Basketball Player Nicknames
- Question: “The Human Highlight Film”
- Answer: An awe-inspiring leaper, Wilkins, who spent most of his NBA career with the Atlanta Hawks, popularized the windmill dunk.
- Question: Larry Bird
- Answer: In addition to being a 12-time NBA All-Star as a Boston Celtic, Bird won three consecutive league Most Valuable Player awards (1984–86).
- Question: “Tiny”
- Answer: A small man who played big, Archibald led the NBA in both scoring (34 points per game) and assists (11.4 assists per game) in 1972–73.
- Question: “The Answer”
- Answer: Known for both explosive play on the court and controversy away from the game, Iverson became the first great athlete to be strongly identified with the hip-hop movement.
- Question: “The Big Dipper”
- Answer: More than 7 feet (2.1 meters) tall and also known as “Wilt the Stilt,” the imposing Chamberlain once scored 100 points in a single game, many of them recorded with his “Dipper Dunk.”
- Question: LeBron James
- Answer: Drafted directly out of high school, James became the youngest player in NBA history to achieve a number of benchmarks, including winning the Rookie of the Year award and scoring 10,000 career points.
- Question: “Run TMC”
- Answer: In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the extraordinary on-court chemistry between Hardaway, Richmond, and Mullin made the Golden State Warriors one of the most-exciting teams in the NBA and earned the trio a nickname derived from their first names that was a nod to rap group Run-DMC.
- Question: Bill Bradley
- Answer: Bill Bradley was a scoring machine at Princeton University and a pivotal member of New York Knicks championship teams before entering the U.S. Senate and running for president.
- Question: “Mr. Clutch”
- Answer: West, who earned this nickname for his prowess at crunch time, was also known as “Zeke from Cabin Creek” (for his West Virginia roots) and “the Logo” (because his silhouette adorns the NBA emblem).
- Question: “Earl the Pearl”
- Answer: Hall of Famer Earl Monroe was also known as “Black Jesus.” Manigault was a legendary playground player, and Lloyd was the first African American to play in the NBA. Schieb painted cars.
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© miqu77/Shutterstock.com