Luc Longley

Player

Birthday January 19, 1969

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Age 55 years old

Nationality Australia

Height 7′ 2″

#22028 Most Popular

1969

Lucien James Longley (born 19 January 1969) is an Australian professional basketball coach and former player.

He was the first Australian to play in the National Basketball Association (NBA), where he played for four teams over 10 seasons.

Longley was born 19 January 1969 in Melbourne, Victoria, to Sue (née Hansen) and Richard Longley.

Longley's father is an architect who stood 6ft 10in tall and represented Australia at international level in basketball, including being a member of two Olympic squads.

1984

His mother, who is 6ft 4in tall, is an equestrian who has been divorced from Richard since 1984 and resides in Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States.

Longley has two brothers, Sam, a journalist and actor, and Griffin, also a journalist and who also played briefly for the Perth Wildcats.

Longley grew up in Fremantle, Western Australia.

1986

Longley began his career in Australia with a brief stint playing for the Perth Wildcats of the National Basketball League (NBL) in 1986.

At the age of 16 he was a member of the Australian Under-19 side and the following year, 1986, he joined the Perth Wildcats, with whom he played two games.

Longley was recruited out of Scotch College in Perth by the University of New Mexico's basketball coach, Gary Colson, who went to Perth to recruit Longley's childhood friend Andrew Vlahov, who ended up attending Stanford University.

Vlahov and Longley both played their junior basketball for the Perth Redbacks on the same team.

Longley also spent time at the Australian Institute of Sport in 1986 and 1987 (before heading to New Mexico) under the coaching of Australian Boomers head coach Adrian Hurley, attending the AIS with Vlahov and another emerging basketball player from Adelaide, Mark Bradtke.

1987

Longley attended college at the University of New Mexico, from 1987 to 1991, where he averaged 19.1 points, 9.2 rebounds and 3.6 assists in his senior year.

1988

He represented Australia as a player at three Olympic Games in 1988, 1992 and 2000, and has worked as an assistant coach for the Australian national basketball team.

Luc Longley made his international debut for the Australia national basketball team in 1988 and would be, whenever possible, the preferred starting centre for the next 12 years.

1989

When Longley returned home to Perth during college breaks, he regularly suited up for the Perth Redbacks, helping the team to consecutive State Basketball League (SBL) championships in 1989 and 1990.

1990

Throughout the 1990s, that trio would form the nucleus of the Australian Boomers front court with Longley at centre, 6'10" (208 cm) Bradtke at power forward, and 6'7" (201 cm) Vlahov at small forward.

1991

He played collegiately for the New Mexico Lobos and was drafted 7th overall by the Minnesota Timberwolves in the 1991 NBA draft.

He helped New Mexico reach the NCAA Tournament in 1991.

At nineteen he was a member of the national team for the Seoul Olympics, where they finished fourth, at the time the best result an Australian senior men's basketball team had achieved in Olympic competition.

Longley was drafted 7th overall by the Minnesota Timberwolves in 1991.

After long contract negotiations that were still going on when the 1991–92 NBA season started and actually prevented him from playing for the first month, Longley made his NBA debut for the Timberwolves on 30 November 1991.

1992

In 1992, he again represented Australia at the Barcelona Olympics.

1993

After two-plus mediocre seasons with the struggling franchise, the 7ft 2in center was traded to the Chicago Bulls for Stacey King late in the 1993–94 season.

Longley became the Bulls' starting center.

1994

Longley played three middling seasons with the Timberwolves before he was traded to the Chicago Bulls in 1994.

After Longley played 55 games from the bench in 1994–95, Chicago Bulls coach Phil Jackson made him the starting centre in 1995–96.

1995

He became the Bulls' starting centre during their historic 1995–96 season when they set the NBA record for most wins in a regular season with 72.

Longley was an important component of the team's success and stayed in the Bulls' starting lineup during their championship three-peat.

1996

Longley most notably played for the Chicago Bulls, with whom he won three championships from 1996 to 1998.

He won three straight championships with the Bulls from 1996 to 1998, becoming the first Australian player to win an NBA title and the only to have won three championships.

Post-season surgery to his left ankle and the recovery time forced him to miss playing for the Australian Boomers at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta.

Longley missed almost two months of the 1996–97 season after dislocating his shoulder while body surfing at Hermosa Beach near the team's hotel after a game in Los Angeles.

1997

Following the breakup of the Bulls roster after the 1997–98 season, Chicago did a sign-and-trade deal with Longley, sending him to the Phoenix Suns for Mark Bryant, Martin Müürsepp, Bubba Wells, and a conditional first-round draft pick.

1998

Following the demise of the Bulls after their 1998 championship win, he had brief stints with the Phoenix Suns and New York Knicks.

2000

Longley was traded to the New York Knicks prior to the 2000–01 NBA season in what was only the second four-team trade in NBA history.

The Suns acquired Chris Dudley as part of the deal together with a first-round draft pick from New York and an undisclosed amount of cash, while New York received Longley, Glen Rice, Travis Knight, Vladimir Stepania, Lazaro Borrell, Vernon Maxwell, two first-round draft picks (from the Los Angeles Lakers and the Seattle SuperSonics) and two second-round draft picks from Seattle.

Seattle received Patrick Ewing and the Lakers received Horace Grant, Greg Foster, Chuck Person and Emanual Davis.

Longley spent one year with New York before retiring, due to a degenerative condition in his left ankle.

2014

In a 2014 interview on Australian television, Longley joked that after a month he began receiving phone calls from Michael Jordan telling him to get back on court soon because he had no one to set screens for him.