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Ben Wallace - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ben Wallace

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ben Wallace
Wallace with the Chicago Bulls
Wallace with the Chicago Bulls
Position Center / Power Forward
Height ft 9 in (2.06 m)
Weight 240 lb (110 kg)
League NBA
Team Cleveland Cavaliers
Jersey #4
Born September 10, 1974 (1974-09-10) (age 33)
White Hall, Alabama
Nationality American
College Virginia Union
Draft Undrafted
Pro career 1996–present
Former teams Washington Bullets/Wizards (1996-1999)
Orlando Magic (1999-2000)
Detroit Pistons (2000-2006)
Chicago Bulls (2006-2008)
Cleveland Cavaliers (2008-Present)
Awards 4x NBA Defensive Player of the Year (2002, 2003, 2005, 2006)
4-time NBA All Star
6-time All NBA Defensive Team
Official profile Info Page

Ben Wallace (born September 10, 1974 in White Hall, Alabama) is an American professional basketball player in the National Basketball Association with the Cleveland Cavaliers. Nicknamed Big Ben, The Body, he plays the positions of center and power forward, and is 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) and 240 lb (110 kg). He is a four-time winner of the NBA Defensive Player of the Year Award (a feat accomplished by only one other player Dikembe Mutombo), and is regarded as one of the finest defensive players in the game. Wallace was considered by many to be the cornerstone of the Detroit Pistons' success in the 2000s, culminating in a championship in 2004. On July 13, 2006, Wallace signed a four-year $60 million contract with the Chicago Bulls.[1] On February 21, 2008, Wallace was involved in a 3-team deal and traded to the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Contents

[edit] Basketball career

Ben first played college basketball on the junior college level at Cuyahoga Community College for two years. He then transferred to Virginia Union, a Division II school, where he studied criminal justice. As an undrafted player, he was signed as a rookie free agent by the Washington Bullets on October 2, 1996 after playing in Italy.

In 1999, Wallace was traded to the Orlando Magic along with Tim Legler, Terry Davis, and Jeff McInnis for Ike Austin. On August 3, 2000, he was traded along with Chucky Atkins to the Detroit Pistons for Grant Hill, in what was at the time considered a one-sided trade; Hill had planned to sign with Orlando as an unrestricted free agent, but the sign and trade deal allowed Hill to receive a slightly more lucrative contract while Detroit received at least some compensation for losing its marquee player. But since the deal, Wallace has had the more successful career by far, owing in part to Hill's oft-injured status. He has been considered the quintessential defensive specialist, winning the NBA Defensive Player of the Year Award in 2001-02, 2002-03, 2004-05, and 2005-06 seasons. In the 2001-02 and 2002-03 seasons, he led the league in both rebounds and blocked shots. In 2003, he was voted by fans to his first NBA All-Star Game as the starting Center for the Eastern Conference.

On July 3, 2006, Wallace agreed to a four-year deal worth $60 million with the Chicago Bulls. The deal became official July 13, and Wallace was introduced to the Chicago media as the team's newest member that day.

On February 21, 2008, he was traded to the Cleveland Cavaliers as part of a three-team deal that included Seattle Sonics and the Chicago Bulls.[2] The deal moved Wallace to the power forward position with Zydrunas Ilgauskas as the starting center.

[edit] Player profile

Ben Wallace plays the center position and is lauded as a prime defensive presence. ESPN - Detroit's Ben Wallace wins NBA's top defensive award - NBA. He is somewhat undersized for a center, being listed at 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m), 240 lb., a frame statistically resembling more of a forward; he himself admits his actual height is 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m).[3]

However, he compensates for this by his impressive physique (even measured against the standards of his NBA peers) which allows him to out-muscle most of his opposition and "play bigger than his body", allowing him to average 10.7 rebounds, 2.3 blocks and 1.4 steals per game over the course of his entire career. He is especially intimidating with his shot-blocking and defending the basket from drives, allowing his teammates to be aggressive on the perimeter, a defensive scheme used extensively by the Pistons. His uncanny defensive timing allows him to defend with great intensity without committing a foul (his career average of 2.1 fouls per game [1] is considered low). In addition, he is seen also as one of the most reliable contributors, rarely failing to deliver in important games.

Although he is the highest paid player on the Cleveland Cavaliers roster at $15.5 million, making more than even Lebron "Breezy" James[4] Wallace's averages on offense are a very poor 4.2 points and 0.6 assists per game[5]. His role on offense is mainly to roam near the basket for close range shots when left open and go after offensive rebounds. Like other big men in the NBA, namely Shaquille O'Neal and Wilt Chamberlain, Wallace is a poor free throw shooter. In fact, he is the worst free throw shooter in NBA history out of any player with more than 1000 attempts; as of May 2008, his NBA career average is 41.8%.[6] This ineptitude at the free throw line results in his sometimes becoming a target of the so-called "Hack-a-Shaq" defense (in reference to Ben Wallace, the technique is also called Whack-a-Wallace, Flick-a-Fro, Kick-a-Cav, Pop-a-Piston, or Bop-a-Ben). Part of the reason for this drawback is that his right wrist has some ligaments that were cut off due to a surgery that was needed because his hand had some carpal tunnel issues. This causes his hand to "slip" sometimes when he shoots a free throw, forcing him to pop it back into place, resulting in him being unable to make them on a consistent basis.[7]

[edit] Accolades

Wallace is honored with the Pistons at the White House for the team's victory in the 2004 NBA Finals.
Wallace is honored with the Pistons at the White House for the team's victory in the 2004 NBA Finals.
  • First Team: 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006
  • Second Team: 2007
  • 5-time All-NBA:
  • Second Team: 2003, 2004, 2006
  • Third Team: 2002, 2005
  • 2-time NBA regular-season leader, rebounds per game: 2002 (13.0), 2003 (15.4)
  • NBA regular-season leader, blocks per game: 2002 (3.5)
  • 2-time NBA regular-season leader, total rebounds: 2001 (1052), 2003 (1026)
  • NBA regular-season leader, total defensive rebounds: 2001 (749)
  • 2-time NBA regular-season leader, total offensive rebounds: 2003 (293), 2006 (301)
  • NBA regular-season leader, total blocks: 2002 (278)

[edit] NBA records/achievements

Only undrafted player to receive a contract of $54 million+ from one team.

[edit] Detroit Pistons franchise records (15)

  • Most blocked shots, all-time: 1,297 (2000–2006)
  • Most blocked shots in
  • Highest blocks-per-game average, one season: 3.48 (2001-02)
  • Most defensive rebounds, one quarter: 10 (November 18, 2002 vs. New York Knicks).
  • Most rebounds, one half, playoffs: 17 (Game 4, 2003 Eastern Conference First Round)
  • Most rebounds, one quarter, playoffs: 13 (Game 4, 2003 Eastern Conference First Round)
  • Most offensive rebounds, one game, playoffs: 11 (Game 3, 2004 Eastern Conference Semifinals)
  • Most offensive rebounds, one half, playoffs: 7 (Game 3, 2004 Eastern Conference Semifinals)
  • Most defensive rebounds, one game, playoffs: 17 (Game 1, 2003 Eastern Conference Finals)
  • Most defensive rebounds, one half, playoffs: 12 (Game 1, 2003 Eastern Conference Finals)
  • Most defensive rebounds, one quarter, playoffs: 9 (Game 1, 2003 Eastern Conference Finals)
  • Most steals, one game, playoffs: 7 (Game 4, 2003 Eastern Conference First Round)

[edit] International competition

He played for the US national team in the 2002 FIBA World Championship.[11]

[edit] Endorsements

Wallace appeared on the cover of ESPN NBA 2K5. An inflatable basketball training aid of Wallace's likeness, called the Inflatable Defender, is manufactured by PlayAir Systems. [2] His new sneaker, the Big Ben was released November 5, 2007 under Stephon Marbury's Starbury label and is retailed at $14.98 at Steve & Barry's stores. [3]

[edit] Trivia

  • Wallace was a letterman in football, baseball, basketball and track. He won All-State honors in all but track.[12]
  • Former basketball player Charles Oakley is Wallace's mentor, having discovered Wallace at a 1991 basketball camp. Coincidentally, Oakley attended Virginia Union as well.[13]
  • Wallace had gained great notoriety in the Detroit area and nationwide, and fans often arrived at his games sporting wigs in honor of his trademark afro hairstyle. However, he usually only had the afro for home games; for away games, he had his hair styled into cornrows. He stated he was made fun of at away games for his hair styles.
  • During his tenure with the Pistons, whenever Wallace scored or recorded a block on Detroit's homecourt, the Palace of Auburn Hills, the sound of a gong was played, an allusion to the Big Ben, Wallace's nickname. After Wallace became a member of the Chicago Bulls, this tradition has continued on their homecourt, the United Center and the tradition is still carried on to this day in Cleveland's Quicken Loans Arena.
  • Recorded a notable block of Shaquille O'Neal on June 1, 2006, in Game 5 of the 2006 Eastern Conference Finals between the Miami Heat and the Detroit Pistons. O'Neal was stuffed so completely that he tumbled to the floor. Heat coach Pat Riley called it "a hell of a play", while Shaq claimed it was an obvious foul and told the press not to ask him stupid questions after being asked whether he thought it was a block or a foul.[14]

One of his best friends is Trevor Machutchon

[edit] Notes

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Dikembe Mutombo (2001)
Ron Artest (2004)
NBA Defensive Player of the Year
2002, 2003
2005, 2006
Succeeded by
Ron Artest (2004)
Marcus Camby (2007)


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