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Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

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Kareem Abdul-Jabbar[b] (born Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor Jr.,[c] April 16, 1947) is an American former basketball player. He played professionally for 20 seasons for the Milwaukee Bucks and Los Angeles Lakers in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and played college basketball for the UCLA Bruins as a center. A member of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, Abdul-Jabbar won a record six NBA Most Valuable Player (MVP) awards. He was a 19-time NBA All-Star, a 15-time All-NBA Team member, and an 11-time NBA All-Defensive Team selection. He was a member of six NBA championship teams as a player and two more as an assistant coach, and was twice voted the NBA Finals MVP. He was named to three NBA anniversary teams (35th, 50th, and 75th).[1] Widely regarded as one of the greatest players of all time,[2][3] Abdul-Jabbar broke the NBA's career scoring record in 1984, and held it until LeBron James surpassed him in 2023.

Key Information

Abdul-Jabbar was known as Lew Alcindor when he played at Power Memorial, a private Catholic high school in New York City, where he led their team to 71 consecutive wins. He played college basketball for the UCLA Bruins, winning three consecutive national championships under head coach John Wooden. Alcindor was a record three-time most outstanding player of the NCAA tournament. Drafted with the first overall pick by the one-season-old Milwaukee Bucks franchise in the 1969 NBA draft, he spent six seasons with the team. After leading the Bucks to their first NBA championship at age 24 in 1971, he took the Muslim name Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Using his trademark skyhook shot, he established himself as one of the league's top scorers. In 1975, he was traded to the Lakers, with whom he played the final 14 seasons of his career, during which time the team won five NBA championships. Abdul-Jabbar's contributions were a key component in the Showtime era of Lakers basketball. Over his 20-year NBA career, his teams reached the playoffs 18 times, got past the first round 14 times, and reached the NBA Finals ten times.[1][4]

At the time of his retirement at age 42 in 1989, Abdul-Jabbar was the NBA's regular season career leader in points (38,387), games played (1,560), minutes (57,446), field goals made (15,837), field goal attempts (28,307), blocked shots (3,189), defensive rebounds (9,394), and personal fouls (4,657). He remains the all-time leader in field goals made. He ranks second in career points, minutes played and field goal attempts, and is third all-time in both total rebounds (17,440) and blocked shots.[5] ESPN named him the greatest center of all time in 2007,[6] the greatest player in college basketball history in 2008,[7] and the second best player in NBA history (behind Michael Jordan) in 2016.[8] Abdul-Jabbar has also been an actor, a basketball coach, a best-selling author, and a martial artist, having trained in Jeet Kune Do under Bruce Lee and appeared in his film Game of Death (1972).[9] In 2012, Abdul-Jabbar was selected by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to be a U.S. global cultural ambassador.[10] In 2016, President Barack Obama awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom.[11]

Early life

[edit]

Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor Jr. was born in Harlem, New York City,[12] the only child of Cora Lillian, a department store price checker, and Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor Sr., a transit police officer and jazz musician.[13] Cora was born in North Carolina but came to Harlem as part of the Great Migration. Ferdinand Sr. was the child of immigrants from Trinidad; his uncle was the Black activist and medical pioneer Dr. John Alcindor.[14][15][16] Alcindor grew up in the Dyckman Street projects in the Inwood neighborhood of Upper Manhattan, which he moved to at the age of 3 in 1950.[17] At birth, Alcindor weighed 12 lb 11 oz (5.75 kg) and was 22+12 inches (57 cm) long.[18][19] Always very tall for his age,[18] he was already 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m) by the age of nine.[20] Alcindor was often depressed as a teenager because of the stares and comments about his height.[18] By the eighth grade (age 13–14), he had grown to 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) and could already dunk a basketball.[20][21]

Alcindor attended Power Memorial Academy, a private all-boys Catholic high school, where he was one of the few Black students.[22] He wore the jersey number 33, which he chose in tribute to his favorite player, New York Giants fullback Mel Triplett. He would continue wearing this number throughout his college and professional career.[23] He led coach Jack Donohue's teams to three straight New York City Catholic championships, a 71–game winning streak, and a 79–2 overall record.[24] This earned him "The Tower from Power" nickname.[22] His 2,067 total points were a New York City high school record.[25] The team won the national high school boys basketball championship when Alcindor was in 10th and 11th grade and was runner-up his senior year.[22] He had a strained relationship in his final year with Donohue after the coach called him a nigger.[26]

Alcindor wrote for the Harlem Youth Action Project newspaper. The Harlem riot of 1964, which was prompted by the fatal shooting of 15-year old black boy James Powell by a New York police officer, triggered Alcindor's interest in racial politics. "Right then and there, I knew who I was, who I had to be. I was going to be black rage personified, Black Power in the flesh", he said.[27][28]

College career

[edit]
Alcindor with the reverse two-hand dunk against Stanford

Alcindor was not able to play professionally in the NBA out of high school. At the time, the league only accepted players beginning with the year that they could have hypothetically graduated from college.[29][30] His other options to play basketball professionally would have been to join the Harlem Globetrotters or play overseas. However, Alcindor's goal was to attend college.[30] Recruited by hundreds of schools, he was the most sought-after prospect since Wilt Chamberlain. Southern teams that were segregated were willing to break the color line to acquire Alcindor.[28] He chose to attend the University of California, Los Angeles,[30] after being recruited by Bruins assistant coach Jerry Norman.[31] Baseball Hall of Famer and UCLA alumnus Jackie Robinson also wrote to Alcindor, encouraging him to attend the college.[23]

By now 7-foot-1-inch (2.16 m) tall, Alcindor was relegated to the freshman team in his first year with the Bruins,[32][33] as freshmen were ineligible to play varsity until 1972.[34] The freshman squad included Lucius Allen, Kenny Heitz, and Lynn Shackelford, who were fellow high-school All-Americans.[35] On November 27, 1965, Alcindor made his first public performance in UCLA's annual varsity–freshman exhibition game, attended by 12,051 fans in the inaugural game at the Bruins' new Pauley Pavilion.[33][36][37] The 1965–66 varsity team was the two-time defending national champions and the top-ranked team in preseason polls.[33][38] The freshman team won 75–60 behind Alcindor's 31 points and 21 rebounds.[36][18] It was the first time a freshman team had beaten the UCLA varsity squad.[18] The varsity had lost Gail Goodrich and Keith Erickson from the championship squad to graduation, and starting guard Freddie Goss was out sick.[36][39] After the game, UPI wrote: "UCLA's Bruins open defense of their national basketball title this week, but right now they're only the second best team on campus."[39][40] The freshman team was 21–0 that year, dominating against junior college and other freshman teams,[38] as Alcindor averaged 33 points and 21 rebounds per game.[41]

Alcindor versus USC

Alcindor made his varsity debut as a sophomore in 1966 and received national coverage. Sports Illustrated described him as "The New Superstar" after he scored 56 points in his first game, which is still an NCAA record for a player in their debut.[42][18][25] He scored 61 later in the season.[41] Averaging 29 points and 15.5 rebounds per game, he led UCLA to an undefeated 30–0 record and a national championship,[41][43] their third title in four years and first of seven consecutive.[28][41] After the season, the dunk was banned in college basketball in an attempt to curtail his dominance;[24][43] critics dubbed it the "Alcindor Rule".[24][28] It was not rescinded until the 1976–77 season.[44] Alcindor was the main contributor to the team's three-year record of 88 wins and only two losses: one to the University of Houston in which Alcindor had an eye injury, and the other to crosstown rival USC who played a "stall game";[33][45] there was no shot clock in that era, allowing the Trojans to hold the ball as long as it wanted before attempting to score. They limited Alcindor to only four shots and 10 points.[46]

During his college career, Alcindor was a three-time national player of the year (1967–1969), a three-time unanimous first-team All-American (1967–1969), played on three NCAA basketball champion teams (1967, 1968, and 1969), was honored as the Most Outstanding Player in the NCAA Tournament three times, and became the first-ever Naismith College Player of the Year in 1969.[47][48] He was the only player to win the Helms Foundation Player of the Year award three times.[49] He had considered transferring to Michigan because of unfulfilled recruiting promises. UCLA player Willie Naulls introduced Alcindor and teammate Lucius Allen to athletic booster Sam Gilbert, who convinced the pair to remain at UCLA.[50]

During his junior year, Alcindor suffered a scratched left cornea on January 12, 1968, in a game against California (UC Berkeley) when he was struck by Tom Henderson in a rebound battle.[51] He missed the next two games against Stanford and Portland.[24] His cornea would again be scratched during his pro career, which subsequently caused him to wear goggles for eye protection.[52] On January 20, the Bruins faced coach Guy Lewis's Houston Cougars in the first-ever nationally televised regular-season college basketball game, with 52,693 in attendance at the Astrodome. In a contest billed as the "Game of the Century", Cougar forward Elvin Hayes scored 39 points and had 15 rebounds, while Alcindor, suffering from his eye injury, was held to just 15 points as Houston won 71–69, ending UCLA's 47-game winning streak.[53][54] Hayes and Alcindor had a rematch in the semifinals of the NCAA tournament, where UCLA, with a healthy Alcindor, defeated Houston 101–69 en route to the national championship. UCLA limited Hayes, who was averaging 37.7 points per game, to only ten points. Wooden credited his assistant Norman for devising the diamond-and-one defense that contained Hayes.[55][56] Sports Illustrated ran a cover story on the game and used the headline: "Lew's Revenge: The Rout of Houston."[57] As a senior in 1968–69, Alcindor led the Bruins to their third consecutive national title.[28]

Alcindor performs ceremonial net cutting at Freedom Hall in Louisville in 1969 after a 20-point win over Purdue and Rick Mount in unprecedented third-straight national title en route to seven consecutive national championships for UCLA.

During the summer of 1968, Alcindor took the shahada twice and converted to Sunni Islam from Catholicism. He adopted the Arabic name Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, though he did not begin using it publicly until 1971.[58] He boycotted the 1968 Summer Olympics, deciding not to try out for the U.S. Olympic basketball team, who went on to win the gold medal.[59] Alcindor was protesting the unequal treatment of African Americans in the United States,[26][28] stating that he was "trying to point out to the world the futility of winning the gold medal for this country and then coming back to live under oppression".[60]

As the NBA did not allow college underclassmen to make an early NBA draft declaration, Alcindor completed his studies and earned a Bachelor of Arts with a major in history in 1969. In his free time, he practiced martial arts. He studied aikido in New York between his sophomore and junior year before learning Jeet Kune Do under Bruce Lee in Los Angeles.[61][62]

School records

[edit]

As of the 2019–20 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team season,[63] he still holds or shares a number of individual records at UCLA:[64]

  • Highest career scoring average: 26.4
  • Most career field goals: 943 — tied with Don MacLean
  • Most points in a season: 870 (1967)
  • Highest season scoring average: 29.0 (1967)
  • Most field goals in a season: 346 (1967) — also the second most at 303 (1969) and the third most at 294 (1968)
  • Most free throw attempts in a season: 274 (1967)
  • Most points in a single game: 61
  • Most points in a college debut game: 56[42]
  • Most field goals in a single game: 26 (vs. Washington State, February 25, 1967)

He is represented in the top ten in a number of other school records, including season and career rebounds, second only to Bill Walton.[64]

Professional career

[edit]

Milwaukee Bucks (1969–1975)

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Rookie of the Year (1969–1970)

[edit]
Alcindor displaying the skyhook over Wes Unseld of the Baltimore Bullets. The shot was almost impossible to block.

The Globetrotters offered Alcindor $1 million to play for them, but he declined and was picked first overall in the 1969 NBA draft by the Milwaukee Bucks, who were in only their second season of existence. The Bucks had won a coin toss with the Phoenix Suns for the first pick. He was also chosen first overall in the 1969 American Basketball Association draft by the New York Nets.[65] The Nets believed that they had the upper hand in securing Alcindor's services because he was from New York; however, when Alcindor told both the Bucks and the Nets that he would accept only one offer from each team, he rejected the Nets' bid as too low. Sam Gilbert negotiated the contract along with Los Angeles businessman Ralph Shapiro at no charge.[50][66] After Alcindor chose the Milwaukee Bucks' offer of $1.4 million, the Nets offered a guaranteed $3.25 million. Alcindor declined the offer, saying: "A bidding war degrades the people involved. It would make me feel like a flesh peddler, and I don't want to think like that."[67]

Alcindor's presence enabled the Bucks to claim second place in the NBA's Eastern Division with a 56–26 record (improved from 27–55 the previous year). On February 21, 1970, he scored 51 points in a 140–127 win over the SuperSonics.[68] Alcindor was an instant star, ranking second in the league in scoring (28.8 ppg) and third in rebounding (14.5 rpg), for which he was awarded the title of NBA Rookie of the Year.[24] In the series-clinching game against the Philadelphia 76ers, he recorded 46 points and 25 rebounds.[69] He was the second rookie to score at least 40 points and 25 rebounds in a playoff game, the first being Wilt Chamberlain.[70] He also set an NBA rookie record with 10 or more games of 20+ points scored during the playoffs, tied by Jayson Tatum in 2018.[71]

First championship, MVP, and Finals MVP (1970–1971)

[edit]

The next season, the Bucks acquired All-Star guard Oscar Robertson. Milwaukee went on to record the best record in the league with 66 victories in the 1970–71 season,[24] including a then-record 20 straight wins.[72] Alcindor was awarded his first of six NBA Most Valuable Player Awards, along with his first scoring title (31.7 ppg).[24] He also led the league in total points, with 2,596.[25] The Bucks won the NBA title, sweeping the Baltimore Bullets 4–0 in the 1971 NBA Finals. Alcindor posted 27 points, 12 rebounds and seven assists in Game 4,[73] and he was named the Finals MVP after averaging 27 points per game on 60.5% shooting in the series.[74]

MVP recognition and trade request (1971–1975)

[edit]

During the offseason, Alcindor and Robertson joined Bucks head coach Larry Costello on a three-week basketball tour of Africa on behalf of the State Department. In a press conference at the State Department on June 3, 1971, he stated that going forward he wanted to be called by his Muslim name, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, its translation roughly "noble one, servant of the Almighty [i.e., servant of God]".[75][76]

Abdul-Jabbar lines up a free throw. He started wearing goggles in order to avoid damage to his corneas.

Abdul-Jabbar remained a dominant force for the Bucks. The following year, he repeated as scoring champion (34.8 ppg and 2,822 total points)[25] and became the first player to be named the NBA Most Valuable Player twice in his first three years.[77] In 1974, Abdul-Jabbar led the Bucks to their fourth consecutive Midwest Division title,[78] and he won his third MVP Award in four years.[79] He was among the top five NBA players in scoring (27.0 ppg, third), rebounding (14.5 rpg, fourth), blocked shots (283, second), and field goal percentage (.539, second).[78] Milwaukee advanced to the 1974 finals, losing to the Boston Celtics in seven games.[80]

Robertson, who became a free agent in the offseason, retired in September 1974 after he was unable to agree on a contract with the Bucks.[81][82] On October 3, Abdul-Jabbar privately requested a trade to the New York Knicks, with his second choice being the Washington Bullets (now the Wizards) and his third, the Los Angeles Lakers.[83] He had never spoken negatively of the city of Milwaukee or its fans, but he said that being in the Midwest did not fit his cultural needs.[83][84][85] Two days later in a pre-season game before the 1974–75 season against the Celtics in Buffalo, New York, Abdul-Jabbar caught a fingernail in his left eye from Don Nelson and suffered a corneal abrasion; this angered him enough to punch the backboard stanchion, breaking two bones in his right hand.[83][86][87] He missed the first 16 games of the season, during which the Bucks were 3–13, and returned in late November wearing protective goggles.[87] On March 13, 1975, sportscaster Marv Albert reported that Abdul-Jabbar requested a trade to either New York or Los Angeles, preferably to the Knicks.[83][88] The following day after a loss in Milwaukee to the Lakers, Abdul-Jabbar confirmed to reporters his desire to play in another city.[89] He averaged 30.0 points during the season, but Milwaukee finished in last place in the division at 38–44.[90]

Los Angeles Lakers (1975–1989)

[edit]

Fourth and fifth MVP awards (1975–1977)

[edit]
Bill Sharman and Jack Kent Cooke at a press conference announcing the signing of Abdul-Jabbar

In 1975, the Lakers acquired Abdul-Jabbar and reserve center Walt Wesley from the Bucks for center Elmore Smith, guard Brian Winters, blue-chip rookies Dave Meyers and Junior Bridgeman, and cash.[83][90] In the 1975–76 season, his first with the Lakers, he had a dominating season, averaging 27.7 points per game and leading the league in rebounding (16.9), blocked shots (4.12), and total minutes played (3,379).[91][92] His 1,111 defensive rebounds remains the NBA single-season record (defensive rebounds were not recorded prior to the 1973–74 season).[93] He earned his fourth MVP award, becoming the first winner in Lakers' franchise history,[94] but missed the post-season for the second straight year as the Lakers finished 40–42.[95]

After acquiring a cast of no-name free agents, the Lakers were projected to finished near the bottom of the Pacific Division in 1976–77. Abdul-Jabbar helped lead the team to the best record (53–29) in the NBA, and he won his fifth MVP award, tying Bill Russell's record. Abdul-Jabbar led the league in field goal percentage (.579), was third in scoring (26.2), and was second in rebounds (13.3) and blocked shots (3.18).[96] In the playoffs, the Lakers beat the Golden State Warriors in the Western Conference semifinals, setting up a confrontation with the Portland Trail Blazers. The result was a memorable matchup, pitting Abdul-Jabbar against a young, injury-free Bill Walton. Although Abdul-Jabbar dominated the series statistically, Walton and the Trail Blazers (who were experiencing their first-ever run in the playoffs) swept the Lakers, behind Walton's skillful passing and timely plays.[97][98]

Playoff disappointments (1977–1979)

[edit]

Two minutes into the opening game of the 1977–78 season, Abdul-Jabbar broke his right hand punching Milwaukee's Kent Benson in retaliation to the rookie's elbow to his stomach. Benson suffered a black right eye and required two stitches.[99][100][101] According to Benson, Abdul-Jabbar initiated the elbowing, but there were no witnesses and it was not captured on replays.[99][101] Abdul-Jabbar, who broke the same bone in 1975 after he punched the backboard support,[100] was out for almost two months and missed 20 games.[101][102] He was fined a then-league record $5,000 but was not suspended.[100][102] Benson missed one game but was not punished by the league.[101][103] The Lakers were 8–13 when Abdul-Jabbar returned.[104] He was not named to the 1978 NBA All-Star Game, the only time in his 20-year career he was not selected to an All-Star Game.[105] Chicago's Artis Gilmore and Detroit's Bob Lanier were chosen as reserves for the West, with Walton starting at center.[106] Amid criticism from the media over his performance, Abdul-Jabbar had 39 points, 20 rebounds, six assists and four blocks in a win over the Philadelphia 76ers the day the All-Star rosters were announced.[107] He added 37 points and 30 rebounds in a victory over the New Jersey Nets (now Brooklyn) in the final game before the All-Star break.[108]

Abdul-Jabbar's play remained strong during the next two seasons, being named to the All-NBA Second Team twice, the All-Defense First Team once, and the All-Defense Second Team once.[5] The Lakers, however, continued to be stymied in the playoffs, being eliminated by the Seattle SuperSonics in both 1978 (first round) and 1979 (semifinals).[109]

Last MVP award and championship success (1979–1985)

[edit]
Abdul-Jabbar against the Boston Celtics in the 1980s

The Lakers selected Magic Johnson with the first overall pick of 1979 NBA draft. They had acquired the pick from the New Orleans Jazz (later Utah) in 1976, when league rules required that they compensate Los Angeles for their signing of free agent Gail Goodrich.[110] The addition of Johnson paved the way for the Lakers' Showtime dynasty of the 1980s, appearing in the finals eight times and winning five NBA championships.[111] While less dominant than in his younger years, Abdul-Jabbar reinforced his status as one of the greatest basketball players ever,[111] adding an additional four All-NBA First Team selections and two All-Defense First Team honors.[5] He won his record sixth MVP award in his first season with Johnson in 1979–80.[111][112] In the 1980 finals, Abdul-Jabbar averaged 33.4 points in five games, spraining his ankle in Game 5, but returning to finish the contest with 40 points and leading the team to a win. He missed Game 6, when the Lakers clinched the title, and Johnson was named the Finals MVP after recording 42 points, 15 rebounds, and seven assists in the finale.[113][114][115]

Abdul-Jabbar continued to average 20 or more points per game in the following six seasons.[111] The Lakers won another championship in 1981–82, but he suffered migraines in the finals, averaging just 18 points per game against Philadelphia.[115][116] In 14 playoff games, he finished with a 20.4 point average, the lowest of his career at the time.[115] The Lakers advanced to the 1983 NBA Finals in a rematch against the 76ers, who had acquired Moses Malone to shore up their center position after Abdul-Jabbar had outplayed their big-man duo of Darryl Dawkins and Caldwell Jones in the previous finals.[116] The 76ers swept the Lakers 4–0, and Malone was named the Finals MVP after outrebounding Abdul-Jabbar 72–30 in the series.[117] Malone had 27 offensive rebounds, which nearly equaled Abdul-Jabbar's total rebounds (30).[118]

Before the 1983–84 season, Abdul-Jabbar signed a two-year, $3 million contract with the Lakers, with none of the amount deferred.[119] He fell ill with viral hepatitis during training camp, rendering him weak for a month after returning. He scored 10 points at Golden State on December 22, 1983, dropping his season average to 17.7, almost 10 points below his career average. His scoring picked up after Christmas.[120] On the road against Utah on April 5, 1984, Abdul-Jabbar broke Chamberlain's record for most career points in the NBA. He received a pass from Johnson and scored from 15 feet (4.6 m) on his patent skyhook over the 7-foot-4-inch (2.24 m) shot-blocking specialist Mark Eaton.[41][121][122] The game was played at the Thomas & Mack Center, one of 11 home games for the Jazz in the Las Vegas Valley that season. The contest drew 18,389 fans, the Jazz's largest home crowd since moving from New Orleans before the 1979–80 season.[122] For the first time since the 1980–81 season,[123] Abdul-Jabbar led the Lakers in both scoring (21.5) and rebounding (7.3) during the season.[124] Playing consistently better than he had over the past few years,[125] he was named to the All-NBA First Team for the ninth time in his career, and he was voted to the All-NBA Defensive Second Team, the final all-defensive selection of his career.[5][125] The team advanced to the 1984 NBA Finals but lost to Boston.[125]

Abdul-Jabbar receiving a pass from Magic Johnson during the 1985 NBA Finals

The 1984–85 season was expected to be Abdul-Jabbar's final season, as he had maintained since breaking Chamberlain's record that he would be retiring.[125][126] Teams began honoring him in his final appearance in their home arena,[126][127] but the Lakers instructed them not to use the word retirement in their ceremony.[125][126] He had left open the possibility of changing his mind, but did not want to accept retirement gifts and play again, as Dave Cowens had done.[126][128] On December 5, 1984, Abdul-Jabbar agreed to a one-year, $2 million contract extension with the Lakers, with none of the money deferred.[129] He won his second Finals MVP in 1985,[111] when he became the oldest to win the award at 38 years and 54 days old.[130] He averaged 25.7 points, 9 rebounds, 5.2 assists and 1.5 blocks in the series against the Celtics.[131] He was initially outplayed in Game 1, scoring 12 points with three rebounds against 30-year-old Boston center Robert Parish, who had 18 points and eight rebounds in a 148–114 win over the Lakers, dubbed the "Memorial Day Massacre".[130] At the team's film session the following day, Abdul-Jabbar—who normally sat near the back—was seated in the front row, and accepted all of head coach Pat Riley's criticism. Before Game 2, Abdul-Jabbar asked if his father could ride on the team bus to the game. Typically a hard-liner on rules, Riley agreed to make an exception. Abdul-Jabbar bounced back with 30 points, 17 rebounds, eight assists and three blocks in a 109–102 victory. In the Lakers’ four wins, he averaged 30.2 points, 11.3 rebounds, 6.5 assists and 2.0 blocks.[132] The title ended the Celtics' streak of eight consecutive championships against the Lakers.[111]

Final playing years and sixth ring (1985–1989)

[edit]

Abdul-Jabbar played in his 17th season in 1985–86, breaking the previous NBA record for seasons played of 16, held by Dolph Schayes, John Havlicek, Paul Silas, and Elvin Hayes.[133][134][135] On November 12, 1985, he signed to a one-year extension of his contract at the same $2 million salary, while maintaining the option to retire after the 1985–86 season.[136] Prior to the 1986–87 season, he gained 13 pounds (5.9 kg), reaching close to 270 pounds (120 kg), to compete against the growing number of 7-footers (2.1 m) in the league.[137] The Lakers advanced to the NBA Finals in each of his final three seasons, starting with a championship over Boston in 1987.[1] Afterwards, he signed a two-year contract with the Lakers.[138]

Riley guaranteed that the Lakers would be the first NBA team to win consecutive titles since the 1968–69 Celtics, and they defeated the Detroit Pistons for the championship in 1988.[1][139] Abdul-Jabbar made only 3 of 14 shots in Game 6 of the finals, but he converted two free throws with 14 seconds remaining to extend the series to seven games.[140] After winning the season finale, in which he had only four points and three rebounds, the 41-year-old center announced in the locker room that he would return for one more season before retiring.[140][141] His points, rebounds, and minutes had dropped in his 19th season,[141][142][143] and there were reports prior to the game that he was retiring after the contest.[140][144] On his "retirement tour" he received standing ovations at games, both home and away, and gifts ranging from a yacht that said "Captain Skyhook" to framed jerseys from his career to a Persian rug.[145] At the Forum against Seattle in his final regular season game,[145] every Laker came onto the court wearing Abdul-Jabbar's trademark goggles.[146] The Lakers lost to the Pistons in a four-game sweep in the 1989 finals.[147]

At the time of his retirement, Abdul-Jabbar held the record for most career games played in the NBA.[148] He was also the all-time record holder for most minutes played (57,446), most field goals made (15,837), most points (38,387), and most 1,000-point seasons (19).[41]

Coaching career

[edit]

In 1995, Abdul-Jabbar began expressing an interest in coaching and imparting knowledge from his playing days.[149][150] His opportunities were limited despite the success he enjoyed during his playing days. During his playing years, Abdul-Jabbar had developed a reputation for being introverted and sullen. He was often unfriendly with the media.[149][150][151] His sensitivity and shyness created a perception of him being aloof and surly.[149][152] At the time, his mentality was that he either did not have the time or did not owe anything to anyone.[153] Magic Johnson recalled as a kid being brushed off after asking him for an autograph. Abdul-Jabbar might freeze out a reporter if they touched him, and he once refused to stop reading the newspaper while giving an interview.[151]

Abdul-Jabbar had spent most of his career with a reserved attitude towards media attention (since he did not have to deal with it as a star at UCLA) before he softened up near the end of his career. Abdul-Jabbar said: "I didn't understand that I also had affected people that way and that's what it was all about. I always saw it like they were trying to pry. I was way too suspicious and I paid a price for it."[154] However, he believes it was his reputation as a "difficult person", alongside his attempts at trying to break into coaching while nearing the age of fifty, that affected his chances of becoming a head coach within the NBA or NCAA.[155]

Abdul-Jabbar worked as an assistant for the Los Angeles Clippers and the Seattle SuperSonics, helping mentor, among others, their young centers, Michael Olowokandi and Jerome James.[156] Abdul-Jabbar was the head coach of the Oklahoma Storm of the United States Basketball League in 2002, leading the team to the league's championship that season, but he failed to land the head coaching position at Columbia University a year later.[157] He then worked as a scout for the New York Knicks.[158] He returned to the Lakers as a special assistant coach to Phil Jackson for six seasons (2005–2011). Early on, he mentored their young center, Andrew Bynum.[159][160] Abdul-Jabbar also served as a volunteer coach at Alchesay High School on the Fort Apache Indian Reservation in Whiteriver, Arizona, in 1998.[161] He moved on from coaching in 2013 after unsuccessfully lobbying for open head coach positions with UCLA and the Milwaukee Bucks.[162]

Player profile

[edit]

On offense, Abdul-Jabbar was a dominant low-post threat. In contrast to other low-post specialists like Wilt Chamberlain or Shaquille O'Neal, he was a slender giant, standing 7 ft 2 in (2.18 m) tall while weighing around 240 to 250 lb (110 to 115 kg), although he bulked to 270 lb (120 kg) in 1986;[137][163] in his early years, he used that frame for agility and speed while in later years he utilized a bigger frame for trying to guard under the basket.[137] Abdul-Jabbar was famous for his ambidextrous skyhook shot. It contributed to his .559 career field goal percentage, which ranked eighth in NBA history at the time of his retirement,[d] and reputation as a feared clutch shooter.[166] He shot above 50% in every season but his last.[167]

Abdul-Jabbar maintained a dominant presence on defense. He was selected to the NBA All-Defensive Team eleven times.[1] He frustrated opponents with his superior shot-blocking ability and denied an average of 2.6 shots a game. He was not an aggressive rebounder, relying more on his size as a 7-footer instead of positioning.[168][169] After the pounding he endured early in his career, his rebounding average fell to between six or eight a game in his latter years.[1] As a teammate, Abdul-Jabbar exuded natural leadership and was affectionately called "Cap",[5] or "Captain", by his colleagues.[170] He had an even temperament, which Riley said made him coachable.[171]

A strict fitness regime made Abdul-Jabbar one of the most durable players of all time.[172] He began a year-around conditioning program at age 26.[173] While in Los Angeles, Abdul-Jabbar started doing yoga in 1976 to improve his flexibility, and was notable for his physical fitness regimen.[174] He said: "There is no way I could have played as long as I did without yoga."[175] Because of his metabolism, he had difficulty putting on weight. Prior to the 1979–80 season, he gained 10 pounds (4.5 kg) from 240 to 250 pounds (110 kg) after switching from free weights to Nautilus equipment. He also switched that offseason from tai chi to yoga.[176] To reduce wear during his later years, Riley did not have him inbound the ball on made baskets, and had him wait at the opposite end of the court on free throws.[177] In what he described as playing a "smarter game" to conserve energy, Abdul-Jabbar sometimes would be the last player to set up on offense by several seconds after staying behind on defense to see if the Lakers scored on a fast break.[173][178] In 1981, he responded to criticism that he did not hustle: "You have to understand I have to play 42 to 45 minutes a night, and it's like mowing a huge estate lawn. If you rush out and run around furiously, it's self-defeating. You'll be worn out just at the point when you're most needed."[179] Abdul-Jabbar finished his career with then-NBA records of 20 seasons and 1,560 games played,[180] later broken by former Celtics center Robert Parish.[181]

Abdul-Jabbar began wearing his trademark goggles after getting poked in the eye during preseason in 1974. He continued wearing them for years until abandoning them in the 1979 playoffs. He resumed wearing goggles in October 1980 after being accidentally poked in the right eye by Houston's Rudy Tomjanovich.[182] After years of being jabbed in the eyes, Abdul-Jabbar developed corneal erosion syndrome, occasionally experiencing pain when his eyes dry up. He missed three games in December 1986 due to the condition.[183]

Skyhook

[edit]

Abdul-Jabbar was well known for his trademark skyhook, a hook shot in which he raised the ball and released it at the highest point of his arm's arching motion. He could shoot the skyhook from up to 16 feet (4.9 m). With his long arms and great height, he released the ball so high that it was difficult for a defender to block without committing a goaltending violation.[184][185] His body being between the defender and the ball made it further difficult to block,[184] as did extending his non-shooting arm to fend off opponents.[167] He was stronger shooting the skyhook with his right hand than he was with his left, which he developed in his later years.[167]

According to Abdul-Jabbar, he learned the move in fifth grade after practicing with the ambidextrious Mikan Drill and soon learned to value it, as it was "the only shot I could use that didn't get smashed back in my face".[153] He also watched Cliff Hagan shoot the hook with the St. Louis Hawks.[167] To prevent his hook from being blocked from behind, he was advised by Wooden to do away with the typical sweeping motion of a hook shot, instead keeping the ball close to his body and shooting with a straighter motion. Abdul-Jabbar's hook shot improved in his junior year at UCLA, after the dunk was banned. In his final college years, he often released the ball several feet above the rim.[186]

Legacy

[edit]

Abdul-Jabbar won a record six MVP awards.[1][8] His 38,387 career points remained the NBA's career scoring record until February 7, 2023, when he was surpassed by LeBron James of the Lakers in Los Angeles.[187] Abdul-Jabbar attended the game, and passed the game ball to James during the in-game ceremony after the record was broken.[188] Abdul-Jabbar held the scoring mark for nearly 39 years, the longest span in league history.[189] His skyhook is considered one of the most unstoppable shots ever.[163] He won six NBA championships and two Finals MVP awards, was voted to 15 All-NBA and 11 All-Defensive Teams, and was selected to 19 All-Star teams,[190] a record which stood until it was surpassed by James in 2024.[191] Abdul-Jabbar was named to the NBA's 35th, 50th, and 75th anniversary teams.[192] He averaged 24.6 points, 11.2 rebounds, 3.6 assists, and 2.6 blocks per game in his career,[190] including three straight seasons where he averaged at least 30 points and 16 rebounds, and six times he averaged at least 27 points and 14.5 rebounds in the same season.[193] He is ranked as the NBA's third leading all-time rebounder (17,440).[194] He is the third all-time in registered blocks (3,189),[195] which is impressive because this basketball statistic was not recorded until the fourth year of his career (1974).[196] He is one of five players who have led the NBA in rebounding and blocks in the same season.[e]

Abdul-Jabbar combined dominance during his career peak with the longevity and sustained excellence of his later years.[8] A pioneer in using yoga in the NBA,[163] he also credited Bruce Lee with teaching him "the discipline and spirituality of martial arts, which was greatly responsible for me being able to play competitively in the NBA for 20 years with very few injuries".[199] Abdul-Jabbar played in 95 percent of his team's regular-season games during his career,[112] including 80 or more games in 11 of his 20 seasons. Five times he played in all 82 games.[163] After claiming his sixth and final MVP in 1980, he continued to average above 20 points in the following six seasons,[1] including 23 points per game in his 17th season at age 38.[200] He earned first-team All-NBA selections that were 15 years apart and Finals MVPs 14 seasons from each other.[201]

Among the most graceful basketball players ever,[112] Abdul-Jabbar is regarded as one of the best centers ever and one of the greatest players in NBA history;[6] he was voted the best center of all time by ESPN ahead of Wilt Chamberlain in 2007,[202] and ranked No. 4 in Slam's "Top 100 Players Of All-Time" in 2018,[203] and No. 3 in ESPN's list of the top 74 NBA players of all time in 2020, the best center ever ahead of Bill Russell and Chamberlain.[204] League experts and basketball legends frequently mentioned him when considering the greatest player of all time.[200][205] Riley said in 1985: "Why judge anymore? When a man has broken records, won championships, endured tremendous criticism and responsibility, why judge? Let's toast him as the greatest player ever."[1][177] In 2023, as James was on the verge of breaking the NBA career scoring record, Abdul-Jabbar remained as Riley's choice as the greatest: "We don't win championships without the greatest player in the history of the game, who had the greatest weapon in the history of the game. The skyhook was unstoppable. Last minute of the game, it's going to one guy". As president of the Miami Heat, Riley had won two NBA titles with James on their roster.[206] Isiah Thomas remarked: "If they say the numbers don't lie, then Kareem is the greatest ever to play the game."[207] In 2013, Julius Erving said: "In terms of players all-time, Kareem is still the number one guy. He's the guy you gotta start your franchise with."[208] In 2015, ESPN named Abdul-Jabbar the best center in NBA history,[200] and ranked him No. 2 behind Michael Jordan among the greatest NBA players ever.[8] While Jordan's shots were enthralling and considered unfathomable, Abdul-Jabbar's skyhook appeared automatic, and he himself called the shot "unsexy".[1][8] In 2016, Abdul-Jabbar's only recognized rookie card became the most expensive basketball card ever sold (the record has since been surpassed) when it went for $501,900 at auction.[209] In 2022, he was ranked No. 3 (first in his position) in ESPN's NBA 75th Anniversary Team list,[210] and No. 3 (behind Jordan and James) in a similar list by The Athletic.[211]

Abdul-Jabbar was also the first ever NBA player to sign a sneaker endorsement deal with Adidas in 1978. He went on to become the first ever player overall with a signature shoe shortly after.[212][213] In 2014, the UCLA Bruins wore "The Blueprint" Crazy 8 against Colorado on Feb. 13, and the shoes were sold online and at an Adidas store in New Orleans—during NBA All-Star weekend—starting on Feb. 14.[214]

NBA career statistics

[edit]
Legend
  GP Games 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
 †  Won an NBA championship  *  Led the league  ‡  NBA record

Regular season

[edit]
Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
1969–70 Milwaukee 82* 43.1 .518 .653 14.5 4.1 28.8
1970–71 Milwaukee 82 40.1 .577 .690 16.0 3.3 31.7*
1971–72 Milwaukee 81 44.2 .574 .689 16.6 4.6 34.8*
1972–73 Milwaukee 76 42.8 .554 .713 16.1 5.0 30.2
1973–74 Milwaukee 81 43.8 .539 .702 14.5 4.8 1.4 3.5 27.0
1974–75 Milwaukee 65 42.3 .513 .763 14.0 4.1 1.0 3.3* 30.0
1975–76 L.A. Lakers 82 82 41.2 .529 .703 16.9* 5.0 1.5 4.1* 27.7
1976–77 L.A. Lakers 82 82 36.8 .579* .701 13.3 3.9 1.2 3.2 26.2
1977–78 L.A. Lakers 62 36.5 .550 .783 12.9 4.3 1.7 3.0 25.8
1978–79 L.A. Lakers 80 39.5 .577 .736 12.8 5.4 1.0 4.0* 23.8
1979–80 L.A. Lakers 82 38.3 .604 .000 .765 10.8 4.5 1.0 3.4* 24.8
1980–81 L.A. Lakers 80 37.2 .574 .000 .766 10.3 3.4 .7 2.9 26.2
1981–82 L.A. Lakers 76 76 35.2 .579 .000 .706 8.7 3.0 .8 2.7 23.9
1982–83 L.A. Lakers 79 79 32.3 .588 .000 .749 7.5 2.5 .8 2.2 21.8
1983–84 L.A. Lakers 80 80 32.8 .578 .000 .723 7.3 2.6 .7 1.8 21.5
1984–85 L.A. Lakers 79 79 33.3 .599 .000 .732 7.9 3.2 .8 2.1 22.0
1985–86 L.A. Lakers 79 79 33.3 .564 .000 .765 6.1 3.5 .8 1.6 23.4
1986–87 L.A. Lakers 78 78 31.3 .564 .333 .714 6.7 2.6 .6 1.2 17.5
1987–88 L.A. Lakers 80 80 28.9 .532 .000 .762 6.0 1.7 .6 1.2 14.6
1988–89 L.A. Lakers 74 74 22.9 .475 .000 .739 4.5 1.0 .5 1.1 10.1
Career[5] 1,560 789 36.8 .559 .056 .721 11.2 3.6 .9 2.6 24.6
All-Star[5] 18 13 24.9 .493 .000 .820 8.3 2.8 .4 2.1‡ 13.9

Playoffs

[edit]
Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
1970 Milwaukee 10 43.5 .567 .733 16.8 4.1 35.2
1971 Milwaukee 14 41.2 .515 .673 17.0 2.5 26.6
1972 Milwaukee 11 46.4 .437 .704 18.2 5.1 28.7
1973 Milwaukee 6 46.0 .428 .543 16.2 2.8 22.8
1974 Milwaukee 16 47.4 .557 .736 15.8 4.9 1.3 2.4 32.2
1977 L.A. Lakers 11 42.5 .607 .725 17.7 4.1 1.7 3.5 34.6
1978 L.A. Lakers 3 44.7 .521 .556 13.7 3.7 .7 4.0 27.0
1979 L.A. Lakers 8 45.9 .579 .839 12.6 4.8 1.0 4.1 28.5
1980 L.A. Lakers 15 41.2 .572 .790 12.1 3.1 1.1 3.9 31.9
1981 L.A. Lakers 3 44.7 .462 .714 16.7 4.0 1.0 2.7 26.7
1982 L.A. Lakers 14 35.2 .520 .632 8.5 3.6 1.0 3.2 20.4
1983 L.A. Lakers 15 39.2 .568 .000 .755 7.7 2.8 1.1 3.7 27.1
1984 L.A. Lakers 21 36.5 .555 .750 8.2 3.8 1.1 2.1 23.9
1985 L.A. Lakers 19 19 32.1 .560 .777 8.1 4.0 1.2 1.9 21.9
1986 L.A. Lakers 14 14 34.9 .557 .787 5.9 3.5 1.1 1.7 25.9
1987 L.A. Lakers 18 18 31.1 .530 .000 .795 6.8 2.0 .4 1.9 19.2
1988 L.A. Lakers 24 24 29.9 .464 .000 .789 5.5 1.5 .6 1.5 14.1
1989 L.A. Lakers 15 15 23.4 .463 .721 3.9 1.3 .3 .7 11.1
Career[5] 237 90 37.3 .533 .000 .740 10.5 3.2 1.0 2.4 24.3

Awards and honors

[edit]

Presidential Medal of Freedom (2016)

Halls of Fame

High School

NCAA

NBA

As head coach:

  • USBL champion (2002)

As assistant coach:

Media

Film and television

[edit]
Actor Shavar Ross and Abdul-Jabbar on the set of Diff'rent Strokes, c. 1982

Playing in Los Angeles facilitated Abdul-Jabbar's trying his hand at acting. He made his film debut in Bruce Lee's 1972 film Game of Death.[9]

In 1980, Abdul-Jabbar played co-pilot Roger Murdock in Airplane![24] He has a scene in which a little boy looks at him and remarks that he is in fact Abdul-Jabbar,[242] spoofing the appearance of football star Elroy "Crazylegs" Hirsch as an airplane pilot in the 1957 drama that served as the inspiration for Airplane!, Zero Hour![243] Staying in character, Abdul-Jabbar states that he is merely Roger Murdock, an airline co-pilot; the boy continues to insist that Abdul-Jabbar is "the greatest", but that according to his father he does not "work hard on defense" and that he does not "really try, except during the playoffs".[242] This causes Abdul-Jabbar's character to snap and break character: "The hell I don't!" He then grabs the boy and snarls that he has "been hearing that crap ever since I was at UCLA" and been "busting my buns every night!" He instructs the boy: "Tell your old man to drag [Bill] Walton and [Bob] Lanier up and down the court for 48 minutes."[242][244] When Murdock loses consciousness later in the film, he collapses at the controls wearing Abdul-Jabbar's goggles and yellow Lakers' shorts.[242] In 2014, Abdul-Jabbar and Airplane! co-star Robert Hays (character Ted Striker) reprised their Airplane! roles in a parody commercial promoting Wisconsin tourism.[245]

Abdul-Jabbar (center) at the Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear with Comedy Central hosts Stephen Colbert and Jon Stewart

Abdul-Jabbar has had numerous other television and film appearances, often playing himself. He has had roles in movies such as Fletch, Troop Beverly Hills and Forget Paris, and television series such as Full House, Living Single, Amen, Everybody Loves Raymond, Martin, Diff'rent Strokes (his height humorously contrasted with that of diminutive child star Gary Coleman), The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, Scrubs, 21 Jump Street,[246] Emergency!, Man from Atlantis, and New Girl.[247] Abdul-Jabbar played a genie in a lamp in a 1984 episode of Tales from the Darkside. He also played himself on the February 10, 1994, episode of the sketch comedy television series In Living Color.[248]

Abdul-Jabbar appeared in the television version of Stephen King's The Stand, played the Archangel of Basketball in Slam Dunk Ernest, and had a brief non-speaking cameo appearance in BASEketball.[249] Abdul-Jabbar was also the co-executive producer of the 1994 TV film The Vernon Johns Story.[250] He has also made appearances on The Colbert Report in a 2006 skit called "HipHopKetball II: The ReJazzebration Remix '06",[251] and in 2008 as a stage manager who is sent out on a mission to find Nazi gold.[252] Abdul-Jabbar also voiced himself in a 2011 episode of The Simpsons titled "Love Is a Many Strangled Thing".[253] He had a recurring role as himself on the NBC series Guys with Kids, which aired from 2012 to 2013.[249] On Al Jazeera English he expressed his desire to be remembered not just as a player, but also as somebody who used their mind and made other contributions.[254]

Abdul-Jabbar appeared in the music video for "Good Goodbye", a 2017 song by rock band Linkin Park featuring rappers Pusha T and Stormzy. In the video, Abdul-Jabbar plays the role of a warlord or emperor of a dunk contest where Linkin Park lead singer Chester Bennington has to dunk on several people in order to save his own life. In an interview about the video, Bennington said that he believes Abdul-Jabbar is the "greatest [basketball] player of all-time".[255]

In February 2019, he appeared in season 12 episode 16 of The Big Bang Theory, "The D&D Vortex".[256] In 2021, Abdul-Jabbar made a guest appearance as himself in a season 2 episode of Dave. The episode he appeared in was also named after him.[257] Abdul-Jabbar makes a cameo appearance as himself in the 2022 Netflix film Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery.[258] In 2023, Abdul-Jabbar appeared as himself in season 7, episode 3 of the Showtime series Billions.[259]

Writing

[edit]

In September 2018, Abdul-Jabbar was announced as one of the writers for the July 2019 revival of Veronica Mars.[260][261][262]

Documentaries

[edit]

On February 10, 2011, Abdul-Jabbar debuted his film On the Shoulders of Giants, documenting the tumultuous journey of the famed yet often-overlooked New York Renaissance professional basketball team, at Science Park High School in Newark, New Jersey. The event was simulcast live throughout the school, city, and state.[263] In 2015, he appeared in Kareem: Minority of One, an HBO documentary on his life.[264] In 2020, Abdul-Jabbar was the executive producer and narrator of the History channel special Black Patriots: Heroes of the Revolution.[265] He was nominated for an Emmy Award for his narration.[266]

Reality television

[edit]

Abdul-Jabbar participated in the 2013 ABC reality series Splash, a celebrity diving competition.[267] In April 2018, Abdul-Jabbar competed in the all-athlete season of season 26 of Dancing with the Stars and partnered with professional dancer Lindsay Arnold.[268]

Writing and activism

[edit]
Book signing, 2007

In 1967, Abdul-Jabbar was the only college athlete to attend the Cleveland Summit, a meeting of prominent black athletes who convened in support of Muhammad Ali's refusal to fight in the Vietnam War.[59]

Abdul-Jabbar became a best-selling author and cultural critic.[269][270] He published several books, mostly on African-American history.[271] His first book, his autobiography Giant Steps, was written in 1983 with co-author Peter Knobler. The book's title is an homage to jazz great John Coltrane, referring to his album Giant Steps. Others include On the Shoulders of Giants: My Journey Through the Harlem Renaissance,[272] co-written with Raymond Obstfeld, and Brothers in Arms: The Epic Story of the 761st Tank Battalion, World War II's Forgotten Heroes, co-written with Anthony Walton, which is a history of the first black armored unit to fight in World War II.[273]

In 2015, Abdul-Jabbar made his adult fiction writing debut with the Victorian mystery novel Mycroft Holmes, based around the titular character from the Sherlock Holmes stories.[274] Two sequels followed: Mycroft and Sherlock (2018) and Mycroft and Sherlock: The Empty Birdcage (2019). All three titles were co-written with Anna Waterhouse.[275][276]

A regular contributor to discussions about issues of race and religion, among other topics, in national magazines and on television, Abdul-Jabbar has written a regular column for Time. He appeared on Meet the Press on January 25, 2015, to talk about a column saying that Islam should not be blamed for the actions of violent extremists, just as Christianity has not been blamed for the actions of violent extremists who profess Christianity.[277][278] When asked about being Muslim, he said: "I don't have any misgiving about my faith. I'm very concerned about the people who claim to be Muslims that are murdering people and creating all this mayhem in the world. That is not what Islam is about, and that should not be what people think of when they think about Muslims. But it's up to all of us to do something about all of it."[279]

In November 2014, Abdul-Jabbar published an essay in Jacobin calling for just compensation for college athletes, writing that "in the name of fairness, we must bring an end to the indentured servitude of college athletes and start paying them what they are worth."[280] Commenting on Donald Trump's 2017 travel ban, he condemned it, saying: "The absence of reason and compassion is the very definition of pure evil because it is a rejection of our sacred values, distilled from millennia of struggle."[281]

In 2017, Abdul-Jabber spoke at an event marking Ramadan organized by the Israeli consul Sam Grundwerg at the Israeli consulate in Los Angeles, stressing the importance of Muslim-Jewish relations and cross-cultural exchange.[282]

In June 2021, he published an essay in Jacobin on the negative impact on public health of those refusing to receive the COVID-19 vaccine, criticizing Kyrie Irving, among others.[283] Abdul-Jabbar began publishing an online newsletter in 2021.[284]

Government appointments

[edit]

Cultural ambassador

[edit]
Hillary Clinton and Abdul-Jabbar, 2012

In January 2012, United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced that Abdul-Jabbar had accepted a position as a cultural ambassador for the United States.[285] During the announcement press conference, Abdul-Jabbar commented on the historical legacy of African-Americans as representatives of U.S. culture: "I remember when Louis Armstrong first did it back for President Kennedy, one of my heroes. So it's nice to be following in his footsteps."[286] As part of this role, Abdul-Jabbar traveled to Brazil to promote education for local youths.[287]

President's Council on Fitness, Sports, and Nutrition

[edit]

Former President Barack Obama announced in his last days of office that he has appointed Abdul-Jabbar along with Gabrielle Douglas and Carli Lloyd to the President's Council on Fitness, Sports, and Nutrition.[288]

Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee

[edit]

In January 2017, Abdul-Jabbar was appointed to the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee by United States Secretary of the Treasury Steven Mnuchin. According to the United States Mint, Abdul-Jabbar is a keen coin collector whose interest in the life of Alexander Hamilton had led him into the hobby. He resigned in 2018 due to what the Mint described as "increasing personal obligations".[289]

Personal life

[edit]
Abdul-Jabbar (below, far right) and other former NBA players visit the New York NBA Store in January 2005

Abdul-Jabbar met Habiba Abdul-Jabbar (born Janice Brown) at a Lakers game during his senior year at UCLA.[290] They married in 1971,[291] and together had three children: daughters Habiba and Sultana and son Kareem Jr., who played basketball at Western Kentucky after attending Valparaiso.[292][293] Abdul-Jabbar and Janice divorced in 1978. He has another son, Amir, with Cheryl Pistono. Another son, Adam, made an appearance on the TV sitcom Full House with him.[294]

In 1983, Abdul-Jabbar's house burned down. Many of his belongings, including his beloved jazz LP collection of about 3,000 albums, were destroyed.[295] Many Lakers fans sent and brought him albums, which he found uplifting.[154]

In 2016, Abdul-Jabbar performed a tribute to friend Muhammad Ali along with Chance the Rapper.[296]

Religion and name

[edit]

Alcindor grew up in the Catholic Church, but abandoned the faith when he left his home in New York for UCLA.[297] At age 24 in 1971, he converted to Islam and legally became Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, which means "noble one, servant of the Almighty".[298] He was named by Hamaas Abdul Khaalis of the Hanafi Movement which split from the Nation of Islam.[298][299] Abdul-Jabbar purchased and donated 7700 16th Street NW, a house in Washington, D.C., for Khaalis to use as the Hanafi Madh-Hab Center; a few years later, the location would become the place of the 1973 Hanafi Muslim massacre. Eventually, Kareem "found that [he] disagreed with some of Hamaas' teachings about the Quran, and [they] parted ways." In 1973, Abdul-Jabbar embarked on a pilgrimage to Libya and Saudi Arabia with the goal of learning enough Arabic for self-study of the Quran, and he "emerged from this pilgrimage with [his] beliefs clarified and [his] faith renewed".[298] Abdul-Jabbar was also heavily influenced by Malcolm X, a leader of the Nation of Islam.[298] Abdul-Jabbar was invited to join the group, but he declined.[298][300]

Abdul-Jabbar has spoken about the thinking that was behind his name change when he converted to Islam.[301] He stated that he was "latching on to something that was part of my heritage, because many of the slaves who were brought here were Muslims. My family was brought to America by a French planter named Alcindor, who came here from Trinidad in the 18th century. My people were Yoruba, and their culture survived slavery ... My father found out about that when I was a kid, and it gave me all I needed to know that, hey, I was somebody, even if nobody else knew about it. When I was a kid, no one would believe anything positive that you could say about black people. And that's a terrible burden on black people, because they don't have an accurate idea of their history, which has been either suppressed or distorted."[302] His name change further eroded his public image in the United States, mostly in white areas.[303]

In 1998, Abdul-Jabbar reached a settlement after he sued Miami Dolphins running back Karim Abdul-Jabbar (now Abdul-Karim al-Jabbar, born Sharmon Shah) because he felt Karim was profiting off the name he made famous by having the Abdul-Jabbar moniker and number 33 on his Dolphins jersey. As a result, the younger Abdul-Jabbar had to change his jersey nameplate to "Abdul" while playing for the Dolphins.[304] The football player had also been an athlete at UCLA.[305]

Health problems

[edit]

Abdul-Jabbar suffers from migraines,[306] and his use of cannabis to reduce the symptoms has had legal ramifications.[307] In November 2009, Abdul-Jabbar announced that he was suffering from a form of leukemia, Philadelphia chromosome-positive chronic myeloid leukemia, a cancer of the blood and bone marrow. The disease was diagnosed in December 2008, but Abdul-Jabbar said his condition could be managed by taking oral medication daily, seeing his specialist every other month, and having his blood analyzed regularly. He expressed in a 2009 press conference that he did not believe the illness would stop him from leading a normal life.[308][309] Abdul-Jabbar is a spokesman for Novartis, the company that produces Gleevec, his cancer medication.[310]

In February 2011, Abdul-Jabbar announced via Twitter that his leukemia was gone and he was "100% cancer free".[311] A few days later, he clarified his misstatement: "You're never really cancer-free and I should have known that. My cancer right now is at an absolute minimum."[310] In April 2015, Abdul-Jabbar was admitted to hospital when he was diagnosed with cardiovascular disease. Later that week, on his 68th birthday, he underwent quadruple coronary bypass surgery at the UCLA Medical Center.[312]

In 2020 Abdul-Jabbar revealed that he had been diagnosed with prostate cancer eleven years earlier.[313]

In February 2023, he spoke out about his atrial fibrillation diagnosis. He partnered with Bristol Myers Squibb and Pfizer's "No Time to Wait"[314] to raise awareness of the symptoms of the irregular and rapid heart rhythm condition which increase the risk of stroke.[315] In December 2023, he was hospitalized after he fell and broke his hip while attending a concert.[316]

Non-athletic honors

[edit]

In 2011, Abdul-Jabbar was awarded the Double Helix Medal for his work in raising awareness for cancer research.[317][318] Also in 2011, Abdul-Jabbar received an honorary degree from New York Institute of Technology.[319] In 2016, Abdul-Jabbar was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by outgoing U.S. President Barack Obama.[320] In 2020, Abdul-Jabbar was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Narrator for his work on the documentary special Black Patriots: Heroes of The Revolution.[266] After receiving an honorary degree from the same,[321] Abdul-Jabbar was named Harvard College Class Day speaker in 2025.[322]

Works

[edit]

Books

[edit]
  • Abdul-Jabbar, Kareem; Knobler, Peter (1983). Giant Steps. New York: Bantam Books. ISBN 0553050443.
  • Kareem, with Mignon McCarthy (1990) ISBN 0-394-55927-4.
  • Selected from Giant Steps (Writers' Voices) (1999) ISBN 0-7857-9912-5.
  • Black Profiles in Courage: A Legacy of African-American Achievement, with Alan Steinberg (1996) ISBN 0-688-13097-6.
  • A Season on the Reservation: My Sojourn with the White Mountain Apaches, with Stephen Singular (2000) ISBN 0-688-17077-3.
  • Brothers in Arms: The Epic Story of the 761st Tank Battalion, World War II's Forgotten Heroes with Anthony Walton (2004) ISBN 978-0-7679-0913-6.
  • On the Shoulders of Giants: My Journey Through the Harlem Renaissance with Raymond Obstfeld (2007) ISBN 978-1-4165-3488-4.
  • What Color Is My World? The Lost History of African American Inventors with Raymond Obstfeld (2012) ISBN 978-0-7636-4564-9.
  • Streetball Crew Book One Sasquatch in the Paint with Raymond Obstfeld (2013) ISBN 978-1-4231-7870-5.
  • Streetball Crew Book Two Stealing the Game with Raymond Obstfeld (2015) ISBN 978-1423178712.
  • Mycroft Holmes with Anna Waterhouse (September 2015) ISBN 978-1-7832-9153-3.
  • Writings on the Wall: Searching for a New Equality Beyond Black and White with Raymond Obstfeld (2016) ISBN 978-1-6189-3171-9.
  • Coach Wooden and Me: Our 50-Year Friendship On and Off the Court (2017) ISBN 978-1538760468.
  • Becoming Kareem: Growing Up On and Off the Court (2017) ISBN 978-0316555388.
  • Mycroft Holmes and The Apocalypse Handbook. Illustrated by Josh Cassara. Titan Comics. 2017. ISBN 978-1785853005.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  • Mycroft and Sherlock with Anna Waterhouse (October 9, 2018) ISBN 978-1785659256.
  • Mycroft and Sherlock: The Empty Birdcage with Anna Waterhouse (September 24, 2019) ISBN 978-1785659300.

Audio book

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Notes

[edit]

References

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from Grokipedia
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (born Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor Jr., April 16, 1947) is a retired American professional basketball player recognized as one of the most dominant centers and accomplished scorers in NBA history.[1][2][3] As Lew Alcindor, he starred at UCLA from 1966 to 1969, leading the Bruins to three consecutive NCAA championships under coach John Wooden with an 88-2 record and earning three-time consensus college player of the year honors.[4][5][6] Drafted first overall by the Milwaukee Bucks in 1969, he converted to Islam during college and legally changed his name to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in 1971 shortly after guiding the Bucks to their inaugural NBA title and securing league MVP honors.[7][8] Traded to the Los Angeles Lakers in 1975, he anchored a dynasty alongside Magic Johnson, capturing five more championships (1980, 1982, 1985, 1987, 1988), two Finals MVPs, and a then-record six regular-season MVPs while amassing 38,387 points to become the NBA's all-time leading scorer—a mark held until LeBron James surpassed it in 2023.[3][9][1] Renowned for his signature skyhook shot, which combined precision and unguardable length at 7 feet 2 inches tall, Abdul-Jabbar retired in 1989 after 20 seasons marked by 19 All-Star selections and 15 All-NBA honors, later receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2016 for his contributions to basketball and public service.[3][2]

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Family Background

Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor Jr., later known as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, was born on April 16, 1947, in Harlem, New York City, as the only child of Cora Lillian Alcindor and Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor Sr.[10][2] His mother worked as a department store price checker, while his father served as a transit police officer with the New York Police Department and pursued music as a jazz trombonist, having studied at the Juilliard School before military service in World War II.[11][12] The family resided in a middle-class household in Harlem before relocating to Manhattan in 1950.[12] Alcindor's paternal lineage traced to immigrants from Trinidad and Tobago who arrived in the United States around 1917, with ancestors originally brought from Africa via the Caribbean by French planters.[13] His mother hailed from North Carolina.[2] Raised in a Roman Catholic family, Alcindor attended parochial schools in New York, where his exceptional height became evident early; he measured 22.5 inches and weighed 12 pounds 11 ounces at birth, reached 5 feet 8 inches by age nine, and towered over peers throughout elementary school.[2][12] This rapid growth, combined with a stable urban upbringing, shaped his initial forays into athletics, though basketball dominance emerged later in adolescence.[10]

High School Career

Alcindor attended Power Memorial Academy, an all-boys Catholic high school in Manhattan, New York City, where he played varsity basketball from 1961 to 1965.[2] During this period, standing at 7 feet 1 inch and playing center, he led the team to three consecutive championships in the Catholic High School Athletic Association (CHSAA), the city's premier Catholic league.[2] [14] He was named the tournament's most valuable player each year.[2] Under Alcindor's dominance, Power Memorial compiled an overall record of 95 wins in 101 games, suffering only six losses across his tenure.[2] The team's most notable achievement was a 71-game winning streak spanning multiple seasons, beginning after an early loss and including undefeated CHSAA campaigns in 1963 and 1964.[14] [5] This streak, fueled by Alcindor's scoring and rebounding prowess—averaging around 27 points and 15 rebounds per game—drew national attention to the program.[15] The streak ended on January 30, 1965, in a highly publicized matchup against DeMatha Catholic High School from Hyattsville, Maryland, played before 4,000 spectators at the University of Maryland's Cole Field House.[16] DeMatha won 46–43 in a defensive battle, with Alcindor limited to 16 points and 14 rebounds—below his norms—amid tight man-to-man marking.[16] The game, often hailed as one of the greatest in high school basketball history due to its upset nature and star power, underscored Alcindor's centrality to Power Memorial's success while highlighting the challenges of facing elite competition outside New York.[16] [17]

College Career at UCLA

Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor Jr., known as Lew Alcindor during his college years, enrolled at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in 1965 to play basketball under head coach John Wooden.[4] As freshmen were ineligible for varsity competition at the time, Alcindor led UCLA's freshman team to a perfect 21–0 record in the 1965–66 season, averaging 33 points and 21 rebounds per game, including a 75–60 scrimmage victory over the defending national champion varsity squad.[5] In his sophomore season of 1966–67, Alcindor averaged 29.0 points and 15.5 rebounds per game across 30 contests, powering UCLA to an undefeated 30–0 record and the program's third NCAA Championship.[6][5] He earned consensus first-team All-American honors and was named the Helms Foundation College Basketball Player of the Year.[2] The NCAA responded to his dominance by banning dunk shots prior to the 1967–68 season, a rule change widely attributed to Alcindor's exceptional aerial prowess that had overwhelmed opponents.[18] During his junior year in 1967–68, despite the dunk prohibition, Alcindor maintained elite production with averages of 26.0 points and 15.4 rebounds per game in 28 games, though UCLA suffered its first loss in 48 outings—a 71–69 defeat to Houston on January 20, 1968, in the Astrodome before a record college basketball crowd of 52,693.[6][19] The Bruins rebounded to finish 29–1 and secure the national title, with Alcindor again earning All-American status and the team claiming its fourth straight championship.[5] As a senior in 1968–69, Alcindor averaged 26.4 points overall for his career but faced another setback with a narrow 46–44 loss to USC on January 30, 1969, via a deliberate stalling tactic.[19] UCLA concluded the year 29–1, winning the NCAA Tournament for the third consecutive season under Alcindor's leadership, finishing his three varsity years with an 88–2 record, 2,325 total points, and 1,367 rebounds.[19] He was recognized as a three-time national player of the year, the only player to win the NCAA Final Four Most Outstanding Player award three times, and led UCLA in scoring each season while setting multiple program records that endure.[20][21]

Professional Basketball Career

Milwaukee Bucks Tenure (1969–1975)

Lew Alcindor was selected by the Milwaukee Bucks with the first overall pick in the 1969 NBA draft after the franchise won a coin flip against the Phoenix Suns for the rights to the top selection.[22] [23] The Bucks signed Alcindor to a contract on May 5, 1969.[24] In his rookie season of 1969–70, Alcindor averaged 28.8 points and 14.5 rebounds per game, earning NBA Rookie of the Year honors and leading the Bucks to a 56–26 record, a 29-win improvement from their inaugural 27–55 season.[1] [4] Prior to the 1970–71 season, the Bucks acquired guard Oscar Robertson from the Cincinnati Royals, pairing him with Alcindor to form one of the league's most dominant duos.[1] That year, Alcindor averaged 31.7 points and 16.0 rebounds per game, winning his first NBA Most Valuable Player Award while leading Milwaukee to a league-best 66–16 record.[25] The Bucks swept the Baltimore Bullets 4–0 in the NBA Finals, with Alcindor earning Finals MVP honors after averaging 27.0 points and 18.5 rebounds per game in the series.[26] Following the championship on April 30, 1971, Alcindor converted to Islam and legally changed his name to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in the fall of that year.[7] Abdul-Jabbar continued his dominance with the Bucks, winning consecutive MVP awards in 1971–72 and 1973–74, and leading the team to four straight Midwest Division titles from 1971 to 1974.[27] Over his six seasons in Milwaukee, he averaged 30.4 points, 15.3 rebounds, and 4.3 assists per game across 467 regular-season appearances.[28] As a self-described "big-city boy" from New York, Abdul-Jabbar requested a trade from the Bucks in October 1974—made public in March 1975—finding Milwaukee too small, too blue-collar, and lacking cultural opportunities, including a sufficient Muslim community after his conversion to Islam and a vibrant jazz scene. He preferred a move to a major city, listing the New York Knicks as his first choice due to hometown ties and the Los Angeles Lakers as his third choice connected to his UCLA years; the Knicks could not assemble a suitable package.[2][29] On June 16, 1975, the Bucks traded him and Walt Wesley to the Los Angeles Lakers in exchange for Elmore Smith, Brian Winters, David Meyers, and Junior Bridgeman.[30]

Los Angeles Lakers Tenure (1975–1989)

On June 16, 1975, the Milwaukee Bucks traded Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Walt Wesley to the Los Angeles Lakers for Elmore Smith, Brian Winters, Dave Meyers, and Junior Bridgeman.[31] The acquisition positioned Abdul-Jabbar as the centerpiece of a Lakers franchise seeking to end a decade without an NBA championship, leveraging his dominance in the paint.[32] In his debut season of 1975–76, he averaged 27.7 points, 16.9 rebounds, and 5.0 assists per game over 82 games, earning unanimous NBA Most Valuable Player honors while leading the Lakers to a 53–29 record.[1] The following year, 1976–77, he repeated as MVP with 26.2 points, 13.3 rebounds, and a league-leading 57.9% field goal percentage, though the team fell in the Western Conference semifinals.[1] Despite Abdul-Jabbar's individual excellence—averaging over 23 points and 12 rebounds annually from 1975 to 1979—the Lakers advanced no further than the conference finals during this period, hampered by inconsistent supporting casts and matchups against teams like the Golden State Warriors and Seattle SuperSonics.[33] The 1979 NBA Draft selection of Earvin "Magic" Johnson as the first overall pick marked a turning point, initiating the Showtime era characterized by fast-break offense, Johnson's elite playmaking, and Abdul-Jabbar's finishing ability.[34] In the 1979–80 season, Abdul-Jabbar won his sixth MVP award with 24.8 points and 10.8 rebounds per game, propelling the Lakers to their first title in a decade by defeating the Philadelphia 76ers 4–2 in the Finals, where he averaged 31.9 points and 12.1 rebounds across 15 playoff games.[1] The Abdul-Jabbar-Johnson tandem yielded four additional championships: 1982 (defeating Philadelphia 4–2, Abdul-Jabbar 20.4 playoff points), 1985 (overcoming Boston Celtics 4–2, earning Finals MVP with 21.9 points and 8.1 rebounds in 19 games), 1987 (beating Boston 4–2), and 1988 (topping Detroit Pistons 4–3).[1] Over his Lakers tenure, Abdul-Jabbar appeared in 1,093 regular-season games, averaging 22.1 points, 9.4 rebounds, and 3.3 assists while shooting 56.1% from the field.[35] As age diminished his output—dropping to 14.6 points in 1987–88 and 10.1 in his final 1988–89 campaign—he remained a stabilizing force, contributing to the 1987 and 1988 titles before retiring at age 42 following a Finals loss to Detroit.[1]

Playing Style and Techniques

Development of the Skyhook

Abdul-Jabbar began developing his hook shot in grade school around age 10, when his coach shifted his focus from poor dribbling skills to post-position finishing, introducing the Mikan drill involving alternating hook shots with each hand from both sides of the basket.[36] This early emphasis addressed his physical advantages as a tall youth, allowing him to score effectively against older opponents without relying on ball-handling.[37] George Hejduk, a local coach, is credited by Abdul-Jabbar with initially teaching him the basic hook shot and Mikan drill during sixth grade, when he stood at 6 feet 6 inches, though accounts vary on further refinement.[38] By eighth grade, Abdul-Jabbar had refined the shot through extensive self-practice in his school gym, often at night, establishing a foundation of reliability under contact.[38] Influences included George Mikan's foundational drill and observations of Cliff Hagan's effective hook usage with the St. Louis Hawks, which extended the shot's range in urban gyms and playgrounds.[37] A disputed claim arises from Jim Couch, who asserted in 1959 that he corrected Abdul-Jabbar's form daily for a year at Dyckman court, emphasizing elbow positioning and wrist action, though Abdul-Jabbar recalls primarily grade-school instruction and independent work without mentioning Couch.[38] At UCLA under coach John Wooden, the shot evolved into the signature skyhook following the 1967 NCAA dunk ban, which necessitated high-arcing, unblockable finishes; relentless bilateral practice ensured consistency, contributing to three consecutive national titles and scoring records across 88 varsity wins in 90 games.[37] Assistant coach Jay Carty assisted in perfecting the one-handed variation, adapting it to exploit Abdul-Jabbar's 7-foot-2-inch frame, precise footwork, and arc that rendered it virtually undefendable due to its height and release point beyond reach.[39] The skyhook's development stemmed from causal necessities of his physique—needing a close-range shot immune to blocking amid physical NBA defenses—refined through thousands of repetitions into a 55.9% career field-goal efficiency weapon.[37]

Defensive and Overall Game Analysis

Abdul-Jabbar's defensive prowess centered on elite rim protection, leveraging his 7-foot-2-inch height, 7-foot-5.5-inch wingspan, and precise timing to disrupt opponents at the basket. He recorded 3,189 career blocks, ranking third in NBA history, at an average of 2.6 blocks per game.[1] [3] This included leading the league in blocks four times—in 1975 (3.3 per game), 1976 (4.1), 1979 (3.4), and 1980 (3.4)—demonstrating consistent dominance in shot alteration without relying on raw athleticism.[1] His approach emphasized positioning and anticipation over lateral quickness, allowing him to anchor paint defenses for the Bucks and Lakers, though quicker guards occasionally exploited his foot speed in pick-and-roll situations.[3] On the glass, Abdul-Jabbar excelled as a rebounder, averaging 11.2 total rebounds per game over 1,560 contests, with 6.6 defensive rebounds per game in eras where tracked.[1] He set the single-season defensive rebound record with 1,111 in 1973–74 and led the NBA in total rebounds once, in 1976 (16.9 per game).[1] These figures underscored his ability to secure possessions and initiate fast breaks, contributing to team defensive efficiency; for instance, the 1970s Bucks and 1980s Lakers ranked among league leaders in points allowed during his peak All-Defensive stretches.[3] Abdul-Jabbar earned 11 NBA All-Defensive Team selections—five First Team (1974, 1975, 1979–1981) and six Second Team (1970, 1971, 1976–1978, 1984)—reflecting peer recognition of his interior presence, though the Defensive Player of the Year award, introduced in 1983, eluded him amid his late-career decline.[1] Overall, Abdul-Jabbar's game epitomized efficiency and durability, blending offensive mastery with defensive reliability across 20 seasons. He maintained high minutes (averaging 35.0 per game career) while posting low turnover rates (3.5% career assist-to-turnover ratio among centers) and solid passing vision for his position, facilitating transition play post-rebound.[1] [3] Versatility defined him: unlike power-dominant centers of prior eras, he combined agility and footwork for post defense with rebounding tenacity, enabling seamless integration into both Milwaukee's methodical schemes and Los Angeles' up-tempo "Showtime" offense.[3] Limitations included limited perimeter range and occasional vulnerability to mobile bigs in his 30s, yet his sustained impact—evident in six championships and anchoring defenses that limited opponents' interior scoring—solidified his status as a two-way cornerstone, prioritizing fundamentals over flash.[1][3]

Career Statistics and Achievements

Regular Season and Playoff Stats

Abdul-Jabbar competed in 1,560 regular-season games over 20 NBA seasons from 1969 to 1989, accumulating 38,387 points to establish the league's all-time scoring record at the time of his retirement, a mark later surpassed by LeBron James on February 7, 2023.[1][40] His career field goal percentage stood at 55.9%, reflecting efficiency driven by his signature skyhook shot, while he also recorded 17,440 rebounds and 5,660 assists.[41] Blocks were officially tracked starting in the 1973-74 season, during which he amassed 3,189 for a 2.6 per-game average.[1]
CategoryGames (G)Minutes (MP)Points (PTS)Rebounds (TRB)Assists (AST)Blocks (BLK)FG%
Career Totals1,56057,44638,38717,4405,6603,189.559
Career Averages36.77.024.611.23.62.6*.559
*Blocks per game average from 1973-74 onward; official tracking began that season.[1][42] In the playoffs, Abdul-Jabbar participated in 237 games across 18 postseason appearances, posting 5,762 points at a 24.3 per-game clip, along with 2,481 rebounds and efficiency metrics that underscored his dominance in high-stakes contests.[1] At retirement, he ranked as the all-time playoff scoring leader, a position he held until overtaken by others in subsequent decades.[43] His postseason field goal percentage remained strong at approximately 53%, supported by consistent volume scoring in championship runs with the Milwaukee Bucks in 1971 and the Los Angeles Lakers in five of six seasons from 1980 to 1988.[44]
CategoryGames (G)Minutes (MP)Points (PTS)Rebounds (TRB)Assists (AST)FG%
Career Totals2378,3745,7622,481752.533
Career Averages35.44.524.310.53.2.533
Data compiled from official NBA records; assists and blocks in playoffs follow similar tracking conventions as regular season.[1][42][45]

Major Awards and Records

Abdul-Jabbar won a record six NBA Most Valuable Player (MVP) awards during his career, earning them in 1971, 1972, 1974, 1976, 1977, and 1980.[46] He also captured two NBA Finals MVP awards, in 1971 with the Milwaukee Bucks and in 1985 with the Los Angeles Lakers.[47] These honors underscored his dominance as the league's premier center, leading the NBA in scoring twice and ranking among the top rebounders and blockers in multiple seasons.[3] He secured six NBA championships, the first in 1971 with the Bucks—his rookie season—followed by five with the Lakers in 1980, 1982, 1985, 1987, and 1988, spanning 17 years and highlighting his sustained excellence.[9] Abdul-Jabbar was selected to 19 NBA All-Star Games, tying for the second-most in history at the time of his retirement, and earned 10 All-NBA First Team selections along with five All-NBA Second Team honors.[1] Among his prominent records, Abdul-Jabbar retired as the NBA's all-time leading scorer with 38,387 points, a mark that stood for 39 years until surpassed by LeBron James on February 7, 2023.[2] He remains the only player in professional sports history to win six regular-season MVP awards and six championships.[48] Additionally, he held records for most career minutes played (57,446) and most field goals made (15,837), both since broken, and led the league in blocked shots four times.[1]
Major AwardAchievements
NBA MVP6 (record; 1971, 1972, 1974, 1976, 1977, 1980)[46]
NBA Championship6 (1971, 1980, 1982, 1985, 1987, 1988)[3]
NBA Finals MVP2 (1971, 1985)[47]
NBA All-Star19 selections[9]
All-NBA First Team10 selections[9]
NBA Scoring Champion2 (1970–71, 1971–72)[47]

Post-Retirement Basketball Roles

Coaching Positions

After retiring from playing in 1989, Abdul-Jabbar pursued coaching opportunities to remain involved in basketball, starting with volunteer work at the high school level. In the 1998–1999 season, he served as an assistant coach for the Alchesay Falcons at Alchesay High School on the Fort Apache Indian Reservation in Whiteriver, Arizona, volunteering for four months and accepting only a $1 salary.[49][50] In February 2000, Abdul-Jabbar joined the Los Angeles Clippers as an assistant coach under interim head coach Jim Todd, signing a contract through June 30 for the remainder of the 1999–2000 NBA season; he did not return for the following year.[51][52] Seeking a head coaching role, Abdul-Jabbar led the Oklahoma Storm of the United States Basketball League (USBL) in 2002, guiding the team to the league championship by defeating the Kansas Cagerz in the finals.[53] From 2005 to 2011, Abdul-Jabbar worked as a special assistant coach for the Los Angeles Lakers, contributing to player development, including mentoring center Andrew Bynum, during which time the team won NBA championships in 2009 and 2010.[54][55]

Mentorship and Influence on the Game

Abdul-Jabbar has provided personal mentorship to several younger NBA players, focusing on defensive fundamentals, shot mechanics, and professional mindset. In the early 2000s, he worked with Los Angeles Lakers center Andrew Bynum, screening archival footage of Bill Russell's defensive plays from the 1950s and 1960s to emphasize positioning, timing, and rebounding technique over raw athleticism.[56] Bynum initially engaged but later requested the sessions end, citing a preference for different approaches, which limited the partnership's duration despite Bynum's subsequent contributions to two Lakers championships in 2009 and 2010.[57] Similarly, Abdul-Jabbar offered guidance to Kobe Bryant starting in the late 1990s, with Bryant regularly consulting him on basketball strategy and life balance during his Lakers tenure; their relationship evolved into a mutual respect, highlighted by Abdul-Jabbar's post-retirement interactions with Bryant's family.[58] [59] Beyond individual player development, Abdul-Jabbar founded the Skyhook Foundation in 2009 to support underserved middle and high school youth through basketball and education initiatives. The foundation fields an elite all-star traveling team that competes nationally, using basketball as a platform to instill discipline and teamwork while integrating STEM mentorship programs aimed at fostering long-term academic and professional skills.[2] As chairman, he has emphasized providing "a shot that can't be blocked" by combining athletic opportunities with rigorous intellectual training, drawing from his own experiences balancing sports and scholarship.[60] Abdul-Jabbar's post-retirement influence on basketball manifests in the enduring emulation of his techniques by subsequent centers, despite the skyhook's rarity in contemporary play due to the league's shift toward perimeter-oriented offenses. Hakeem Olajuwon, a two-time NBA champion and Defensive Player of the Year, acknowledged Abdul-Jabbar's dominance—particularly the skyhook's unguardable arc—as a benchmark that shaped his own post footwork and dream shake maneuvers during the 1980s and 1990s matchups. [61] His career longevity, achieved through pioneering core strength routines before they became standard, has informed training regimens for modern big men seeking sustained durability over 15-20 seasons.[62] Additionally, by publicly pursuing writing, history, and activism post-retirement, Abdul-Jabbar modeled for peers that elite athletes could extend their impact beyond the court without diminishing on-court legacies.[63]

Media and Entertainment Career

Acting Roles and Appearances

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar entered acting through his martial arts training under Bruce Lee, appearing in the 1978 film Game of Death as the character Hakim Muhammad Ali, a towering opponent in a pagoda fight sequence completed after Lee's death using stand-ins and footage. His performance featured physical combat skills honed in Jeet Kune Do, contributing to the film's action choreography despite its posthumous assembly and narrative inconsistencies. Abdul-Jabbar gained wider recognition for comedy in Airplane! (1980), portraying co-pilot Roger Murdock in a memorable cabin scene where he denies being himself to a skeptical passenger, delivering deadpan lines that highlighted his 7-foot-2-inch frame for humorous effect.[64] The role, originally considered for baseball player Pete Rose but reassigned due to scheduling, parodied aviation tropes and athlete cameos, with Abdul-Jabbar's delivery praised for timing amid the film's rapid-fire gags.[65] He reprised similar self-referential humor in cameos as himself in Fletch (1985), assisting the protagonist in a basketball-related gag, and Forget Paris (1995), appearing during a Knicks game sequence.[66] Later, he featured as himself in Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery (2022), joining celebrity ensemble in a brief murder-mystery context.[67] On television, Abdul-Jabbar made guest appearances blending his persona with scripted elements, such as in Scrubs (2006), where he played a hallucinatory version of himself advising Dr. Cox on life regrets, tying into the show's medical fantasy arcs. He appeared as himself in The Big Bang Theory (2019), Season 12 Episode 16, interacting with characters during a Dungeons & Dragons episode, and in New Girl (2012), Season 1 Episode 20, offering basketball wisdom. Other credits include Veronica Mars (2006) as a coach figure and Everybody Loves Raymond (1996), Season 1 Episode 6, in a writing-themed cameo. These roles typically lasted under five minutes, capitalizing on his celebrity for comedic or inspirational beats without demanding extensive dramatic range.[68]

Documentaries and Reality TV

Abdul-Jabbar is the subject of the 2015 documentary Kareem: Minority of One, directed by Glenn Wein and produced by Ten Life, which chronicles his basketball career, conversion to Islam, and social activism up to 1989, emphasizing his intellectual pursuits and trailblazing role in the NBA.[69] The film, which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival on April 17, 2015, and later aired on HBO, features interviews with figures like Billy Crystal and Jerry West, highlighting Abdul-Jabbar's skyhook technique and his minority status as a principled athlete amid 1960s-1980s cultural shifts.[70] He executive produced the 2022 History Channel documentary Black Patriots: Heroes of the Revolution, a one-hour special examining overlooked contributions of Black soldiers in the American Revolutionary War, narrated by Abdul-Jabbar to underscore themes of heroism and historical erasure.[71] In 2021, he hosted and contributed to Fight the Power: The Movements That Changed America, a four-part History Channel series premiering on Juneteenth, June 19, 2021, that analyzes key U.S. civil rights protests from the 1960s onward, drawing on archival footage and expert analysis to trace causal links between activism and policy changes.[72] On reality television, Abdul-Jabbar competed as a celebrity contestant in the first season of ABC's Splash, a diving competition series that premiered on March 19, 2013, where he performed dives judged by Olympic experts, though he was eliminated early after scoring 21.5 out of 30 on his initial attempt.[73] He made a guest appearance on season 13 of The Bachelorette on May 29, 2017, assisting host Rachel Lindsay in evaluating contestants through basketball-themed challenges, leveraging his Lakers legacy to add competitive insight to the dating format.[74]

Writing and Intellectual Contributions

Books and Publications

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar has authored or co-authored over a dozen books, including autobiographies, historical accounts, young adult fiction, and social commentary, often emphasizing overlooked aspects of African American history and personal reflection.[75] His works frequently draw on primary research and interviews to challenge mainstream historical narratives, such as highlighting the contributions of Black soldiers in World War II.[76] Several have achieved New York Times bestseller status, reflecting his transition from basketball to intellectual pursuits post-retirement.[77] Notable non-fiction titles include Giant Steps: The Autobiography of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (1983, co-authored with Peter Knobler), which details his early life, college career at UCLA, and entry into the NBA.[78] Kareem (1990, with Mignon McCarthy) chronicles his final NBA season and broader life experiences.[79] Black Profiles in Courage (1996) profiles lesser-known Black historical figures who demonstrated valor, countering selective omissions in standard accounts.[77] Brothers in Arms: The Epic Story of the 761st Tank Battalion, World War II's Forgotten Heroes (2004, with Anthony Walton) documents the 761st Tank Battalion's combat record, based on archival records and veteran testimonies, underscoring racial barriers in the U.S. military.[76] On the Shoulders of Giants: My Journey Through the Harlem Renaissance (2007) combines photography and narrative to explore Black cultural achievements in the early 20th century.[80] Writings on the Wall: Discovering America in the Age of Trump (2016, with David Ritz) compiles essays on contemporary cultural and political issues.[81] Coach Wooden and Me: Our 50-Year Friendship On and Off the Court (2017) reflects on his relationship with UCLA coach John Wooden.[82] In fiction, Abdul-Jabbar co-authored the Mycroft Holmes series with Anna Waterhouse, beginning with Mycroft Holmes (2015), a prequel reimagining the Sherlock Holmes universe centered on Mycroft, followed by Mycroft and Sherlock (2018) and The Empty Birdcage (2020).[82] He has also written young adult works, such as Becoming Kareem: Growing Up On and Off the Court (2017) and the Streetball Crew series (2015–2016), aimed at introducing youth to basketball and history.[75] Recent publications include We All Want to Change the World: My Journey Through Social Justice Movements from the 1960s to Today (2024), examining his involvement in activism.[83]

Essays and Substack Commentary

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar maintains a Substack newsletter titled Kareem Takes on the News, launched in 2023, through which he offers commentary on sports, politics, and popular culture as they intersect with American society.[84] The publication features posts analyzing current events, such as his February 8, 2023, reflection on LeBron James surpassing his NBA all-time scoring record, where he praised James's exceptional drive, dedication, and talent required to endure two decades in the league.[85] Other entries address topics like the death of Bill Walton in May 2024, blending personal anecdotes with broader cultural observations. Abdul-Jabbar promotes the newsletter on his X account, emphasizing its role in his ongoing work as an eight-time Columnist of the Year.[86] Beyond Substack, Abdul-Jabbar has contributed numerous essays and opinion pieces to mainstream outlets, frequently examining racial dynamics, political figures, and social movements through a lens shaped by his experiences as a Black athlete and intellectual. In the Washington Post, he endorsed Hillary Clinton for president on April 15, 2016, arguing that her policies aligned with addressing systemic inequalities more effectively than alternatives.[87] He critiqued Donald Trump's anti-Muslim rhetoric in a December 10, 2015, piece, asserting it represented ISIS's "greatest triumph" by validating extremist narratives of Western hostility toward Islam.[88] Similarly, in August 2016, he defended San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick's decision to kneel during the national anthem, framing criticism of the protest as revealing more about detractors' understanding of patriotism than about Kaepernick's actions.[89] Abdul-Jabbar's essays often highlight perceived hypocrisies in public discourse on race and justice, as seen in his 2020 Hollywood Reporter contribution questioning the lack of outrage over antisemitism in sports and entertainment industries.[90] His writings extend to cultural critiques, such as a 2015 Brevity essay on body shaming of Black female athletes, which employed personal narrative to argue against racialized standards of beauty and athleticism.[91] These pieces, while rooted in first-hand perspectives from his career, have drawn mixed reception, with supporters valuing their candor on inequality and critics noting a consistent alignment with progressive viewpoints that occasionally overlooks counterarguments or empirical nuances in policy debates.[92]

Activism and Political Engagement

Early Civil Rights Involvement

During his undergraduate years at UCLA from 1966 to 1969, Lew Alcindor became involved in civil rights activism amid heightened racial tensions, drawing inspiration from the Autobiography of Malcolm X, which emphasized Black self-determination and critique of systemic racism, as well as figures like Muhammad Ali, Bill Russell, and Jim Brown.[93][94] His exposure to the 1964 Harlem riots, where he witnessed police actions following the shooting of James Powell, further solidified his commitment to Black Power principles, leading him to view himself as "Black Power in the flesh."[94] Alcindor aligned with the Olympic Project for Human Rights (OPHR), co-founded by sociologist Harry Edwards to demand reforms like the removal of Avery Brundage as IOC president due to his alleged Nazi sympathies and opposition to U.S. racial demands. At an OPHR workshop on Thanksgiving Day 1967 in Los Angeles, he endorsed a boycott of the 1968 Summer Olympics, declaring, "Somewhere each of us has got to take a stand… This is how I make my stand," and spoke publicly at Second Baptist Church on the need for Black athletes to protest domestic injustices rather than compete abroad.[94] In summer 1968, he refused to attend Olympic trials despite eligibility, citing irreconcilable conflicts with U.S. policies on race and the Vietnam War, and stated on NBC's Today show, "Yeah, I live here, but it’s not really my country."[94][95] This stance elicited widespread condemnation, including hate mail, death threats, and demands from some to revoke his UCLA scholarship, positioning him as a polarizing figure who rejected the era's expectation of apolitical Black athletes.[94][93] Alcindor also joined campus protests following Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination on April 4, 1968, and participated in early anti-Vietnam War rallies at UCLA, linking foreign policy critiques to civil rights struggles.[96][97]

Ongoing Social Justice Advocacy

Abdul-Jabbar has sustained his social justice efforts post-retirement through targeted initiatives addressing educational disparities and health access in underserved communities. The Skyhook Foundation, which he established to empower youth via STEM programs, operates Camp Skyhook, an immersive outdoor learning experience for fourth and fifth graders from low-income Los Angeles areas, utilizing curricula developed with UCLA and NASA in partnership with the Los Angeles Unified School District.[98][99] In response to pandemic-related challenges, the foundation launched mobile classroom initiatives, including the Skyhook Eco Van Program with the City of Los Angeles, to deliver accessible STEM education.[100][101] In May 2023, Abdul-Jabbar directed foundation resources toward improving health care delivery in marginalized neighborhoods, building on over a decade of efforts to introduce Black and Latino students to science, technology, engineering, and mathematics fields underrepresented in their communities.[102][103] These programs prioritize hands-on, environmental literacy to foster long-term opportunities, reflecting his view that concrete educational investments yield more enduring progress than transient protests alone.[97] Publicly, Abdul-Jabbar has advocated for racial equality and intersectional issues, including a 2022 address in Toronto condemning antisemitism as a threat intertwined with broader injustices.[104] His 2025 memoir, We All Want to Change the World: My Journey Through Social Justice Movements from the 1960s to Today, analyzes historical protests' impacts and calls for strategic, evidence-based activism amid contemporary challenges.[105] In a May 2025 CBS Mornings interview promoting the book, he emphasized how sustained movements have advanced U.S. racial progress while critiquing superficial responses to systemic issues.[106] The NBA's 2021 creation of the Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Social Justice Champion Award, which honors players advancing equality, respect, and inclusion with a $100,000 grant, perpetuates his influence by incentivizing league-wide commitments to verifiable community impact.[107][108]

Criticisms of Activism and Public Backlash

Abdul-Jabbar faced significant public backlash in the late 1960s for his early activism, including his decision to boycott the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City as a protest against racial injustice in the United States. Influenced by events like the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. and discussions at the Cleveland Summit, he cited police violence and systemic racism as reasons for his refusal to participate, which drew widespread media criticism and fan disapproval, portraying him as unpatriotic.[106][109] His conversion to Islam in 1971 and subsequent name change from Lew Alcindor to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar further intensified scrutiny, with some fans and commentators accusing him of disloyalty to American values and contributing to perceptions of aloofness during his playing career.[110][93] His coach at UCLA, John Wooden, expressed reservations about Abdul-Jabbar's activism, viewing it as a potentially dangerous distraction from athletics without directly discouraging it. This reflected broader institutional discomfort with athletes engaging in political protest, as evidenced by the NBA's reluctance to offer him head coaching positions later in his career, which some attributed partly to his history of outspokenness on civil rights and anti-war issues.[97][110] In more recent years, Abdul-Jabbar's commentary on cultural and political issues has elicited criticism from conservative commentators, particularly following a 2020 Substack essay where he argued that Hollywood should exclude actors like Jon Voight and James Woods from roles due to their conservative political views, claiming such views undermined their ability to portray diverse characters authentically. Critics, including outlets aligned with free speech advocacy, condemned this as an endorsement of viewpoint discrimination and selective cancel culture, arguing it contradicted principles of artistic freedom and mirrored the intolerance he opposed elsewhere.[111][112][113] Abdul-Jabbar's repeated criticisms of Donald Trump, such as a 2015 Washington Post op-ed decrying the candidate's bullying tactics toward the media and specific groups, prompted a direct retort from Trump, who dismissed Abdul-Jabbar as overrated in a handwritten note, escalating partisan divide among fans and commentators. Similar backlash arose from his defenses of political correctness in a 2016 Washington Post piece and statements urging "uninformed" voters to abstain, which some viewed as elitist and dismissive of democratic participation.[114][115][116]

Public Service and Philanthropy

Government Roles

In January 2012, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton appointed Kareem Abdul-Jabbar as a Cultural Ambassador for the U.S. Department of State.[117] This role tasked him with promoting education, respect for diversity, and cultural understanding, particularly through dialogues with young audiences in international settings.[117] [118] Abdul-Jabbar's first mission as Cultural Ambassador took him to Brazil in 2012, where he engaged in public discussions on these themes amid preparations for the 2014 FIFA World Cup and 2016 Summer Olympics.[119] [118] He later extended similar efforts to locations including El Salvador and Rio de Janeiro, leveraging his public profile to foster cross-cultural exchanges.[120] These activities aligned with the State Department's broader public diplomacy objectives, emphasizing soft power through sports and personal narratives.[121] No other formal government positions are documented in Abdul-Jabbar's career, distinguishing this ambassadorship as his primary federal involvement.[118]

Charitable Efforts and Foundations

Abdul-Jabbar established the Skyhook Foundation in 2009 to deliver STEM education to underserved youth, targeting fourth and fifth graders in the Los Angeles Unified School District, with a particular emphasis on Black and Latino students eligible for free or reduced-price lunches.[103] The foundation's programs aim to foster interest in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics through hands-on experiences, addressing disparities in access to such opportunities.[98] A flagship initiative, Camp Skyhook, offers a five-day, four-night immersive STEAM camp in the Angeles National Forest, designed to inspire participants toward STEM careers; the program maintains a six-year waitlist reflecting high demand.[103] [98] During the COVID-19 pandemic, the foundation adapted by partnering with the Los Angeles Unified School District and the City of Los Angeles to launch the Skyhook Eco Van Program, deploying mobile classrooms for accessible STEAM instruction.[98] In 2012, Abdul-Jabbar was appointed STEAM Ambassador of California by State Superintendent Tom Torlakson, enhancing the foundation's outreach.[98] Reported engagement rates include 92 percent of participating boys and 97 percent of girls actively involved in STEAM activities by fifth grade.[98] To fund these efforts, Abdul-Jabbar auctioned personal memorabilia in 2019, including four NBA championship rings and three MVP trophies, generating nearly $3 million in proceeds directed to the Skyhook Foundation for youth education programs.[122] The foundation has collaborated with partners such as Panasonic, which awarded it a 2020 Corporate Social Responsibility recognition.[98] In May 2023, Abdul-Jabbar expanded philanthropic focus by committing to reduce health care hesitancy in marginalized Los Angeles communities, joining the Board of Advisors at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center alongside Skyhook co-founder Deborah Morales to promote equitable access and trust, particularly among Black populations skeptical due to historical factors.[123] Abdul-Jabbar has also supported broader causes through affiliations with organizations including the Entertainment Industry Foundation and Stand Up To Cancer.[124]

Personal Life

Religious Conversion and Name Change

Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor Jr., raised in a Catholic household in New York City, developed an interest in Islam during his time at the University of California, Los Angeles, where he attended from 1965 to 1969.[125] Influenced by readings of the Quran, encounters with Muslim students, and broader civil rights discussions amid the era's racial tensions, Alcindor privately took the shahada—the Islamic declaration of faith—during the summer of 1968, marking his conversion to Sunni Islam at age 21. This shift represented a rejection of what he later described as the imposed cultural expectations of his birth name and upbringing, aligning instead with a faith he viewed as emphasizing discipline, justice, and personal agency.[126] He continued competing professionally as Lew Alcindor, including during his rookie NBA season with the Milwaukee Bucks in 1969–70, while deepening his Islamic practice privately.[19] In May 1971, following the Bucks' NBA championship victory and his first MVP award—achieved still under the name Lew Alcindor—Alcindor publicly announced his conversion and legally changed his name to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in the fall of that year.[127] The name, selected with guidance from Islamic scholars, translates from Arabic as "generous" or "noble" (Kareem) and "servant of the Almighty" or "servant of the Mighty One" (Abdul-Jabbar), reflecting attributes of generosity and devotion central to his adopted faith.[2] This transition drew backlash from some fans and media, who perceived it as aloof or separatist, particularly amid Alcindor's prior refusal to join the 1968 U.S. Olympic team over racial injustices; however, Abdul-Jabbar maintained it was a principled assertion of identity and spiritual autonomy, unconnected to militancy.[19] The change solidified his public embrace of Islam, influencing his worldview and public persona thereafter, though he has reflected that a more gradual approach might have mitigated early perceptions of abruptness.[128]

Family and Relationships

Abdul-Jabbar married Habiba Abdul-Jabbar (born Janice Brown) on August 8, 1971, after meeting her during his college years at UCLA.[129] The couple separated in 1973 but remained legally married until their divorce was finalized in 1978.[130] This marriage produced three children: daughter Habiba (born circa 1972), daughter Sultana (born circa 1974), and son Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Jr. (born February 28, 1976).[129][131] Following his separation from Habiba, Abdul-Jabbar entered a long-term relationship with Cheryl Pistono, which began around 1975 and lasted until approximately 1983.[132] With Pistono, he fathered two sons: Amir (born 1983), who became an orthopedic spine surgeon, and Adam (born 1986).[133][131] Abdul-Jabbar has maintained a low public profile regarding his family dynamics, emphasizing privacy amid his high-profile career, and has not remarried.[132] His children have pursued varied paths, including Kareem Jr.'s brief professional basketball career overseas and Habiba's involvement in writing and activism, reflecting independent trajectories from their father's legacy.[131]

Health Issues and Resilience

Abdul-Jabbar was diagnosed with Philadelphia chromosome-positive chronic myeloid leukemia in 2008 after blood tests revealed elevated white blood cell counts.[134] He began treatment with the targeted therapy imatinib (Gleevec), which inhibits the abnormal protein driving the cancer, achieving deep remission by 2011 and enabling him to maintain an active lifestyle without significant interruption.[135] Upon initial diagnosis, Abdul-Jabbar reported fearing imminent death, but the drug's efficacy—contributing to CML survival rates exceeding 95%—allowed long-term management as a chronic condition rather than a terminal illness.[136][137] Around 2009, he received a prostate cancer diagnosis, which he kept private until revealing it in 2020.[138] Treatment involved surgery followed by radiation therapy, addressing the cancer at an early stage and resulting in a cancer-free status as of 2024.[139][140] In 2021, Abdul-Jabbar was diagnosed with atrial fibrillation, a heart rhythm disorder causing symptoms including irregular heartbeat, shortness of breath, and reduced stamina that limited him to walking short distances.[141] He manages the condition through medication and lifestyle adjustments to mitigate stroke risk, which is five times higher in AFib patients.[142] On December 16, 2023, Abdul-Jabbar broke his hip in a fall while attending a concert in Los Angeles, necessitating immediate surgery and a projected three-month recovery period.[143][144] Throughout these health challenges, Abdul-Jabbar has exhibited resilience by prioritizing early detection, adhering to evidence-based treatments, and sustaining professional output, including authorship and public advocacy on cancer and cardiovascular awareness, crediting disciplined health monitoring for his ongoing functionality at age 77.[145][146]

Legacy and Public Perception

Impact on Basketball and Culture

Abdul-Jabbar's invention and mastery of the skyhook—a 12-foot arcing shot combining height, leverage, and precision—transformed post scoring in basketball, achieving an estimated efficiency that contributed to his unblockable dominance and the NBA's all-time scoring record of 38,387 points, set on April 5, 1984, and held until LeBron James surpassed it on February 7, 2023.[147][37][148] The move's emphasis on fundamentals over athletic flash influenced generations of big men, prioritizing skill development and efficiency amid evolving defensive schemes, though its rarity in modern play stems from the shift toward perimeter-oriented offenses.[147][148] At UCLA from 1966 to 1969, playing as Lew Alcindor, he anchored three consecutive NCAA championships (1967–1969), compiling a perfect 12–0 tournament record and averaging 26.0 points and 15.9 rebounds per game across 88 contests, establishing a blueprint for dominant college centers through disciplined team play under coach John Wooden.[149] In the NBA, over 20 seasons with the Milwaukee Bucks and Los Angeles Lakers, he secured six championships (1971 with Bucks; 1980, 1982, 1985, 1987, 1988 with Lakers), earned six MVP awards, and set records for games played (1,560), minutes (57,446), and field goals made (15,837), while leading in blocks with 3,189, blending scoring, rebounding (17,440 total), and defense to redefine center versatility.[19][3][150] Culturally, Abdul-Jabbar's 1971 conversion to Islam and name change from Lew Alcindor challenged mid-20th-century expectations of Black athletes' public silence on social issues, positioning him as an early exemplar of integrating personal conviction with professional success and influencing subsequent generations to engage in civil rights discourse.[93] His post-retirement writings, including the 2016 collection Writings on the Wall critiquing American politics, racism, religion, and media bias, and 2025's We All Want to Change the World, tracing 60 years of protest movements from the 1960s onward, amplified his role as a public intellectual advocating evidence-based social reform over performative activism.[151][152] Through columns, speeches, and media appearances, he promoted athlete-led initiatives on equality and diversity, emphasizing historical context and individual agency in cultural shifts, while modeling resilience amid scrutiny of high-profile Black figures.[153][93]

Debates on Greatness and Underrating

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar amassed a resume that includes six NBA Most Valuable Player awards—the most in league history—six NBA championships, two Finals MVP awards, and 19 All-Star selections over 20 seasons.[154] He held the NBA's all-time scoring record with 38,387 points from April 5, 1984, until February 7, 2023, when surpassed by LeBron James, while averaging 24.6 points, 11.2 rebounds, 3.6 assists, and 2.6 blocks per game across 1,560 regular-season games.[1] Abdul-Jabbar led the league in scoring twice, blocked shots four times, and pioneered the skyhook, a shot defended as virtually unblockable due to its high release and arc.[155] Debates on Abdul-Jabbar's place among the all-time greats often position him in the top five but below Michael Jordan and LeBron James in greatest-of-all-time (GOAT) rankings, with arguments centering on longevity versus peak dominance. Proponents highlight his three straight NCAA Player of the Year awards at UCLA (1967–1969), where he won three national titles, an Olympic gold medal in 1968 (though he boycotted the 1968 Games personally), and carrying the Milwaukee Bucks to a 1971 championship as a rookie alongside Oscar Robertson.[156] His six MVPs exceed Jordan's five and Russell's five, and his career Win Shares (273.4) rank third all-time behind only LeBron James and Jordan, supporting claims of sustained elite impact.[1] However, detractors note that four of his championships came after age 30 with the Lakers alongside Magic Johnson, contrasting Jordan's six titles and Finals MVPs in his prime without comparable co-stars carrying the load.[157] Abdul-Jabbar's perceived underrating stems from several factors, including much of his prime occurring in the 1970s "dark ages" of the NBA, when league viewership and global marketing lagged behind the 1980s1990s explosion.[158] His stoic demeanor and preference for privacy, coupled with the skyhook's efficiency over flashiness, diminished highlight-reel appeal compared to dunking spectacles from players like Jordan or Julius Erving.[159] Magic Johnson, his Lakers teammate for five championships, called him "the most underrated player ever," emphasizing his unmatched decorations and defensive anchoring that led the league in blocks four times despite lacking modern athleticism.[160] Former Lakers forward Mychal Thompson attributed the oversight to recency bias favoring post-1980s stars.[161] Abdul-Jabbar has addressed his exclusion from GOAT conversations, stating in July 2025 that it "makes me see that people don't have a very good perspective," pointing to incomplete historical analysis.[162] While empirical metrics like total MVPs and points favor his case for top-tier status, causal factors such as era-specific competition—facing dominant big men like Wilt Chamberlain, Bill Russell, and later Hakeem Olajuwon—and the NBA's evolution toward perimeter play have relegated his center-dominated era in popular discourse.[163] This underrating persists despite peers like Charles Barkley affirming Kareem as the greatest of his generation.[164]

Recent Developments and Honors

In September 2024, Abdul-Jabbar received the University of California Presidential Medal, recognizing his lifetime achievements in basketball, education, and social advocacy, including his efforts to promote literacy and combat inequality.[165] This honor underscores his ongoing influence beyond sports, as he has advocated for public health awareness and historical education in recent years. Abdul-Jabbar published the book We All Want to Change the World: My Journey Through Social Justice Movements from the 1960s to Today in May 2025, reflecting on his involvement in civil rights protests, including meeting Martin Luther King Jr. at age 17, and drawing parallels to contemporary activism.[166][167] In promotional speeches, such as one in May 2025, he emphasized the role of sustained, non-violent protest in achieving social progress, critiquing both historical complacency and modern performative activism.[168] On the health front, Abdul-Jabbar disclosed in September 2024 that he had been diagnosed with prostate cancer, which was detected early and treated successfully through surgery and radiation, rendering him cancer-free; this followed prior battles with chronic myeloid leukemia in 2008 and a 2023 hip replacement after a fall.[138][169] He has also shared achieving a 50-pound weight loss by age 76, reducing from 275 to 225 pounds through dietary changes and exercise, while promoting early screenings for conditions like atrial fibrillation based on his own experiences.[170] In an August 2025 UCLA address, he discussed how his alma mater's resources supported his health management and resilience amid multiple surgeries and diagnoses.[171]

References

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