Anthony Johnson (basketball)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Position | Point guard/Shooting guard |
|---|---|
| Height | 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) |
| Weight | 200 lb (91 kg) |
| Team | Atlanta Hawks |
| Nationality | USA |
| Born | October 2, 1974 |
| College | College of Charleston |
| Draft | 2nd round, 40th overall |
| Pro career | 1998–present |
| Former teams | Sacramento Kings (1997-1998) Atlanta Hawks (1998-2000) (2000-2001) Orlando Magic (2000) Cleveland Cavaliers (2001) New Jersey Nets (2001-2003) Indiana Pacers (2003-2006) Dallas Mavericks (2006-2007) |
| Awards | 1997 Trans American Athletic Conference Player of the Year |
Anthony Mark Johnson (born October 2, 1974 in Charleston, South Carolina) is an American professional basketball player, currently with the Atlanta Hawks of the NBA. Johnson is a 6'3" (1.91 m) point guard.
After leading Stall High School to the South Carolina AA football championship, he received a basketball scholarship at the College of Charleston, where his older brother Stephen was a standout years earlier. By his senior year, he developed into one of the top players in the now defunct Trans American Athletic Conference, named conference player of the year in 1997, while leading the College of Charleston to an NCAA basketball tournament first round victory over the University of Maryland at the Memphis regional.
He was the first player in College of Charleston history selected in the NBA draft, picked by the Sacramento Kings in the late second round. In the 1997-1998 season, he started 62 games, averaging 7.5 points per game. Over the next several seasons, he played with the Atlanta Hawks, Orlando Magic, Cleveland Cavaliers, and New Jersey Nets. In the 2003-2004 season, he was signed by the Indiana Pacers, where he had a career resurgence, averaging nearly 22 minutes per game and scoring 6.5 points per game. Prior to the 2004-2005 season, the longtime NBA journeyman earned his first long term contract, a four-year deal with the Indiana Pacers.
Johnson drew a five-game suspension from the NBA as a result of his actions in the Pacers-Pistons brawl which broke out at the The Palace of Auburn Hills near the end of a November 19, 2004 game between the two teams.
During the 2004-2005 season, Pacers' starting point guard, Jamaal Tinsley, missed extended periods of time due to injury, which led to a starting role for Anthony Johnson during much to the latter half of that season.
In the 2006 NBA Playoffs, Johnson scored a career-high 40 points against the New Jersey Nets in Game 6 of the series. Despite his heroics, the Pacers lost 96-90, and the series 4-2 to the Nets.
In the 2006 off-season, Johnson was traded to the Dallas Mavericks in exchange for guard Darrell Armstrong, and forwards Josh Powell and Rawle Marshall.
On February 22, 2007, Johnson was traded back to the Atlanta Hawks in exchange for a second round draft choice. It will be Johnson's third stint with the team.[1]
- Anthony Johnson Player Info at NBA.com
- Anthony Johnson Statistics at Basketball-Reference.com
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| First Round Tim Duncan • Keith Van Horn • Chauncey Billups • Antonio Daniels • Tony Battie • Ron Mercer • Tim Thomas • Adonal Foyle • Tracy McGrady • Danny Fortson • Olivier Saint-Jean • Austin Croshere • Derek Anderson • Maurice Taylor • Kelvin Cato • Brevin Knight • Johnny Taylor • Chris Anstey • Scot Pollard • Paul Grant • Anthony Parker • Ed Gray • Bobby Jackson • Rodrick Rhodes • John Thomas • Charles Smith • Jacque Vaughn • Keith Booth |
| Second Round Serge Zwikker • Mark Sanford • Charles O'Bannon • James Cotton • Marko Milič • Bubba Wells • Kebu Stewart • James Collins • Marc Jackson • Jerald Honeycutt • Anthony Johnson • Ed Elisma • Jason Lawson • Stephen Jackson • Gordon Malone • Cedric Henderson • God Shammgod • Eric Washington • Alvin Williams • Predrag Drobnjak • Alain Digbeu • Chris Crawford • DeJuan Wheat • C.J. Bruton • Paul Rogers • Mark Blount • Ben Pepper • Nate Erdmann • Roberto Dueñas |
Categories: 1974 births | Living people | American basketball players | African American sportspeople | Atlanta Hawks players | Cleveland Cavaliers players | Dallas Mavericks players | Indiana Pacers players | New Jersey Nets players | Orlando Magic players | Sacramento Kings players | People from South Carolina | Point guards | Shooting guards