Marvin Barnes
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Marvin Barnes (born July 27, 1952, in Providence, Rhode Island) is an American former professional basketball player.
A 6'8" forward from Providence College, Barnes played in the American Basketball Association from 1974 to 1976 and in the National Basketball Association from 1976 to 1980. He had his most success in the ABA, where he starred for the Spirits of St. Louis and was named Rookie of the Year for the 1974–75 season. He also shares the ABA record for most two-point field goals in a game, with 27. In 2005, the ABA 2000, the second incarnation of the ABA, named one of their divisions after him. (The other divisions are named in honor of Spencer Haywood, Ron Boone, Freddie Lewis, George Gervin, Roger Brown, Connie Hawkins, and Moses Malone.)
[edit] External links
- Career stats at basketball-reference.com
- "ABA Names Division After Marvin "Bad News" Barnes", article at abalive.com
American Basketball Association | ABA's All-Time Team |
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Marvin Barnes | Rick Barry | Zelmo Beaty | Ron Boone | Roger Brown | Mack Calvin | Darel Carrier | Billy Cunningham | Louie Dampier | Mel Daniels | Julius Erving | Donnie Freeman | George Gervin | Artis Gilmore | Connie Hawkins | Spencer Haywood | Dan Issel | Warren Jabali | Jimmy Jones | Freddie Lewis | Maurice Lucas | Moses Malone | George McGinnis | Doug Moe | Bob Netolicky | Billy Paultz | Charlie Scott | James Silas | David Thompson | Willie Wise |
Categories: 1952 births | Living people | American basketball players | African American basketball players | Providence Friars men's basketball players | Spirits of St. Louis players | Detroit Pistons players | Buffalo Braves players | Boston Celtics players | San Diego Clippers players | People from Providence, Rhode Island | Providence College alumni | United States basketball biography stubs