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Lew Massey
Lawrence "Lew" Massey (February 16, 1956 – January 23, 2014) was an American professional basketball player. He played college basketball at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
Massey attended South Mecklenburg. He accepted a basketball scholarship from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. Often called "Sweet Lew", the prolific scorer helped the 49ers reach the 1976 National Invitation Tournament finals as a sophomore, losing 67–71 against the University of Kentucky. He also set school records for single-season scoring average (22.5) and total points (677). He set a school single-game record with 10 blocked shots against Wofford College.
As a junior in 1977, along with teammate Cedric Maxwell, he contributed to the team reaching the final four in the NCAA tournament. The 49–51 loss against Marquette University, was surrounded in controversy with a last-second tip-in by Jerome Whitehead.
As a senior, he averaged 21.8 points (third in school history) and 6.8 rebounds per game. He scored 38 points (fourth in school history) against Virginia Commonwealth University.
Massey graduated as the leading scorer in school history (2,149 points). He posted a 19.4 point average per game (third in school history), 740 total rebounds (fourth in school history), 343 total free throws made (third in school history), fifty five 20+ scoring games (school record) and 916 field goals made (school record).
Massey was selected by the Los Angeles Lakers in the second round (38th overall) of the 1978 NBA draft. He was cut a month away from the 1978-79 NBA regular season opener.
In 1978, he signed with the Maine Lumberjacks of the Continental Basketball Association, where he ranked seventh in the league with 970 scored points.
In 1979, he was signed by the San Diego Clippers of the National Basketball Association. He was released on October 17. That same year, he played in 26 games with the Lehigh Valley Jets, while scoring 406 points. He ended up leaving the United States for the Venezuelan and Swiss semi-pro circuits.
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Lew Massey
Lawrence "Lew" Massey (February 16, 1956 – January 23, 2014) was an American professional basketball player. He played college basketball at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
Massey attended South Mecklenburg. He accepted a basketball scholarship from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. Often called "Sweet Lew", the prolific scorer helped the 49ers reach the 1976 National Invitation Tournament finals as a sophomore, losing 67–71 against the University of Kentucky. He also set school records for single-season scoring average (22.5) and total points (677). He set a school single-game record with 10 blocked shots against Wofford College.
As a junior in 1977, along with teammate Cedric Maxwell, he contributed to the team reaching the final four in the NCAA tournament. The 49–51 loss against Marquette University, was surrounded in controversy with a last-second tip-in by Jerome Whitehead.
As a senior, he averaged 21.8 points (third in school history) and 6.8 rebounds per game. He scored 38 points (fourth in school history) against Virginia Commonwealth University.
Massey graduated as the leading scorer in school history (2,149 points). He posted a 19.4 point average per game (third in school history), 740 total rebounds (fourth in school history), 343 total free throws made (third in school history), fifty five 20+ scoring games (school record) and 916 field goals made (school record).
Massey was selected by the Los Angeles Lakers in the second round (38th overall) of the 1978 NBA draft. He was cut a month away from the 1978-79 NBA regular season opener.
In 1978, he signed with the Maine Lumberjacks of the Continental Basketball Association, where he ranked seventh in the league with 970 scored points.
In 1979, he was signed by the San Diego Clippers of the National Basketball Association. He was released on October 17. That same year, he played in 26 games with the Lehigh Valley Jets, while scoring 406 points. He ended up leaving the United States for the Venezuelan and Swiss semi-pro circuits.