No. 43 | |
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Small forward / Guard | |
Personal information | |
Date of birth | December 11, 1945 |
Nationality | American |
High school | Jim Hill (Jackson, Mississippi) |
Listed height | 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) |
Listed weight | 210 lb (95 kg) |
Career information | |
College | Seattle |
NBA Draft | 1967 / Round: 5 / Pick: 54th overall |
Selected by the Seattle SuperSonics | |
Pro career | 1967–1969 |
League | NBA |
Career history | |
1967–1969 | Seattle SuperSonics |
Stats at NBA.com | |
Stats at Basketball-Reference.com |
Plummer E. Lott (born December 11, 1945Mississippi[1]) is a retired American professional basketball player in the NBA and a New York Supreme Court judge.
inLott was a 6'5" (1.96 m) and 210 lb (95 kg) small forward whose brief career lasted with the Seattle SuperSonics from 1967 to 1969. The former Seattle University star was selected by the expansion SuperSonics in the fifth round of the 1967 NBA Draft.[2]
Lott is now a New York Supreme Court judge based in Brooklyn, New York.[1][3] A famous case he presided over involved David Hampton, a con man who posed as film legend Sidney Poitier's son — a case that inspired the play Six Degrees of Separation, and a 1994 film adaptation of the same name.[1]