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Lester Conner

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American basketball coach and former player

Lester Conner
Virginia Valley Vipers
PositionHead coach
Personal information
Born (1959-09-17)September 17, 1959 (age 65)
Memphis, Tennessee
NationalityAmerican
Listed height6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
Listed weight180 lb (82 kg)
Career information
High schoolFremont (Oakland, California)
College
NBA draft1982: 1st round, 14th overall pick
Selected by theGolden State Warriors
Playing career1982–1997
PositionShooting guard
Number15, 32, 7, 12
Coaching career1998–present
Career history
As player:
19821986Golden State Warriors
1986–1987Rapid City Thrillers
1987–1988Houston Rockets
19881991New Jersey Nets
19911992Milwaukee Bucks
1993Los Angeles Clippers
1993–1994Rapid City Thrillers
1994Indiana Pacers
1995Los Angeles Lakers
1996–1997Florida Beach Dogs
As coach:
19982004Boston Celtics (assistant)
2004–2005Philadelphia 76ers (assistant)
20052007Milwaukee Bucks (assistant)
20072010Indiana Pacers (assistant)
20102013Atlanta Hawks (assistant)
20132015Denver Nuggets (assistant)
2023-presentVirginia Valley Vipers
Career highlights and awards
Career NBA statistics
Points4,337 (6.3 ppg)
Assists2,669 (3.9 apg)
Steals1,085 (1.6 spg)
Stats at NBA.com Edit this at Wikidata
Stats atBasketball Reference

Lester Allen Conner (born September 17, 1959) is an American professionalbasketball coach and former professional basketball player, who played for numerousNBA teams. On the floor at the collegiate level the 6'4" Conner was a "swingman," playing both theshooting guard andsmall forward positions, earning high collegiate honors as the 1982Pac-10 Player of the Year.

Conner was the 14th selection in the first round of the1982 NBA draft, selected by his hometownGolden State Warriors, for whom he played the first four years of his 12-season NBA career. In the NBA Conner was a "combo guard," playing both the shooting guard andpoint guard positions. His NBA career was interrupted by one year played with the league championRapid City Thrillers of theContinental Basketball Association.

Following his retirement at the end of the 1994–95 season, Conner turned his attention to coaching, beginning as an assistant toBoston Celtics head coachRick Pitino in 1998 and continuing for more than 15 years.

Biography

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Conner was born September 17, 1959, inMemphis, Tennessee. He grew up inOakland, California, where he attended the ethnically diverseFremont High School.[1] Although he played high school basketball for the Fremont Tigers, he was far from a star at the time, starting sporadically.[1] No elite collegiate basketball programs beat down his door, and Conner found himself relegated to pursuing an alternate path forward in his chosen sport.

Collegiate career

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Junior College

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In 1978, Conner enrolled atLos Medanos Junior College inPittsburg, California, where his game expanded dramatically. Conner achieved star status, averaging 25.2 points per game in leading his team to a 24–7 record.[1] He moved on toChabot Junior College inHayward, California, for the 1979–80 season, achieving similar results in becoming the co-recipient of the California Junior College Player of the Year honors.[1] From being a largely unheralded high school player, Conner found himself a blue chip prospect as a transfer player, pursued by some of the leading collegiate programs in America.

1980–81

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One chief suitor includedJerry Tarkanian, head coach of theUniversity of Nevada-Las Vegas, whose program Conner found attractive.[1] Another wasOregon State University, a program headed by gruff veteran head coachRalph Miller, a future member of theBasketball Hall of Fame. Conner requested that Miller travel to see him play in person, a bold request that one writer has likened to "asking the Pope to say grace at Thanksgiving dinner."[2] Nevertheless, Miller acceded to Conner's wishes and ultimately won Conner's commitment to take a scholarship with the program nearly a month after the end of the April signing period.[1]

Conner quickly won a starting role with the team, opening up the 1980–81 season playingsmall forward next to future NBA playersSteve Johnson,Mark Radford,Ray Blume, andCharlie Sitton.[3] The team was regarded from opening day as one of the powers of college basketball, bringing back the nucleus of a team that had finished the previous year with a record of 26–4 as the 5th ranked team in America.[3] Conner would produce for much of the year off the bench as an invaluablesixth man, gaining notice as a highly skilled passer, gritty rebounder, and lock-down defensive specialist.[4]

Seven wins out the gate brought the Beavers a #2 national ranking, which soon became #1 when Oregon State kept winning while the previously top-rankedDePaul Blue Demons fell toOld Dominion, 63–62, on January 10, 1981.[5] The DePaul result was announced in the midst of an OSU annihilation of theCal Golden Bears, with the home team up 56–28, bringing the crowd of 10,087 to a deafening standing ovation lasting more than a minute.[6]

The 1980–81 Beavers flirted with perfection, going 26–0 before suffering a shocking 20 point home loss toAlton Lister,Fat Lever, and the 24–3Arizona State Sun Devils to close the year.[7] The season would then end in unmitigated disaster with a crushing early loss toKansas State, 50–48, in the1981 NCAA Tournament.[7] Conner would finish the year fourth on the team in scoring, with an average of 7.0 points per game, and pulling down 119 rebounds — second on the Beavers to star 6'11" center Steve Johnson.[8]

1981–82

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Conner's senior season, 1981–82, looked like trouble for Oregon State, with both guards and center Steve Johnson leaving for the NBA, along with two rotation players, with those lost needing to be replaced by athletes of clearly lesser talent. Fully 71% of the offense from OSU's previous season was erased by the loss of the departures, along with 53% of the team's rebounds.[9] The arch-rivalUCLA Bruins entered the year with a #2 ranking; expectations for OSU to repeat as conference champions were extremely low.[9]

The Beavers had a new tool in the kit, however, with the addition of an acclaimed 6'8" freshman fromBenson High School inPortland namedA.C. Green, who narrowly chose OSU over coachGeorge Raveling andWashington State University.[10] Together with the maturation and improvement of pesky defensive guard William Brew and angular small forward Danny Evans, and the return of the versatile Charlie Sitton, the Beavers found themselves with a more than capable roster that racked up a Pac-10 conference record of 16–2 en route to a third straight conference title.[11]

Conner played mostly at the2-guard position during his senior year, while frequently sharing the chore of advancing the ball against pressure. He proved his mettle as a passer, finishing the season as the Pac-10's leader in assists, with an average of 5.1 assists per game.[12] While the over-achieving Beavers again found themselves knocked out of theNCAA Tournament before they were ready, they won games in their first two rounds before running intoPatrick Ewing,Sleepy Floyd, and theGeorgetown Hoyas and a 24-point drubbing.[12]

Conner would finish the year as the team's scoring leader, with an average of 14.6 points per game, as well as the team's rebounding leader, with 145 boards — toppingpower forward A.C. Green's total of 141.[13]

During his two years as a Beaver, Conner helped lead the team to a record of 52 wins and 6 losses, a winning percentage of .897.[14]

Conner was voted the 1982Pac-10 Player of the Year, following his Oregon State teammate Steve Johnson as recipient of the award,[15] and was tapped as a 1982 AP All-American.[14] He was remembered by OSU boss Ralph Miller as one of the top five defensive players he coached during his 38-season career.[1]

Professional career

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1982-1986: Conner wasdrafted in 1982 as the 14th pick overall, by theGolden State Warriors, and played with the Warriors for 4 seasons.

1988:Houston Rockets[16]

1989-1991:New Jersey Nets

1991-1992:Milwaukee Bucks,

1993:Los Angeles Clippers

1994:Indiana Pacers

1995:Los Angeles Lakers. He ended his NBA playing days in 1995.

He earned the nickname "The Molester" for his ball-stealing defensive play.[17]

Conner won aCBA championship with the Rapid City Thrillers in 1987.[18]

NBA career statistics

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Legend
  GPGames played  GS Games started MPG Minutes per game
 FG% Field goal percentage 3P% 3-point field goal percentage FT% Free throw percentage
 RPG Rebounds per game APG Assists per game SPG Steals per game
 BPG Blocks per game PPG Points per game Bold Career high

Regular season

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YearTeamGPGSMPGFG%3P%FT%RPGAPGSPGBPGPPG
1982–83Golden State751018.9.479.000.6992.93.41.50.14.9
1983–84Golden State828231.4.493.167.7183.74.92.00.111.1
1984–85Golden State794928.6.451.200.7503.14.72.00.28.1
1985–86Golden State36011.5.375.286.7411.71.20.70.04.0
1987–88Houston5237.7.463.000.7800.71.10.70.02.5
1988–89New Jersey826330.9.457.351.7884.37.42.20.110.3
1989–90New Jersey826128.7.414.154.8043.24.72.10.17.9
1990–91New Jersey35214.0.523.000.6901.61.71.10.04.1
1990–91Milwaukee39213.3.396.000.7501.42.71.20.02.9
1991–92Milwaukee81917.5.431.000.7042.33.61.20.13.5
1992–93Los Angeles31013.6.452.000.9471.62.11.10.12.4
1993–94Indiana11015.4.368.000.5002.22.81.30.12.8
1994–95Los Angeles202.5.000.0001.0000.00.00.50.01.0
Career68728121.8.453.202.7532.73.91.60.16.3

Playoffs

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YearTeamGPGSMPGFG%3P%FT%RPGAPGSPGBPGPPG
1987–88Houston101.0.000.0001.0001.01.01.00.02.0
1990–91Milwaukee107.01.000.000.0001.02.00.00.02.0
1992–93Los Angeles5012.8.7501.0001.0001.42.00.60.24.2
1993–94Indiana603.7.400.0001.0000.70.00.20.01.0
Career1307.2.6671.000.8571.01.00.40.12.4

Coaching career

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Conner began his NBA coaching career in 1998 as an assistant to head coachRick Pitino of theBoston Celtics.[19] Conner credits Pitino with teaching him to project his voice from the bench, shouting instructions that cut through the din of an NBA arena.[19]

He also was twice the assistant coach inMilwaukee for head coachTerry Stotts, leaving after Stotts was fired following the 2006–2007 season.

Conner is considered a protege of formerIndiana Pacers head coachJim O'Brien and has worked under O'Brien on three separate occasions. The first was with the Boston Celtics from 2001 to 2004. The second was as the associate head coach for thePhiladelphia 76ers in the 2004–05 season. In June, 2007, Conner moved to Indiana, to once again work for O'Brien and the Pacers.

On Feb. 2, 2010, taking over for one game[20] for an absent O'Brien, Lester Conner instituted a few strategic changes such as movingRoy Hibbert closer to the basket and emphasizing an attacking, uptempo style preferred by the players. The Pacers scored what turned out to be a season-high 130 points in a 15-point victory amid their 32–50 season.

In 2010, Conner joinedLarry Drew as his top assistant at theAtlanta Hawks, leaving the team following Drew's termination at the end of the 2012–13 NBA Season. Conner joined theDenver Nuggets for the 2013–14 season as an assistant coach.

Conner has expressed an interest in returning to his alma mater, Oregon State University, as a head coach, but was informed in 2014 by Beaver Athletic DirectorBob De Carolis of the university's unwillingness to make the job available to him due to Conner's lack of a college degree.[21] Conner expressed lament at the university's refusal to consider him for what he called "the only university job I want" owing to lack of academic qualification.[21]

"I understand the importance of having the degree," Conner told an interviewer from the PortlandOregonian in May 2014. "But at the same time, that doesn't define who I am or what I am as a coach and as a person."[21]

Footnotes

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  1. ^abcdefgK.J. White,Miller's Time: A Legacy of OSU Basketball, 1971–1989. Portland, OR: Highland Times Press, 1997; pg. 65.
  2. ^The quote is that of K. J. White inMiller's Time, pg. 65.
  3. ^abWhite,Miller's Time, pg. 63.
  4. ^White,Miller's Time, pg. 69.
  5. ^White,Miller's Time, pg. 66.
  6. ^White,Miller's Time, pg. 67.
  7. ^abWhite,Miller's Time, pg. 71.
  8. ^"1980–81 Oregon State Beavers Roster and Stats," Sports-Reference.com/
  9. ^abWhite,Miller's Time, pg. 74.
  10. ^White,Miller's Time, pp. 74–75.
  11. ^White,Miller's Time, pg. 73.
  12. ^abWhite,Miller's Time, pg. 81.
  13. ^"1981–82 Oregon State Beavers Roster and Stats," Sports-Reference.com/
  14. ^ab"Lester Conner," NBA Coach File, www.nba.com/
  15. ^White,Miller's Time, pg. 91.
  16. ^"Lester Conner Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Draft Status and more".Basketball-Reference.com. RetrievedMay 15, 2024.
  17. ^"Lester Conner," BasketballReference.com, www.basketball-reference.com/
  18. ^"1986-87 Tampa Bay/Rapid City Thrillers Statistics".Stats Crew. RetrievedMarch 9, 2025.
  19. ^abMichael Cunningham,"Conner Adds His Voice to Hawks,"Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Oct. 14, 2010.
  20. ^"Burke Takes a Turn on the Hot Seat | Indiana Pacers".Indiana Pacers. RetrievedFebruary 2, 2018.
  21. ^abcConnor Letourneau,"Beavers Great Lester Conner Loses Sleep Over Oregon State Head Coaching Vacancy,"The Oregonian, May 13, 2014.

External links

[edit]
First round
Second round
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