Scott Skiles

Player

Birthday March 5, 1964

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace La Porte, Indiana, U.S.

Age 60 years old

Nationality United States

#37147 Most Popular

1964

Scott Allen Skiles Sr. (born March 5, 1964) is an American former basketball coach and player.

He coached the Phoenix Suns, Chicago Bulls, Milwaukee Bucks and Orlando Magic.

A first-round draft pick out of Michigan State University, Skiles played ten seasons as a point guard in the NBA.

1982

In 1982, Skiles led Plymouth High School to the Indiana State Championship, scoring 39 points to lead the Pilgrims past the Gary Roosevelt Panthers in double overtime.

During the 1982 season Skiles led the state in scoring, averaging 30.2 points per game.

Skiles set several school records during his career at Plymouth, including most points in a home game (53) and most points in an away game (56).

1986

The Milwaukee Bucks made Skiles the 22nd selection of the 1986 NBA draft.

In ten seasons, he played for the Bucks (1986–87), Indiana Pacers (1987–89), Orlando Magic (1989–94), Washington Bullets (1994–95), and Philadelphia 76ers (1995–96).

Skiles made his NBA debut with the Bucks on November 11, 1986, against the Indiana Pacers, recording 2 rebounds and 5 assists in the 102-94 win.

Skiles was seldom used his rookie season with the Bucks, averaging 3.8 points and 3.5 assists in just 13 games off the bench.

1987

On June 21, 1987, Skiles was traded by the Bucks to the Indiana Pacers in exchange for a 1989 2nd round pick (which would later be used to select Gary Leonard).

With the Pacers in 1987-88, Skiles averaged even fewer minutes but played in more games, increasing his scoring marginally to 4.4 points and posting the same 3.5 assists per game in 50 games, just two of them starts.

1988

He played in 80 games in 1988–89, starting just 13 and averaging 6.8 points and 4.9 assists in slightly under 20 minutes a game.

1989

In 1989 Skiles was selected by the newly formed Orlando Magic in the NBA expansion draft.

Mainly a backup point guard, he scored 7.7 points and posted 4.8 assists in 20.9 minutes per game in 70 games, 48 off the bench.

1990

He holds the NBA record for assists in one game with 30, set in his fifth season in the league and second with Orlando, in which he also earned the 1990–91 NBA Most Improved Player Award.

In 1990–91 he transitioned to a starting role at the position, jumping to a career high 17.2 points and improved 8.4 assists in 34.4 minutes over 79 games and 66 starts.

The season was highlighted on December 30, 1990, when Skiles racked up 30 assists in Orlando's 155–116 victory over the Denver Nuggets at Orlando Arena, breaking Kevin Porter's NBA single-game assists record (29).

His well more than doubling scoring and nearly doubling his assists marks from the previous year earned him the NBA Most Improved Player Award.

1991

The next year, 1991–92, was a bit of a backslide, dropping to 14.1 points and 7.3 assists in 31.7 minutes in 75 games, with games started, field goals made, field goal percentage, 2-pointers made, 2-point percentage, 3-pointers made, 3-point percentage, free throws, free throw percentage, offensive rebounds, defensive rebounds, total rebounds, and steals all falling off.

1992

Skiles had his number 22 jersey retired at Plymouth High School in 1992.

Skiles attended Michigan State University, where in his senior season he was a First Team All-America selection as well as the Big Ten Conference MVP and scoring champion.

He left MSU as its all-time career scoring leader (2,145 points) and still holds the Spartans' record for most points scored in a season (850).

While in East Lansing, he was arrested and charged with felony possession of cocaine and misdemeanor possession of marijuana.

The cocaine charge was dropped, and Skiles pleaded guilty to the marijuana possession.

He was arrested and charged with drunken driving a year later and served 15 days in jail.

During his senior season, Skiles committed a parole violation on an earlier marijuana conviction, and served a brief jail sentence.

1992–93 saw a bouncing back nearly across the board, with scoring up to 15.4 points, a career high 9.4 assists, and career highs in shooting percentage and 2-point shooting percentage in a career high 39.6 minutes in 78 games, all starts.

1993

Skiles played in all 82 games in 1993–94 but only started 46, showing severe drop-offs in minutes, field goals, field goal percentage, 2-pointers made, 2-point percentage, rebounds, assists, and scoring, posting just 9.9 points and 6.1 assists per game.

Skiles began the year as a starter but in the second half of the season he became a reserve, leaving Penny Hardaway as his successor.

Skiles was traded to the Washington Bullets in the offseason to create salary cap space.

1994

As a Washington Bullets in 1994–95 Skiles' minutes were back up to 33.5 per game in just 62 games, all starts, and improvements were shown in virtually every statistical category, though points per game only rose to 13.0 and assists to 7.3.

1995

Skiles spent only a single season in Washington, moving on to the Philadelphia 76ers in his final NBA season in 1995–96.

Appearing in only 10 games Skiles stats backslid again, with only 6.3 points and 3.8 assists in 23.6 minutes per game over 9 starts.

1996

Nursing a serious shoulder injury in 1996, Skiles left the U.S. for the Greek League, joining PAOK in Thessaloniki.

Expectations were high for the new arrival from the NBA, but midway through the season injuries and contract problems with key players threatened the season for both PAOK and French coach Michel Gomez.

Still struggling with injury himself, and increasingly at odds with Gomez, Skiles asked to be released from his contract.

Instead, president Lakis Alexopoulos fired Gomez and offered Skiles the job.

Despite lacking three of their top players due to injury, Skiles led PAOK to a winning record as coach in the remainder of the '96-'97 season, and an unexpected 3rd-place finish in the Greek League, thus assuring a qualification to the following year's Euroleague.

2005

He left Plymouth as the school's all-time career scoring leader (1,788 points), a record that would stand until 2005.