Lonnie Wright (born January 23, 1944) is a retired American professional basketball and football player. He was born in Newark, New Jersey.
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Wright attended South Side High School in Newark where he earned All-City, All-County, All-State, and All-American honors in both football and basketball. He was inducted into the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association Hall of Fame in 1997.[1]
He attended Colorado State University, where he played basketball and set the school's shot put record of 52 feet, 9 inches.[1][2] Wright scored 1,246 points in his college basketball career, and was part of the Rams team that made it to the 1966 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, losing in the first round to the University of Houston team led by Elvin Hayes and Don Chaney.[2]
He was drafted in the sixth round of the 1966 NBA Draft by the St. Louis Hawks (now the Atlanta Hawks, but did not sign with the team.[3] The Dallas Cowboys of the NFL also showed interest.[2]
Wright signed with the Denver Broncos of the American Football League on April 16, 1966, playing for the team in 1966 and 1967.[1] As a safety, he intercepted one pass in the 1966 season and four more the following year. He caught a single pass in his career, losing two yards on the reception.[4]
Switching sports, Wright signed with the Denver Rockets (predecessor to the Denver Nuggets) on January 5, 1968,[5][6] starting play with the Rockets just weeks after the end of the football season.[2]
A 6 foot 2 inch (1.88 m), 205 pound (93 kg) guard, he played for five seasons in the American Basketball Association, four seasons with the Rockets (1967-1971) and a single season with The Floridians (1971-1972).[3] He scored 3,590 points and averaged 10.7 points per game over his career, with the 1968-69 season marking his career bests, scoring 1,130 points and 16.4 points per game, second on the team in both statistics behind Larry Jones.[7]
While Otto Graham and Bud Grant had done the basketball-football double in the 1940s, only Ron Widby had done it since, through 1999.[8]
Wright was inducted into the Newark Athletic Hall of Fame in 1988 and into the Colorado State University Sports Hall of Fame the following year.[9][10]
He has served as the Director of Students at the New Jersey Medical School of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey in Newark.[1]
Wright's wife Joanna is head coach of the girls' basketball team at Columbia High School in Maplewood, New Jersey, and had compiled a 420-140 career record in 28 years of coaching through 2002.[11]
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