Lisa Leslie

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Lisa Leslie
Lisa Leslie of the Los Angeles Sparks
Lisa Leslie of the Los Angeles Sparks
Position Center
Height 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m)
Weight 170 pounds (77.1 kg)
Team Los Angeles Sparks
Born July 7, 1972 (1972-07-07) (age 35)
Gardena, California
College USC
Draft 7th, Initial Player Allocation, 1997
Pro career 1997 – present
Awards
  • First WNBA player to reach the 3,000 point plateau
  • Led the WNBA in rebounds in 1997 (9.5 rpg) and 1998 (10.2 rpg)
  • First player ever to garner regular season, WNBA Championship and All-Star Game MVP awards in the same season.
  • MVP of the WNBA Championship and All-Star Game in 2002
  • Three-time Olympic gold medalist 1996, 2000, 2004
  • MVP and All-Tournament team honors, USA World Championships, 2002
  • First player to dunk in a WNBA game

Lisa Leslie (born July 7, 1972 in Gardena, California) is a WNBA player currently playing for the Los Angeles Sparks. One of the original WNBA players, she quickly rose to stardom as one of the league's most top-performing and popular players. On July 30, 2002 she made history by becoming the first player to perform a dunk in that league.[1]

Contents

[edit] High school and college

Leslie became a famous basketball player long before her career in the WNBA began. She was quite tall even in her youth, already standing six foot tall when she started playing basketball in the seventh grade. She was a dominating player made legendary by scoring 101 points in the first half of a high school basketball game, and would likely have broken Cheryl Miller's high school record of 105 points if the other team had not forfeited at halftime. Among her many accolades at Morningside High School in Inglewood, California, Leslie was named the 1990 Gatorade Girls Basketball National Player of the Year, and received the Dial Award for female American high-school athlete/scholar of the year in 1989.

After high school, Lisa Leslie attended the University of Southern California[2] She was a four time All-Pacific Ten Conference first team selection.

[edit] WNBA

After winning a gold medal with the Women's Olympic team in the 1996 Summer Olympic Games, Leslie became one of the original members of the Los Angeles Sparks when the WNBA's first season opened in 1997. She had stated her intentions of dunking in a game before the first season even started, and she tried to dunk the ball on the first game of that season, against the New York Liberty, but she missed. She led the WNBA in rebounds in 1997 (9.5 rpg) and 1998 (10.2 rpg).

Throughout the late 1990s, the Sparks kept paving their way to the playoffs, but getting eliminated as the Houston Comets claimed every WNBA championship played in that decade. After winning a gold medal in the 2000 Summer Olympic Games the Sparks were finally able to topple the Comets in 2001, and they beat the Charlotte Sting to win the WNBA title for the first time. In 2001, she was named MVP of the league, the all-star game and the finals, becoming the first player ever to garner all three awards in the same season.

2002 was a very successful year for Leslie. In 2002, she helped win the USA World Championships in women's basketball., and was rewarded with MVP and All-Tournament team honors. On July 22, 2002 she had become the first WNBA player to have over 3,000 career points, when she scored 24 points against the Orlando Miracle.

On July 30, 2002, in a game against the Miami Sol, she became the first woman to score with a dunk in a WNBA game. After a steal by teammate Latasha Byears, Leslie caught Byears's outlet pass and made a fast break, one-handed dunk. The Staples Center crowd and her teammates erupted into a spontaneous celebration that stopped the game for a few minutes.

After winning the MVP Award in the 2002 WNBA All-Star Game, she helped lead the Sparks to their second straight world championship, garnering WNBA Finals MVP honors. She returned to school in the 2002 off-season to work on a Master’s Degree in Business Administration.

On July 29 of 2004, she reached the milestone of 4,000 career points, scoring 17 points in an 85-80, double overtime victory over the Sacramento Monarchs. Later that year she won a gold medal winner with United States women's national basketball team in the 2004 Summer Olympic Games.

At the 2005 WNBA All Star Game, Leslie dunked once again in the closing seconds of the game. It was the both the 2nd dunk of her career in the WNBA as well as the second dunk in the history of the WNBA.

On June 23, 2006, Lisa Leslie scored her 5,000th career point and set an individual career high with 41 points versus the San Antonio Silver Stars. At the end of the season, she was named the WNBA MVP for the third time.

Olympic medal record
Women's Basketball
Gold Atlanta 1996 Team Competition
Gold Sydney 2000 Team Competition
Gold Athens 2004 Team Competition

[edit] International career

[edit] Europe

  • 1994-1995 : Flag of Italy Sicilgesso Alcamo
  • 2005-2006 : Flag of Russia Spartak Moscow Region

[edit] Media

Leslie is also a fashion model and aspiring actress on the side. In June 1996, she signed a contract with the Wilhelmina modeling agency. She is one of five Olympic athletes featured in a Herb Ritts photo spread for Vogue magazine and has modeled designs by Armani, Tommy Hilfiger, Gigi Hunter and Anne Klein.

During the NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament in 2005 Lisa worked on the air for ESPN adding key insight and commentary. She has done color commentary for several USC basketball games and has also been a guest correspondent on NBA Inside Stuff. She intends to continue broadcasting when her basketball career is over. She has also appeared in episodes of The Jersey and Sister, Sister, as well as various commercials. She also appeared on Hang Time, Moesha, Who Wants to be a Millionaire?, One on One, The Weakest Link and Punk'd. She once appeared in an episode of The Simpsons, and was portrayed with an exaggerated, tall figure.

Along with her mom, Leslie is an advocate for breast cancer research. Leslie's mom, Christine Leslie-Espinoza, was once a cross-country truck driver. Leslie has stated that her mother is the person she admires the most. Leslie has two sisters and four brothers.

[edit] Personal

Lisa Leslie married Michael Lockwood, a pilot and former Air Force basketball player, in Maui in November 2005. Leslie gave birth to the couple's first child, daughter Lauren Jolie Lockwood, on June 15, 2007 in Los Angeles. Leslie missed the 2007 WNBA season due to pregnancy and maternity leave.

On December 13, 2007, the Los Angeles Sparks announced that Leslie would return for the 2008 WNBA season. In her first six games back she has averaged a double-double along with 3.8 blocks and 2.3 steals per game.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Awards
Preceded by
Katrina McClain
United States Basketball Female Athlete of the Year
1993
Succeeded by
Dawn Staley
Preceded by
Sheryl Swoopes
Naismith College Player of the Year (women's)
1994
Succeeded by
Rebecca Lobo
Preceded by
Chamique Holdsclaw
United States Basketball Female Athlete of the Year
1998
Succeeded by
Natalie Williams
Preceded by
Monica Seles
Flo Hyman Memorial Award
2001
Succeeded by
Dot Richardson
Preceded by
Ayana Walker
United States Basketball Female Athlete of the Year
2002
Succeeded by
Seimone Augustus