Stacey Augmon

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Stacey P. Augmon
Position Small forward/shooting guard
Height ft 8 in (2.03 m)
Weight 203 lb (92 kg)
League NBA
Born August 1, 1968 (1968-08-01) (age 39)
Pasadena, California
Nationality USA
High school John Muir
College UNLV
Draft 9th overall, 1991
Atlanta Hawks
Pro career 1991–present
Former teams Atlanta Hawks (1991–1996)
Detroit Pistons (1996–1997)
Portland Trail Blazers (1997–2001)
New Orleans Hornets (2001–2004)
Orlando Magic (2004–2006)
Official profile Info Page
Olympic medal record
Men's Basketball
Bronze 1988 United States

Stacey Orlando Augmon (born August 1, 1968 in Pasadena, California) is a former American professional basketball player in the NBA. He gained the nickname "Plastic Man" due to his resemblance to the DC Comics superhero of the same name. He also has a son named Justice.

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[edit] College

See also: List of college men's basketball players with 2000 points and 1000 rebounds

Augmon played college basketball for four years at UNLV and won the 1990 NCAA Championship with them. Augmon was the first three-time winner of the NABC Defensive Player of the Year, winning the award in 1989, 1990, and 1991.[1] He is a class of 2002 member of the UNLV Athletic Hall of Fame along with teammates Greg Anthony and Larry Johnson.[2]

[edit] NBA career

Augmon was drafted by the Atlanta Hawks with the ninth pick of the 1991 NBA Draft. Upon Augmon being chosen, Bill Walton famously said "Russell begat Kareem, Kareem begat Magic, and so Magic has begat the Plastic Man." He was the first player in the top ten draft picks to work out a deal, a 5-year contract worth between 6.5 and 7 million dollars.[3] Augmon has played for the Hawks, the Detroit Pistons, the Portland Trail Blazers, the Charlotte/New Orleans Hornets, and the Magic. He holds a scoring average of 8.0 points per game throughout his career.

The Magic decided not to re-sign Augmon for the 2006-07 NBA season, making him an unrestricted free agent. On October 3, 2007, the Denver Nuggets announced the signing of the 15-year veteran[4], but he was later waived on the 24th[5]. One month and three days later, Denver re-hired Augmon, this time as a player development coach.[6]

[edit] Controversy

During the 2004-2005 season, Augmon was investigated by the league for two incidents. He had already refused to speak to the media, which violated league rules.[7]

The first was following a game March 11, 2005. Greg Sandoval from The Washington Post wrote, "As reporters gathered around the locker of Magic guard Jameer Nelson, a female reporter for a local TV station kneeled down to give cameramen a clear shot and to place a microphone near Nelson, who was sitting. Augmon, whose locker is near Nelson's, made a comment about the woman being on her knees in front of a player that involved a reference to oral sex, a witness told the newspaper."[7]

Two nights later on March 13, Sandoval continues, "Augmon became angered over a question that an Orlando Sentinel reporter asked Magic guard Steve Francis.[7]"That's a stupid [expletive] question," Augmon allegedly said, according to several reports. When a male Florida Today reporter told Augmon that they were interviewing Francis and not him, Augmon shouted obscenities and began moving toward the reporter. A Magic employee stepped in front of Augmon, who then threw a bottle of lotion at the reporter. The bottle did not strike the reporter but some of its contents splashed his clothes."[7]Augmon later apologized to the reporter by purchasing him a new suit made of fine Italian silk.[8]

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