George Lynch (basketball)

George Lynch
Personal information
Born (1970-09-03) September 3, 1970
Roanoke, Virginia
Nationality American
Listed height 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m)
Listed weight 218 lb (99 kg)
Career information
High school Flint Hill School (Oakton, Virginia)
College North Carolina (1989–1993)
NBA draft 1993 / Round: 1 / Pick: 12th overall
Selected by the Los Angeles Lakers
Playing career 1993–2005
Position Small forward / Power forward
Number 30, 24, 34, 9
Career history
As player:
19931996 Los Angeles Lakers
19961998 Vancouver Grizzlies
19992001 Philadelphia 76ers
20012005 Charlotte / New Orleans Hornets
As coach:
2006–2007 SMU (graduate assistant)
2010–2012 UC Irvine (strength & conditioning)
2012–2013 SMU (assistant)
2013–2014 SMU (strength & conditioning)
2014–present SMU (Director of Player Development)
Career highlights and awards
Career NBA statistics
Points 5,109 (6.6 ppg)
Rebounds 3,902 (5.0 rpg)
Steals 817 (1.1 spg)
Stats at Basketball-Reference.com

George DeWitt Lynch III (born September 3, 1970) is a retired American professional basketball player who played in the NBA from 1993 to 2005. He holds the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill basketball record for most career steals.

Lynch was raised in Roanoke, Virginia, and played basketball at Patrick Henry High for coach Woody Dean. Lynch was part of the 1989 Virginia State Champion Team at Patrick Henry. For his senior year, he transferred to Flint Hill School, a prep school located outside Washington, D.C. to better his chances at college prospects.

After leading the University of North Carolina to an NCAA title in 1993, he was selected by the Los Angeles Lakers with the 12th overall pick in that year's NBA draft. With the Lakers, he wore three different jersey numbers – #24, #30 and #34. Lynch was traded to the Vancouver Grizzlies along with Anthony Peeler in 1996 in order to open up salary cap space in order to sign Shaquille O'Neal. He joined the Philadelphia 76ers as a free agent in 1999.

It was with Theo Ratliff, Tyrone Hill, Eric Snow, Dikembe Mutombo, Allen Iverson, and coach Larry Brown that he helped form one of the better defenses in the league.

After playing with the 76ers for three seasons, he was traded to the Charlotte Hornets in a three-way trade also involving Derrick Coleman, Jérôme Moïso, Robert Traylor, and Vonteego Cummings, among others, in 2001, retiring after 2004–05.

On December 20, 2006, he joined the Southern Methodist University men's basketball staff under head coach Matt Doherty, who was part of North Carolina Tar Heels 1981–1982 NCAA championship team (thus, both played for coach Dean Smith). Lynch became the team's administrative assistant/graduate manager.[1] He moved on to be founder and director of Flight Nine Basketball from 2006 until 2010, then spent 2010–12 at UC-Irvine as a strength and conditioning coach for basketball and an assistant athletics director for community relations before re-joining the SMU men's basketball staff in 2012 under head coach and fellow UNC alum Larry Brown.[2]

Notes

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