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Betty Lennox

 
Black Biography: Betty Lennox

basketball player

Personal Information

Born on December 4, 1976, in Oklahoma City, OK.
Education: Graduated from Fort Osage High School, Independence, Missouri; attended Butler County Community College, Kansas; Louisiana Tech University, B.A., 2000.

Career

Professional basketball player. Averaged 17.5 points per game during senior year at Louisiana Tech; sixth draft pick in 2000 WNBA draft; signed with Minnesota Lynx, 2000; averaged 16.9 points per game in 2000 season; played only 11 games in 2001 due to hip injury.

Life's Work

In professional basketball it is often the imposing, aggressive, high-scoring centers and forwards who grab the limelight, but Minnesota Lynx guard Betty Lennox has been an exception to the rule. Standing five feet, eight inches tall, Lennox was named Rookie of the Year after the 2000 season of the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA). Through an odyssey marked by sheer determination, Lennox had become one of women's pro basketball's brightest young stars.

Betty Bernice Lennox was born in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, on December 4, 1976; her middle name Bernice was her mother's first name. She was raised in small-town Hugo, Oklahoma. The eighth of nine children, she had five older brothers who spent a good deal of time playing basketball. She loved the game from the start, once even dressing up as a basketball for Halloween. Her brothers let her join in their games, but never cut her any slack. "My brothers taught me: Don't be scared of anything," Lennox told the Kansas City Star. "I go into games and don't get intimidated by anyone. I'm not afraid of anything, except the Man upstairs."

Originally Learned Six-Player Game

Indeed, Lennox has been known to snare jump balls when facing off against the WNBA's seven-foot players. Lennox's positive attitude has helped her overcome a series of setbacks. The first came when the Lennox family moved to Independence, Missouri, outside Kansas City, when Lennox was in the ninth grade, and she tried out for the basketball team at Fort Osage High. In Oklahoma she had played under old-fashioned women's basketball rules that split teams into three offensive and three defensive players, with no crossing the center line allowed. Lennox, who was an offense player, remains most comfortable as a shooter.

"I didn't think I could cross," Lennox recalled to Sports Illustrated. "Everybody was laughing at me. I was like, 'Is there something on my pants?'" Briefly cut from the varsity team, Lennox nevertheless bounced back to become a standout player at Fort Osage. Throughout her career she has had the support of Fort Osage coach Dale Williams, who jokingly calls her his "black daughter"; Lennox in turn calls Williams her "white father." Lennox seemed to be college scholarship material, but she lacked the grades to win admission to a major-college program. So in 1995 she enrolled at Butler County Community College across the river in Kansas. That proved another temporary setback in her career, for the school's basketball program was weak indeed. "I knew it was all wrong when I saw our 300-pound, no-muscle post player," Lennox told Sports Illustrated. Transferring to Trinity Valley Community College in Athens, Texas, Lennox had better luck in her sophomore year. With a 26-point-per-game average, Lennox led the team to the national junior college women's championship and a record of 34-2.

Took Year Off for Academics

After amassing that impressive record, Lennox won a basketball scholarship to Louisiana Tech, a top Division I college program. But mindful of the problems that academics had caused her in the past, Lennox took a year off to devote herself exclusively to her studies. "It's more than just on the court for me," Lennox told the Kansas City Star after she graduated in 2000 with a psychology major. "I still consider myself an average student even though I put hours and hours of study in, worked so hard. But I tell kids, it all starts in class."

When Lennox returned to basketball she was once again discouraged to find herself on the bench instead of on Louisiana Tech's starting team. Her time at Louisiana Tech was stormy; at halftime of one game, angry with herself over her performance, she wrote "DON'T PUT ME BACK IN THE GAME!" on the locker room chalkboard and landed in hot water with the coaching staff. But her dedication impressed Louisiana Tech coach Leon Barmore. "Inside her gut, every day, she wanted to be good," Barmore told the Minneapolis Star-Tribune. "When you run across someone like that, you treasure them."

Together with fellow guard Tamicha Jackson, Lennox came into her own during her senior year at Louisiana Tech. She still had a reputation for being mercurial--her teammates nicknamed her "Psycho"--but she began to reap the rewards of her work regimen, which included a weightlifting routine involving bench presses of up to 165 pounds. Lennox and fellow guard Tamicha Jackson became a much-feared duo, and Louisiana Tech was ranked No. 2 in the United States for much of the season before losing to Penn State in postseason tournament play. Lennox averaged 17.5 points per game and was named to the U.S.A. Basketball Writers Association All-America first team. Pro scouts came calling.

Joined Minnesota Lynx

In the 2000 WNBA draft Lennox was the sixth player picked; she was signed to the Minnesota Lynx. Once again the pattern of initial difficulties followed by hard work and standout play repeated itself. Struggling in preseason training, she clashed with Lynx coach Brian Agler and called Louisiana Tech coach Barmore for advice. "I said, 'Look. That guy can coach. Be patient. He has a game plan,'" Barmore told the Minneapolis Star-Tribune. Over her first four games with the Lynx, Lennox averaged only 8.2 points per game.

Then Lennox began to blaze across the court like the Tasmanian Devil cartoon character to which she sometimes likens herself (and which she had tattooed on her body twice). Scoring 24 points in a game against the WNBA's Orlando franchise, she never looked back. She ended up scoring 541 points for an average of 16.9 points per game. At the season's end she received 59 out of a possible 62 votes as the WNBA's Rookie of the Year. She was also selected as part of the WNBA All-Star Second Team.

A tireless worker who spends much of her spare time in her Minneapolis apartment watching herself on game films and trying to spot areas in need of improvement, Lennox spent the 2000-2001 off-season in Israel, playing on a pro team there in order to hone her competitive skills. In 2001 she was sidelined for 20 games by a broken left hip, managing to average 11 points per game in the 11 games she did play. Still, she returned to top form late in the Lynx season, and her goal of eventually winning the WNBA's Most Valuable Player award seemed well within reach.

Awards

Rookie of the Year, WNBA, 2000; WNBA All-Star Second Team, 2000; U.S.A. Basketball Writers Association All-America first team, 1999.

Further Reading

Periodicals

  • Kansas City Star, August 2, 2000, p. D1; February 16, 2001, p. D1.
  • Minneapolis Star-Tribune, July 7, 2000, p. C1; August 11, 2000, p. C1; August 12, 2000, p. C4.
  • Sports Illustrated, February 7, 2000, p. 74.
  • USA Today, March 13, 2000, p. E22.
Online
  • Women's National Basketball Association, http://www.wnba.com.

— James M. Manheim

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Wikipedia: Betty Lennox
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Betty Lennox
Betty Lennox015.JPG
WNBA's Los Angeles Sparks  – No. 22
Guard
Born December 4, 1976 (1976-12-04) (age 32)
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Nationality American
Height 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)
Weight 143 lb (65 kg)
College Louisiana Tech
Draft 6th overall, 2000
Minnesota Lynx
WNBA career 2000–present
Profile WNBA Info Page
WNBA Teams
Minnesota Lynx (2000-2002)
Miami Sol (2002 - the team folded after the 2002 season)
Cleveland Rockers (2003 - the team folded after the 2003 season)
Seattle Storm (2004-2007)
Atlanta Dream (2008)
Los Angeles Sparks (2009-present)
Awards and Honors
Rookie of the Year (2000)
WNBA Finals MVP (2004)

Betty Bernice Lennox (born December 4, 1976 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma) is an American professional basketball player currently playing for the Los Angeles Sparks in the WNBA. Her nicknames include "Betty Basketball," "Betty Big Buckets," and her most popular nickname "B-Money."

Contents

Childhood

She grew up in the small town of Hugo, OK. Daughter of Bernice Jefferies and A. B. Lennox, but was raised by her mother primarily. She was the eighth of nine children and the youngest daughter in the family. She learned to basketball with her five older brothers, who did not cut her any slack because she was a girl. She would learn to not be intimated by others while playing with her brothers as a child. She also developed her work ethic from growing up on a farm with her family. She was loading bales by age ten, each bale weighing 30 to 40 pounds, and did many daily chores while in primary school in Hugo. Her full name is Betty Bernice Lennox, getting her middle name from her mother.

High School Career

Betty spent her high school years attending Fort Osage High School in Independence, Missouri, under the coaching of Dale Williams. Betty also spent her sophomore year at Grant High School in Grant, OK before her family moved to Missouri. She originally learned the six-player game of basketball while in Oklahoma. She struggled when her family moved to Missouri, as she was not used to crossing over the center line to be a defensive player, as she had only been an offensive player while in Oklahoma.

College Years

Lennox first played college basketball at Trinity Valley Community College in Athens, Texas. Her Tigers team won the 1998 Junior College National Championship, an accomplishment she is most proud of. Lennox then transferred to Louisiana Tech University, and graduated there in 2000 with a BA in Psychology. She actually to a year off from basketball to devote herself to her studies in order to complete her degree. She was named the 2000 Sun Belt Conference Player of the Year and a U. S. Basketball Writers Association First Team All-American while at Louisiana Tech University.

WNBA career

Lennox was selected by the Minnesota Lynx as the #6 overall pick in the 2000 WNBA Draft and later became the WNBA's Rookie of the Year in 2000. She was also the first Rookie to ever play in the 2000 WNBA All-Star Game that same year. She broke her hip in 2001, and was originally told that her basketball career would be over after the injury. With the work ethic she learned as a child, she fought back from her injury to come back and continues to thrive as a player.

On June 13, 2002, the Minnesota Lynx traded Lennox along with a 2003 first-round draft pick to the Miami Sol in exchange for Tamara Moore and a 2003 second-round draft pick. After the 2002 season ended, the Miami Sol folded, and Lennox was selected by the Cleveland Rockers in the 2003 WNBA Dispersal draft. When the Rockers folded after the 2003 season ended, Lennox went through another Dispersal Draft before the 2004 season. This time, she was selected by the Seattle Storm.

Lennox led the Seattle Storm to the 2004 WNBA Championship against the Connecticut Sun. She was named the recipient of the WNBA Finals Most Valuable Player (MVP) award for the Storm's championship run. Betty averaged 22.3 points during the Storm's championship run en route to winning the award.

On February 6, 2008, Lennox was selected by the Atlanta Dream in the expansion draft. She would play the entire season for the Atlanta Dream, averaging 17.5 points per game. She was the Eastern Conference leading point scorer for the 2008 season. She reached the 3,000 point and 1,000 rebound milestones in the 2008 season as well.

She was acquired by the Los Angeles Sparks for the 2009 season as an unrestricted free agent, where she helped lead them to the Western Conference finals in her tenth season with the WNBA.

She is has been known to play internationally during the off season with the WNBA, playing for many teams throughout the world. She recently played for Nadezhda in Russia during the 2008-09 WNBA off-season.[1]

Personal life

Lennox started the Lennox Foundation in 2005 to support children that were victims of neglect and abuse. The organization’s mission is to give these children better experiences and the chance to succeed with support, education, and love. They learn self-motivation through playing basketball. She was presented with the WNBA’s Community Assist Award in June 2006 for her charitable work.

She comes from a deeply religious background, and has a bible verse inscribed on the toes of her shoes (Philippians 4:13) which she says is the scripture that tells all that she has become today.

Vital statistics

References

External links


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