Where is moses malone now
During the season, Malone led the league in minutes played, averaging 42 per game. For five straight seasons beginning in , Malone led the league in rebounds. Prior to the season, Malone was traded to the Philadelphia 76ers. In his first year with the team, Malone put up strong numbers again, averaging He spent four seasons with the 76ers before being traded to the Washington Bullets. For his career, Malone averaged Moses Malone retired from the NBA after the season. On Sept. Erving made a point of that during his introduction of Malone for his Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame induction, referring to Malone as a "genius" and "great student of the game.
Erving recalled how Malone would be the first off the court and in and out of the postgame shower so he could sit there, wrapped in just a towel in the locker room, and offer useful analysis to every teammate who exited the shower and crossed in front of him. Malone had plenty of their power, if not their vertical, and he also had a unique guile to get where the ball would go.
So when you next see an authoritative putback by Drummond or Jordan after relentlessly going to retrieve a miss—or when you next see Paul Millsap or Draymond Green or David Lee slip in and find a clever way to the ball and score, remember that Malone was the ultimate one-man machine in that regard. Ironman A. Green had 3, career offensive rebounds. Fiery Kevin Garnett has 3, Long-standing legend Abdul-Jabbar had 2, Even more than his prodigious talent, we will miss his friendship, his generosity, his exuberant personality, and the extraordinary work ethic he brought to the game throughout his year pro career.
The center played a season with the Stars, a season with the Sprits of St. Louis before coming to the NBA in Malone played for five seasons with the Houston Rockets before joining the Philadelphia 76ers in Malone averaged It is difficult to express what his contributions to this organization - both as a friend and player - have meant to us, the city of Philadelphia and his faithful fans," Philadelphia 76ers CEO Scott O'Neil said in a statement.
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