Harvey Grant

Harvey Grant
Personal information
Born (1965-07-04) July 4, 1965
Augusta, Georgia
Nationality American
Listed height 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m)
Listed weight 195 lb (88 kg)
Career information
High school Hancock Central (Sparta, Georgia)
College Clemson (1984–1985)
Independence CC (1985–1986)
Oklahoma (1986–1988)
NBA draft 1988 / Round: 1 / Pick: 12th overall
Selected by the Washington Bullets
Playing career 1988–1999
Position Small forward / Power forward
Number 44
Career history
19881993 Washington Bullets
19931996 Portland Trail Blazers
19961998 Washington Bullets / Wizards
1999 Philadelphia 76ers
Career highlights and awards
Career NBA statistics
Points 7,781 (9.9 ppg)
Rebounds 3,436 (4.4 rpg)
Assists 1,219 (1.6 apg)
Stats at Basketball-Reference.com

Harvey Grant (born July 4, 1965) is a retired American National Basketball Association basketball player. He is the identical twin brother of Horace Grant, also a former NBA player.[1]

College

Grant transferred to Oklahoma after a year in junior college and a year at Clemson with his brother Horace.[2]

Career

Washington Wizards/Washington Bullets

Selected twelfth overall by the Washington Bullets in the 1988 NBA draft out of Oklahoma, he averaged 5.6 points, 2.3 rebounds and 1.1 assists per game. He lifted his averages to 8.2 points, 4.2 rebounds and 1.6 assists the following season, in 1989–90. Grant improved markedly in the 1990–91 campaign, when he averaged 18.2 points, 7.2 rebounds, 2.6 assists and 1.18 steals per game. At season's end, he was runner-up to the 1991 NBA Most Improved Player Award (which was earned by Orlando's Scott Skiles). In two subsequent seasons, he continued his solid play with 18.0 and 18.6 points per contest in 1991–92 and 1992–93, respectively.

Portland Trail Blazers

In 1993 he was traded to the Portland Trail Blazers in exchange for center Kevin Duckworth, where he was instead utilized in a secondary role off the bench, and in three seasons with Portland, averaged 9.6 points per game.

Return to Wizards

On July 15, 1996, he returned to the Washington Bullets via a trade, along with Blazers point guard Rod Strickland, for power forward Rasheed Wallace and shooting guard Mitchell Butler. By this stage Grant's career was on a downslide, averaging 4.1 points in 1996–97, then slipping to 2.6 points the following season when the Bullets franchise had reinvented itself as the Wizards.

Philadelphia 76ers

He rounded out his professional career with the Philadelphia 76ers in the lockout-shortened 1999 NBA season, averaging 3.1 points and 2.3 rebounds in 47 of 50 possible games.

Orlando Magic

He was traded just before the 1999–00 season along with Anthony Parker to the Orlando Magic for Billy Owens, who had previously been sent to the Magic in a trade that sent brother Horace to the Seattle SuperSonics. He subsequently was waived by the team and retired from the league afterwards.

Never proficient as a rebounder in comparison with his brother, he holds career averages of 4.4 rebounds and 9.9 points per game.

Family

Grant's son Jerai, who played college basketball for Clemson University, the same school that Harvey attended before transferring to Oklahoma,[3] has since played in professional leagues in Australia,[4] Italy, Israel, Latvia and currently Lithuania. Another son, Jerian, played for the University of Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's basketball team and was selected by the New York Knicks in the 1st round of the 2015 NBA Draft,[5] and a younger son, Jerami, played for the Syracuse University Orange men's basketball team[5] before being drafted 39th overall by the Philadelphia 76ers in the 2014 NBA draft, where he now plays. Jaelin Grant is his youngest son.[6] Harvey Grant also has a daughter, Mikayla, born in 2005 with longtime girlfriend Karen Mitchell.

Grant is also a grandfather to Jerai's daughter, Halle.[7]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/23/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.