Everything about Wes Unseld totally explained
Westley Sissel "Wes" Unseld (born
March 14,
1946 in
Louisville, Kentucky) is an American former
basketball player. He spent his entire
NBA career with the
Baltimore/Capital/Washington Bullets, and was inducted into the
Basketball Hall of Fame in 1988.
Early life and college career
Unseld starred on a
Seneca High School team that won two state championships. In 1965, Unseld began playing center for the
University of Louisville, where he averaged 35.8 points per game and 23.6 rebounds per game in 14 games with a freshman team. He was a 3-year letter winner, scored 1,686 points in 82 games (20.6 points per game), grabbed 1,551 rebounds (18.9 rebounds per game), led the conference in rebounding in 1966, 1967 and 1968, and led Louisville to a 60-22 record with two trips to the
NCAA tournament and one trip to the
NIT tournament. Unseld is also a member of
Alpha Phi Alpha, the first intercollegiate Greek-letter fraternity established for African Americans.
NBA years
Unseld was drafted 2nd overall in the first round by the
Baltimore Bullets in
1968, and helped lead the Bullets (who had finished in last place in the Eastern division the previous year) to a 57-25 record and a division title. Unseld averaged
18.2 rebounds per game that year, and became only the second player ever to win both
Rookie of the Year and
Most Valuable Player in the same season (
Wilt Chamberlain being the first). Unseld was also named the
Sporting News MVP that year. He was one of the best defensive players of his era, and in 1975, he led the NBA in rebounding. The following season, he led the NBA in field goal percentage with a .561 percentage.
Famed for his rebounding, bone-jarring picks and ability to ignite a fast break with his crisp, accurate outlet passes, Unseld made up for his lack of size (6’7”) with brute strength and sheer determination. Unseld took the Bullets franchise to four NBA Finals, and won the championship in 1978 over the
Seattle Supersonics, in which he was named the Finals MVP. He ended his playing career following the
1980-1981 season, and his #41 jersey was retired by the Bullets shortly thereafter.
In 1988, Unseld was enshrined into the
Basketball Hall of Fame, and in 1996, he was named as one of the NBA's
50 Greatest Players of all time.
General manager and head coach
After his retirement in 1981 he moved into a front office position with the Bullets where he served as vice president for six years before being named head coach in 1987. His tenure as coach was nowhere near as successful as his playing career, and he resigned following the 1994 season with a 202-345 record (.369).
Unseld became Washington's General Manager in 1996 and guided the team to the playoffs only once during his tenure.
Post NBA career
Unseld now operates a private school which started in
1979 in
Baltimore, Maryland, where both, his wife Constance, and his daughter Kimberley work as school's teachers.
(External Link
) The school has an infant and toddlers program and continues to the 8th grade.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Wes Unseld'.
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