Larry Johnson (basketball)
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For the American basketball player of the 1970s, see Larry Johnson (Buffalo Braves).
| Position | Power forward |
|---|---|
| Nickname | LJ, Grandma-ma |
| Height | 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) |
| Weight | 250 lb (113 kg) |
| Nationality | USA |
| Born | March 14, 1969 |
| College | UNLV |
| Draft | 1st overall, 1991 Charlotte Hornets |
| Pro career | 1991–2001 |
| Former teams | Charlotte Hornets (1991–1996) New York Knicks (1996–2001) |
| Awards | 1991 USBWA College Player of the Year Naismith College Player of the Year (1991) John R. Wooden (1991) NBA Rookie of the Year (1992) 2-Time NBA All-Star |
Larry Demetric Johnson (born March 14, 1969 in Tyler, Texas) is a retired American professional basketball player who spent his professional career with the Charlotte Hornets and New York Knicks in the NBA. He was listed as a 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) forward.
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Johnson played his collegiate ball at Odessa College in 1988-89 and transferred to UNLV, winning the 1990 NCAA Championship title with them, was selected first overall in the 1991 NBA Draft by the Hornets, and would win the NBA Rookie of the Year Award the following year.
Along with Alonzo Mourning and Muggsy Bogues, Johnson played with the Hornets at the height of their popularity in the early and mid-1990s. During this time, Johnson, who went by his initialism "LJ" and the nickname "Grandma-ma" (because of a popular Converse commercial in which he dressed up like an old lady, which led to a role on the sitcom Family Matters), was featured on the cover of the premiere issue of SLAM Magazine. Unfortunately, friction between Johnson and Mourning forced the organization to make a change, so the Hornets traded Mourning to the Miami Heat. A year later however, Johnson himself was traded by the Hornets for fan-favorite Knicks player, Anthony Mason.
He played for the US national team in the 1994 FIBA World Championship, winning the gold medal.[1]
Johnson was a key member of the Knicks' 1999 Eastern Conference championship team and was the player who was hit with a foul by Antonio Davis of the Indiana Pacers. Standing outside the three-point line with 11.9 seconds left, Johnson held the ball, and then began to dribble. He leaned into defender Davis before jumping up. The referee called the foul about a half-second before Johnson released the ball, but it was counted as a continuation shooting foul. The three-point basket and the ensuing free throw gave the Knicks a 92-91 victory. The play was described by Tom Hammond of The NBA on NBC: "Johnson... is fouled... and hit it!".
He was also a main contributor a year later in the NBA conference finals against the Indiana Pacers. Even though the Knicks lost the series 4-2, Johnson single-handedly carried them to their two victories in the series.
During the 1999 NBA Finals, Johnson characterized the Knicks as a band of "rebellious slaves." Bill Walton later called Johnson and his performance "a disgrace to the game of basketball." When Johnson was asked about the play of Spurs' point guard Avery Johnson in Game 4, Johnson again shifted the topic to slavery. "That's my man, Ave, because we're from the same plantation. We've both got the Johnson name," he said. "You tell Bill Walton that. We're from Massa Johnson's plantation." [2]
On October 10, 2001 Johnson announced his early retirement from basketball due to chronic back problems that had plagued him for several years, after his point production decreased for five straight years.
In July 2007, LJ has expressed interest in making a comeback with the Knicks in some type of "leadership role". [3]
- Johnson had a cameo in the film Space Jam 1996, depicted as one of the NBA stars who lost their talent alongside Muggsy Bogues, Shawn Bradley, Charles Barkley and Patrick Ewing.
- In the fifth season (1993) of Family Matters, Johnson guest-stars as Steve Urkel's teammate in a basketball tournament. Johnson dresses up as a senior citizen lady, playing his alter-ego Grandmama.
- NBA.com Player Page
- Larry Johnson Statistics at Basketball-Reference.com
- Article on the effect of Johnson's conversion to Islam
- 1991 Oscar Robertson Trophy
| Preceded by Lionel Simmons |
Naismith Award Winners (Men) 1991 |
Succeeded by Christian Laettner |
| Preceded by Lionel Simmons |
John R. Wooden Award (Men) 1991 |
Succeeded by Christian Laettner |
| Preceded by Derrick Coleman |
NBA first overall draft pick 1991 NBA Draft |
Succeeded by Shaquille O'Neal |
| Preceded by Derrick Coleman |
NBA Rookie of the Year 1992 |
Succeeded by Shaquille O'Neal |
| United States squad - 1994 FIBA World Championship Champions - Gold medal | ||
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4 Dumars | 5 Price | 6 Coleman | 7 Kemp | 8 Smith | 9 Majerle | 10 Miller | 11 K.Johnson | 12 Wilkins | 13 O'Neal | 14 Mourning | 15 L.Johnson | Coach: Nelson |
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| Greg Anthony | Stacey Augmon | Travis Bice | David Butler | Stacey Cvijanovich | Anderson Hunt | Larry Johnson | James Jones | Moses Scurry | Barry Young Coach Jerry Tarkanian |
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| McNeeley • Tonkovich • Shannon • Share • Melchiorre • Workman • Beck • Selvy • Ricketts • Green • Hundley • Baylor • Boozer • Robertson • Bellamy • McGill • Heyman • Barnes • Hetzel • Russell • Walker • Hayes • Alcindor • Lanier • Carr • L. Martin • Collins • Walton • D. Thompson • Lucas • Benson • M. Thompson • E. Johnson • Carroll • Aguirre • Worthy • Sampson • Olajuwon • Ewing • Daugherty • D. Robinson • Manning • Ellison • Coleman • L. Johnson • O'Neal • Webber • G. Robinson • Smith • Iverson • Duncan • Olowokandi • Brand • K. Martin • Brown • Yao • James • Howard • Bogut • Bargnani • Oden |
Categories: 1969 births | African American sportspeople | American basketball players | United States men's national basketball team members | Charlotte Hornets players | Converts to Islam | American Muslims | People from Dallas | Graduates of Dallas ISD | Living people | New York Knicks players | UNLV Runnin' Rebels basketball players | McDonald's High School All-Americans | Power forwards (basketball)