Rick Mahorn Contents College career Playing career Coaching NBA career statistics References External links Navigation menuStatsPistons Announcers"Candace Parker, Lisa Leslie suspended after WNBA fight"Basketball-Reference.comWNBA.com profileeeeeee0000 0004 0947 4042no2013051457303129712303129712

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1958 birthsLiving peopleAfrican-American basketball coachesAfrican-American basketball playersAmerican expatriate basketball people in ItalyAmerican men's basketball playersBasketball players from ConnecticutBIG3 coachesContinental Basketball Association coachesDetroit Pistons broadcastersDetroit Pistons playersDetroit Shock coachesDetroit Shock head coachesHampton Pirates men's basketball playersMinnesota Timberwolves expansion draft picksNew Jersey Nets playersPallacanestro Virtus Roma playersPhiladelphia 76ers playersPower forwards (basketball)Sportspeople from Hartford, ConnecticutWashington Bullets draft picksWashington Bullets players


National Basketball Associationpower forwardcenterradio analystDetroit PistonsSiriusXM NBA RadioGeorge BlahaDetroit Bad BoysIsiah ThomasJoe DumarsDennis Rodmancollege basketballHampton UniversityNCAA Division IINAIAAll-AmericanNBA championshipexpansion draftMinnesota Timberwolvesgeneral managerJack McCloskeyESPNPhiladelphia 76ersCharles BarkleySerie ANew Jersey NetsDoug CollinsBill LaimbeerWNBADetroit ShockbrawlLisa LeslieTulsa, OklahomaMark ChampionTrilogyBIG3Al HarringtonKenyon MartinVirginia Sports Hall of Fame



















































Rick Mahorn

Rick Mahorn.jpg
Mahorn in 2007

Personal information
Born
(1958-09-21) September 21, 1958 (age 60)
Hartford, Connecticut
NationalityAmerican
Listed height6 ft 10 in (2.08 m)
Listed weight260 lb (118 kg)
Career information
High schoolWeaver (Hartford, Connecticut)
College
Hampton (1976–1980)
NBA draft
1980 / Round: 2 / Pick: 35th overall
Selected by the Washington Bullets
Playing career1980–1999
Position
Center / Power forward
Number44, 4
Career history
As player:

1980–1985
Washington Bullets

1985–1989
Detroit Pistons

1989–1991
Philadelphia 76ers
1991–1992Virtus Roma

1992–1996
New Jersey Nets

1996–1998
Detroit Pistons
1999Philadelphia 76ers
As coach:
1999–2000Rockford Lightning

2005–2009

Detroit Shock (assistant)
2009Detroit Shock (interim)

Career highlights and awards

As player:

  • NBA champion (1989)


  • NBA All-Defensive Second Team (1990)

As assistant coach:


  • 2× WNBA champion (2006, 2008)

Career statistics
Points7,763 (6.9 ppg)
Rebounds6,957 (6.2 rpg)
Blocks1,007 (0.9 bpg)

Stats at Basketball-Reference.com

Derrick Allen Mahorn (born September 21, 1958) is an American retired National Basketball Association (NBA) player who played power forward and center. He is currently a radio analyst for the Detroit Pistons [1] and works as a co-host/analyst on SiriusXM NBA Radio.


Mahorn was dubbed by Piston announcer George Blaha the "Baddest Bad Boy of them all." Mahorn gained a reputation for physical play, which he used to compensate for his relatively limited leaping ability. He served as a team leader of the Detroit Bad Boys teams of the late 1980s, winning his only NBA Championship in 1989 along with captain Isiah Thomas, Joe Dumars, and Dennis Rodman among others.




Contents





  • 1 College career


  • 2 Playing career


  • 3 Coaching


  • 4 NBA career statistics

    • 4.1 Regular season


    • 4.2 Playoffs



  • 5 References


  • 6 External links




College career


Mahorn played college basketball at Hampton University. He was a three-time NCAA Division II champion and NAIA All-American and owned 18 school records.[1]



Playing career


In 1989, Mahorn won his only NBA championship with the Pistons. Though the Bad Boys went on to repeat in 1990, Mahorn was picked up in the 1989 NBA expansion draft only days after hoisting the '89 trophy, as teams were only able to protect 8 of their players from being "drafted." After he was selected by the new Minnesota Timberwolves, Pistons general manager Jack McCloskey tried in vain to trade to get him back. In ESPN's 30 for 30 feature film about the Detroit teams in this era, Mahorn shed a tear when talking about being dealt away from the Pistons. Despite being out of Detroit, Mahorn never played for Minnesota, being traded instead to the Philadelphia 76ers, where he teamed with superstar Charles Barkley (despite previous rivalries with him) to form the top-rebounding duo of "Thump N' Bump." After two seasons, Mahorn moved to the Italian Serie A for the 1991–92 season.


Mahorn later played for the New Jersey Nets for four seasons, before returning to the Pistons in 1996–97 under coach Doug Collins. He retired after the 1999 season, after a second stint with the 76ers.



Coaching


Mahorn then served as a color commentator for Pistons radio broadcasts, and as an assistant coach under former teammate Bill Laimbeer with the WNBA's Detroit Shock. Laimbeer and Mahorn led the Shock to multiple WNBA titles.


On July 22, 2008, at a Sparks-Shock game, Mahorn attempted to break up a brawl. When attempting to restrain Lisa Leslie, he put his left hand out and Leslie fell to the ground. Mahorn was suspended for two games.[2]


On June 15, 2009 he became the head coach of the Shock, a position he held until the franchise moved to Tulsa, Oklahoma after the season. Shortly afterwards, Mahorn continued his work with Pistons radio, doing color commentary alongside Mark Champion.
In 2017, Mahorn became head coach of Trilogy, the eventual champion of the BIG3 basketball league's inaugural season. His team's players included Al Harrington and Kenyon Martin. In 2018, Mahorn was inducted into the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame.



NBA career statistics


























Legend
  GP
Games played
  GS 
Games started
 MPG 
Minutes per game
 FG% 

Field goal percentage
 3P% 

3-point field goal percentage
 FT% 

Free throw percentage
 RPG 

Rebounds per game
 APG 

Assists per game
 SPG 

Steals per game
 BPG 

Blocks per game
 PPG 
Points per game
 Bold 
Career high



Denotes seasons in which Mahorn won an NBA championship


Regular season





































































































































































































































































Year
Team

GP

GS

MPG

FG%

3P%

FT%

RPG

APG

SPG

BPG

PPG

1980–81

Washington
52013.4.507.000.6754.10.50.4.84.8

1981–82

Washington
808033.3.507.000.6328.81.90.71.7
12.2

1982–83

Washington
828236.9.490.000.5759.51.41.01.811.0

1983–84

Washington
828232.9.507.000.6519.01.60.81.59.0

1984–85

Washington
776326.9.499.000.6537.91.60.81.46.3

1985–86

Detroit
801218.0.455.000.6815.20.80.5.84.9

1986–87

Detroit
63620.3.477.000.8216.00.60.5.86.1

1987–88

Detroit
676429.3.574.500.7568.40.90.6.610.7

1988–89†

Detroit
726124.9.517.000.7486.90.80.6.97.3

1989–90

Philadelphia
756630.3.497.222.7157.61.30.61.410.8

1990–91

Philadelphia
807430.5.467.000.7887.81.51.0.78.9

1992–93

New Jersey
74914.6.472.333.8003.80.40.3.43.9

1993–94

New Jersey
2808.1.489.000.6501.90.20.1.22.1

1994–95

New Jersey
58710.9.523.333.7962.80.40.2.23.4

1995–96

New Jersey
5009.0.352.000.7232.20.30.3.32.4

1996–97

Detroit
2279.9.370.000.7272.40.30.2.12.5

1997–98

Detroit
59012.0.457.000.6763.30.30.2.12.4

1998–99

Philadelphia
1607.9.278.000.3751.40.10.3.10.8
Career
111761323.1.493.132.7046.21.00.6.96.9


Playoffs




































































































































































































Year
Team

GP

GS

MPG

FG%

3P%

FT%

RPG

APG

SPG

BPG

PPG

1982

Washington
7734.6.438.000.7148.71.91.4.7
10.6

1984

Washington
4438.5.600.000.80010.81.50.31.59.5

1985

Washington
4110.3.500.0001.0001.80.00.0.83.0

1986

Detroit
4015.3.385.0001.0003.00.00.3.03.0

1987

Detroit
151532.2.541.000.8009.50.30.4.79.7

1988

Detroit
232117.8.344.000.6843.90.60.2.43.3

1989†

Detroit
171721.2.580.000.6545.10.40.5.85.7

1990

Philadelphia
101034.2.430.000.7697.01.00.7.89.4

1991

Philadelphia
8826.0.556.000.7865.31.80.3.56.4

1993

New Jersey
4215.8.400.000.0003.30.80.0.52.0

1994

New Jersey
306.3.000.000.0001.30.00.0.30.0

1997

Detroit
219.0.000.000.0000.50.00.0.00.0

1999

Philadelphia
505.8.333.000.5001.60.20.2.01.6
Career
1068622.9.427.000.7505.50.70.4.65.8


References




  1. ^ ab Pistons Announcers


  2. ^ Arritt, Dan. "Candace Parker, Lisa Leslie suspended after WNBA fight". Los Angeles Times. July 25, 2008.




External links




  • Career statistics and player information from Basketball-Reference.com

  • WNBA.com profile








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