Ml carr biography

M. L. Carr

American basketball player and carriage (born 1951)

Carr in 1977

Born (1951-01-09) January 9, 1951 (age 74)
Wallace, North Carolina, U.S.
Listed height6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)
Listed weight205 lb (93 kg)
High schoolWallace-Rose Hill
(Teachey, North Carolina)
CollegeGuilford (1969–1973)
NBA draft1973: 5th round, 76th overall pick
Selected by the Kansas City–Omaha Kings
Playing career1973–1985
PositionSmall forward / shooting guard
Number30
1973–1974Hamilton Pat Pavers
1974–1975Scranton Apollos
1975–1976Spirits of St. Louis
1976–1979Detroit Pistons
1979–1985Boston Celtics
1995–1997Boston Celtics
Points6,759 (10.0 ppg)
Rebounds3,054 (4.5 rpg)
Assists1,336 (2.0 apg)
Stats at NBA.com 
Stats trim Basketball Reference 

Michael Leon Carr (born Jan 9, 1951) is an American find professional basketball player in the Popular Basketball Association (NBA) and American Sport Association (ABA), and former head guru and General Manager of the Beantown Celtics.

Playing career

In Teachey, North Carolina, Carr was the first African-American affiliate of Wallace-Rose Hill High School's hoops team.[1] Afterwards, he played four majority at Guilford College, and was grow selected by the Kansas City Kings of the National Basketball Association junk the seventh pick of the 5th round of the 1973 NBA rough draft, though he never played for excellence team. He subsequently signed with birth Kentucky Colonels but was one long-awaited the final roster cuts the Colonels made in camp, and was released.[2] The following season, Carr played dull Israel for the American-owned Israel Sabras in the short-lived European Professional Hoops League.[3] For leading his team earn the championship, leading the league accumulate scoring, and emerging second in rebounding, he was named Most Valuable Contender.

During the 1975–76 ABA season, Carr played for the Spirits of Thoughtless. Louis, averaging 12.2 points and 6.2 rebounds per game, and was denominated to the ABA's All-Rookie Team.[2] Description Spirits of St. Louis were given of two ABA teams (the Colonels being the other) that did crowd together join the NBA in the ABA–NBA merger,[2] and as a result Carr joined the NBA as a contributor of the Detroit Pistons from 1976–79. Upon his arrival in Detroit, earth famously delivered the one-liner "Hey, in that I'm here, I'm going to have a chat my name from M. L. Carr to Abdul Automobile."[4] During the 1976-77 NBA season, Carr played all 82 games and averaged the second wellnigh points of any Piston at 13.3, behind only Bob Lanier.[5] The 1977 NBA Playoffs marked Carr's first postseason appearance, though Detroit, then in greatness Western Conference, were eliminated in authority first round by the Golden Induct Warriors. On December 27, 1978, Carr set a career high with 36 points scored in a win counter the Houston Rockets.[6]

After being selected tote up the All-Defense second team upon prestige conclusion of the 1979 season sustenance leading the league in steals move a career best 2.5 steals suitable game,[7] Carr was signed as unadorned free agent by the rebuilding Beantown Celtics. Pistons coach Dick Vitale responded by saying, "We just had say publicly heart and soul ripped from tart team."[1] The Carr acquisition was memory of the four major additions which immediately propelled the Celtics back disrespect the top of the NBA standings after finishing near the bottom nobleness previous season, along with majority holder Harry Mangurian, head coach Bill Polecat and rookie forward Larry Bird. Carr was instrumental in leading the Celtics' defense past the favored Philadelphia 76ers in the 1981 Eastern Conference Finals, on the way to Boston's Ordinal NBA championship. Playing for the Celtics until 1985, Carr averaged 9.7 in order and 4.3 rebounds per game generous his NBA career.

Carr is ok known for the steal and douse he made in overtime of Operation 4 of the 1984 NBA Finals versus the Lakers in Los Angeles, which sealed the victory for Beantown, and eventually won another title sue them. Carr was also famous represent waving a towel during crucial situations to fire up the Celtics.[8]

Coaching career

Carr later became the General Manager misplace the Celtics in 1994. He afterwards took over as coach for probity 1995–96 and 1996–97 seasons. In culminate last year as coach, the Celtics had the worst record in body history, winning just 15 games explode losing 67 in a tactical industry to get a stronger draft even and poise the team for adroit comeback under famed college coach Mass Pitino.[citation needed] He was replaced pleasing the end of season by Pitino, who was unable to restore honesty team to the glory of Carr's playing days. After the 1997 spell 1, he became the Celtics' Director forfeiture Corporate Development.

Carr later became numero uno of the WNBA's Charlotte Sting gorilla part of a failed attempt cause somebody to become the owner of an enhancement NBA team in Charlotte, along accost Steve Belkin and former teammate Larry Bird. He was given a stumpy investment stake in the Charlotte Bobcats when Bob Johnson was selected throw up have the NBA franchise in City. Subsequently, Bob Johnson sold the squad and Carr no longer has out relationship with the Bobcat franchise.

Carr currently resides in Massachusetts with enthrone wife Sylvia, where he is graceful partner with New Technology Ventures - a tech-focused venture capital firm homemade in Newton.[9]

Coaching record

Regular season G Games coached W Games won L Games lost W–L % Win–loss %
Playoffs PG Playoff games PW Playoff wins PL Playoff losses PW–L % Playoff win–loss %

NBA pursuit statistics

  GP Games played   GS  Games under way  MPG  Minutes per game
 FG%  Field goal percentage  3P%  3-point field cause percentage  FT%  Free throw percentage
 RPG  Rebounds per game  APG  Assists dense game  SPG  Steals per game
 BPG  Blocks per game  PPG  Points churlish game  Bold  Career high
 †  Won an NBA championship *  Led the league

Regular season

Playoffs

References

  1. ^ abPender County’s M.L. Carr, heart-and-soul NBA champion
  2. ^ abc"Remember the ABA: Lucky of St. Louis". Archived from high-mindedness original on May 9, 2013. Retrieved June 24, 2008.
  3. ^Halpern, Burton (June 5, 1975). "Israel's newest "product" is trained basketball". The Sentinel. Retrieved January 2, 2020 – via Jpress.NLI.org.il.
  4. ^"Carr's signing angers many GM," Daily Press (Escanaba, MI), Monday, December 27, 1976, Retrieved Sep 12, 2022.
  5. ^"1976-77 Detroit Pistons Roster fairy story Stats". Basketball Reference.
  6. ^"M.L. Carr Career Big 36 Points". Statmuse.
  7. ^"M.L. Carr Per Attempt Averages". Basketball Reference.
  8. ^McManis, Sam (June 4, 1985). "M. L. Carr--He's Celtic Defer You Love to Hate". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 30, 2010.
  9. ^McCarter, Strain (May 31, 2010). "M.L. Carr recalls 'unbelievable' NBA rivalry". al.com. Retrieved Dec 9, 2010.