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John Johnson (basketball, born 1947)

American basketball player (1947–2016)


Summary

American basketball player (1947–2016)

FieldValue
nameJohn Johnson
imageJohn_Johnson_Iowa.jpg
captionJohnson with the Iowa Hawkeyes, 1970
birth_date
birth_placeCarthage, Mississippi, U.S.
death_date
death_placeSan Jose, California, U.S.
height_ft6
height_in7
weight_lb200
high_schoolMessmer (Milwaukee, Wisconsin)
draft_year1970
draft_round1
draft_pick7
draft_teamCleveland Cavaliers
career_start1970
career_end1982
career_positionSmall forward
career_number32, 27, 34
years1
team1Cleveland Cavaliers
years2
team2Portland Trail Blazers
years3
team3Houston Rockets
years4
team4Seattle SuperSonics
stat1labelPoints
stat1value11,200 (12.9 ppg)
stat2labelRebounds
stat2value4,778 (5.5 rpg)
stat3labelAssists
stat3value3,285 (3.8 apg)
bbrjohnsjo01
  • Northwest College (1966–1968)
  • Iowa (1968–1970)
  • NBA champion (1979)
  • 2× NBA All-Star (, )
  • Third-team All-American – UPI (1970)
  • First-team All-Big Ten (1970)

John Howard Getty "J. J." Johnson (October 18, 1947 – January 7, 2016) was an American professional basketball player. He played college basketball for the Iowa Hawkeyes.

High school and college career

Johnson played high school basketball at Messmer High School in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. As a senior, he helped lead Messmer to the Wisconsin state title in 1966.

Johnson, a 6’7" small forward, then played for Northwest College in Powell, Wyoming and for the University of Iowa. He set an Iowa record for points in a season during his senior year, when he averaged 27.9 points per game. Johnson also holds Iowa's top two scoring performances with 49 and 46 points. Johnson played two seasons for Iowa, leading the team in scoring and rebounding both seasons. Johnson, accompanied by later Seattle SuperSonics teammate Fred Brown, guided Iowa to a 14–0 Big Ten record and NCAA tournament berth in 1970.

Professional career

Johnson was selected by the Cleveland Cavaliers with the 7th pick of the 1970 NBA draft. Johnson was also selected in the 1970 ABA Draft by the Dallas Chaparrals before the team briefly became the Texas Chaparrals for the following season. He was the first Cavaliers player to play in an NBA All Star Game. As a member of the Houston Rockets, he would be the last to wear #34 years before the arrival of Hakeem Olajuwon.

In 1977, Johnson was traded to the Seattle SuperSonics and was reunited with former Iowa Hawkeye teammate Fred Brown. Johnson was a key contributor for Seattle, who went to the NBA Finals in 1977–78 and won an NBA championship in 1978–79 while possibly becoming the first point forward in league history as he was the player who more often set the plays for the Sonics rather than their star guards Dennis Johnson and Gus Williams.

Overall, Johnson had a productive 12-year NBA career with four teams, making two NBA All-Star Game appearances and scoring 11,200 career points. He ended his NBA career in Seattle in the early 1980s.

Later years

Johnson moved from Seattle to San Jose when his son Mitch was recruited to play for Stanford. His son played on the Stanford University basketball team from 2005 to 2008. On January 7, 2016, at age 68, Johnson died in his San Jose residence of undetermined cause.

Career statistics

NBA

Source

Regular season

|- |67 | |34.5 |.422 | |.805 |6.8 |4.8 | |

16.6
82

| |37.1 |.433 | |.785 |7.7 |5.1 | |

17.0

| |34.3 |.430 | |.734 |6.7 |3.8 | |

14.4
69

| |33.1 |.464 | |.812 |7.5 |4.1 |1.0 |.4

16.4
80

| |31.8 |.487 | |.784 |6.3 |3.0 |.9 |.5

16.1
9

| |23.6 |.466 | |.852 |4.4 |2.2 |.8 |.9

11.7
67

| |22.2 |.452 | |.758 |4.4 |2.9 |.7 |.4

9.7
79

| |22.0 |.458 | |.712 |3.4 |2.3 |.6 |.3

9.3
1

| |11.0 |.250 | |.667 |3.0 |1.0 |.0 |.0

4.0
76

| |23.8 |.416 | |.753 |4.0 |2.8 |.6 |.3

10.7
82
29.1
.434

| |.760 |5.0 |4.4 |.7 |.3

11.0
81

| |31.3 |.488 |– |.801 |5.3 |5.2 |.9 |.4

11.3
80

| |29.1 |.431 |.000 |.808 |4.5 |3.9 |.7 |.3

11.5
14
1
13.4
.489
.750
1.3
2.1
.3
.2
4.2
-
869
83
29.6
.446
.000
.779
5.5
3.8
.8
.4
12.9
-
2
0
2.5
.000

| |– |.5 |.5 | | |.0 |}

Playoffs

YearTeamGPMPGFG%3P%FT%RPGAPGSPGBPGPPG
1977Houston1212.2.393.6672.4.8.3.04.8
1978Seattle22*27.1.424.6964.52.5.4.310.1
1979Seattle1736.2.474.6416.85.41.0.212.2
1980Seattle1532.4.494.000.8116.85.7.5.212.4
1982Seattle722.7.395.7272.04.9.9.05.4
Career7327.4.450.000.6994.93.8.6.29.7

References

References

  1. (January 11, 2015). "John Johnson, 68, All-Star Forward in N.B.A.". [[The New York Times]].
  2. "hawkeyesports.com: Season Individual Leaders".
  3. Dochterman, Scott. (January 8, 2016). "Former Iowa basketball star John Johnson dies". [[The Gazette (Cedar Rapids).
  4. link. (July 20, 2013)
  5. (January 8, 2016). "Former SuperSonics All-Star Johnny Johnson dies in San Jose". [[San Jose Mercury News]].
  6. "John Johnson NBA stats". Sports Reference LLC.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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