Lauren Jackson

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Lauren Jackson
Lauren Jackson posing with her WNBA Most Valuable Player Award
Lauren Jackson posing with her WNBA Most Valuable Player Award
Position Forward/Center
Height ft 5 in (1.96 m)
Weight 187 lb (85 kg)
Team Seattle Storm
Nationality Flag of Australia Australia
Born May 11, 1981
Albury, New South Wales
Draft 1st overall, 2001
Seattle Storm
Pro career 1997 – present
Former teams Canberra Capitals (1999-2006)
Australian Institute of Sport (1997-99)
Awards WNBL MVP (1999, 2000, 2004)
WNBL All-Star 5 (1999-2004)
WNBA MVP (2003)
All-WNBA First Team (2003, 2005)
Five-time WNBA All-Star
WNBL Grand Final MVP (2006)
WNBA's All-Decade Team (2006)
Olympic medal record
Women's Basketball
Silver 2000 Sydney Team Competition
Silver 2004 Athens Team Competition

Lauren Elizabeth Jackson (born May 11, 1981 in Albury, New South Wales, Australia) is an Australian professional basketball player. She is a forward/center with the Seattle Storm of the WNBA, and the Australian national team The Opals, and until 2006 with the Canberra Capitals of the Australian WNBL. She has won national championships in both the U.S. and Australia, and a world championship as well. She is universally considered to be the best Australian female basketball player of all time, and one of the best players in the world.

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[edit] Early career

Both Jackson's parents, Gary and Maree, represented Australia at basketball, and she took up the game at age four. A teenage prodigy, she moved to the Australian Institute of Sport in Canberra as a teenager. She played for the Australian women's team, the Opals, in 1997 as a 16-year-old. She led the Australian Institute of Sport team, made up of the country's best 16 to 18 year-old players, to a premiership in the WNBL Women's National Basketball League, the Australian women's professional league, in 1998-1999 - an unprecedented achievement for a youth team. Ineligible to continue with the AIS team, she joined the other Canberra-based team, the Canberra Capitals, and led them to four titles in 1999-2000, 2001-02, 2002-03 and 2005-2006.

[edit] International career

In the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, Australia, Jackson registered 20 points and 13 rebounds in a loss to the United States in the gold-medal game. The silver medal was Australian basketball's first in international competition.

In the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece, The Opals went on to repeat as silver medalists, losing again to the United States in the Olympic final.

In the 2006 Commonwealth Games in Melbourne, Australia, the Opals defeated New Zealand's Tall Ferns in the final, and earned the gold medal.

In the 2006 FIBA World Championship for Women in Brazil, the Opals defeated Russia to win the gold medal. Jackson captained the team.

[edit] WNBA

When Jackson declared for the WNBA Draft in 2001, she was an automatic first selection to the Seattle Storm, where she has played since.

MVPs Lauren Jackson and Lisa Leslie battle for the ball
Enlarge
MVPs Lauren Jackson and Lisa Leslie battle for the ball

The 196 centimeter (6'5") Jackson is very effective in offense, combining her height with a good shooting percentage - even from three-point range (she led the WNBA in three-point percentage in 2004), athletic ability, and not least a little bit of "mongrel" (mental toughness and aggressiveness) to deal with the highly physical defensive tactics usually laid on to stop her. Earlier in her career, her defense was perhaps the weaker aspect of her game, but these days that area has also improved, making her a leading defensive rebounder and shot-blocker in the WNBA. In 2003, despite the fact that the Seattle Storm did not make the playoffs, she was voted as the WNBA's Most Valuable Player that season.

In 2004, her Seattle Storm team won the WNBA Championship by defeating the Connecticut Sun, two games to one.

[edit] 2005 Injury

In October 2005, having returned to Australia to play in the 2005-06 WNBL season, Jackson aggravated an old stress fracture injury in her left leg, was not expected to play again in the WNBL season. She recovered more quickly than expected, returning to star for Canberra in the WNBL finals series, being named finals MVP in Canberra's 05-06 title, and to lead the Opals in the Commonwealth Games.

[edit] Move to South Korea

Jackson decided to leave Australia after the 2005-06 season. While she had huge offers from clubs in Russia—she was reportedly paid over AUD 200,000 to play a few games with a Russian club before the 2005 WNBA season—she opted instead to sign a three-year deal with a Seoul-based club in South Korea's national league. Although she would not earn as much money in Korea as she could in Russia, her salary will still be higher than what she could earn in Australia. More importantly, Korea's season runs only from mid-December through early March, about half the length of the European season, and clubs in the league only play two matches a week. She indicated that Korea's shorter season played the main role in her decision to sign there, noting that it would likely prolong her career.

Jackson will continue to play in the WNBA during the Northern Hemisphere summer; in April 2006, she signed a three-year contract to stay with the Storm.

[edit] Off the court

Jackson posed nude in an Australian magazine, Black+White, that featured Olympic athletes who were set to compete in Athens in the 2004 Summer Olympics. The expensively-printed magazine/book has been produced for the last three Olympic Games, and by the 2004 edition was considered relatively uncontroversial in Australia with its "artistic" approach to nude photography and its equal coverage of male and female athletes. While Jackson considered it an honor to be in the magazine, it was the subject of some controversy in Seattle. Jackson also posed for the 2005 edition of the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue. After Jackson's pro basketball career she hopes to be involved with a women's refuge and help victims of rape and domestic violence.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Women's National Basketball Association | WNBA's All-Decade Team
Sue Bird | Tamika Catchings | Cynthia Cooper | Yolanda Griffith | Lauren Jackson | Lisa Leslie | Katie Smith | Dawn Staley | Sheryl Swoopes | Tina Thompson

Ruthie Bolton | Chamique Holdsclaw | Ticha Penicheiro | Diana Taurasi | Teresa Weatherspoon (Honorable mention)

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