Steve Scheffler

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stephen Robert Scheffler
Position Center-Forward
Height ft 9 in (2.06 m)
Weight 250 lb (110 kg)
Born September 3, 1967 (1967-09-03) (age 40)
Grand Rapids, Michigan
College Purdue University
Draft 39th overall, 1990
Charlotte Hornets
Pro career 1990 –1998
Former teams Charlotte Hornets (1990–1991)
Sacramento Kings (1991–1992)
Denver Nuggets (1991–1992,1997–1998)
Seattle Supersonics (1992–1997)

Steve Scheffler (born September 3, 1967, in Ada, Michigan) is a retired American professional basketball player.

Scheffler was selected by the Charlotte Hornets in the 2nd round (39th overall) of the 1990 NBA Draft. He played for the Hornets, Sacramento Kings, Denver Nuggets and Seattle SuperSonics in 7 years in the NBA. In his College and NBA career he always wore No 55 and he was a 12th man and played in 178 games and (starting 8) and averaged 1.9 points in 5.3 minutes per game and shot 55.8% from the floor. Scheffler was a member of the Sonics when they reached the 1996 NBA Finals and played briefly in 4 of the 6 games with the home crowd at KeyArena going wild when he entered the court.

Scheffler played collegiately at Purdue University, where he concluded his career as the NCAA's all-time leader in career field goal percentage. He is one of three Purdue players to have been named Big Ten MVP (1990), Jim Rowinksi (1984) and Glenn Robinson (1994) being the others.[1] He was embraced as a fan favorite in Seattle for his rare appearances and stellar efforts at scoring in late-game blowout situations [2].

Steve Scheffler also had an older brother named Tom Scheffler (6'10"/210cm) who played 39 games as a 12th man for Portland in the 1985-86 season.[1]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Steve Scheffler NBA bio page accessed June 21st, 2007

[edit] External links