American basketball & volleyball player
Keith Erickson Erickson in 1976
Born (1944-04-19 ) April 19, 1944 (age 80) San Francisco, California , U.S.Listed height 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) Listed weight 195 lb (88 kg) High school El Segundo (El Segundo, California )College
NBA draft 1965 : 3rd round, 18th overall pickSelected by the San Francisco Warriors Playing career 1965–1977 Position Small forward / shooting guard Number 18, 15, 24, 14 1965–1966 San Francisco Warriors 1966 –1968 Chicago Bulls 1968 –1973 Los Angeles Lakers 1973 –1977 Phoenix Suns
Points 7,251 (9.5 ppg) Rebounds 3,449 (4.5 rpg) Assists 1,991 (2.6 apg)
Stats at NBA.com Stats at Basketball Reference
Keith Raymond Erickson (born April 19, 1944) is an American former basketball and volleyball player.
After graduating from El Segundo High School (California), Erickson attended El Camino College. He then played basketball at UCLA , where he was a member of the 1964 and 1965 NCAA Champion teams. Erickson, who attended UCLA on a shared baseball /basketball scholarship, also played on the 1964 United States Olympic volleyball team. Coach John Wooden would later remark that Erickson was the finest athlete he ever coached.
In 1965 , Erickson was selected by the San Francisco Warriors in the third round of the NBA draft . Erickson played for the Warriors, Chicago Bulls , the 1972 NBA Champion Los Angeles Lakers , and Phoenix Suns . He had been traded along with a 1974 second-round selection (31st overall–Fred Saunders ) from the Lakers to the Suns for Connie Hawkins on October 30, 1973.[ 1] [ 2]
Erickson retired in 1977 with 7,251 points and 3,449 rebounds. He later served as color commentator for the Los Angeles Lakers with Chick Hearn , the Los Angeles Clippers , the Phoenix Suns ,[ 3] and The NBA on CBS . He was inducted into the UCLA Athletics Hall of Fame in 1986 and was inducted into the Pac-12 Conference Men's Basketball Hall of Honor during the 2016 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball tournament .[ 4]
Career statistics
NBA
Source[ 5]
Regular season
Playoffs
References
^ Goldaper, Sam. "The Hawk Takes Off, Traded to Lakers," The New York Times , Wednesday, October 31, 1973. Retrieved November 29, 2020
^ 1974 NBA Draft Pick Transactions, May 28 – Pro Sports Transactions. Retrieved November 29, 2020
^ "Suns broadcaster al McCoy set for Ring of Honor" .
^ Pac-12 Basketball Hall of Honor to Induct 2015-16 Class [permanent dead link ] , Pac-12 Conference, January 19, 2016
^ "Keith Erickson NBA stats" . Basketball Reference . Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved April 30, 2024 .
External links
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