Jeff Hornacek

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Jeff Hornacek
Position Shooting guard
Height ft 4 in (1.93 m)
Weight 190 lb (86 kg)
Born May 3, 1963 (1963-05-03) (age 45)
Elmhurst, Illinois
Nationality USA
College Iowa State
Draft 2nd round, 46thoverall, 1986
Phoenix Suns
Pro career 1986–2000
Former teams Phoenix Suns (1986–1992)
Philadelphia 76ers (1992–1994)
Utah Jazz (1994–2000)
Awards NBA All-Star (1992)
All-Star Three-point Shootout Champion (1998, 2000)
All-Star 2Ball Champion (2000)

Jeffrey John Hornacek (IPA: /ˈhɔrnəsɛk/); (born May 3, 1963 in Elmhurst, Illinois) is a retired American basketball player who played at the shooting guard position in the NBA from 19862000.

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[edit] High school

He attended Lyons Township High School in LaGrange, Illinois, graduating in 1981. He led his team to the Illinois Sweet 16 in his senior year coached by Ron Niksevich and still holds individual team records in free throw shooting. Also played shortstop for the baseball team.

[edit] College

Redshirted at Iowa State University (ISU) in 1981, he was a campus walk-on from 1982–1986, the son of a high school basketball coach became an all-conference player in the Big Eight Conference, playing for legendary coach Johnny Orr. As a point guard he guided the Cyclones to the Sweet 16 of the 1986 NCAA tournament. His shining moment came at the Metrodome in Minneapolis, Minnesota when, after first hitting a shot to tie the game and send it to overtime, Jeff hit the game winning shot in overtime, a 26-ft jumper at the buzzer, to give ISU its first NCAA tournament victory since 1944, beating Miami (Ohio), March 14 1986, 81-79 (Ron Harper was the starting shooting guard for Miami). Two days later, he led the Cyclones to the NCAA Tournament "Sweet Sixteen," in a 72-69 upset of second seed Michigan. Orr, who left Michigan to coach at Iowa State, called it the greatest victory of his career. Hornacek left ISU with a Big-8 record of 665 career assists, still an Iowa State school record, and 1,313 career points.

[edit] NBA career

He was the 22nd pick in the 2nd round (46th overall) of the 1986 NBA Draft, by the Phoenix Suns. He became the star of the Suns, but after his sixth and most productive season, he was traded (along with Andrew Lang and Tim Perry) to the Philadelphia 76ers for Charles Barkley. With Hersey Hawkins, the Sixers' leading scorer in the shooting guard position, Hornacek was assigned point guard responsibilities. Although he had a career high 6.9 assists per game in his only complete season with the Sixers (1992-1993 season), his stint as a point guard was not a success (26 wins, 56 losses). Midway through the 1993-1994 season (February 24) he was traded to the Utah Jazz (for Jeff Malone) where he could return to his natural shooting guard position alongside John Stockton. Hornacek was also one of the best on offense in the NBA in moving without the ball, something essential for a shooting guard. He was an instrumental part of the Jazz's drive to the NBA Finals in 1997 and 1998, where the Jazz lost to the Chicago Bulls both times. He remained with the Jazz until knee problems forced his retirement in 2000. On 23 November 1994, he set a then-NBA record eight consecutive three-pointers in a single game without a miss against the Seattle SuperSonics. That same season, he also tied an NBA record 11 consecutive three-pointers without a miss, from December 30, 1994 through 11 January 1995.

One of the best free throw shooters in the league, once making 67 in a row (12 November 1999January 6 2000), one of his most well-known mannerisms was stroking his cheek three times before every free throw attempt. That was his way of saying hello to his three children during the game.[1] He holds a career free throw percentage of 87.7, 12th highest in NBA history.[2]

Hornacek won the NBA three-point competition twice, and along with Natalie Williams, star of the Utah Starzz, won the All-Star 2-Ball Challenge.

[edit] Retirement and post NBA

Hornacek's #14 jersey was retired by the Utah Jazz, for whom he played from 1994 to 2000, and helped get them to the NBA Finals in 1997 and 1998. Coach Jerry Sloan and Jazz announcer "Hot Rod" Hundley referred to Hornacek affectionately as "Horny".[3]

He currently resides in Paradise Valley, Arizona with wife Stacy and their children, Ryan, Tyler and Abigail. There has been extensive speculation that he will eventually return to basketball as a coach at either the high school, college, or professional levels, but, as of yet, this speculation remains merely that, although he has done workouts with several of the new class of Jazz shooters. Hornacek was recently hired by the Jazz to be a part-time assistant coach and to help Andrei Kirilenko and others with their shooting.

[edit] Stats

  • Height: 6' 4"
  • Weight: 190 lb
  • High School: Lyons Township (La Grange, Cook County, Illinois)
  • Iowa State Records:
    • Career assists: 665
    • Career steals: 211
    • Career complete games: 30
    • Season assists: 219 (1985-1986; 2nd w/198 1983-1984)
    • Season, assists per-game average: 6.83 (1984; 2nd w/6.63 - 1986)
  • NBA Totals:
    • Games: 1,077
    • Minutes Played: 33,959
    • Points: 15,659 (14.5 per game)
    • Assists: 5,281 (4.9 per game)
    • Steals: 1,536 (1.43 per game)

[edit] Transactions

  • 17 June 1986: Selected by the Phoenix Suns as the 22nd pick in the 2nd round (46th pick overall) of the 1986 NBA Draft.
  • 17 June 1992: Traded to the Philadelphia 76ers for Charles Barkley by the Phoenix Suns along with Andrew Lang and Tim Perry.
  • 24 February 1994: Traded to the Utah Jazz for Jeff Malone and a 1994 first-round draft choice, by the Philadelphia 76ers with Sean Green and a 1995 or 1996 second-round draft choice.
  • 16 May 2000: Announced at the beginning of the season that it would be his last. After the Jazz lost to the Portland Trail Blazers in game five (Portland won the series 4 games to 1) of the Western Conference semifinals, Hornacek retired.

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Changing teams: Hornacek will trade NBA for family" CNN/Sports Illustrated - Wednesday, April 26, 2000 - CNNSI.com
  2. ^ "Career Leaders and Records for Free Throw %" @ Basketball-Reference.com - Retrieved on 2007-08-23
  3. ^ Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named NBA.com

[edit] External links