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Yinka Dare

Yinka Dare Listen DAR-eh (October 10, 1972 – January 9, 2004) was a Nigerian professional basketball player. A 7 ft 0 in (2.13 m), 265-pound (120 kg) center, he played four seasons in the National Basketball Association (NBA).

Born in Kano, Dare was discovered by Nigerian-born lawyer Lloyd Ukwu during a visit to Lagos in 1991. While Ukwu was driving, he noticed a very tall man sitting on a bench eating a bowl of food. When he asked him how tall he was, Dare said he didn't know.

Dare had previously spent most of his free time playing tennis, but soon picked up basketball for the first time.

Already in the United States, Dare played one season at Milford Academy High, a prep school in New Berlin, New York. Subsequently, he played college basketball for George Washington University, where he excelled as a player under coach Mike Jarvis, also helping revive the basketball program. As a freshman in 1992–93, he led the Colonials to the NCAA Tournament round of 16 ("The Sweet 16"), the furthest they had ever advanced.

The next year, Dare led the team to the second round of the tournament. He finished his college career averaging 13.8 points and 10.7 rebounds per game; additionally, after just two seasons, he had become the Colonials' all-time leader in blocked shots, averaging more than two per game.

Dare was selected in the first round (14th overall) of the 1994 NBA draft by the New Jersey Nets. He would sign a six-year, US$9 million guaranteed contract. In the NBA, he would appear in 110 games in four seasons, all with the Nets; in his rookie campaign, he played for three minutes before getting injured (torn ACL) and missing the rest of the season.

In his first full season (1995–96), in which he played a personal best 58 out of 82 games, he turned the ball over 72 times while registering no assists, holding the dubious NBA record for most games played in a season, 58 (769 minutes), without recording an assist. During his four-year career, he would rack up a total of four assists accompanied by 96 turnovers, while averaging 2.1 points, 2.6 rebounds, and less than 0.1 assists per game.

In early 1998, Dare was traded, along with David Benoit, Kevin Edwards, and a first round draft pick to the Orlando Magic, for Brian Evans and Rony Seikaly. He was almost immediately waived so the Magic could sign point guard Spud Webb. Dare's next involvement in the NBA would be receiving a training camp invite to join the Golden State Warriors in 2000; he was released before the start of the season. He would play intermittently in other leagues including the Continental Basketball Association and United States Basketball League, until 2003.

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