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Geoff Petrie

American former basketball player (born 1948)

Geoff Petrie

Summary

American former basketball player (born 1948)

FieldValue
nameGeoff Petrie
imageGeoff Petrie 1971 Texaco front (cropped).jpg
captionPetrie, 1971
height_ft6
height_in4
weight_lb190
birth_date
birth_placeDarby, Pennsylvania, U.S.
high_schoolSpringfield (Springfield, Pennsylvania)
collegePrinceton (1967–1970)
draft_year1970
draft_round1
draft_pick8
draft_teamPortland Trail Blazers
career_start1970
career_end1976
career_positionPoint guard / shooting guard
career_number45
years1
team1Portland Trail Blazers
stat1labelPoints
stat1value9,732 (21.8 ppg)
stat2labelRebounds
stat2value1,271 (2.8 rpg)
stat3labelAssists
stat3value2,057 (4.6 apg)

the basketball player

As player:

  • 2× NBA All-Star (, )
  • NBA Rookie of the Year ()
  • NBA All-Rookie First Team (1971)
  • No. 45 retired by Portland Trail Blazers
  • 2× First-team All-Ivy League (1968, 1969)
  • Second-team All-Ivy League (1970) As executive:
  • 2× NBA Executive of the Year (, ) Geoffrey Michael Petrie (born April 17, 1948) is an American former professional basketball player. A native of Pennsylvania, he played professional basketball in the National Basketball Association (NBA) for the Portland Trail Blazers where he won NBA Rookie of the Year in 1971. After retirement as a player he entered management, and was the President of Basketball Operations for the Sacramento Kings in the NBA until June 2013.

Early life

Geoff Petrie was born in Darby, Pennsylvania, on April 17, 1948. He attended Springfield High School, in Springfield, Pennsylvania, and played collegiate ball at Princeton University.

In Petrie's sophomore season at Princeton, the team was co-champion of the Ivy League with a 20–6 (12-3 Ivy) record. they lost the one-game league playoff to the Jim McMillian–led 1968 Columbia Lions men's basketball team. As a senior, Petrie was second-team All-Ivy, but the Tigers placed third in the conference to the undefeated (in Ivy League games) Corky Calhoun-led Penn Quakers men's basketball team and McMillian's Lions. Although Princeton did not appear in the 1970 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, they hosted Penn's game. Petrie was All-East both as a junior and a senior.

Petrie scored 1,321 points in college, third in school history at the end of his career in 1970 and still seventh after the 2009–10 season. His 541 in 1968–69 was fourth, behind each of Bill Bradley's single-season totals, until Brian Taylor moved him down to sixth, where he still stands. Petrie continued to rank fourth in school history with an 18.3 points/game average through the 2009–10 season. His 1969–70 single season average of 22.3 is sixth, behind only Bradley and Taylor and his 20.8 average the prior year stands eighth. Petrie's 530 career field goal stands fourth on the school list behind Bradley, Kit Mueller and Craig Robinson. 216 field goals in 1968–69 ranks fifth behind Bradley and Taylor, while his 189 the following year ranks eighth. Seventeen made against Fordham, January 26, 1970, trails only Bradley's three best nights.

Professional career

Player

At 6'4", Petrie could play either the guard or forward positions and was a long range shooter. He played in two All-Star games and in 1971, the Trail Blazers' first year in existence, was named co-Rookie of the Year with the Boston Celtics' Dave Cowens after averaging 24.8 points per game. The Associated Press reported Petrie's salary during his rookie season was approximately $80,000.

Until Damon Stoudamire's 54 point performance in 2005, Petrie held the Trail Blazers' individual scoring record for one game at 51 — a feat he accomplished twice. His jersey number, 45, was retired by the Trail Blazers. Following the 1975–76 NBA season, he was traded to the Atlanta Hawks in a transaction that landed Portland Maurice Lucas. Petrie did not play any games for the Hawks after suffering a career-ending knee injury.

Petrie is credited as the first NBA player to switch from Converse brand athletic shoes, which were popular in the 1970s, to Nike brand.

Post-playing career

Petrie in 2009

Petrie worked in the private sector for several years after leaving the NBA, including as interim coach at Willamette University in Salem for the 1984 to 1985 season, and in 1985 began working for the Trail Blazers. He worked as a commentator for Blazer radio broadcasts and several other positions before being hired as senior vice president for operations. He left Portland in 1994 and was hired by the Sacramento Kings as president of basketball operations. As an executive he won the NBA Executive of the Year Award twice with the Kings, first in 1999 and again in 2001.

On December 29, 2009, Petrie received a three-year extension as team president through the 2012–13 season. On June 17, 2013, Petrie was replaced as team president of the Kings by Pete D'Alessandro.

NBA career statistics

Regular season

|- | 82 || – || 37.0 || .443 || – || .722 || 3.4 || 4.8 || – || – || 24.8 |- | 60 || – || 35.9 || .417 || – || .789 || 2.2 || 4.1 || – || – || 18.9 |- | 79 || – || 39.7 || .464 || – || .778 || 3.5 || 4.4 || – || – || 24.9 |- | 73 || – || 38.4 || .481 || – || .853 || 2.8 || 4.3 || 1.2 || 0.2 || 24.3 |- | 80 || – || 38.9 || .456 || – || .839 || 2.6 || 5.3 || 1.0 || 0.2 || 18.3 |- | 72 || – || 35.5 || .461 || – || .829 || 2.3 || 4.6 || 1.1 || 0.1 || 18.9 |- class="sortbottom" | 446 || – || 37.6 || .455 || – || .805 || 2.8 || 4.6 || 1.1 || 0.1 || 21.8 |- class="sortbottom" | 2 || 1 || 15.5 || .214 || – || 1.000 || 1.0 || 2.5 || 0.5 || 0.0 || 4.0

References

References

  1. "1967-68 Ivy Men's Basketball". ivyleaguesports.com.
  2. "1969-70 Ivy Men's Basketball". ivyleaguesports.com.
  3. Princeton Athletic Communications. (June 12, 2009). "Men's Basketball Record Book • All-Time Results". Princeton University.
  4. Princeton Athletic Communications. (June 12, 2009). "Men's Basketball Record Book • Ivy League & National Awards". Princeton University.
  5. Princeton Athletic Communications. (June 12, 2009). "Men's Basketball Record Book • Individual & Team Records". Princeton University.
  6. (March 4, 1971). "NBA Rookie of the Year Prospect; But Who is Geoff Petrie". Victoria Advocate.
  7. (August 6, 1976). "Hawks get Petrie, Hawes". [[The Atlanta Constitution]].
  8. "Geoff Petrie". Sports Reference LLC.
  9. "Geoff Petrie". Portland Trail Blazers.
  10. (September 18, 1977). "Petrie's through with surgery". [[Detroit Free Press]].
  11. Biderman, David. "Why The Hightop Has One Foot in the Grave". [[Wall Street Journal]].
  12. (June 9, 1984). "Former Portland Trail Blazer guard Geoff Petrie has been...". UPI.
  13. (December 29, 2009). "Rebuilding kings lock up Petrie with three-year extension". [[NBA.com]].
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