Lewis collapsed on the court during the Celtics' April 29, 1993 playoff game against the
Charlotte Hornets.
Death On July 27, 1993, during off-season practice at
Brandeis University in
Waltham, Massachusetts, Lewis suffered
sudden cardiac death on the basketball court at the age of 27. Two Brandeis University police officers found Lewis and attempted to revive him using
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, but they were unsuccessful. Lewis's funeral was held on August 2, 1993. Lewis's death was attributed to
hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a structural heart defect that is the most common cause of death in young athletes.
Aftermath Following Lewis' death, questions were raised about whether he had used cocaine and whether cocaine use had contributed to his death. The
Wall Street Journal reported that physicians "suspected that cocaine killed Boston Celtics star Reggie Lewis...but they were thwarted by actions of his family and a 'dismissive' policy toward drugs by the NBA." The
Journal added the following: Whether Mr. Lewis died from a heart damaged by cocaine -- as many doctors suspected then and now -- cannot be definitively shown. What is evident: The official cause of death, a heart damaged by a common-cold virus, is a medically nonsensical finding by a coroner who was under intense pressure from the Lewis family to exclude any implication of drug use. The Boston Celtics responded by expressing sadness about the "vicious attack on Reggie Lewis and his family" and threatening "to file a $100 million lawsuit against the reporter,
The Wall Street Journal, and its parent company, Dow Jones and Co. Inc." Dr. Gilbert Mudge, a doctor who treated Lewis, was sued for malpractice in connection with Lewis' death; in written responses to questions from the attorneys for Donna Harris-Lewis, Mudge said that "16 days before Lewis collapsed from a heart attack in 1993, he acknowledged having used cocaine, but said he had stopped." On the other hand, the doctor who performed the autopsy on Lewis testified that the
scarring on his heart was inconsistent with cocaine use, and other doctors reached the same conclusion though they "stopped short of saying he never used drugs." Also, Lewis's heart tissue tested positive for adenovirus during his autopsy. Lewis' contract remained on the Celtics' salary cap for two full seasons after his death because at the time the NBA did not have a provision to void contracts if an active player died; NBA Commissioner
David Stern suggested that the remaining NBA teams should approve an exemption for Lewis' contract, but the teams refused to do so. The rules have since been changed so that a similar case would result in the player's contract being paid by league insurance, as seen with
Chris Bosh in 2018. ==NBA career statistics==