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men_s_basketball:maurice_lucas

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Maurice D. Lucas #20

Nicknames: “Luke”, “Mo”
Position: Forward-Center
Height: 6'9“
Weight: 215 lbs.
Birthdate: February 18, 1952 in Pittsburgh, PA
High School: Schenley H.S.

Marquette Career

Maurice Lucas played two seasons of basketball for Marquette- 1972-73 and 1973-74. Lucas paced the team in rebounding in each of his two seasons and his 328 boards during his senior season is good for ninth place on the school’s seasonal chart. His top rebound game at Marquette was a 23-board effort against Loyola in 1973. The MVP and top scorer (15.8 ppg) of the 1973-74 team that finished runner-up in the national championship game, he totaled 936 points in his two campaigns. Lucas was named a 1974 Converse All-American (second team) and started on the 1973 World University Games championship team. Inducted into MU's Hall of Fame in 1991.

All-Time Sophomore Season Rankings

Professional Career

Lucas was drafted by the Bulls in the NBA draft and Carolina in the ABA draft, but chose to go to the ABA instead. He had been drafted in the ABA's undergraduate draft by the Carolina Cougars despite not coming out that year the team retained his rights. When he joined the team the next season, they had already relocated to St. Louis to become the Spirits of St. Louis. He would later come to the NBA through the ABA dispersal draft when the league folded and join the Portland TrailBlazers. He played 14 seasons in the ABA and NBA. He averaged 20.2 points for the NBA champion Portland Trailblazers in 1977.

Referred to Basketball Digest as “the toughest player in the NBA,” Lucas once reportedly flattened Daryll “Chocolate Thunder” Dawkins with one punch. He won an NBA title with the Blazers of Bill Walton.

Honors

  • ABA All-Star (1976)
  • 4-time NBA All-Star (1977, '78, '79, '83)
  • 1 NBA Championship (1977)
  • All-NBA Second Team (1978)
  • All-NBA-Defense First Team (1978)
  • All-NBA-Defense Second Team (1979)
  • Named one of the 30 Greatest Players in ABA History (1997)
  • Inducted into the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame in 2000.
men_s_basketball/maurice_lucas.1200503730.txt.gz · Last modified: 2020/12/07 16:39 (external edit)