Mark Aguirre

Mark Anthony Aguirre (born December 10, 1959) is an American former basketball player in the National Basketball Association. Aguirre was chosen as the first overall pick of the 1981 NBA draft by the Dallas Mavericks after playing three years at DePaul University. Aguirre played in the NBA from 1981 until 1994 and won two championships with the Detroit Pistons after being traded to Detroit from Dallas in exchange for Adrian Dantley. Aguirre was a three-time All-Star for Dallas.

Mark Aguirre
Aguirre playing in the 1989 NBA Playoffs during his tenure with the Detroit Pistons.
Personal information
Born (1959-12-10) December 10, 1959
Chicago, Illinois
NationalityAmerican
Listed height6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)
Listed weight232 lb (105 kg)
Career information
High schoolWestinghouse (Chicago, Illinois)
CollegeDePaul (1978–1981)
NBA draft1981 / Round: 1 / Pick: 1st overall
Selected by the Dallas Mavericks
Playing career1981–1994
PositionSmall forward
Number24, 23, 7
Coaching career2002–present
Career history
As player:
19811989Dallas Mavericks
19891993Detroit Pistons
1993–1994Los Angeles Clippers
As coach:
2002–2003Indiana Pacers (assistant)
20032008New York Knicks (assistant)
Career highlights and awards
Career statistics
Points18,458 (20.0 ppg)
Rebounds4,578 (5.0 rpg)
Assists2,871 (3.1 apg)
Stats at Basketball-Reference.com
College Basketball Hall of Fame
Inducted in 2016

College career

While playing at DePaul University, he averaged 24.5 points over three seasons with the Blue Demons under coach Ray Meyer. In 1981, Aguirre was The Sporting News and Helms Foundation College Player of the Year.[1] He also was the USBWA College Player of the Year and James Naismith Award winner in 1980, and a 2 time member of The Sporting News' All-America first team. As a freshman in 1978–1979, he led the Demons to the Final Four, where they lost to Indiana State, led by future Basketball Hall of Famer Larry Bird.

The Chicago native played alongside Terry Cummings at DePaul, and found himself in the national spotlight during his three years at the university. Aguirre averaged 24.0 points as a freshman in 1978–79, and led the Blue Demons to the NCAA Final Four. Over the next two seasons he scored 26.8 and 23.0 points per game, respectively, and was named College Player of the Year in 1980–81.

1980 US Olympic Team

Aguirre was a member of the 1980 U.S. Olympic basketball team but was unable to compete due to the 1980 Summer Olympics boycott. He did however receive one of 461 Congressional Gold Medals created especially for the spurned athletes.[2]

Aguirre declared for the NBA draft after his junior year at DePaul. The Dallas Mavericks selected him with the first overall pick in the 1981 NBA draft.

Professional career

Dallas Mavericks (1981-1989)

Aguirre averaged 20 points per game over the course of his 13-year NBA career. He was selected as the first overall pick by the Dallas Mavericks in the 1981 NBA draft and remained with the Mavericks until 1989. In his first season Aguirre was limited to 51 games and averaged 18.7 points, second on the team to Jay Vincent (21.4 ppg). The Mavericks improved by 13 games in the win column and finished ahead of the Utah Jazz, but were still twenty games behind division-leading San Antonio Spurs.

Beginning with the 1982–83 season Aguirre reeled off six straight campaigns in which his average topped 22 points per game. In the first of those seasons he scored 24.4 points per contest, tops on the team and sixth in the league. The Mavericks continued their ascent, bettering their record to 38-44 to finish ahead of Utah and the Houston Rockets in the Midwest Division. During the 1983-84 NBA season Aguirre averaged 29.5 points per game, second in the league to Dantley's 30.6 ppg. He finished the season with 2,330 total points.

Although Aguirre was the Mavericks’ main weapon, he was helped by the emergence of Rolando Blackman (22.4 ppg) and the contributions of role players Brad Davis and Pat Cummings. Dallas finished second in the Midwest at 43-39, and the team made its first playoff trip, beating the Seattle SuperSonics in the opening round before losing to the Los Angeles Lakers in the conference semifinals. In each of the next two seasons the Mavericks posted identical 44-38 records. In 1984–85 they made a quick exit from the playoffs, bowing to the Portland Trail Blazers in the first round; in 1985–86 they defeated Utah and then took the Lakers to six games in the conference semifinals. Aguirre averaged 25.7 and 22.6 points for those seasons.

In 1986–87 and 1987–88 he made the All-Star Team and averaged 25.7 and 25.1 points, respectively, during the regular season. The Mavericks won more than 50 games each year. The 1987–88 edition of the franchise went 53-29, beat Houston and the Denver Nuggets in the first two rounds of the postseason, then extended the Lakers to seven games before losing in the Western Conference Finals. It was the longest postseason run in the Mavs’ eight-year history. Both Mavericks single-season scoring records still stand. His 13,930 points as a Maverick rank third in the franchise's history,[3] behind Rolando Blackman's 16,643 points and Dirk Nowitzki's 31,560.[4]

While Aguirre's time in Dallas was full of high-scoring efforts and playoff visits, the Mavericks were postseason underachievers (their only Western Conference Finals visit was the 1988 loss to the Lakers), and Aguirre had repeated conflicts with coach Dick Motta and players like Blackman, Derek Harper and James Donaldson. Then-team owner Donald Carter was a huge fan of Aguirre and hoped he would remain in Dallas for his entire career, but eventually conceded that the gulf between Aguirre and the team was unbridgeable. Midway through the 1988–89 season Aguirre was traded to the Detroit Pistons for Dantley, who was also one of the league's top scorers, and a first round draft pick on February 15, 1989.

Detroit Pistons (1989-1993)

After Aguirre joined them, the Pistons won the NBA title in 1988-89 and repeated as champions in 1989–90. He showed he could blend into a successful team by taking fewer shots, playing hard on defense, and not complaining when Dennis Rodman's minutes increased greatly over time. In the 1990 playoffs, which culminated with a five-game Finals win over Portland, Aguirre averaged 11.0 points. Aguirre played three more seasons with the Pistons in an increasingly limited role, due to both Rodman's play and his own age and injury issues.

Los Angeles Clippers (1993-1994)

In 1993, the Pistons released Aguirre. After he cleared waivers the Los Angeles Clippers signed him for $150,000 for a partial campaign in 1993–94. Through the 1993–94 season Aguirre had accumulated 18,458 points for a career average of 20.0 points per game. He retired in 1994.

Personal life

Aguirre has been married to Angela Bowman since January 1988.[5] Aguirre, whose grandfather was from Mexico, at one point considered playing for team Mexico at the 1992 Olympics.[6]

Honors

  • Aguirre was inducted into the College Basketball Hall of Fame in 2016.

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
   Won an NBA championship

Regular season

Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
1981–82 Dallas 512028.8.465.352.6804.93.2.7.418.7
1982–83 Dallas 817534.4.483.211.7286.34.11.0.324.4
1983–84 Dallas 797936.7.524.268.7495.94.51.0.329.5
1984–85 Dallas 807933.7.506.318.7596.03.1.8.325.7
1985–86 Dallas 747333.8.503.286.7056.04.6.8.222.6
1986–87 Dallas 808033.3.495.353.7705.33.21.1.425.7
1987–88 Dallas 777733.9.475.302.7705.63.6.9.725.1
1988–89 Dallas 444434.8.450.293.7305.34.3.7.721.7
1988–89 Detroit 363229.7.483.293.7384.22.5.4.415.5
1989–90 Detroit 784025.7.488.333.7563.91.9.4.214.1
1990–91 Detroit 781325.7.462.308.7574.81.8.6.314.2
1991–92 Detroit 751221.1.431.211.6873.11.7.7.111.3
1992–93 Detroit 511520.7.443.361.7673.02.1.3.19.9
1993–94 L.A. Clippers 39022.0.468.398.6943.02.7.5.210.6
Career 92363930.0.484.312.7415.03.1.7.320.0
All-Star 3014.0.542.400.8001.31.3.7.312.0

Playoffs

Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
1984 Dallas 101035.0.478.000.7727.63.2.5.522.0
1985 Dallas 4441.0.494.500.8447.54.0.8.029.0
1986 Dallas 101034.5.491.333.3637.15.4.9.024.7
1987 Dallas 4432.5.500.000.7676.02.02.0.021.3
1988 Dallas 171721.6.500.382.6985.93.3.8.521.6
1989† Detroit 171727.2.489.276.7374.41.6.5.212.6
1990† Detroit 20322.0.467.333.7504.61.4.5.211.0
1991 Detroit 15226.5.506.364.8244.11.9.8.115.6
1992 Detroit 5022.6.333.200.7501.82.4.4.29.0
Career 1026729.0.485.317.7435.32.6.7.217.1

References

  1. Anderson, Claude (April 7, 1981). "Getting set for run at the roses". The Sun. pp. D-1, D-5. Retrieved May 2, 2020 via Newspapers.com. DePaul's Mark Aguirre was player-of-the-year and UC Irvine's Kevin Magee (the only other Southlander selected) made it at a forward.
  2. Caroccioli, Tom; Caroccioli, Jerry. Boycott: Stolen Dreams of the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games. Highland Park, IL: New Chapter Press. pp. 243–253. ISBN 978-0942257403.
  3. "Nets vs. Mavericks - Game Recap - March 8, 2008 - ESPN". ESPN.com.
  4. "Dirk Nowitzki". ESPN.com.
  5. "Chicago Tribune - Historical Newspapers". chicagotribune.com.
  6. "Sports - Aguirre May Play For Mexico - Seattle Times Newspaper". community.seattletimes.nwsource.com.
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