Mercer had a very successful collegiate career, having been an All-American and all-Southeastern Conference player at Kentucky, and part of a national championship team his freshman year.[1]
NBA
Boston Celtics
Mercer was selected with the sixth overall pick of the 1997 NBA draft by the Boston Celtics and was reunited with fellow Kentucky teammate Antoine Walker, and Rick Pitino, his coach at Kentucky who had just become the coach of the Celtics. Prior to Mercer's drafting, Pitino was recorded as saying that he did not envisage Mercer as having the necessary talent to be selected very high. Some felt this was just a ploy to scare the other teams away from him so as to increase the likelihood of Mercer being available by the time the Celtics got an opportunity to make their draft selection.[2] It turned out it was.[3]
Mercer left after that season, signing as a free agent with the Chicago Bulls the next year.[4] He averaged 19.7 points per game in his first year with them.
This was Mercer's career high in points per game and was the second leading scorer on the team.
[5]
Indiana Pacers
Despite Mercer's 16.8 points per game in 2001–02, he was traded midway through the season alongside Brad Miller, Ron Artest, and Kevin Ollie to the Indiana Pacers for Jalen Rose, Travis Best, Norman Richardson, and a second-round draft pick. In Indiana, he served merely as a reserve player and his play declined rapidly over his one-and-a-half-season stint with the club.[6]
In 1997, Mercer and fellow former Celtic player Chauncey Billups were accused of sexually assaulting a woman at the home of teammate Antoine Walker. According to a civil suit, Billups, Mercer, and Walker's roommate Michael Irvin assaulted the woman at Walker's condo after leaving a Boston comedy club on November 9, 1997. A medical examination on the following day revealed injuries consistent with the victim's testimony. No criminal charges were filed, but Billups and Mercer settled a civil suit in 2000.[10]
^Murphy, Shelley (October 6, 1999). "Renewed suit: Walker failed to stop rape". The Boston Globe. Archived from the original on January 23, 2018. Retrieved January 22, 2018.