Slater Martin
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Slater Nelson "Dugie" Martin, Jr. (born October 22, 1925 in El Mina, Texas) is a former pro-basketball player who played 11 seasons in the NBA. He was a member of five World Championship teams and played in seven NBA All-Star games.
Martin was one of the NBA's best defensive players in the 1950s while playing for the George Mikan-led Minneapolis Lakers that won four NBA championships between 1950 and 1954. In 1956 he joined Bob Pettit's St. Louis Hawks and won another NBA title in 1958.
Martin is an alumnus of Jefferson Davis High School, where he led his school to two state basketball championships in 1942 and 1943. [1] He is also a graduate of University of Texas at Austin, where he set a record in 1949 for putting up 49 points playing for the Texas Longhorns against the opposing Texas Christian University team. Throughout his career with the Longhorns, Martin averaged 12.7 points per game. [2] His former high school now holds an annual funder raiser in his name, the "Slater Martin Golf Tournament", which successfully raises tens of thousands of dollars each year as an aid to high school student clubs and sports teams.
He was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame on May 3, 1982 in Springfield, Massachusetts. He is the only Longhorn to accomplish the feat.
[edit] References
- Slater Martin biography provided by losangeleslakersonline.com
- Slater Martin biography provided by basketball-reference.com
- Hall of Fame biography at hoophall.com
- Timeline: A history of Texas basketball (free registration may be required)
[edit] See also
Preceded by Red Holzman |
St. Louis Hawks Head Coach 1957 |
Succeeded by Alex Hannum |
Preceded by Initial coach |
Houston Mavericks Head Coach 1967–1968 |
Succeeded by Jim Weaver |
Categories: 1925 births | Living people | People from Texas | American basketball coaches | American basketball players | Basketball Hall of Fame | Minneapolis Lakers players | New York Knicks players | St. Louis Hawks players | St. Louis Hawks coaches | Texas Longhorns men's basketball players | United States basketball biography stubs