DeShawn Stevenson

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DeShawn Stevenson
Position Shooting Guard
Height ft 5 in (1.96 m)
Weight 214 lb (97 kg)
League NBA
Team Washington Wizards
Jersey #2
Born April 3, 1981 (1981-04-03) (age 27)
Fresno, California
Nationality American
High school Washington Union High School (California)
Draft 23rd overall, 2000
Utah Jazz
Pro career 2000–present
Official profile Info Page

DeShawn Stevenson (born April 3, 1981 in Fresno, California) is a American professional basketball player currently with the Washington Wizards of the NBA. He originally committed to the University of Kansas, but decided to enter the NBA directly from Washington Union High School in his hometown of Fresno, and was picked by the Utah Jazz with the 23rd selection of the 2000 NBA Draft. In 2001, Stevenson finished second in the NBA Slam Dunk Contest.[1]

Stevenson opted out of the third and final year of his contract with Orlando and on August 3, 2006 he signed a two-year minimum contract with the Washington Wizards.[2]

During a portion of the 2006-07 NBA season, Stevenson maintained a field-goal shooting percentage of above fifty percent, an unusual accomplishment among guards.

In July 2007, Stevenson signed a 4-year deal with the Wizards for $15 million.[3]

After Stevenson, with a sore knee, scored a career-high 33 points, including a game winning three-pointer as time expired in a February 25, 2008 victory over the New Orleans Hornets, Wizards coach Eddie Jordan described Stevenson this way --- "He's a warrior, man, a true warrior. His confidence is growing -- he's making threes -- he's just a true pro. This is a man's league and he is man. In the dictionary next to that word there is a picture of DeShawn Stevenson."

On the early morning of August 20, 2007, a 31-year-old man, Curtis Ruff, was shot and injured at Stevenson's home, following an argument with women that were invited from Destiny's Club in Orlando, Florida. Circumstances of the incident remain unclear.[4]

In April 2008, rapper Jay-Z dissed Stevenson in a remix of Too Short's Blow the Whistle after Stevenson called LeBron James "overrated" before the first round of the NBA Playoffs.

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