Kris Humphries

Player

Birthday February 6, 1985

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.

Age 39 years old

Nationality United States

Height 6 ft

#7124 Most Popular

1985

Kristopher Nathan Humphries (born February 6, 1985) is an American retired professional basketball player who played in the National Basketball Association (NBA).

He played in the NBA for the Utah Jazz, Toronto Raptors, Dallas Mavericks, New Jersey / Brooklyn Nets, Boston Celtics, Washington Wizards, Phoenix Suns, and the Atlanta Hawks.

Humphries played college basketball for the Minnesota Golden Gophers of the University of Minnesota, and for the United States men's national basketball team.

Humphries was born in Minnesota to Debra and William Humphries.

His father was a football player at the University of Minnesota.

Humphries is half African-American from his father.

He has two older sisters, Krystal and Kaela.

His first success in sports came in competitive swimming, where he was the top 10-year-old in the nation in six events, first, beating young Michael Phelps in the remaining events.

Kris Humphries held the US national record for the 50-meter freestyle for 10 and under boys for 18 years until it was recently broken.

At age 12, he gave up swimming to pursue a career in basketball.

2002

Humphries attended Hopkins High School, where he led the team to a 25–2 record in 2002 and its first Minnesota state championship in 49 years.

2003

He was named a 2003 McDonald's All-American and named Second Team All-USA by USA Today.

He was also named to the Super 25 Basketball Team by USA Today, named Minnesota Mr. Basketball, and state player of the year by the Minneapolis Star Tribune and College Basketball News.

He was one of 10 finalists for the 2003 Naismith Prep Player of the Year Award, averaging a double-double in his final three seasons, averaging 25.7 points, 11.4 rebounds, and 5.0 assists a game as a senior.

Considered a five-star recruit by Rivals.com, Humphries was listed as the No. 2 power forward and the No. 15 player in the nation in 2003.

Humphries accepted a scholarship offer to Duke University, but later reconsidered and chose the University of Minnesota.

2004

At Minnesota, Humphries was named 2004 Big Ten Freshman of the Year and named to the All-Big Ten First Team by the media and coaches.

He was named Honorable Mention All-America by the Associated Press and by Rivals.com.

He was the first freshman to lead the Big Ten in scoring and rebounding in the same season.

He scored in double figures in all the 29 games, with 16 point/rebound double-doubles on the season for Minnesota.

He averaged 21.7 points and 10.1 rebounds (both tops in the Big Ten), while shooting .444 percent from the field and .742 from the line.

On February 18, 2004 he set a school record with 36 points in a game against Indiana.

He also set a school record for most points by a freshman for a season with 629 and was the first Big Ten freshman to be named conference Player of the Week in two of the first three weeks of the season.

Humphries only played one season for Minnesota before declaring for the NBA Draft.

Although Humphries was personally successful at Minnesota, the team struggled.

The Gophers finished 12–18, with a 3–13 record in the Big Ten during Humphries' lone season, tying Penn State for the worst record in the conference.

Critics accused Humphries of playing selfishly, preferring to inflate his statistics and NBA draft stock rather than help the team win games.

The team had a .500 record before his arrival and finished with a 10–6 conference record in the season after he left.

At the 2004 NBA Combine, Humphries benched an impressive 22 reps of 185 pounds.

Humphries was drafted by the Utah Jazz with the 14th overall selection in the 2004 NBA draft.

He spent two seasons with the Jazz, averaging 3.7 ppg and 2.8 rpg in 4.8 minutes per game.

2006

On June 8, 2006, Humphries was traded along with Robert Whaley to the Toronto Raptors in exchange for Rafael Araújo.

In the 2006–07 season, after a slow start in which he did not receive many minutes from Raptors coach Sam Mitchell, Humphries proved to be a valuable rebounder and energy player and contributed to the Raptors capturing their first ever division title.

2007

On March 28, 2007, he grabbed seven offensive rebounds in 27 minutes against the Miami Heat, both a game-high and a career-high.

He followed up this performance with nine offensive and 18 total rebounds in a win against the Detroit Pistons on April 13, 2007, again both game and career-highs.

Humphries concluded his inaugural season with the Raptors with a career-high 3.1 rpg and .470 field goal percentage, as well as 3.8 ppg.

2009

On July 9, 2009, Humphries, Shawn Marion and Nathan Jawai were traded to the Dallas Mavericks as a part of the four-team deal among Raptors, Mavericks, Orlando Magic and Memphis Grizzlies.

2010

On January 11, 2010 the Mavericks traded Humphries along with G/F Shawne Williams to the New Jersey Nets in order to re-acquire Eduardo Nájera.

On January 27, 2010, Humphries scored a career-high 25 points against the Los Angeles Clippers.

He previously recorded career highs of 15 and 21 points respectively as a New Jersey Net.