This page will contain external links about Pete Maravich, as they become available.Pete MaravichPete Maravich (June 22, 1947 - January 5, 1988), known in the basketball world as "Pistol Pete", was a legendary player who starred in college and for three NBA teams. Born in the Pittsburgh suburb of Aliquippa, Pennsylvania and of Serbian descent, Pete had seemed to marvel his family and friends with his basketball ability since he was young. His father Press Maravich, former player turned coach, showed Pete the fundamentals starting at age 7. Pete would spend hours practicing ball control tricks, passes, head fakes, and long range shots. He decided on the guard position, the only position he would ever play. He attended three high schools as a teen: Daniel High School in Clemson, South Carolina, Needham Broughton in Raleigh, North Carolina, and Edward Military Institute in Salemburg, North Carolina. During his years at those schools, he wowed college scouts with his ability to play his favorite sport. And so, in 1966, Pete decided to attend Louisiana State University, where his father was head basketball coach. This is where he, along with his trademark floppy gray socks, became legendary. He scored a record 3,667 points for his career at LSU, which lasted from 1967-1970, and averaged 44.2 points per game for his career, also a record. His records are even more remarkable for two reasons: First, in Maravich's time, freshmen were ineligible for varsity sports - meaning that he only had three years to compile his career point totals instead of the four years today's college players have. Second, he played more than 15 years before the NCAA instituted the three-point field goal. Many of his outside shots would be three-pointers today. Maravich was named The Sporting News' player of the year in 1970. He scored a personal record of 69 points versus Alabama during a game that year, and garnered numerous other awards and college records. He graduated from LSU in 1970, but the respect he garnered among many of Louisiana's basketball fans would bring him back to that state soon. In November of 1970, Maravich started his NBA career with the Atlanta Hawks. After four years there, he was back in Louisiana upon being traded to the New Orleans Jazz. Many say that he had his best years in the NBA as a player while in New Orleans. In the 1979-80 season the Jazz became the Utah Jazz, and Maravich was soon traded to the Boston Celtics, where he played for one season alongside Larry Bird before retiring. In 1982 Pete Maravich found religion and became a motivational speaker, incorporating Christian faith into his message. He enjoyed the life of a retired basketball player. Maravich was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 1987. He was, and still is, the youngest player to be inducted. On January 5, 1988, while playing a pickup basketball game with a group that included Focus on the Family head James Dobson (Maravich was scheduled to appear on Dobson's radio show later that day), he collapsed and died of a heart attack at the age of only 40. An autopsy revealed that his death was due to a previously undiagnosed congenital heart defect; he had been born with only one coronary artery instead of the normal two. After Maravich's death, Louisiana Governor Buddy Roemer signed a proclamation officially naming the LSU home court the Pete Maravich Assembly Center. Maravich was a 24.4 points per game scorer in his NBA career, scoring 15,948 points in 688 games. He scored 68 points in one game versus the New York Knicks and shares the record for most free throws made in a quarter with 14. He was a 5-time All-Star, and led the league in points in 1977 when he scored 31.1 points a game. In 1996, he was named one of the 50 greatest NBA players in history by a panel made up of NBA historians, former players and coaches. His widow and their two sons accepted the honor in his place. In 1991, a biographical movie about him, Pistol Pete, was produced in Hollywood. Pistol Pete also came out with Pistol Pete's Homework Basketball video series. The series contains four different videos, one on passing, ball-handling, shooting, and dribbling. The videos are meant for people of all ages who want to learn the great skills and drills that made him one of the best basketball players of all time. This page about Pete Maravich includes information from a Wikipedia article. Additional articles about Pete Maravich News stories about Pete Maravich External links for Pete Maravich Videos for Pete Maravich Wikis about Pete Maravich Discussion Groups about Pete Maravich Blogs about Pete Maravich Images of Pete Maravich |
|
The videos are meant for people of all ages who want to learn the great skills and drills that made him one of the best basketball players of all time. His widow and their two sons accepted the honor in his place. Brady finished third in the league in MVP votes for the 2005 season, with Shaun Alexander winning the award. In 1996, he was named one of the 50 greatest NBA players in history by a panel made up of NBA historians, former players and coaches. Even as his Patriots shifted through a league record 44 starters, including injuries to left tackle Matt Light and center Dan Koppen for the season, the Patriots finished with a 10-6 record and clinched the AFC East for the fourth time in five years. He was a 5-time All-Star, and led the league in points in 1977 when he scored 31.1 points a game. As previously mentioned, Brady finished the regular season with league-leading 4,110 yards passing and 26 touchdowns. He scored 68 points in one game versus the New York Knicks and shares the record for most free throws made in a quarter with 14. Looking at his statistics, one sees that the departure of offensive coordinator Charlie Weis, who became head coach of Notre Dame in 2005, did not seem to affect Brady. Maravich was a 24.4 points per game scorer in his NBA career, scoring 15,948 points in 688 games. Brady also led the NFL in touchdown passes in 2002-2003 with 28, and total pass yardage in 2005-2006 with 4,110 yards.[2]. After Maravich's death, Louisiana Governor Buddy Roemer signed a proclamation officially naming the LSU home court the Pete Maravich Assembly Center. While not known for his outstanding statistics, Brady is seventh all-time in passer rating, posting an 88.5 career mark through the end of the 2005-2006 regular season. An autopsy revealed that his death was due to a previously undiagnosed congenital heart defect; he had been born with only one coronary artery instead of the normal two. He has led the most (21) game-winning scoring drives in the 4th quarter or overtime in the NFL since he became a starter. On January 5, 1988, while playing a pickup basketball game with a group that included Focus on the Family head James Dobson (Maravich was scheduled to appear on Dobson's radio show later that day), he collapsed and died of a heart attack at the age of only 40. Brady has extensive experience with pressure situations. He was, and still is, the youngest player to be inducted. Under Tom Brady, the New England Patriots' regular season record is 48-17, and they are 10-1 in the playoffs and 7-0 in overtime. Maravich was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 1987. Brady's defenders argue that he is a clutch player. He enjoyed the life of a retired basketball player. Brady's fiercest detractors have argued that he is a "system quarterback", and believe that many other quarterbacks would have enjoyed the same level of success playing for the Patriots. In 1982 Pete Maravich found religion and became a motivational speaker, incorporating Christian faith into his message. Most notably, comparisons are often made with Peyton Manning of the Indianapolis Colts, leading to fierce and bitter controversy. In the 1979-80 season the Jazz became the Utah Jazz, and Maravich was soon traded to the Boston Celtics, where he played for one season alongside Larry Bird before retiring. This debate has existed and evolved for several years, from arguments over whether Brady was even better than average to current arguments that center on comparing Brady to only a few select and elite quarterbacks. Many say that he had his best years in the NBA as a player while in New Orleans. There is considerable debate, both among football fans and sportswriters, as to where exactly Tom Brady ranks in the quarterback pantheon. After four years there, he was back in Louisiana upon being traded to the New Orleans Jazz. Despite not playing in the game, Brady was present at Super Bowl XL, as the official coin tosser prior to kickoff. In November of 1970, Maravich started his NBA career with the Atlanta Hawks. It was the first loss of Brady's playoff career. He graduated from LSU in 1970, but the respect he garnered among many of Louisiana's basketball fans would bring him back to that state soon. Brady threw for 346 yards in the game and a touchdown with two interceptions, including one returned 100 yards by Denver cornerback Champ Bailey. He scored a personal record of 69 points versus Alabama during a game that year, and garnered numerous other awards and college records. However, on January 14, 2006, the Patriots lost 27-13 against the Denver Broncos at INVESCO Field. Maravich was named The Sporting News' player of the year in 1970. In the playoffs, Brady led the Patriots to a 28-3 victory over Jacksonville in the Wild Card Round. Many of his outside shots would be three-pointers today. When the Patriots hosted the Atlanta Falcons, Brady achieved a regular season-high rating of 140.3.[2] It was the fourth highest regular season single-game quarterback rating of Brady's career. Second, he played more than 15 years before the NCAA instituted the three-point field goal. Some of the highlights of the season included another game with the Steelers, in which Brady helped lead the team on the game winning drive. His records are even more remarkable for two reasons: First, in Maravich's time, freshmen were ineligible for varsity sports - meaning that he only had three years to compile his career point totals instead of the four years today's college players have. At 92.3, his 2005-2006 passer rating was the second highest of his career, although he tied his worst interception total (14).[2] He also rushed for 89 yards and fumbled a career-low 4 times.[2] Brady and the injured Patriots finished with a 10-6 record and obtained their third straight AFC East title. He scored a record 3,667 points for his career at LSU, which lasted from 1967-1970, and averaged 44.2 points per game for his career, also a record. The results were positive; Brady finished first in the league with 4,110 passing yards and third in the league with 26 touchdowns. This is where he, along with his trademark floppy gray socks, became legendary. Brady also had to adjust to a new center and a new running back: Heath Evans. And so, in 1966, Pete decided to attend Louisiana State University, where his father was head basketball coach. During the 2005-2006 season, the Patriots were forced to rely more on Tom Brady's passing due to injuries suffered by running backs Corey Dillon, Patrick Pass, and Kevin Faulk. During his years at those schools, he wowed college scouts with his ability to play his favorite sport. On February 6, 2005, the Brady-led Patriots won Super Bowl XXXIX for their third NFL championship in four years. He attended three high schools as a teen: Daniel High School in Clemson, South Carolina, Needham Broughton in Raleigh, North Carolina, and Edward Military Institute in Salemburg, North Carolina. Against the NFL's best defensive team, Brady recorded a quarterback passer rating of 130.5, his highest of the season.[2] 2004 also served as Brady's best year statistically; his rating, at 92.6, was a career high.[2]. He decided on the guard position, the only position he would ever play. Brady played his best game of the year in Pittsburgh despite requiring IV treatment the previous night when he had a temperature of 103 degrees. Pete would spend hours practicing ball control tricks, passes, head fakes, and long range shots. In the AFC playoffs, Brady led the Patriots to victories over the Indianapolis Colts and the Pittsburgh Steelers. His father Press Maravich, former player turned coach, showed Pete the fundamentals starting at age 7. The Patriots also won the AFC East divisional title for the third time in four years. Born in the Pittsburgh suburb of Aliquippa, Pennsylvania and of Serbian descent, Pete had seemed to marvel his family and friends with his basketball ability since he was young. New England's 14-2 record matched that of the 2003-04 season and equalled the best record ever for a defending champion. Pete Maravich (June 22, 1947 - January 5, 1988), known in the basketball world as "Pistol Pete", was a legendary player who starred in college and for three NBA teams. During the 2004-2005 season, Brady helped the Patriots set an NFL record with 21 straight wins dating from the previous year. With 1:08 left in the fourth quarter and the score tied at 29, Brady engineered a drive to put the Patriots in position for the game-winning field goal. During the game, Brady set the record for most completions by a QB in the Super Bowl (32). On February 1, 2004, Brady led the Patriots to a 32-29 victory over the NFC champion Carolina Panthers in Super Bowl XXXVIII and was named Super Bowl MVP for the second time. In the first two rounds of the playoffs, the Patriots defeated the Tennessee Titans and Indianapolis Colts. Statistically, Brady's strongest game of the season was against Buffalo, when he achieved a season-high quarterback rating of 122.9.[2]. In the 2003-2004 NFL season, after a 2-2 start, Brady led the Patriots to 12 consecutive victories to finish the season and win the AFC East. Brady continues to suffer from shoulder complications, but it has not led to a missed start. Although posting a career-low single-season rating of 85.7, Brady threw for a league-leading 28 touchdown passes, though his 14 interceptions ties his worst total.[2] Moreover, at Buffalo, Brady threw for a quarterback rating of 147.6, the second highest of his career.[2] Furthermore, Brady played much of the second half of the season with a shoulder injury, and New England head coach Bill Belichick has since indicated that if the Patriots had made the playoffs, Brady would not have been able to play in the first game due to that injury. However the Jets won the division on the third tiebreaker, and the Patriots missed the playoffs. Tom Brady and the Patriots finished the year at 9-7, tied for the New York Jets and the Miami Dolphins for the best record in the division. Brady was named MVP of Super Bowl XXXVI while throwing for 145 yards and 1 touchdown. The Patriots won the game on an Adam Vinatieri field goal as time expired. Instead, Brady drove the Patriots offense down the field. With less than two minutes left in the Super Bowl, and the score tied, sportscaster John Madden said that he thought the Patriots should let the time run out on the clock and look to win the game in overtime. Louis Rams in Super Bowl XXXVI. After defeating the Pittsburgh Steelers in the AFC Championship Game, the Patriots were considered 14-point underdogs against the NFC champion St. Brady, who threw for 312 yards in his first NFL playoff game, led the Patriots back from a 10-point fourth quarter deficit and engineered the winning drive in overtime to beat the Raiders. Citing the controversial "tuck rule," where a ball is ruled an incomplete pass after the quarterback starts any forward throwing motion, referee Walt Coleman overturned the decision after reviewing the instant replay, calling the drop an incomplete pass rather than a fumble (some analysts have claimed that Oakland should have been called for "roughing the passer" on that play, as the player who made contact with Brady hit his head; such a call would have rendered the "tuck rule" controversy obsolete). During a 2001-2002 divisional playoff game against the Oakland Raiders (played in January 2002), Tom Brady had been ruled as having fumbled on a pass attempt, with Oakland protecting a three-point lead. He also passed for his third highest single season rating (86.5).[2]. However, during a mid-season matchup at Indianapolis, Brady passed for a career-high regular season rating of 148.3 in a 38-17 win.[2] Brady helped bring the Patriots to an 11-5 record and into the playoffs. [2]. In his first two games, Brady's quarterback rating was low, at 79.6 and 58.7 respectively. Soon after Brady was named the starting quarterback. New England lost both the game and Bledsoe. During that game, Drew Bledsoe suffered internal bleeding after colliding with Jets linebacker Mo Lewis. This changed on September 23, 2001, when the Patriots were playing against their AFC East division rivals, New York Jets at Foxboro Stadium. After being selected in the 6th round of the 2000 Draft, Brady served as the backup quarterback to Drew Bledsoe. In the 1999 season, Brady led Michigan in defeating Alabama in an overtime game in the Orange Bowl and threw for 400 yards in that game. The Wolverines won 20 of 25 games when Brady started and shared the Big Ten Conference title in 1998. He was All-Big Ten both seasons and team captain his senior year. Brady battled for the first string quarterback position with Drew Henson and ultimately started every game in the 1998 and 1999 seasons under Michigan head coach Lloyd Carr. Since that time, Brady has mentioned Montana as one of his inspirations and an idol[1] He played college football for, and graduated from, the University of Michigan, sitting on the bench his first two years; including a year as understudy to fellow UM teammate and future NFL quarterback Brian Griese who led the Wolverines to the 1997 National Championship. Born near San Francisco in San Mateo, California, Brady would be regularly taken to see the 49ers play in the 1980s, where he became a fan of quarterback Joe Montana. . Additionally, Brady was Sports Illustrated's Sportsman of the Year in 2005. With the Patriots, Brady has won three Super Bowls and two Super Bowl MVP awards. In the 2000 NFL Draft, Brady was selected by the New England Patriots in the 6th round (199th overall). Brady attended the University of Michigan and led Michigan to an Orange Bowl victory in the 1999 season. Brady graduated from Junipero Serra High School, the same school that produced baseball player Barry Bonds and NFL Hall of Famer Lynn Swann. Thomas Edward Brady, Jr. (born August 3, 1977) is an American football quarterback for the National Football League's New England Patriots. Brady guest-starred as himself in Family Guy episode "Patriot Games" (first aired January 29, 2006). Brady guest-starred as himself in The Simpsons episode "Homer and Ned's Hail Mary Pass" (first aired February 6, 2005). In 2002 and 2004, his touchdown-interception ratio was identical (28-14). In his five full seasons as an NFL quarterback, Brady has thrown for either 12 or 14 interceptions per season. Was nominated for the FedEx Air Player of the Year Award with Peyton Manning and Carson Palmer(Winner). In the December 12, 2005 Issue of Sports Illustrated, Brady was named Sportsman of the Year; he is the fourth professional football player to receive the honor since the award was created in 1954 and the first professional football player to garner the accolade since 1990. Brady appears in a Visa commercial with his teammates from his offensive line, Brandon Gorin, Tom Ashworth, Russ Hochstein, Matt Light, and Dan Koppen in which the offensive linemen represented Visa's five layers of protection. Brady is a lifelong Roman Catholic. On April 16, 2005, Brady hosted an episode of Saturday Night Live with musical guest Beck. According to The Smoking Gun as of 2004, Tom Brady is a registered voter, but has not voted in any political election so far. Brady declined to discuss his political views with the media. Bush. On January 26, 2004, Tom Brady attended the annual State of the Union Address as a guest of President George W. Most completions in a Super Bowl (32 in Super Bowl XXXVIII). 3 Super Bowl victories. 2 Super Bowl MVP awards. 3 Pro Bowls. 73.7 passing attempts per interception in the post-season (lowest rate, NFL history (minimum 250 pass attempts): Bart Starr second with 71 attempts per post-season interception). 5 passes intercepted. 15 passing touchdowns. 2493 passing yards (226.6 ypg). 225 passes completed. 367 passes attempted. NFL record 10-1 in the post-season (12-1 including college). Most consecutive post season wins (college and professional combined): 12. NFL record for most consecutive wins in post season: 10 (broke record of Green Bay's Bart Starr). 7-0 in overtime games. 58-20 record as a starter (.744 winning percentage). 66 interceptions. 123 passing touchdowns. 18,035 passing yards. 63.0% completion rate. 4110 passing yards, (1st in the NFL). 14 interceptions. 26 passing touchdowns (3rd in the NFL). 92.3 quarterback rating (2nd highest of career). Highest interception total, season (minumum 2 starts): 14 (2002, 2004, 2005). Lowest interception total, season (minimum 2 starts): 12 (2001 and 2003). Highest career quarterback rating against a team: Atlanta Falcons (140.4). Highest single-season quarterback rating: 92.6 (2004-2005 season). Highest single-game quarterback rating: 148.3 (at Indianapolis, October 21, 2001). |