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  • Tracy Lamar McGrady, Jr. is an American retired professional basketball player in the National

  • Basketball Association. He is a seven-time NBA All-Star, seven-time All-NBA selection,

  • and a two-time NBA scoring champion. McGrady played as a swingman.

  • McGrady entered the NBA straight from high school after being selected in the 1997 NBA

  • Draft with the ninth overall pick in the first round by the Toronto Raptors. He played in

  • the NBA for the Raptors, Orlando Magic, Houston Rockets, New York Knicks, Detroit Pistons,

  • Atlanta Hawks, and San Antonio Spurs. He then played for the Qingdao Eagles of the Chinese

  • Basketball Association before signing with San Antonio. In 2013, he announced his retirement

  • from the NBA, but indicated that he would consider opportunities to play overseas.

  • McGrady was ranked #75 on SLAM Magazine's "Top 75 Players of All-Time" in 2003. McGrady's

  • style of play has been compared to that of George Gervin.

  • Early years McGrady was born in Bartow, Florida. He played

  • high school basketball and baseball at Auburndale High School in Auburndale, Florida for three

  • years. He then transferred to Mount Zion Christian Academy, in Durham, North Carolina. McGrady

  • created a national buzz after his performance in the Adidas ABCD Camp, where the best high

  • school players in the U.S. are invited annually. He was named High School Player of the Year

  • by USA Today. McGrady has stated that if he had not gone straight to the NBA from high

  • school, he would have attended Kentucky. Professional career

  • Toronto Raptors McGrady was selected with the ninth overall

  • pick by the Toronto Raptors in the 1997 NBA Draft. For most of the 1997-98 season, he

  • received little playing time, averaging only 13 minutes per game under coach Darrell Walker.

  • McGrady has described his rookie year as "hell", feeling lonely in Toronto and sleeping for

  • up to 20 hours a day. Late in the season, Walker resigned and McGrady began playing

  • more under new coach Butch Carter on the condition that McGrady improve his work ethic.

  • Before the lockout-shortened 1998-99 season, the Raptors drafted McGrady's distant cousin

  • Vince Carter. The two became inseparable; teammate Dee Brown once said, "They say they're

  • cousins... But Siamese twins is more like it." By the 1999-00 season, the duo had developed

  • a reputation for their athleticism, giving memorable performances at the All-Star Weekend

  • Slam Dunk Contest. McGrady, now playing significant minutes, was a contender for the Sixth Man

  • of the Year Award before being elevated to Toronto's starting backcourt in late March.

  • Behind McGrady and Carter's play, the Raptors finished the season with a 45-37 record, qualifying

  • for the playoffs for the first time in franchise history. For the year, McGrady averaged 15.4

  • points, 6.3 rebounds, 3.3 assists, and a career-high 1.9 blocks per game. In the first round of

  • the postseason, the Raptors were swept by the New York Knicks.

  • Orlando Magic After the 2000 Playoffs, McGrady became a

  • free agent, signing a six-year, $67.5 million contract with the Orlando Magic. He elected

  • to join the Magic in part because he disliked his secondary role playing behind Vince Carter,

  • in part so that he could return home to Florida, and in part to play with their other newly

  • acquired free agent, Grant Hill. Hill would play in only four games during the 2000-01

  • season and 47 games total throughout his tenure with the team, forcing McGrady into a larger

  • leadership and scoring role than anticipated. Defying the expectations of many, he emerged

  • as one of the best players in the NBA, with Milwaukee Bucks General Manager Ernie Grunfeld

  • going so far as to call him "one of the top five talents in the league". McGrady's play

  • earned him his first All-Star Game appearance, and with final averages of 26.8 points, 7.5

  • rebounds, and 4.6 assists per game, he was selected to his first All-NBA Team, being

  • named to the All-NBA Second Team. He was also voted the league's Most Improved Player. With

  • a 43-39 record, the Magic entered the playoffs as the East's seventh seed, matched up with

  • the Bucks. In Game 3 of the series, McGrady notched 42 points, 10 rebounds, and 8 assists,

  • a performance that Bill Simmons later called "his superstar audition tape". Orlando were

  • eliminated by the Bucks in four games. For the 2001-02 season, McGrady averaged 25.6

  • points, 7.9 rebounds, and 5.3 assists per game, earning his second All-NBA Team selection,

  • this time to the All-NBA First Team. The Magic were again ousted in the first round of the

  • playoffs, losing in four games to the Charlotte Hornets. In the 2002-03 season, McGrady won

  • his first scoring title and, with averages of 32.1 points, 6.5 rebounds, and 5.5 assists

  • per game, became one of seven players in NBA history to achieve a 30 player efficiency

  • rating in a single season. In the playoffs, McGrady made headlines when he prematurely

  • assumed that Orlando were guaranteed to advance to the second round after establishing a 3-1

  • lead over the Detroit Pistons, replying in an interview, "It feels good to get in the

  • second round." Despite holding the series lead, the Magic lost the series in seven games.

  • The 2003-04 season was a tumultuous year for McGrady; Magic coach Doc Rivers was fired

  • after a 1-10 start to the year and there were reports of friction between McGrady and Orlando

  • General Manager John Weisbrod. Throughout the season, Orlando struggled because of a

  • series of injuries, finishing the year with the worst record in the East despite McGrady

  • winning his second consecutive scoring title. Late in the season, McGrady scored a career-high

  • 62 points in a winning effort versus the Washington Wizards. His final averages were 28 points,

  • 6 rebounds, and 5.5 assists per game. Houston Rockets

  • On June 29, 2004, McGrady, Juwan Howard, Tyronn Lue, and Reece Gaines were traded to the Houston

  • Rockets in a seven-player deal that sent Steve Francis, Cuttino Mobley, and Kelvin Cato to

  • the Magic. Initially viewed as a fair trade, it has come to be seen as one of the more

  • lopsided trades in NBA history. McGrady would play in several All-Star games as a Rocket;

  • Orlando traded Francis after less than two seasons.

  • In his first year with the Rockets, McGrady teamed with 7' 6" center Yao Ming to form

  • one of the more potent duos in the Western Conference. They started slowly, struggling

  • to find a point guard to complement McGrady's skill set in the backcourt until Bob Sura

  • returned from an injury. The Rockets traded Lue for Jon Barry for 3-point shooting off

  • the bench. The Rockets also acquired David Wesley from the Hornets to bolster their backcourt

  • defense, particularly on smaller guards. With these new trades, McGrady was moved to SF,

  • with a starting lineup of Bob Sura, David Wesley, Juwan Howard, and Yao Ming. The Rockets

  • then ran the offense through McGrady, used the inside game of Yao, and used the perimeter

  • game of Howard's baseline jumper and 3-point shooting effectively. On December 9, 2004,

  • McGrady scored 13 points in the last 35 seconds of a game against the San Antonio Spurs: four

  • consecutive 3 pointers, including a steal and the game-winning 3 pointer with 1.7 seconds

  • left that led to the 81-80 Rockets win. The Rockets finished the 2004–05 season 51–31

  • as the 5th seed in the playoffs.

  • McGrady's stellar 30.7 ppg, 6.7 apg, and 7.4 rpg in the first round of the 2005 NBA Playoffs

  • helped Houston to a 2-0 lead in the series against the Dallas Mavericks. McGrady's signature

  • moment was in Game 2, where he blew past Dallas forward Dirk Nowitzki and dunked over 7' 6"

  • Dallas center Shawn Bradley. McGrady also hit the gamewinner for a 113–111 victory.

  • But in Game 7, McGrady missed 6 of his first 7 shots, and the Rockets were never able to

  • match the intensity of the Mavericks, who beat them by 40 points and bounced them from

  • the playoffs. In the early 2005–06 season, McGrady missed

  • eight games because of back spasms. His back spasms resurfaced on January 8, 2006, and

  • he was taken at halftime in a game against the Denver Nuggets on a stretcher to the hospital;

  • he missed another five games and the back problems lurked thereafter. In the 2005–06

  • season, the Rockets were 2–15 in games he did not play in and 2–16 in games McGrady

  • did not finish. While McGrady was injured for five games with his back injury, the Rockets

  • did not win a single game. Other injuries include him falling on his back in a game

  • against the Indiana Pacers. Despite his back injuries, McGrady was voted into the 2006

  • All-Star Game in Houston. His Western Conference teammates constantly put the ball in his hands

  • to put him in contention for the All-Star MVP award in front of his Houston home crowd.

  • A controversy resulted in the final minute when McGrady attempted a jump shot that would

  • have given the West the lead and control of the game. Replays showed LeBron James, who

  • was guarding McGrady appearing to make contact with McGrady's elbow, causing the shot attempt

  • to fall way short of the basket. However, no foul was whistled, the East won, and LeBron

  • James was named All-Star MVP. In the 2006–07 season, McGrady started out

  • slowly, and after missing 7 games with back spasms he visited a doctor. In an interview

  • with TNT, McGrady said that he thought that his body was slowing down. He believed that

  • he could no longer be as explosive as he was in the past due to his back injury. Shortly

  • after another bout with back spasms, McGrady went to Waco, Texas where Dr. John Patterson

  • performed "Synergy Release Therapy" to cure his chronic back problems, particularly the

  • back spasms. However, since Yao Ming was having another breakout season, he was deferring

  • to Yao as the number one option. Since Yao went down with a leg injury, McGrady stepped

  • up his overall play, re-establishing himself as one of the game's premier players and by

  • doing so led Houston to the 5th best record in the league. On December 29, 2006, he became

  • the third-youngest player in NBA history to reach 14,000 points and 4,000 rebounds. In

  • the playoffs, the Rockets lost their first-round series to the Utah Jazz 4–3. McGrady had

  • said in an interview that if he and the Rockets failed to make it out of the first round again,

  • it was "on me". At his post-game press conference following the Game 7 defeat, McGrady, still

  • visibly emotional from the loss, said "I tried, man, I tried."

  • After the 2006–07 season, Jeff Van Gundy was fired as head coach. Rick Adelman was

  • hired as head coach as Rockets owner Leslie Alexander wanted a more uptempo offense to

  • use the offensive skills of Yao and McGrady. The 2007–08 season for the Rockets was decimated

  • by injuries; Yao was placed on injured reserve in February. Incredibly, the Rockets won 22

  • straight games. The Rockets finished as the 5th seed in the West and earned a rematch

  • with the Utah Jazz. However, by the time playoffs came, McGrady was already nursing shoulder

  • and knee injuries as he had bandages placed on his shoulder and his knee throughout the

  • playoff series. McGrady took pain-killing injections in and had fluid drained from both

  • his shoulder and knee to allow him to play. The Jazz again eliminated the Rockets in six

  • games, even though McGrady recorded 40 points and 10 rebounds in the decisive Game Six,

  • a 113–91 loss. In May 2008, McGrady underwent arthroscopic

  • surgery on both his left shoulder and left knee.

  • On February 18, 2009, McGrady announced on his website that he would have surgery on

  • his left knee and would miss the remainder of the 2008–09 season. He had already missed

  • 18 games before the All-Star break, including a two-week stretch in January, and said before

  • the season that his knee was not healed from his off-season surgery. He decided to have

  • microfracture surgery in Chicago on February 24, 2009. The cartilage damage to be repaired

  • by the microfracture surgery was in a small area on a non-weight-bearing surface, and

  • the rest of his knee was otherwise healthy, according to the team doctor.

  • Despite McGrady being on injured reserve, the Rockets beat the Trail Blazers 4–2 in

  • the first round of the playoffs to advance to the second round of the playoffs for the

  • first time since 1997. The Rockets would compete in a memorable series against the eventual

  • NBA champion LA Lakers, before losing Game 7 in LA. Since McGrady was on the Rockets'

  • roster during the 2009 NBA Playoffs, he officially advanced past the first round of the playoffs

  • for the first time in his career. McGrady only played in six games with the

  • Rockets during the 2009–10 season, all in limited minutes as a reserve due to injuries,

  • before being traded to the New York Knicks in February.

  • New York Knicks

  • On February 18, 2010, McGrady was traded to the New York Knicks as part of a three-team

  • trade involving Houston, New York, and the Sacramento Kings. On February 20, 2010, McGrady

  • made his debut for the Knicks against the Oklahoma City Thunder, to a sold-out Madison

  • Square Garden, amid many "We Want T-Mac!" chants. He scored 26 points, grabbed 4 rebounds,

  • and dished 5 assists in 32 minutes of play as New York lost in overtime. This was McGrady's

  • first game since December 23, 2009 against the Orlando Magic. His first win as a member

  • of the Knicks came six days later, in a 23-point effort against the Washington Wizards. McGrady

  • was the starting shooting guard for the Knicks. He played 24 games with the team, averaging

  • 9.4 ppg, 3.9 rpg, 3.7 apg in 26.1 mpg. Detroit Pistons

  • On August 16, 2010, McGrady signed a one-year contract with the Detroit Pistons. On December

  • 7, 2010, McGrady returned to Houston for the first time to a mixture of applause and boos

  • from the home crowd and scored 11 points, grabbed 3 rebounds, and dished 3 assists in

  • a 97–83 loss. On January 14, 2011, McGrady scored a season-high of 22 points in a 101–95

  • win over the Toronto Raptors. McGrady averaged 8.0 points, 3.5 assists, and 3.5 rebounds

  • in 23.4 minutes for the Pistons but they failed to make the playoffs for the second year in

  • a row. Atlanta Hawks

  • On December 7, 2011, ESPN reported that McGrady agreed to a one-year deal with the Atlanta

  • Hawks for the veteran minimum. In his debut as a Hawk, McGrady finished with 12 points,

  • 2 rebounds, a steal and a block in less than 20 minutes of action in a 106–70 blowout

  • win over the New Jersey Nets. Less than a week later, on January 2, 2012, McGrady scored

  • 13 of his 16 points in the fourth quarter of a game against the then-undefeated Miami

  • Heat, to lead the Hawks to a comeback victory. Over the season, he averaged a career-low

  • 5.3 points per game in 16 minutes per game. Qingdao Eagles

  • On October 9, 2012, McGrady signed a one-year deal with the Qingdao Eagles of the Chinese

  • Basketball Association. In the CBA, McGrady shot 49.6% overall from the field, making

  • 239 out of 482 total shot attempts, shooting 56.1% on 2 point field goal attempts and 33.3%

  • on 3 point field goal attempts, making 46 out of 138. He also averaged 25.0 points,

  • 7.2 rebounds, 5.1 assists, 1.6 steals, and 0.6 blocks per game. His team finished in

  • last place in the CBA 2012–13 league standings, with a record of 8 wins and 24 losses.

  • San Antonio Spurs On April 16, 2013, McGrady signed with the

  • San Antonio Spurs just before their season finale, making him eligible to play for them

  • in the playoffs. He chose to wear the No. 1 jersey. The 2012–13 season was the first

  • of McGrady's NBA career that he did not play a regular-season game. The San Antonio Spurs

  • finished 58-24, 2nd best record in the Western Conference. McGrady got his first minutes

  • as a Spur against the Los Angeles Lakers in Game 4 of the first round of the 2013 NBA

  • Playoffs, logging one assist and one steal. In Game 2 of the NBA Finals, McGrady played

  • his first minutes in a championship series, logging two rebounds and two assists. The

  • Spurs lost the series in seven games. Retirement from NBA

  • On August 26, 2013, McGrady announced his retirement from the NBA on ESPN's First Take.

  • He noted that the "door's still open" to him playing overseas.

  • International career McGrady played with the United States men's

  • national basketball team in the FIBA Americas Championship 2003 at San Juan, Puerto Rico.

  • The FIBA tournament was for qualification to the 2004 Summer Olympics. On August 22

  • in a 98–69 victory over Venezuela, McGrady led the U.S. with 16 points. McGrady sat out

  • the August 26 game due to a back injury. The U.S. qualified for the 2004 Olympics on August

  • 30 with an 87–71 win over Puerto Rico, but McGrady was in an altercation with Puerto

  • Rico's Eddie Casiano with fans throwing drinks and debris on the court when it happened.

  • The U.S. won the gold medal in the tournament. In the tournament, McGrady shot 54.4% from

  • the field and made 42.1% of three-point attempts. He averaged 12.6 points and 2.9 rebounds a

  • game. Off the court

  • Personal life McGrady has four childrendaughters Layla

  • Clarice and Laycee Aloe, and sons Laymen Lamar and Laydenwith his wife CleRenda Harris,

  • whom he had dated for ten years. Their first son was born on December 27, 2005, during

  • an 82–74 loss against the Utah Jazz in which McGrady left during halftime to see his girlfriend

  • going into labor. The couple was married on September 12, 2006 in Mexico.

  • McGrady and Vince Carter are third cousins; McGrady learned that his grandmother and Carter's

  • grandmother were cousins at a family reunion while he was still in high school and Carter

  • played at the University of North Carolina. The two played together with the Toronto Raptors

  • for two years before McGrady left for free agency. After McGrady left, he and Carter

  • had a feud, but this was resolved in a short period of time.

  • Tracy's younger brother, Chancellor "Chance" McGrady, played for the 2008 NCAA Men's Division

  • I Basketball runner-up Memphis Tigers basketball team.

  • In 2008, McGrady was criticized for his comments on the All-Star game being held in New Orleans,

  • only three years removed from the destruction of Hurricane Katrina. McGrady publicly questioned

  • the quality of public safety and protection of NBA players.

  • Upon retirement, McGrady has stated that he plans on focusing his efforts on the two companies

  • that he currently runs. The first is a bottled water company in Florida, called BLUE04. The

  • second is a technology company based in Washington, D.C., called Dasdak.

  • Endorsements In 2002, McGrady signed a longterm partnership

  • with Adidas, agreeing to an endorsement deal that will last through his playing career

  • and beyond. He also appeared on the cover of NBA Live 07.

  • Philanthropy McGrady has traveled to the Darfurian refugee

  • camps in Chad with John Prendergast and Omer Ismail of the ENOUGH Project. McGrady recruited

  • NBA players to support a sister schools initiative linking schools in Darfurian refugee camps

  • to American middle schools, high schools and universities.

  • In 2009, McGrady changed his jersey number to #3. He made the switch to promote his humanitarian

  • efforts in the Darfur region of the Sudan and a documentary on his summer 2007 visits

  • to refugee camps in the region. The documentary is called 3 Points. However, he went back

  • to wearing # 1 when he joined the Detroit Pistons.

  • Baseball On February 4, 2014, McGrady confirmed that

  • he was aiming to pursue his dream of becoming a baseball player, working with Roger Clemens

  • to become a pitcher for the Sugar Land Skeeters of the independent Atlantic League. He is

  • also part-owner of a Minor League Baseball team set to begin play in Biloxi, Mississippi.

  • On April 23, 2014, McGrady made the Opening Day roster of the Skeeters. In his debut,

  • he pitched 1 2⁄3 innings, receiving the loss. He started the Atlantic League All-Star

  • Game, where he recorded his first strikeout. After the game, McGrady announced his retirement

  • from baseball. NBA career statistics

  • Regular season Playoffs

  • CBA career statistics NBA career achievements

  • NBA scoring champion: 2003, 2004 7× NBA All-Star: 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004,

  • 2005, 2006, 2007 7× All-NBA:

  • First Team: 2002, 2003 Second Team: 2001, 2004, 2007

  • Third Team: 2005, 2008

  • NBA Most Improved Player Award: 2001 Orlando Magic franchise records

  • Most points in one game with 62 Most points in one half with 37 in the first

  • half Most points in one quarter with 25 in the

  • second quarter Most points in a playoff game with 46

  • Most three-point field goals made in one half with 8

  • See also

  • List of individual National Basketball Association scoring leaders by season

  • List of National Basketball Association players with 60 or more points in a game

  • References

  • External links Tracy McGrady's Official Website

  • Career statistics and player information from NBA.com

  • Career statistics and player information from Basketball-Reference.com

  • Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference

  • Chinese Basketball Association Official Profile And Stats

  • Feschuk, Dave. "Tracy McGrady wishes he had stayed in Toronto: Feschuk". Toronto Star.

  • Retrieved September 14, 2013. 

Tracy Lamar McGrady, Jr. is an American retired professional basketball player in the National

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