Cliff Alexander

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Cliff Alexander
Sagesse Club
2023–presentBeirut Club
Career highlights and awards
Stats Edit this at Wikidata at NBA.com
Stats Edit this at Wikidata at Basketball-Reference.com
Medals
Men's 3x3 basketball
Representing the  United States
FIBA Americas U18 3x3 Championship
Gold medal – first place 2013 United States National team

Cliff Alexander (born November 16, 1995) is an American professional

basketball player for Beirut Club of the Lebanese Basketball League (LBL). He completed his freshman season at the University of Kansas for the Jayhawks' on their 2014–15 team. He declared himself eligible for the 2015 NBA draft but was undrafted. He played one season for the Portland Trail Blazers and earned a second year of NBA service with the Brooklyn Nets
.

He played in high school at

Martin Luther King Day
performance during his senior year against the number one team in the country, many experts considered him to be the best player in the national class of 2014.

In 2013, he represented

Division I basketball programs and his recruitment was widely followed. He played in the 2014 McDonald's All-American Boys Game, 2014 Jordan Brand Classic and the 2014 Nike Hoop Summit, earning co-MVP of the Jordan Brand Classic. Alexander led Curie to the 2014 Chicago Public High School League city championship in a quadruple-overtime game against Okafor that was the lead story on SportsCenter. The championship was later forfeited. As a freshman with Kansas, he did not play in the latter part of the season after the National Collegiate Athletic Association
(NCAA) launched an investigation into his eligibility.

High school career

Freshman season

Alexander, who was also a highly regarded football player, did not play organized basketball until eighth grade.

blocks in a 66–64 loss.[5] His late-season contributions gave Curie an added dimension,[6] as the team finished with a 28–3 record.[1] Following his freshman season, Alexander began to be recognized by local evaluators as a potential top national recruit.[7] After Jabari Parker and Jahlil Okafor, Alexander was already considered the best Chicago area basketball prospect.[2] He earned Red-Central all-conference recognition.[8]

Sophomore season

As late as August 2011, Alexander remained unrecognized by most national evaluators.

Division I programs in attendance.[15][16] Curie had a rematch against Simeon in the February 17 CPL championship game with Alexander again being ineffective on offense with four points against Parker and Taylor as Curie lost 53–49.[17][18][19] The game broadcast on ESPN3.[20] Following the season, a statewide panel of sportswriters and broadcaster voted Alexander as an Associated Press boys basketball Class 4A all-state honorable mention honoree.[21]

Junior season

Alexander posting up against Jahlil Okafor

At the June 2012 Pangos All-American Camp, Alexander was selected as the Most Outstanding Player.[22] Alexander, who was already a top 5 recruit according to some sources, endured a Summer 2012 foot injury that sidelined him.[23] By mid-July 2012, as ESPN's number 10 ranked prospect, he received an offer from Kentucky and was being recruited by DePaul, Indiana, Ohio State and Wisconsin.[24] Upon receiving his offer from Kentucky, he told Rivals.com that his two leading schools were Kentucky and Michigan State.[25]

By the fall of his junior season, the Illinois class of 2014 was being mentioned as one of the all-time great statewide classes of basketball players.

McDonald's All-Americans.[26] He also noted that the class has a chance to rival if not surpass the classes of 1998 and 2011 which each had nine top 100 players.[27]

On November 30, at a

February 2013 Great Plains blizzard caused controversial postponements of several IHSA games including the March 6 Young-Curie game, which was delayed one day.[38][39] Young defeated Curie 62–58 as the supporting cast made up for Alexander's 14–13 scoring edge over Okafor.[40]

Alexander blocking Paul White
Alexander dunking

In late April 2013, Okafor's father believed it was very possible that Okafor and Tyus Jones would matriculate together as a package.[41] By late April 2013, there were rumors that Alexander and Justise Winslow would attend whatever school Jones and Okafor attended.[42] Although Alexander was ranked as the fifth best player in the class of 2014 by Rivals.com and had offers from four of the six schools common to Jones and Okafor by the beginning of June, he said the chances of him matriculating with Jones and Okafor was slim.[43]

Alexander was recognized as a 2013 All-CPL first team selection by the Chicago Sun-Times along with Parker, Okafor,

Joel Berry (second team along with Alexander).[47]

Senior season

Summer and preseason

Alexander has become a member of the Mac Irvin Fire

Myles Turner and Karl-Anthony Towns.[51] On September 4, 2013, Rivals.com updated their ranking with Alexander maintaining his number 4 ranking. At the time, Eric Bossi of Rivals described Alexander as " perhaps the most powerful player in the high school ranks".[52]

In September, Alexander believed that he would make his final selection with a December verbal commitment and an April signing of his National Letter of Intent.[53] On October 7, the Hoophall Classic schedule was announced and Curie was scheduled to play Montverde Academy on January 20.[54] By some accounts Kansas was a favorite because his girlfriend was a student at Kansas and the 2013–14 Kansas Jayhawks were scheduled to play the 2013–14 Duke Blue Devils at Chicago's United Center in the ESPN Champions Classic on November 12 just before his scheduled announcement.[55] In 2013 Caelynn Manning-Allen became a freshman on the Kansas women's basketball team.[56] However, Illinois was very excited to be in serious contention for Alexander. It was the first time since Derrick Rose in 2006 that a top 5 prospect was still considering Illinois so late into his senior year and Alexander's level of interest seemed much higher than Rose's.[57] Following his Illinois visit, his scheduled announcement date had moved forward to November 15.[58] On October 31, Alexander officially eliminated Michigan State from his candidate list, leaving Kansas, Illinois, DePaul and Memphis in contention.[59]

On November 7 Alexander was ranked second behind points leader Emmanuel Mudiay in the Mr. Basketball USA preseason tracker. Although he had only one first place vote on the ten ballots, he was ranked ahead of Okafor and Stanley Johnson who combined for seven first place votes. Alexander and Mudiay were the only players named on 9 of the 10 ballots.[60] The preseason points leader has gone on to win the award in four of the prior five years.[61] His November 15 verbal commitment announcement was scheduled on the same date as Okafor, Jones and Stanley Johnson. According to ESPN, all four were among the top 10 in the national class (Okafor #1, Alexander #3, Jones #4 and Johnson #9).[62] On the eve of his announcement, Kansas and Illinois were the favorites for his services.[63] He made his verbal commitment on ESPNU to Kansas basketball on November 15.[64][65][66] He was flanked by his father (Clifton Terry) and mother (Latillia Alexander).[67] Prior to his senior season, USA Today named him to its 10-man preseason All-USA team along with Stanley Johnson, Jones, Trey Lyles, Emmanuel Mudiay, Malik Newman, Okafor, Oubre, D'Angelo Russell, and Turner.[68] Alexander was joined on the Chicago Tribune's preseason Illinois Mr. Basketball top 5 by Okafor, Brunson, Ulis and Keita Bates-Diop.[69]

2013–14 regular season

Alexander at Kenwood Academy

Alexander posted 22 points, 20 rebounds, and 5 blocks in a December 7, 66–62 victory at

Carlton Bragg.[78][79] In the January 20 Hoophall Classic, Alexander led Curie to a victory over D'Angelo Russell, Ben Simmons and Montverde Academy, the number one rated team in the country. Curie trailed by 9 points entering the fourth quarter, but Alexander had 13 of his 30 points in the final 4 minutes and 30 seconds to key the comeback. Alexander also had 12 rebounds and 5 blocks.[80][81][82] Following the game, several writers, including CBS Sports college basketball writer Jeff Borzello said that Alexander has a valid case to present in terms of being the best high school basketball player in the country (along with Okafor, Turner and Mudiay).[82][83][84] High school basketball writer Ronnie Flores regards the performance as one of the top 5 performances against a nationally highly rated high school basketball team since the turn of the century, ranking it with Louis Williams (2005), Kevin Durant (2006), Kevin Love (2007) and LeBron James (2001).[85] The win bolted Curie to the number one ranking in the nation according to StudentSports.com.[86] Alexander's performance moved him to the top of the rankings in the Mr. Basketball USA midseason tracker. He was ranked first by a wide margin and held the number one position on 7 out of 10 ballots.[87]

2014 postseason

Alexander against Jahlil Okafor (left); Alexander against Miles Reynolds (middle); Pregame (right)

As the CPL playoffs began on February 5, a February 21 championship game clash between Okafor and Alexander was pondered in the local press after the 32-team brackets were announced.

Comcast SportsNet, while the Chicago Sun-Times and Sports Illustrated credited him with just 12 rebounds. This came against Okafor who had 16 points and 9, 8 or 4 rebounds before fouling out with 2:13 remaining in regulation depending on which of the three sources you believe.[97][98][99][100] The CPL Championship game was attended by Mayor of Chicago Rahm Emanuel and was the lead story on the late edition of SportsCenter.[100][101][102] Seven days later, Curie was forced to forfeit all of its wins and the CPL championship due to the academic ineligibility of seven of its players. The title will remain vacant.[103][104][105]

Okafor and Alexander vied for a host of local and national player of the year awards,[106] with each winning multiple national player of the year awards. Young and Curie were both in the Marist Class 4A sectional in the 2014 IHSA playoffs and could have met again in the round of sixteen on March 14 if they had both won three regional contests.[107] Despite forfeiting all wins in CPL games, Curie remained eligible to compete in the IHSA playoffs due to differences in eligibility rules.[103][105] On March 4, Curie lost their opening IHSA playoff game to 11–11 DuSable High School by an 88–85 margin in overtime. It marked Curies first loss of the season on the court with Alexander in the lineup. Alexander posted 25 points, 15 rebounds, and 8 blocks despite fouling out in the final minute of regulation time.[108] Curie trailed 13–2 early and led 47–32 midway through the third quarter.[109] Curie starters Josh and Joseph Stamps were ineligible for IHSA play as was Malik Washington.[110]

In the April 2, 2014, McDonald's All-American Game Alexander posted 9 points and a game-high (tied with Kevon Looney) 11 rebounds for the losing east team.[111] In the April 18 Jordan Brand Classic, he was co-MVP (with Okafor). In the game, he posted 23 points, 8 rebounds and 5 blocks.[112][113][114]

Awards and honors

Alexander was selected to the 10-man Team USA for the 17th annual

All-USA Boys Basketball Team selection along with Okafor, Oubre, Mudiay, and Stanley Johnson.[127] He earned first team All-American recognition from MaxPreps on April 13.[128] On April 16, he earned another national player of the year award Mr. Basketball USA.[129][130]

US college sports recruiting information for high school athletes
Name Hometown High school / college Height Weight Commit date
Cliff Alexander
PF
Chicago, IL Curie (IL) 6 ft 8.5 in (2.04 m) 240 lb (110 kg) Nov 15, 2013 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:5/5 stars   Rivals:5/5 stars   247Sports:5/5 stars    ESPN:5/5 stars
Overall recruiting rankings: Scout: 6, 4 (C)   Rivals: 4, 1 (PF)  ESPN: 3, 2 (IL), 1 (PF)
  • Note: In many cases, Scout, Rivals, 247Sports, and ESPN may conflict in their listings of height and weight.
  • In these cases, the average was taken. ESPN grades are on a 100-point scale.

Sources:

  • "Kansas 2014 Basketball Commitments". Rivals.com. Retrieved May 1, 2014.
  • "2014 Kansas Basketball Commits". Scout.com. Retrieved May 1, 2014.
  • "ESPN". ESPN.com. Retrieved May 1, 2014.
  • "Scout.com Team Recruiting Rankings". Scout.com. Retrieved May 1, 2014.
  • "2014 Team Ranking". Rivals.com. Retrieved May 1, 2014.
In high school, Alexander (left) was contrasted with crosstown rival Jahlil Okafor (right).

College career

After a controversial college choice ceremony, where he put on two hats and then finished with a Kansas hat, with his father celebrating the bag, Alexander entered his college career as the

Wayman Tisdale Award Watch list selection.[135][136] Alexander was also included in the early December Naismith Award top 50 watch list.[137]

Alexander began the season coming off the bench.

2014 Orlando Classic semifinals against Tennessee on November 28, he posted 16 points.[140] Then in the finals against #20 Michigan State on November 30, he contributed 4 blocks.[141] On December 5 during the Big 12/SEC Challenge contest against Florida, Alexander posted a team-high 10 rebounds along with 12 points for his first collegiate double-double.[142][143][144] On December 20, Alexander was expected to be in the starting lineup for the first time against Lafayette,[145] but he was not.[146][147] However, he started on December 22 against Temple.[148] On January 19 against #19 Oklahoma, Alexander posted 13 points and 13 rebounds.[149] The 13 rebounds in just 23 minutes played marked a career high for Alexander and an individual season high for the Jayhawks.[150] Alexander was named Big 12 newcomer of the week on January 26, 2015.[151][152] Alexander made his second start of the season on February 10 against Texas Tech, replacing Jamari Traylor in the lineup and posting 10 points, 4 blocks and 5 rebounds.[153][154] On February 28, Alexander was inactivated due to an undisclosed NCAA investigation as a precautionary measure.[155] He did not play any games after February 23 because of the investigation of his mother's initiation of pre-NBA draft loan processing.[156]

Professional career

Portland Trail Blazers (2015–2016)

On April 7, in the face of a battle for NCAA reinstatement that saw him miss the last 8 games of the season, Alexander declared for the 2015 NBA draft.[157][158][159] On May 31, Alexander suffered a right knee injury in draft workout with the Los Angeles Lakers.[160] He was not selected in the draft and became the second top-five college recruit to go undrafted after Scotty Hopson.[161] Alexander joined the Brooklyn Nets for the 2015 NBA Summer League.[162] He averaged 6.7 rebounds, 0.3 assists, and 1.5 blocks in 22 minutes per game in the Summer League.[163] On July 24, 2015, Alexander signed a 2-year, $1.4 million contract with the Portland Trail Blazers.[164] By the beginning of training camp, Alexander's injury caused him to be expected to miss two weeks.[165] Alexander missed the entire preseason with the Trail Blazers due to his knee but made the roster and entered the season behind Meyers Leonard, Mason Plumlee, Ed Davis, Noah Vonleh, and Al-Farouq Aminu on the depth chart.[163] Despite minor torn cartilage issues, Alexander was active for the first time on November 8 in Portland's seventh game of the season.[166][167][168] Alexander played 17 minutes on November 15, posting 4 points, 4 rebounds and a block against Charlotte.[169]

On March 10, 2016, using the flexible assignment rule, Alexander was assigned to the

D-League affiliate of the Golden State Warriors.[170] On March 20, he was recalled by Portland.[171]

On July 7, 2016, Alexander was waived by the Trail Blazers.[172] The transaction was a maneuver to create salary cap space for Festus Ezeli.[173] After he cleared waivers, the Trail Blazers added him to its NBA Summer League roster.[174]

Erie BayHawks (2016–2017)

On September 8, 2016, Alexander signed with the

NBA Development League as an affiliate player of the Magic.[177] In 22 games he averaged 11.9 points, 8.0 rebounds and 1.1 blocks in 24.5 minutes.[178]

Long Island Nets (2017)

On January 31, 2017, Alexander was traded to the Long Island Nets in exchange for a 2017 third-round draft pick.[178] On April 2, 2017, Alexander signed a 10-day contract with the Brooklyn Nets. He was waived two days later before appearing in a game for the Nets. The 10-day contract had been guaranteed and earned Alexander a year of service (toward payscale minimums and pension eligibility) in the NBA making him a 2-year veteran.[179][180]

Wisconsin Herd (2017–2018)

On September 24, Alexander signed a one-year, non-guaranteed contract with the New Orleans Pelicans a few days before training camp began.[181][182] Alexander was waived on October 14.[183]

On October 20, it was announced that the Wisconsin Herd had acquired returning player rights to Alexander in a trade with Long Island.[184] On November 2, which was the eve of the season tipoff,[185] Alexander was issued a 5-game suspension for violating league's Anti-Drug Program.[186]

ASVEL Basket (2018)

On March 24, 2018, ASVEL Basket was reported to have signed Alexander.[187]

Le Mans Sarthe (2019–2020)

Alexander joined the

LNB Pro A.[189]

Suwon KT Sonicboom (2020–2021)

On November 23, 2020, Alexander signed with the

Sagesse Club (2022–2023)

Alexander joined

Sagesse Club of the Lebanese Basketball League for the 2022–23 season.[191]

During a game against Antranik Youth Association away from their homeground, Cliff would break one of the two fix backboards used for the game, suspending it[192] for an hour. It's Antranik's second backboard broken in the span of a month, the first being broken by Elias Sebaaly, another player from Sagesse.

Beirut (2023–present)

National team career

Alexander was selected by USA Basketball to represent Team USA in the inaugural 2013 FIBA Americas 3x3 U18 Championship in August. He helped the team achieve gold.[193] In the September 26–29, 2013 FIBA 3x3 U18 World Championship in Jakarta, Indonesia, Team USA finished 9th with a 7–1 record, losing in the opening round of 16 in the playoffs.[194][195]

NBA career statistics

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

Regular season

Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
2015–16 Portland 8 0 4.5 .500 .000 .000 .8 .0 .1 .3 1.3
Career 8 0 4.5 .500 .000 .000 .8 .0 .1 .3 1.3

Personal life

Alexander's father is 6-foot-7-inch (2.01 m) Clifton Terry, who played basketball for

NBA Development League. Alexander picked up basketball late due to the lack of available safe courts to play on in his Chicago West Side neighborhood known as the Brian Piccolo community.[3]

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External links