NBL and college In 1984, Gaze joined the
Melbourne Tigers of the
National Basketball League as an 18-year-old. His first season with the Tigers saw him win the
NBL Rookie of the Year Award after averaging an impressive 29.1 points, 6.7 rebounds, 4.1 assists and 1.6 steals in 24 games. By 1986, he made his first
All-NBL First Team selection. He would go on to earn first-team honours in 15 straight seasons (1986–2000). In the
1987 NBL season, Gaze set an NBL record for points per game in a season when he averaged 44.1 points. This was despite the Tigers finishing the season in last place with a 3–23 record. During the season, Gaze had a 60-point game (against the
Newcastle Falcons) and another five 50-point games. Following the
1988 NBL season, Gaze, who was spotted by talent scouts while playing for Australia at the
1988 Olympics, moved to the United States after being recruited to play
college basketball for
Seton Hall University. During the 1988–89 season, Gaze played in 38 games for the Seton Hall Pirates, averaging 13.6 points, 4.5 rebounds and 2.9 assists per game. Gaze started every game in The Hall's
first-ever run to the NCAA Final Four, twice leading all Pirates scorers with 19 points in their Elite Eight win over
UNLV and 20 points (highlighted by 4-from-9 shooting from 3) in the National Semifinal win against
Duke. He completed his season at Seton Hall with an 80–79 overtime loss to the
Michigan Wolverines in the NCAA Championship Game which was played in front of 39,187 fans at the
Kingdome in
Seattle, where he was heavily guarded and limited to only five field goal attempts, all from three-point range. After a year in New Jersey, Gaze returned to Australia and re-joined the Tigers for the
1989 NBL season. He missed the back-end of the
1990 NBL season due to a blood clot in his right shoulder. Not known for being an outstanding athlete, Gaze's heavy scoring in the NBL was due to exceptional shooting, including from three-point range. A crowd favourite to the Tigers faithful, Gaze was a front runner in the league's resurgence during the 1990s, as he and American import
Lanard Copeland combined to form a formidable backcourt and guided the Tigers to two championships in 1993 and 1997. Playing under his father with the Tigers, Gaze assured the team were perpetual finalists. In his later years, Gaze still managed to score at a high clip for the Tigers, averaging over 19 points per game in each of his last four NBL seasons. Following the
2004–05 NBL season, Gaze announced his retirement from the NBL. In 20 seasons with the Tigers, he played a total of 612 games and recorded 18,908 points at an average of 30.9 points per game. Despite his best efforts, the team finished the league last and was relegated to the
3rd division. In March 1994, Gaze returned to the United States and signed with the
NBA's
Washington Bullets. In seven games for the Bullets during the
1993–94 NBA season, he averaged 3.1 points per game. In early 1995, he moved to Greece and played half a season for
Greek League club
Apollon Patras. He had another short stint in the NBA during the lockout-shortened
1998–99 season, this time with the
San Antonio Spurs. He received very little court time for a stacked
Spurs team that included guards
Mario Elie,
Avery Johnson,
Antonio Daniels and
Steve Kerr. He appeared in just 19 games for the Spurs during the regular season and was inactive for the entire
playoff run, which saw the Spurs win their first
NBA championship.
National team On the international stage, Gaze forged his reputation as one of Australia's finest products, appearing at the
1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games, as a 19-year-old. He led all scorers at the
1994 FIBA World Championship with 23.9 points per game, leading the Aussies to a fifth-place finish. In
2000, he became (jointly with American
Teresa Edwards) the third basketball player to compete at
five Olympics, after Puerto Rican
Teófilo Cruz and Brazilian
Oscar Schmidt. That year, Gaze was the
flag bearer at the
opening ceremony of the
Sydney Olympics, and he was also the Australian
Team Captain. At the
1996 Atlanta Olympics, he led the
Boomers to their then best Olympic performance, a fourth-placed finish, with a 5–3 record. Gaze also competed in four
FIBA World Cups with the Boomers, as he played in more than 280
matches for Australia. Gaze is the second all-time career points scorer, behind only
Brazil's
Oscar Schmidt, in
Summer Olympic Games history, and he is third all-time in career points scored in
FIBA World Cup history, after Schmidt and
Argentina's
Luis Scola. Gaze played 297 games for the Boomers. ==Coaching career==