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Dominique Wilkins
Dominique Wilkins (2013)
Wilkins at the 2013 Basketball Hall of Fame ceremony in April 2013.
Atlanta Hawks
Position Vice President of Basketball
Personal information
Full name Jacques Dominique Wilkins
Born January 12, 1960 (1960-01-12) (age 64)
Paris, France
Nationality U.S. Flag American
Physical stats
Listed height 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m)
Listed weight 230 lbs (104 kg)
Career information
High school Washington High School
(Washington, North Carolina)
College Georgia (1979–1982)
NBA Draft 1982 / Round: 1 / Pick: 3rd
Selected by the Utah Jazz
Pro career 1982-1999 (17 years)
Position Small forward
Career history
1982–1994 Atlanta Hawks
1994 Los Angeles Clippers
1994–1995 Boston Celtics
1995–1996 Panathinaikos (Greece)
1996–1997 San Antonio Spurs
1997–1999 Fortitudo Bologna (Italy)
1999 Orlando Magic
Career highlights and awards
  • Career highlights and awards
  • 9× NBA All Star (1986–1994)
  • All-NBA First Team (1986)
  • 4× All-NBA Second Team (1987–1988, 1991, 1993)
  • 2× All-NBA Third Team (1989, 1994)
  • NBA All-Rookie First Team (1983)
  • NBA scoring champion (1986)
  • 2× NBA Slam Dunk Contest champion (1985, 1990)
  • 3× 2013–2015)
  • Atlanta Hawks all-time leading scorer
  • No. 21 retired by Atlanta Hawks
  • Euroleague champion (1996)
  • Euroleague Final Four MVP (1996)
  • Greek Cup champion (1996)
  • Greek Cup MVP (1996)
  • Second-team All-American – NABC, UPI (1982)
  • Third-team All-American – AP (1982)
  • SEC Player of the Year (1981)
Basketball Hall of Fame
Inducted in 2006
NBA.com profile profile

Jacques Dominique Wilkins (born January 12, 1960) is a retired American professional basketball player. Wilkins is currently Vice President of Basketball for the Atlanta Hawks whom he spent primarily most of his playing career with. During his career Wilkins made 9 NBA All-Star appearances, and may be known one of the best dunkers in NBA history, earning the nickname "The Human Highlight Film".[1] In 2006, Wilkins was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame[2].

Early life and college[]

Wilkins was born in Paris, France, due to his father being stationed there while in the U.S. Air Force. Wilkins' family then moved to Washington, North Carolina, where he attended Washington High School. He was the back-to-back MVP for the team's consecutive Class 3-A State Championships (1978-1979). Wilkins then starred in the McDonald's Game, The Capital Classic, The Kentucky Derby Festival Classic, and The Dapper Dan Classic All-Star Games. He had 16 points and 12 rebounds in the McDonald's, 26 points in the Capital, and 22 points in the Derby Classic. He entered the University of Georgia in 1979 with an established reputation as an exciting player. Wilkins averaged 21.6 points a game over his career and was named SEC Men's Basketball Player of the Year in 1981.[2][3] He left college after his junior year and was selected third overall (behind James Worthy and Terry Cummings) by the Utah Jazz in the 1982 NBA Draft.

NBA Career[]

Cash flow problems within the Utah Jazz organization, along with Wilkins' reluctance to play with the Jazz led to him being traded to the Atlanta Hawks several months after the draft. The trade included John Drew, Freeman Williams and cash. Despite Wilkins' reluctance to play for Utah, this trade is now considered among the most lopsided deals in NBA history.[citation needed]

Prior to his last three NBA seasons, Wilkins never averaged fewer than 20 points per game and captured a scoring title in 1985-86 with an average of 30.3 points per game.

Wilkins, in addition to his eleven seasons with the Hawks, had short stints with the Los Angeles Clippers, the Boston Celtics, Panathinaikos Athens (a professional team in Greece's A1 Ethniki League, with whom he won his first title, the European Clubs' Championship and the Greek Cup), Fortitudo Bologna (a professional team in Italy's Serie A League), the San Antonio Spurs, and the Orlando Magic before he retired in 1999.

Wilkins was instrumental in the Hawks' prominence in the 1980s, when the club recorded four consecutive 50-win seasons during the decade. As Wilkins entered his thirties and the Hawks needed more of an all-around contribution from their star, Wilkins stepped forward, averaging 9.0 rebounds and 3.0 assists during the 1990-91 season.

A nine-time NBA All-Star and the winner of two NBA Slam Dunk Contests, Wilkins registered 26,668 points and 7,169 rebounds in his NBA career.

Wilkins' nickname was the "The Human Highlight Film" for his athletic ability and highlight reel dunks. His trademark dunk was a powerful one- or two-handed windmill, dunks he used to capture the Slam Dunk titles in 1985 and 1990. As a basketball player he was known as an acrobatic scorer, somewhat of a gunner, though an outstanding finisher and one of the greatest dunkers in NBA history.

His #21 jersey was retired by the Hawks on January 13, 2001. He is one of four players to have had their jerseys retired by the Hawks.

Early NBA Years[]

Wilkins notched his first Slam-Dunk Championship at the NBA All-Star Weekend in Indianapolis. He went on to finish the season with a 27.4 scoring average, good for sixth in the NBA. He ranked second on the Hawks in rebounding (6.9 rpg) and steals (135). For the first of two straight seasons he led the NBA in field-goal attempts, with 1,891. After going 0-for-11 from the three-point line the previous season, Wilkins made 25 of 81 three-point shots in 1984–85. He also shot better than 80 percent from the line for the first of 10 consecutive seasons. Despite Wilkins's efforts, Atlanta finished 34-48 and failed to reach the playoffs.

Wilkins exploded into the NBA's elite circle in 1985–86, winning the league scoring title with an average of 30.3 points per game. He was an NBA All-Star for the first time and was voted to the All-NBA First Team at the end of the season. He failed in his bid to repeat as NBA Slam-Dunk champion, his competition coming from an unlikely source. The Hawks had signed 5-foot-7 Anthony "Spud" Webb as a free agent prior to the season, and Webb dazzled the All-Star Saturday crowd in Dallas by soaring more than 4 feet (1.2 m) to the basket on each of his dunk attempts. Atlanta turned its fortunes around in dramatic fashion, winning 16 more games in the 1985–86 season to finish 50-32 for the year. Wilkins scored 57 points in one game and ranked among the Hawks' leaders in rebounding (7.9 rpg), steals (138), and free-throw percentage (.818). Atlanta beat the Detroit Pistons in four games in the first round of the playoffs, but the Hawks could not get past the eventual NBA-champion Boston Celtics, losing four games to one in the Eastern Conference semifinals. Wilkins averaged 28.6 points in the nine playoff games.

After playing as a reserve the previous year, Wilkins became the first Atlanta Hawks player to start in an NBA All-Star Game since Eddie Johnson in 1981. Wilkins finished the year second in the league in scoring (29.0 ppg) to Michael Jordan's 37.1 points per game. He scored the 10,000th point of his career against the Chicago Bulls on April 16 and was named to the All-NBA Second Team at the season's end. Atlanta went into the season with high expectations after a 50-32 mark the previous year, and the Hawks totalled a franchise-record 57 victories. Doc Rivers, Kevin Willis, Tree Rollins, and Mike McGee contributed as the club made it through the first round of the NBA playoffs before losing in the Eastern Conference semifinals to the Detroit Pistons. Wilkins averaged 26.8 points during the postseason, the second of six straight playoffs in which he would average at least 20 points.

Late 1980s[]

In the 1987-88 season, Wilkins posted the highest scoring average of his career and finished second to Jordan in the NBA scoring race. He averaged 30.7 points for the Hawks, but Jordan bested him at 35.0. Jordan also defeated Wilkins for the Slam Dunk Championship at the NBA All-Star Weekend in Chicago. Wilkins earned a berth on the All-NBA Second Team and became the first Hawks player to be named NBA Player of the Week three times in a season. In his third straight All-Star Game appearance, Wilkins scored 29 points on 12-of-22 shooting, leading the East squad to a 138-133 victory.

Atlanta (50-32) won at least 50 games for the third straight season and advanced to the Eastern Conference semifinals before losing to the Boston Celtics in seven games. In Game 7 on May 22, Wilkins and Larry Bird carried their respective teams to a thrilling finish, trading bucket for bucket in the fourth quarter until Boston won with a 118-116 victory. Wilkins finished with 47 points and Bird had 34—with 20 of his points tallied in the fourth quarter. "The basket was like a well", remembered Wilkins. "I couldn't miss. He couldn't miss. And it went down to the last shot of the game. Who was going to make the last shot? That's the greatest game I've ever played in or seen played. It was two guys who just did not want to lose."

During the 1989 season with the Hawks, Wilkins's scoring average dropped slightly to 26.2, good for seventh in the league, but he was an All-Star for the fourth straight year. He shot a career-best .844 from the free-throw line and ranked second on the Hawks with 117 steals. Basketball writers selected him to the All-NBA Third Team at season's end. The Hawks added Reggie Theus and Moses Malone to the team in 1988–89,. Malone averaged 20.2 points and finished fourth in the league with his 11.8 rebounding average. Theus averaged 15.8 points. Without 7-foot (2.1 m) Kevin Willis, however, who missed the entire season with a fractured left foot, Atlanta lost to the Milwaukee Bucks in the first round. Wilkins averaged 27.2 points in the playoffs.

Wilkins returned to dunking prominence in 1989–90 by edging out the Sacramento Kings' Kenny Smith for his second NBA Slam-Dunk championship. He averaged 26.7 points to finish fifth in the NBA scoring race. He led the Hawks in steals for the first time since 1985–86, finishing with 126. His .484 field-goal percentage was the best since his rookie season, and for the sixth straight year that he did not foul out of a game. Nonetheless, Atlanta struggled to a 41-41 record in Mike Fratello's last season as head coach, failing to make the playoffs for only the second time in Wilkins' career.

1990s[]

Dominique wilkins 1 Wilkins averaged a career-high 9.0 rebounds in 1990—91, leading the Hawks in that category for the first time in his nine NBA seasons. He also led the team in scoring for the eighth straight year, finishing at 25.9 points per game—seventh best in the NBA. He registered a career-high 265 assists while developing a three-point shot he would use more and more in the later stages of his career. He hit 85-of-249 from long range for a .341 percentage, by far his most prolific three-point numbers to date. Wilkins made his sixth All-Star Game appearance, scoring 12 points in the East's 116-114 victory over the West. He was selected to the All-NBA Second Team for the third time in his career. Atlanta returned to the playoffs after a year's absence, drawing the defending NBA champion Detroit Pistons in the first round. The Hawks pushed the Pistons to a fifth game, but Detroit routed Atlanta, 113-81, in Game 5. Wilkins averaged 20.8 points in the five games, but shot .372 from the field and .133 from three-point range.

After 42 games, Wilkins' season was brought to an abrupt halt by a ruptured Achilles tendon against the Philadelphia 76ers on January 28. He underwent surgery on January 30. Seven weeks before the injury, Wilkins had set an NBA record by making 23 free throws in 23 attempts in a game against the Chicago Bulls.[4] He also scored the 20,000th point of his career, becoming only the 16th player at the time to reach that plateau. On the day of the injury, Wilkins was named a reserve on the Eastern Conference All-Star Team. His 28.1 scoring average was his highest in five years, and the 52 points he scored in a double-overtime game on December 7 against the New York Knicks were the most by an NBA player that season.

Wilkins was honored by several sports publicationsTemplate:Who the next season as the NBA Comeback Player of the Year. He scored an average of 27.7 points per game in the first month of the season. He then suffered a setback when he fractured the ring finger on his right hand on December 15, sitting out the next 11 games. He returned to rack up 29.4 points per game on .487 shooting in January, then added 31.5 points per game on .519 shooting in February. By the end of the season, his scoring average was up to 29.9, second in the league behind Michael Jordan's 32.6. When Wilkins scored his 31st point in a February 2 game against the Seattle SuperSonics, he broke Bob Pettit's franchise scoring record of 20,880 points. He had developed into a full-fledged three-point threat, hitting 120 of 316 attempts from long range to shatter his previous career bests. He was later selected to the All-NBA Second Team. The Chicago Bulls swept the Hawks in the first round of the playoffs 3-0.

Wilkins showed no signs of fading in his 12th NBA season, even after a tumultuous midseason trade. After 11½ years with the Atlanta Hawks, Wilkins was traded to the Los Angeles Clippers on February 24 in exchange for Danny Manning. This is still the only time in NBA history a team in first place in their conference traded its leading scorer after the All-Star break. Prior to the trade Wilkins averaged 24.4 points, 6.2 rebounds, and 2.3 assists for Atlanta, leading the club to a 36-16 record. At midseason he appeared in his eighth NBA All-Star Game. However, Hawks management and new coach Lenny Wilkens felt Manning and his skills might help the team more during the stretch run. The top-seeded Hawks lost in the conference semifinals to the Indiana Pacers. Wilkins left Atlanta as the team's all-time leading scorer with 23,292 points. In his final 25 games of the season Wilkins averaged 29.1 points and 7.0 rebounds. On March 25 he returned to Atlanta in a Clippers uniform and tallied 36 points and 10 rebounds against his former team. Overall, Wilkins's 26.0 scoring average ranked fourth in the NBA. He concluded the season with 24,019 career points, placing ninth on the NBA's all-time list. Wilkins became a free agent after the 1993–94 season and signed with the Boston Celtics. Shortly after the signing, he helped Dream Team II to a gold medal at the 1994 World Championship of Basketball.

European Champion[]

Unhappy with his role on a rebuilding Celtics team, Wilkins signed to play for Panathinaikos of the Greek League. He averaged 20.9 points and 7.0 rebounds for Panathinaikos and led the team to the Euroleague title in 1996 alongside teammates Fragiskos Alvertis, Stojan Vranković and Panagiotis Giannakis. During the Final Four that was held in Paris he had 35 points and 8 rebounds in the semifinal against CSKA and a double-double with 16 points and 10 rebounds against Barcelona in the final. His performances earned him the Final Four MVP award. He also won the Greek Cup with Panathinaikos and was named the MVP of the Final.

He returned to the NBA before the 1996-97 season, signing a contract as a free agent with the San Antonio Spurs to solidify their bench scoring. Wilkins led the team with an average of 18.2 ppg in 1996-97. However, after one season, Wilkins once again went overseas, this time signing a contract with Teamsystem Bologna of the Italian League for the 1997-98 season. He returned to play his last season in the NBA during the 1998-99 campaign alongside his brother Gerald Wilkins with the Orlando Magic. In 27 games, he averaged 5.0 ppg and 2.6 rpg.

Slam Dunk Contests[]

Wilkins participated in five slam dunk contests, winning two. The first one was in 1984, in Denver. Wilkins finished third behind Larry Nance and Julius Erving. In 1985, in Indianapolis, he beat Michael Jordan in the finals. In Dallas in 1986, a Jordan-Wilkins rematch was put on hold, since Jordan was injured. Wilkins reached the finals where he was defeated by his 5'7" teammate, Spud Webb.

The highly anticipated rematch of Wilkins vs. Jordan was in the 1988 Chicago All-Star Weekend, where at the end Jordan won 147 to 145.

In 1990 Wilkins made his final appearance in the Slam Dunk Contest, going up against new promising stars such as Shawn Kemp, Scottie Pippen and Kenny Walker (the 1989 champion). He defeated Kenny Smith of the Sacramento Kings in the finals.

Later Life[]

In the 1998 Tyson-Holyfield I match, Wilkins and NBA player Chris Childs were wanted for questioning in the disappearance of $134,000.00 in casino chips. [3]. Wilkins was later shown on video tape picking up something that had landed on the floor after a melee had broken out; his hair dresser was charged with attempted theft.[5]

Since 2004, Wilkins has served as the Hawks' Vice President of Basketball. He works in a variety of management functions within the franchise's basketball and business areas. Wilkins is responsible for advising the Hawks's senior management team on basketball-related issues and is a goodwill ambassador for the community. [6] Wilkins also serves as a color analyst for Hawks games, pairing alongside long-time play-by-play announcer Bob Rathbun.

On February 13, 2009, Wilkins participated in the McDonald's All-Star Celebrity Game during NBA All-Star Weekend.[7] He is an announcer on Sportsouth and FSN South.

In 2010, Wilkins signed an agreement to partner with fitness company 24 Hour Fitness to develop the Dominique Wilkins Basketball Academy. The academy will conduct private training, camps, and clinics. The first camp is slated for June 7–11Template:When at the 24 Hour facility in Pearl City, Hawaii.

According to ESPN, Wilkins was attacked by former NBA referee Rashan Michel after a 2011 Hawks–Magic game at Philips Arena in Atlanta. The latter claimed that Wilkins owed him money for a suit provided to Wilkins. Afterward, according to the police, Michel attacked Wilkins by punching him in the chest.[8]

Awards and Achievements[]

  • 1985-86 NBA Scoring Champion (30.3)
  • NBA All-Star Slam Dunk Champion: 1985, 1990.
  • NBA All-Rookie Team: 1983.
  • All-NBA First Team: 1986.
  • All-NBA Second Team: 1987, 1988, 1991, 1993.
  • All-NBA Third Team: 1989, 1994.
  • Nine-time NBA All-Star: 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994.
  • Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame (2006).
  • European Champion: 1996 (now known as Euroleague).
  • Greek Cup: 1996

NBA Records[]

Regular Season[]

Free throws made, none missed, game: 23—23, vs. Chicago Bulls, Template:Dts/out1

  • Also holds fourth (see below)

Consecutive free throws made in a game: 23, vs. Chicago Bulls, Template:Dts/out1

One of six players in NBA history to average at least 25 points per game for ten consecutive seasons: 1984–851993–94

Playoffs[]

Points scored in a Game 7 of a playoff series: 47, at Boston Celtics, Template:Dts/out1

  • Game 7 of Eastern Conference Semifinals
  • The Atlanta Hawks still lost the game (and series), 116—118.

Field goal attempts, 4-game series: 114, vs. Detroit Pistons (1986)

All-Star[]

Field goal attempts, half: 16 (1988)

Ranks 3rd in NBA history[]

Regular season[]

Consecutive seasons scoring 2,000 or more points: 7 (1984–851990–91)

Ranks 4th in NBA history[]

Regular season[]

Seasons scoring 2,000 or more points: 8 (1984–851990–91, 1992–93)

Free throws made, none missed, game: 18—18, at San Antonio Spurs, Template:Dts/out1

  • Also holds the record (see above)

Playoffs[]

Field goals made, 4-game series: 53, vs. Detroit Pistons (1986)

Field goal attempts, 4-game series: 108, vs. Indiana Pacers (1987)

  • Also held the record (see above)

See also[]

  • List of National Basketball Association career scoring leaders
  • List of National Basketball Association career free throw scoring leaders
  • List of National Basketball Association career steals leaders
  • List of National Basketball Association career turnovers leaders
  • List of individual National Basketball Association scoring leaders by season
  • List of National Basketball Association players with 50 or more points in a playoff game

Notes[]

External links[]

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