Muggsy Bogues

Player

Birthday January 9, 1965

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.

Age 59 years old

Nationality United States

Height 1.6 m

#4018 Most Popular

1965

Tyrone Curtis "Muggsy" Bogues (born January 9, 1965) is an American former basketball player.

The shortest player ever to play in the National Basketball Association (NBA), the 5ft 3in Bogues played point guard for four teams during his 14-season career in the NBA.

Although best known for his ten seasons with the Charlotte Hornets, he also played for the Washington Bullets, Golden State Warriors, and Toronto Raptors.

1981

The Dunbar Poets finished the 1981–82 season at 29–0 during Bogues's junior year and finished 31–0 during his senior year in 1982–83, and were ranked first in the nation by USA Today.

Bogues received scholarship offers to play college basketball for several schools including Virginia, Penn State and Seton Hall.

Bogues attended Wake Forest University and played college basketball for the Wake Forest Demon Deacons for four years.

He averaged 11.3 points, 8.4 assists and 3.1 steals per game in his junior year.

He followed with a senior campaign in which he averaged 14.8 points, 9.5 assists, 3.8 rebounds and 2.4 steals per game.

1986

In 1986–87, he led the Atlantic Coast Conference in steals and assists and received the Frances Pomeroy Naismith Award.

As a senior, he received the Arnold Palmer Award as Wake Forest's most valuable athlete.

When his collegiate career ended, he was the ACC career leader in steals and assists.

Wake Forest retired his number within a few years of his leaving the program.

Bogues played for the USA national team in the 1986 FIBA World Championship and won the gold medal.

Under head coach Lute Olson, Bogues played in all ten of the team's games and led them in assists and steals.

1987

Bogues was selected second overall in the 1987 United States Basketball League draft by the Rhode Island Gulls.

Bogues was a fan favorite in the USBL and the Gulls led the league in attendance.

In his only season in the league, he averaged 22.2 points and 8.4 assists per game and led the league in minutes per game before an ankle injury ended his season.

Bogues was drafted twelfth overall in the 1987 NBA draft by the Washington Bullets, and was part of a talent-laden draft class that also included David Robinson, Reggie Miller, Scottie Pippen, and Kevin Johnson.

Bogues made his NBA debut on November 6, 1987, against the Atlanta Hawks at Omni Coliseum; he started and led the team in assists.

1989

Bogues finished in the top seven in assists in six consecutive seasons (1989–1995), and in the top ten in steals in three of those seasons.

He had 146 career NBA double-doubles.

After his NBA career, he served as head coach of the now-defunct Charlotte Sting of the WNBA.

Bogues also had a surprising defensive ability.

He blocked 39 shots throughout his NBA career, including one from 7-foot-tall Patrick Ewing.

Bogues was born in Baltimore, Maryland, and grew up in the Lafayette Court housing projects.

His mother was 4ft 11in and his father was 5ft 5in.

He had three older siblings.

Bogues's childhood was troubled.

At five years old, he was hit by stray Buckshot in his neighborhood and had to be hospitalized.

As a child, he witnessed a man get beaten to death with a baseball bat, a sight that haunted him into adulthood.

When Bogues was 12 years old, his father was sentenced to twenty years in prison for armed robbery.

Around the same time, his brother Chuckie began using hard drugs.

In addition to basketball, Bogues was a standout wrestler and baseball player growing up.

As a child playing basketball on playgrounds, he was nicknamed "Muggsy" after a diminutive character from The Bowery Boys.

Bogues initially attended and played basketball at Southern High School in Baltimore.

Because Bogues aspired to be a dental technician, he transferred to Baltimore's Dunbar High School which offered healthcare classes.

At Dunbar, he was coached by Bob Wade, later the head coach at the University of Maryland.

He was a teammate of future NBA players David Wingate, Reggie Williams and Reggie Lewis (the latter two of whom were in his graduating class).

2001

In 2001, he was inducted into the Wake Forest Sports Hall of Fame.

, he remains Wake Forest's all-time leader in both steals and assists.