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Wendell Ladner

American basketball player (1948–1975)


Summary

American basketball player (1948–1975)

FieldValue
nameWendell Ladner
imageWendell Ladner 1975.jpeg
birth_date
birth_placeNecaise Crossing, Mississippi, U.S.
death_date
death_placeJamaica, New York, U.S.
height_ft6
height_in5
weight_lb220
high_schoolHancock North Central
(Kiln, Mississippi)
collegeSouthern Miss (1967–1970)
draft_year1970
career_start1970
career_end1975
career_positionSmall forward
career_number33, 4
years1
team1Memphis Pros
years2
team2Carolina Cougars
years3
team3Memphis Tams
years4
team4Kentucky Colonels
years5
team5New York Nets
stats_leagueABA
stat1labelPoints
stat1value3,474 (11.6 ppg)
stat2labelRebounds
stat2value2,481 (8.3 rpg)
stat3labelAssists
stat3value621 (2.1 apg)

(Kiln, Mississippi)

  • ABA champion (1974)
  • 2× ABA All-Star (1971, 1972)
  • ABA All-Rookie First Team (1971)

Wendell Larry Ladner (October 6, 1948 – June 24, 1975) was an American professional basketball player most notable for his playing time in the American Basketball Association (ABA) from 1970 to 1975.

Ladner was born in Necaise Crossing, Hancock County, Mississippi and played high-school basketball at Hancock North Central High School in Kiln, Mississippi. After attending the University of Southern Mississippi, Ladner was undrafted in the 1970 American Basketball Association (ABA) draft but played forward for five seasons with four different teams (including Memphis twice) in the ABA from 1970 to 1975. At and 220 lb, Ladner was one of the more notorious enforcers of the ABA, protecting Dan Issel of the Kentucky Colonels and Julius Erving of the New York Nets. Ladner regularly faced perhaps the fiercest player in the ABA, the Pittsburgh Condors' John Brisker, once entering the Condors' locker room and yelling, "Hey, John, you wanna fight right now or wait for the game?" (It was not unusual for Brisker and Ladner to beat each other bloody on the court, only to hang out together at a local bar afterwards.)

Ladner was named to the 1971 ABA All-Rookie Team and was selected to the ABA All-Star Game in his rookie season. On January 24, 1971, he scored a career-high total of 34 points in a Memphis win over the Miami Floridians. He was also an all-star the following season.

Ladner was killed at the age of 26 in the June 24, 1975 crash of Eastern Air Lines Flight 66. He was identified by medical examiners because he was wearing his ABA championship ring. He was only player in the nine-year history of the ABA to lose his life while an active player for one of the league's best teams.

The Nets' website used to include his name and number in their list of retired numbers, although Ladner's #4 was not displayed in the rafters with the other retired numbers. His number was also given to Rick Mahorn during his tenure with the Nets. In October 2013, a New York Daily News article explained that the number was never formally retired. However, as a tribute to Ladner, Nets trainer Fritz Massmann had not issued #4 to other players for 17 years after Ladner's death.

Erving called Ladner his most unusual teammate because Ladner wanted to be Burt Reynolds with a basketball. (Indeed, Ladner posed for a poster in only his gym shorts and a red-white-and-blue ball.) Semi-Pro, a basketball comedy set in the 1970s starring Will Ferrell, spoofs Ladner's Reynolds persona in its trailer.

A road in Perkinston, Mississippi has been named in Ladner's honor.

References

References

  1. "Memphis Pros at The Floridians Box Score, January 24, 1971".
  2. "Editor column: Plane down, pro athlete dead, news interest stoked".
  3. (June 25, 1975). "Airplane Crash Claims Wndell Ladner's Life". Kentucky New Era.
  4. (April 20, 2013). "A New Nets Era, but Much Has Been Left Behind".
  5. (October 17, 2013). "SOLVED: The mysterious case of Wendell Ladner's (un)retired jersey".
  6. "Wendell Ladner Rd".
Wikipedia Source

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