Glenn Alann Robinson Jr. (born January 10, 1973) is a former professional American basketball player. He played at the National Basketball Association (NBA) from 1994 to 2005 for the Milwaukee Bucks, the Atlanta Hawks, the Philadelphia 76ers, and the San Antonio Spurs. Robinson attended Purdue University, was the first voted overall in the 1994 NBA draft, and was the father of Glenn Robinson III, who played college basketball at the University of Michigan and played in the NBA with Indiana Pacers.
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Robinson was born to Christine Bridgeman in Gary, Indiana. With her mother as an unmarried teenager, Robinson rarely sees her father. Not receiving the best grades in school, his mother once pulled him off the basketball team, and he took a job in an AC shop and cooler.
Maps Glenn Robinson
High school career
Robinson attended Theodore Roosevelt High School in Gary, where he began playing organized basketball during the 9th grade. He is a member of three IHSAA Sessionional title teams, two Regional degree teams and the State Championship team. During the senior season (1990-91), he led the Panthers to the Indiana state basketball championship, winning the last game against Brebeuf Jesuit and their star Alan Henderson; this highly anticipated dispute was captured on The Road to Indianapolis . and Indiana High School Basketball 20 Most Dominant Players . Robinson won the Indiana Award Basketball 1991, the country's oldest award (unveiled in 1939). He was voted McDonald's All-American and along with Chris Webber is one of the MVPs of the classic Dapper And Roundball.
College career
1991-1993
After high school, Robinson attended Purdue University to play under head coach Gene Keady and his recruiter/assistant coach, Frank Kendrick. Fighting with the feasibility of the NCAA, resulting from Proposition 48 requiring minimum academic standards, he must redshirt for his first season. He worked as a welder during the summer when in Purdue. Eligible for the sophomore season, Robinson leads Boilermakers with 24.1 points and 9.4 rebounds games in his first season as Boilermaker. He led them to an 18-10 record in regular season and NCAA tournament appearances. He received the First Team All-Big Ten and Second Team All-American awards.
1993-1994
In his junior season, Robinson built above the previous season's averages with 30.3 points and 11.2 rebounds games, while being the first player since 1978 to lead the Big Ten Conference in both categories. He is known as "The Big Dog", referring to his frenzied basketball playing style. Together with teammates Cuonzo Martin and Matt Waddell, he led Boilermakers to the Ten Big Conference and Elite Eight appearances, finishing the season with a 29-5 record and third overall. In his last game at college against the Duke team led by Grant Hill at the NCAA Tournament, Robinson only scored 13 points, his season low, while suffering a back injury he suffered against Kansas in the previous game. Leading the nation in judgment and became the sole point leader throughout the conference with 1,030 points, Robinson was unanimously elected as the Ten-Year Big Player of the Year. He also unanimously accepted the John R. Wooden Award and Naismith Award, the first national player of the year Boilermaker honored since John Wooden himself did so in 1932 (who also wore jersey # 13). Robinson is also the recipient for Best School Player of the Year USBWA.
College notes
Robinson left Purdue after being the only Boilermaker with more than 1,000 points, 500 rebounds, 100 steals, 100 assists and 50 shots blocked in a two-season career at Purdue, along with a school's weight-bearing record with a 309 clean-clean pound. and-asshole. His 1,030 points during his first year made him only the 15th player in college history to score 1,000 points in a single season. In September 2010, the Big Ten Network named Robinson Icon No. 35 on the list of greatest icons in the history of the Big Ten Conference.
Professional career
Milwaukee Bucks (1994-2002)
Robinson was selected by the Milwaukee Bucks with the first overall pick in the 1994 NBA draft, the first Boilermaker to be picked as the first pick since Joe Barry Carroll in 1980. Before he can go to court, he and the Bucks are involved in contract arrests lasting until the start of the training camp after it was rumored that he wanted a 13-year contract, $ 100 million. Robinson eventually signed a 10-year rookie-record, a $ 68 million deal that still stands as the richest NBA rookie contract, as a salary cap for beginners implemented the following season. During his first year in the NBA, Robinson twice named Schick NBA Rookie of the Month and was named after the NBA All-Rookie First Team after leading all beginners with an average of 21.9 points per game. Robinson finished third in Rookie of the Year votes behind Grant Hill and Jason Kidd, who shared the award, but was named Rookie Of The Year by Basketball Digest magazine. While playing for the Milwaukee Bucks, Robinson recorded some of the best statistical seasons in franchise history. Early in his career, Robinson shared frontcourt with teammate and All-Star Vin Baker. After Baker left, he teamed up with Ray Allen and Sam Cassell, and helped lead the Bucks to the Eastern Conference Finals in 2001, losing to the Philadelphia 76ers. Robinson is the second-place all-time leading scorer in the history of the Milwaukee Bucks, just behind Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, averaging at least 20 points per game in seven of the eight seasons in Milwaukee. He made the NBA All-Star back-to-back performance in 2000 and 2001.
Atlanta
Robinson traded by Milwaukee to the Atlanta Hawks for Toni Kuko, Leon Smith, and the 2003 first-round pick on 2 August 2002. In Robinson's debut as Hawk in the season opener, he scored 34 points, had 10 rebounds and 8 assists against the New Jersey Nets. During the 2002-03 season, he averaged 20.8 points and shot 87.6 percent of the best personal from the free throw line.
Philadelphia 76ers (2003-2004)
After a year in Atlanta, he traded on July 23, 2003 with a second-round selection of 2006 to the Philadelphia 76ers in a four-team deal. In his tenth season and the only player to play with the Sixers, Robinson averaged 16.6 points and 1 stole per game as a second-choice option for teammate Allen Iverson. After years in Philadelphia during the 2003-04 season, Robinson did not play the game for the 76ers in 2004-05, largely due to injury. On February 24, 2005, he traded to the New Orleans Hornets in exchange for Rodney Rogers and Jamal Mashburn. Robinson was freed by the team immediately and never suited them.
San Antonio Spurs (2005)
Robinson signed a contract with the San Antonio Spurs on April 4, 2005 to establish the presence of additional veteran shootings as the team prepares for the playoffs. As a role player in the 2005 playoffs, Robinson helped Spurs win the championship. The match in the NBA Finals will be Robinson's last game in the NBA, ending his 11-year career with the title.
Robinson was forced to retire because of injury, especially on his knee. He ended his career with 14,234 career points, averaging 20.7 points, 6.1 rebounds, 2.7 assists, and 1.2 steals per game.
NBA career statistics
Regular season
Playoffs
Careers of national team
Robinson was elected to the 1996 US Olympic basketball team, but could not play due to injury. He was replaced by Gary Payton.
Personal life
His eldest son, Glenn III, played basketball for the University of Michigan and started for the 2011-13 runner-up national team. After the season of the Great Ten 2012-13, he is an honorable man. Choice of All-freshman conference and honorary by trainers. Glenn III currently plays with Indiana Pacers.
Her younger son, Gelen (2014 class), is an Indiana High School Athletic Association (IHSAA) 2013, 100 pound wrestling champion, IHSAA 2013 shooting second winner, IHSAA champion in 2013, and winner of the test (2012 and 2013) of The Times of Northwest Indiana's Best Footballers of the Year and as a result is the 2012-13 Times from Northwest Indiana Athletes of the Year. Gelen is verbally committed to the Purdue Boilermakers football team.
References
External links
- Career statistics and player information from NBA.com, or Basketball-Reference.com
Source of the article : Wikipedia