Jamal Mashburn

Player

Birthday November 29, 1972

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace The Bronx, New York, U.S.

Age 51 years old

Nationality United States

Height 203 cm

#24560 Most Popular

1972

Jamal Mashburn Sr. (born November 29, 1972) is an American entrepreneur and former professional basketball player.

Nicknamed "the Monster Mash", Mashburn was a prolific scorer as a small forward in his 12 seasons in the National Basketball Association (NBA), with a career scoring average of 19.1 points per game.

Mashburn was born to Bobby, a former heavyweight boxer and New York City police officer, and Helen Mashburn.

1974

His father retired in 1974 and then lived separately from Helen and his son Jamal, divorcing after about 10 years.

Mashburn learned the game at Rucker Park, just a block away from where he grew up.

After attending Cardinal Hayes High School in The Bronx, Mashburn had a very successful basketball career in college, playing for the University of Kentucky.

He was the fourth-leading career scorer for the Wildcats and a consensus First Team All-American by his junior year, in which the Wildcats made it to the Final Four of the NCAA Tournament.

1993

Following the tournament he declared for the 1993 NBA draft, with Mashburn being selected by the Dallas Mavericks with the fourth pick.

The Mavericks were a lottery team led by veteran point guard Derek Harper and second year guard Jim Jackson, and Mashburn quickly shared the reins of the offense, averaging 19.2 points a game in 73 starts and earning a selection to the first NBA All-Rookie Team.

Despite this the Mavericks could only manage 13 wins for the 1993–94 season.

In the off-season, the team drafted star point guard Jason Kidd, teaming up with Jackson and Mashburn to become known collectively as "The Three J's."

1994

The Mavericks would improve to 36 wins in the 1994–95 season, as Mashburn averaged 24.1 points a game (sixth in the league), while placing fifth in the league in free throw makes (447), seventh in made field goals (683), and fifth in total points (1,926).

The season also featured a 50-point performance by Mashburn on November 12 against the Chicago Bulls in Chicago.

This made him the fourth-youngest player to score 50 points in an NBA game (Brandon Jennings is the youngest).

He also broke many franchise records and blossomed into one of the best scoring forwards in the league.

1995

Despite the team's improvement they were unable to make the playoffs, and injuries would force Mashburn to only play 18 games in the 1995–96 season.

1997

Mashburn started in just 21 games of the Mavericks' first 37 games of the 1996–97 season, and on February 14, 1997, he was traded to the Miami Heat in exchange for Kurt Thomas, Predrag Danilović and Martin Müürsepp.

Miami was a loaded team led by all-stars Alonzo Mourning and Tim Hardaway and coached by Pat Riley.

The addition of Mashburn boosted the team's offense, and the team finished the season with a franchise best 61 wins with Mashburn averaging 13.4 points in 30 starts.

In the playoffs the Heat defeated the Orlando Magic in a difficult 5 games in the first round, followed by a grueling seven-game series win against the New York Knicks.

Miami made its first ever Conference Finals against the defending champion Bulls, and would lose the first three games of the series before managing a win in Miami in game four, with Mashburn scoring 17 points.

The Bulls proved too much for the Heat and won the series in the fifth game in Chicago.

Mashburn averaged 10.5 points in his first postseason.

Injuries limited Mashburn to 48 games in the 1997–98 season, but he started in each game he played and averaged 15.1 points a game as Miami won 55 games before losing in a five-game first round series to the Knicks.

Mashburn started in 3 of the games and saw his production slip.

The following season would be shortened to 50 games due to a league lockout, and injuries again limited Mashburn to just 23 starts with averages of 14.8 points a game with 6.1 rebounds a game.

Miami captured the best record in the Eastern Conference, but once again lost in the first round to New York, as Mashburn averaged 10 points in the five-game series.

1999

The 1999–2000 season featured an improvement statistically for Mashburn, as he shouldered more of the offensive load and averaged 17.5 points a game including a career high 112 three point field goals.

The Heat won 52 games before sweeping the Detroit Pistons in the first round of the playoffs in three games.

This set up another rematch with New York, as the Heat and Knicks battled in another grueling seven-game series.

Despite scoring in bunches in the Heat's victories, including a 21-point performance in game 5, Mashburn's scoring dropped off in the final two games of the series, and the Knicks once again eliminated Miami at home.

Following another disappointing playoff run for the team, Mashburn and teammate P. J. Brown were traded to the Charlotte Hornets for Eddie Jones and Anthony Mason.

In his first season in Charlotte, Mashburn averaged 20.1 points, 7.6 rebounds and 5.4 assists in 76 games.

Led by his play and the play of Baron Davis, the Hornets won 46 games and faced Miami in the first round of the playoffs.

While his former team was favored to win the series, Mashburn averaged 23.7 points, as the younger Hornets shocked the Heat and swept them in three games.

Next up were the Milwaukee Bucks, who took a two-game lead before the Hornets won game three in Charlotte led by Mashburn's 36 points and game four, in which Mashburn scored 31.

Despite managing to win three straight games, the Bucks responded to win the last two games and the series.

2001

Mashburn averaged a career high 24.9 points in the 2001 playoffs.

The 2001–02 season once again featured injury problems for Mashburn, and he only played in 40 games averaging 21.5 points per game.

The Hornets made the playoffs and defeated Orlando before losing to the New Jersey Nets, but Mashburn's injury woes kept him out of the postseason.