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Billy Ray Bates

Billy Ray Bates is a retired American professional basketball player. Bates played shooting guard at McAdams High in Mississippi and attended Kentucky State University.

NBA career
Billy Ray Bates, the eighth of nine children, played basketball at McAdams High in Mississippi. He later played basketball for Kentucky State University. The Houston Rockets drafted him in the 3rd round of the 1978 draft. Before the season started, he was cut by the Rockets, after his agent demanded guaranteed money. He ended up playing for the Maine Lumberjacks in the now-defunct Continental Basketball Association, where he won the league's Rookie of the Year and the slam dunk competition in its all-star game. Bates is credited for shattering at least four backboards in the Continental league before jumping to the NBA. He served as head coach of the Lumberjacks for 12 games during the 1979–80 season and accumulated a 5–7 record. After signing a 10-day contract with the Portland Trail Blazers in February 1980, the , guard became a crowd favorite for his slam dunks and energetic playing style. He once scored 40 points in 32 minutes against San Diego and later 35 points in 25 minutes against the Dallas Mavericks. He was named NBA Player of the Week towards the end of his rookie season. He averaged 25.0 points per game (ppg) in the 1980 playoffs and 28.3 ppg in the 1981 playoffs. , this is the franchise record. Bates played briefly with the Washington Bullets in the 1982–83 season, appearing in 15 games before being let go. He then had a 10-day trial with the Lakers and appeared in four games. His average of 26.7 ppg in the playoffs is the highest in NBA history by a non-starter. == PBA career ==
PBA career
Bates began play in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) in 1983. His scoring ability, showmanship, and personality endeared him to the basketball-watching Filipino public and the media. He was called the Black Superman. A local shoe manufacturer produced a line of shoes for him to endorse, with his nickname on them. Bates told The Oregonian: "They loved me ... There, I was like Michael Jordan. I could have anything I wanted. All I had to do was snap my fingers. I had my own condo, my own car and my own bodyguard with an Uzi. I had to fight off the women." Bates won the 1983 Best Import award and helped the Crispa Redmanizers win two championships. Three years later, Bates and Michael Hackett joined forces to give Ginebra its first PBA title in 1986. He returned to Ginebra in 1987 leading all imports with a 54.9 ppg average. His last stint with Ginebra, then renamed Añejo, was in 1988; Bates played in four games, all of which the team lost, and he was released. == Later professional career ==
Later professional career
Bates later played in Switzerland with the FIBA EuroLeague club Fribourg Olympic, during the 1985–86 season, back in the U.S. with the World Basketball League, a few seasons in Mexico, and a season in Uruguay. == Personal life ==
Personal life
Bates was born in 1956, the second-youngest of nine children, and was raised in Goodman, Mississippi, in a house with no plumbing and no electricity. After his father died when Billy Ray was seven years old, the children worked the fields to support their family. Bates attended school primarily to play basketball; he was able to slam dunk in his second year in high school, but he reportedly never learned to read full sentences. His Filipino teammates recalled times when Bates drank beer in the locker room before tip-off. His teammates told a reporter that Bates was known for a flamboyant lifestyle, including frequent drinking, companionships with many women, and frivolous spending. On January 17, 1998, Bates robbed a Texaco gas station in Gloucester, New Jersey, at knifepoint. In 2009, Bates had submitted an autobiography entitled Born to Play Basketball for publication. The manuscript was handwritten in ink and pencil, spanned 714 pages of legal paper, and required significant editing. == Career statistics ==
Career statistics
NBA Source Regular season Playoffs PBA ==References==
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