Vincent Askew
Personal information | |
---|---|
Born | Idaho Stampede | February 28, 1966
1998–1999 | Cocodrilos de Caracas |
Career highlights and awards | |
| |
Stats at NBA.com | |
Stats at Basketball-Reference.com | |
Vincent Jerome Askew (born February 28, 1966) is an American former professional basketball player who played for nine seasons in the National Basketball Association (NBA) for eight different teams. A 6'6" guard-forward, Askew played college basketball for Memphis State University. He was raised by his grandmother who had 13 kids and custody of Askew and three cousins.[1]
College career
Askew was a
After the Final Four season, Askew found himself in the midst of a debate on NCAA regulations when he briefly considered transferring to Kansas.
In October 1986, Vincent Askew was involved in a possible transfer to the University of Kansas. He did not transfer, and re-enrolled at Memphis State University in the fall of 1986. While Askew was visiting the Jayhawks, then-coach Larry Brown provided Askew with a plane ticket to fly back to Memphis to see his dying grandmother. The purchase of the plane ticket violated NCAA rules and Kansas was served with NCAA sanctions because of their recruitment of Askew, mainly involving "improper recruiting inducements totaling at least $1,244 to the above-mentioned young man."[3]
Askew left after three seasons with the Tigers.[4]
NBA career
Askew was picked by the
He was brought back to the NBA by the
He also had stints with the Denver Nuggets and the Portland Trail Blazers, where he was waived for a final time in the 1997–1998 season.
Askew was described as a 6-foot-6 do-everything team player who played in the post and the perimeter and was a steady defensive stopper who built a reliable jumper late in his career.[6] The most he has ever scored in an NBA game is 21 points. In his NBA career, Askew played in 467 games and scored a total of 3,313 points. He averaged 7.1 points, 2.5 rebounds, 2.2 assists in 20 minutes per game.
Professional career outside the NBA
Askew is the only player to be named Most Valuable Player in two straight years (1990 and 1991) in the Continental Basketball Association. He also had a stint in the World Basketball League.[7]
Askew also played in Italy for
After the NBA, Askew had some difficulties establishing himself. European basketball records indicate that at least three times he signed with various teams but refused to play with them, ending in August 2001 when he signed a contract with Roseto, but did not come to Italy. Askew, according to an undated Euroleague scouting report, "is an NBA veteran that has finally, according to many, reached maturity. Vincent still has a lot of basketball left in him and wants to show the basketball people in Europe that he is indeed a reliable person."[4]
Retirement
Upon his release from Portland in 1998, Askew returned to his hometown of Memphis, completed a degree in marketing and did some scouting for Memphis coach John Calipari, which piqued his interest in coaching.
He confided in George Karl, his long-time mentor from his Sonics days, and was told to go overseas. Askew went to Europe, where he coached in an Italian league for three years.
Askew took the head coaching job at Elliston Baptist Academy in Memphis, but was embattled to leave the job. Allegations that he had used ineligible players had landed the school in hot water with the Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Association, potentially costing them a chance to play in the postseason, and Askew's players were not pleased with his abrasive coaching methods.[4]
In 2004, Askew accepted the head coaching position at Rossville Christian Academy. Askew again stirred some controversy by recruiting players, which is a clear
In 2005, he contacted the ABA expansion team Tacoma Navigators' owner Michael Tuckman. Askew got a chance to hone his raw coaching skills, while the Navigators, which plays its home games at Mount Tahoma High School, marketed its coach as a former Sonic.
In 2014, Askew hosted "Holiday Hoop It Up" in Memphis, Tennessee Askew also tells his story about "Going Public" with God and getting baptized [1]
Askew was listed by CBS Los Angeles as "10 Biggest NBA Trade Deadline Deals"[8]
References
- ^ a b "Going Public :: Vincent Askew". 21 May 2014.
- ^ "1984-85 Tigers To Be Honored At Saturday's Game - GOTIGERSGO.COM - The Official Website of the University of Memphis Tigers". www.gotigersgo.com. Archived from the original on 2015-02-25.
- ^ "NCAA Penalty Hits KU Hard".
- ^ a b c Busbee, Jay (October 8, 2023). "Flashlight & A Biscuit | Jay Busbee | Substack". jaybusbee.substack.com.
- ^ Paul Gerald, Plugging Along
- ^ "The Seattle Times | Local news, sports, business, politics, entertainment, travel, restaurants and opinion for Seattle and the Pacific Northwest". www.seattletimes.com.
- ^ Percy Allen, The Seattle Times: Sonics: The long road home for Askew, December 11, 2005
- ^ "10 Biggest NBA Trade Deadline Deals". 17 February 2015.