Spencer Hawes

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Spencer Hawes
Position Center
Height ft 0 in (2.13 m)
Weight 230 lb (100 kg)
League NBA
Team Sacramento Kings
Jersey #31
Born April 28, 1988 (1988-04-28) (age 20)
Seattle, Washington
Nationality USA
High school Seattle Prep,
Seattle, Washington
College Washington
Draft 10th overall, 2007
Sacramento Kings
Pro career 2007present
Awards 2007 Pac-10 First team
Official profile Info Page

Spencer Hawes (born April 28, 1988, in Seattle, Washington) is an American basketball player who was selected by the Sacramento Kings in the 2007 NBA Draft. He is the nephew of Steve Hawes, a retired National Basketball Association (NBA) player.

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[edit] High school

Hawes played center at Seattle Prep, where he led his team to win the state championship for the 2005-2006 season and was named the tournament MVP. He might have entered the 2006 NBA Draft had the NBA not enacted a new rule requiring players to wait a year after their class graduates from high school. He and Martell Webster were teammates at Seattle Preparatory School.

[edit] NBA career

He was drafted by the Sacramento Kings with the 10th overall pick in the 2007 NBA Draft.

[edit] College

Coach Romar has said he expects Hawes to play a major role for the Washington team during his freshman year, with plenty of minutes available after the departure of four seniors from the 2005-2006 team, including NBA guards Brandon Roy (Portland Trail Blazers) and Bobby Jones (Philadelphia 76ers). NBA draft projection services stated he would be a lottery pick when he goes pro following his freshman year.[1]

  • Named 2006 Gatorade Boys Basketball Washington Player of the Year and Seattle Times player of the year.
  • In the summer of 2006, he played for the USA Basketball Under-18 team (coached by Washington's Lorenzo Romar) which defeated Argentina to win the gold medal at the FIBA Americas Under-18 Championship. In the final game, he scored 24 points and had 10 rebounds.

[edit] Personal

Hawes is a conservative Republican and critic of Al Gore's documentary An Inconvenient Truth. [3] ESPN reported on draft night that he loves to debate politics and has a "God Bless George W. Bush" bumper sticker on his automobile. Spencer also recently appeared on the Lars Larson Show, a conservative radio talk show broadcast on KXL and throughout the Northwest.

[edit] External links