABA history (1,192). He played for the Los Angeles Lakers, Phoenix Suns, Dallas Mavericks, Toronto Raptors and Miami Heat. He was born and raised in Portland, Oregon and attended Benson Polytechnic High School. He was inducted into the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame in 2003. He missed just 3 games in his entire career in his second season in 1986–87 and played in 1278 out of 1281 games that were played in his career (99.8%). He played all the games of the regular season in 15 of his 16 career seasons (including the 1999 lockout-shortened season of 50 games because of the players' strike) and 14 consecutive seasons from his third season to his retirement.

Contents

Career

Oregon State

Green was a four-year star at Oregon State University, where he finished second in school history in rebounding and fourth in scoring. He was an All-Pac-10 selection as a sophomore, and as a junior he ranked fourth in the nation in field goal percentage at .657. As a senior he averaged 19.1 points and 9.2 rebounds and was named to the All-America Third Team.

Los Angeles Lakers

The Los Angeles Lakers, fresh from winning an NBA championship, selected Green as the 23rd overall pick in the 1985 NBA Draft.[1]

Green fit well into the Los Angeles flow, as he did not need to have plays run for him in order to be effective. He led the Lakers in rebounding for six of his eight years on the team. Led by Magic Johnson, James Worthy and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Los Angeles captured back-to-back titles in 1987 and 1988, Green's second and third years with the squad. In the two campaigns combined, he averaged 11.1 points and 8.2 rebounds while shooting better than .500 from the field. Green also reached the NBA Finals with Los Angeles in 1989 and 1991. Green was named to the NBA All-Defensive Second Team in 1988–89, was voted a starter on the 1990 Western Conference All-Star Team and finished fourth in the league in field goal percentage in 1992–93 at .537.

Phoenix Suns

Green left the Lakers in 1993 to sign with the Phoenix Suns as a free agent. The Suns had just reached the NBA Finals, losing in six games to the Chicago Bulls, and they viewed Green as the missing piece to their championship puzzle. Green posted a career-high average of 14.7 points per game in 1993–94, but the Suns were eliminated in the conference semifinals. In 1994–95 he again contributed double-figure scoring and solid rebounding for the Suns, but his playing time and contributions dipped in 1995–96; though he remained the team's second-leading rebounder. His streak of consecutive games played almost ended during a game with the New York Knicks when J. R. Reid intentionally elbowed him to the face. Green lost two teeth to the incident but was still able to continue on with his streak by wearing a protective mask and only playing a couple of minutes a game for a few weeks.

Dallas Mavericks

Green was traded two months into the 1996–97 season to the Dallas Mavericks in the deal that brought Jason Kidd to Phoenix. He brought reliable rebounding to the rebuilding Mavs, leading the team off the boards in 30 of the 56 games he played in a Dallas uniform. Due to the trade he was able to move one game closer to the record of consecutive games played, since he appeared in 83 games in 1996–97 instead of the standard 82. He tied Shawn Bradley for the team lead in rebounding in 1997–98 with 8.1 rpg, but his season highlight came on November 20 against Golden State when he played in his 907th consecutive game, becoming the league's all-time iron man, surpassing Randy Smith's mark of 906 consecutive games played. [1]

Green played in his 1,000th consecutive game on March 13, 1999 against Vancouver, and finished the 1998–99 season at 1,028 in a row and counting. After 14 seasons in the league, Green had missed only three games, all during the 1986–87 season (his second in the league).

Twilight years

Green returned to the Los Angeles Lakers for the 1999–2000 season where he won his last NBA Championship with the team. He played his final season with the Miami Heat where he was reunited with Pat Riley. The Heat managed to make the playoffs where they were swept in a very one-sided series 3-0 by the Charlotte Hornets who won all 3 games easily.

Iron man streak

Green's consecutive games played streak began on November 19, 1986, when the Los Angeles Lakers defeated the San Antonio Spurs in San Antonio. The streak ended on April 18, 2001 when the Miami Heat defeated the Orlando Magic in Orlando.

Business ventures

A. C. Green is the current ambassador of basketball for 3BA International and the owner of the Portland, Oregon-based 3BA basketball franchise. The 3BA is a full court, 3-on-3, professional basketball league that is scheduled to be starting its inaugural seasons in June of 2010. The 3BA will kick off leagues in both the United States and China.

A. C. Green is a member and endorser of Financial Destination, Inc. [2], a multi-level marketing company that advertises personal concierge and financial planning services.

He is listed as "COB" of Desert Falls Sports Resort [3], and has publicly endorsed the project before the Mesquite, Nevada, City Council. [4]

Personal life

  • Green is known as deeply religious and is well-known for proclaiming that he began and ended his NBA career as a virgin. During his playing days, his teammates would frequently send women to tempt him to compromise his morals. Instead, Green would respond by calmly quoting scripture.[2] Currently, he runs youth camps through his A.C. Green Youth Foundation promoting abstinence until marriage.
  • On his homepage, he states that the initials in his name do not stand for anything. His given name is simply "A. C.", similar to the case of fellow basketball star K. C. Jones.
  • Green is married to Veronique Green. The two were wed on April 20, 2002.
  • Green converted to Christianity in the town of Hermiston, Oregon, while he was still in high school.[1]
  • Green suffered from singultus, or chronic hiccups, during his NBA career, the hiccups only stopping when Green was running or working out. Reportedly, Green never slept more than two hours at a time due to the condition. He has since recovered.[3]

References

External links


 
 

 

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