List of nicknames used in basketball
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This is a list of nicknames in the sport of basketball. Most are related to professional basketball, although a few notable nicknames from the U.S. college game are included.
Players
A
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – "The Captain", "A"[1]
- Furkan Aldemir – "Mr. Rebound" [2]
- Ray Allen – "Ray Ray",[3] "Sugar Ray", "Jesus Shuttlesworth"[4] (after his character in the movie He Got Game)[4]
- Tony Allen - "Mister First Team All-Defense", "Grindfather", "Gucci"
- Rafer Alston – "Skip To My Lou"[5]
- Chris Andersen – "Birdman"[6]
- Anthony Anderson – "Double A"[7]
- Greg Anderson – "Cadillac"[8][9]
- Giannis Antetokounmpo - "Greek Freak"
- Carmelo Anthony – "Melo",[10] "Captain America", "The Patriot"
- Nate Archibald – "Tiny"[8][11][12]
- Gilbert Arenas – "Agent Zero", "The Hibachi",[13][14] "Black President", "Nacho", "Gil", "High-Noon", "The Gambler"
- Trevor Ariza – "Cobra",[15] "Ariza Green", "Switchblade", "Athreeza"
- Paul Arizin – "Pitchin' Paul"[11]
- Stacey Augmon – "Plastic Man"[11]
B
- Ken Bannister – "The Animal"[9]
- Leandro Barbosa - "The Brazilian Blur"
- Andrea Bargnani – "Il Mago" (The Magician) (In Italy)[16]
- Charles Barkley – "Chuck",[11][17] "The Round Mound of Rebound",[8][11][17][18][19] "Sir Charles",[11][12] "Prince Charles", "Leaning Tower of Pizza",[17][19] "Pillsbury Dough Boy",[17] "The Human Refrigerator",[17] "The Flying Coke Machine",[17] "The Crisco Kid",[17][19] "Boy Gorge"[17][19]
- Harrison Barnes – "The Black Falcon",[20] "Barney Humble, "The Pencil"
- Jim Barnes – "Bad News"[18]
- Marvin Barnes – "Bad News" (originally because of his basketball skills but later because of his frequent off-court issues)[17]
- Dick Barnett – "Fall Back Baby"[8]
- Jerry Baskerville – "Hound"[9]
- Alfred Beard – "Butch"[21]
- Michael Beasley - "B-Easy" "Big Mike" [11]
- Marco Belinelli – "Beli"[22]
- Walt Bellamy – "Bells"[23][24]
- Brent Barry – "Bones"[25]
- Chauncey Billups – "Mr. Big Shot"[26]
- Larry Bird – "The Great White Hope" "The Hick from French Lick",[27] "Larry Legend",[27] "Uncle Larry"
- Bismack Biyombo - "Bizzy Bo", "The Acrobatic from the Democratic (Republic of the Congo)" "BB-8", "Biznation", "Big Bizness" [28]
- Daron Blaylock – "Mookie"[11]
- Eric Bledsoe – "Mini LeBron"[11]
- Tyrone Bogues – "Muggsy"[12][29] (because he was so adept at stealing, it was like he was mugging someone), "The shortest NBA player ever"
- Matt Bonner - "Red Rocket", "Red Mamba"
- Chris Bosh – "CB4",[30] "The Boshtrich",[30]
- Bill Bradley – "Dollar Bill",[11][12] "The Secretary of State",[18] "Mr. President"[18]
- Shawn Bradley – "The enormous Mormon"[31]
- Jon Brockman – "The Brockness Monster" (because he was rarely seen in games)[32]
- Fred Brown – "Downtown Freddie"[11] (for his proficiency in the 3-point basket, "from downtown")[33]
- Joe Bryant – "Jellybean"[34]
- Kobe Bryant – "Black Mamba", "Mr. 81", "KB-24", "The 8th Wonder of the World", ("Kobe Wan Kenobi" "Lord of the Rings" given from rucker park) "The Dagger", "Vino"([35]
- Jimmy Butler – "Jimmy G Buckets" (the G stands for "Gets"),[36] "The Butler", "Jimmy Buckets"
C
- Joe Caldwell – "Pogo", "Jumping Joe"[37]
- Isaiah Canaan – "Canaanball"
- Brian Cardinal – "The Custodian"
- Antoine Carr – "Big Dawg"[11]
- Vince Carter – "Vinsanity", "Air Canada", "Half Man Half Amazing", "VC" (based on the name of the currency in the basketball video game NBA 2K17)[11]
- Sam Cassell – "Sam I Am",[38] "The Space-man"
- Wilt Chamberlain – "Wilt the Stilt",[11][12][39] "The Big Dipper"[12][29][40] (because as a child he had to '"dip" his head after hitting it on a door frame)[29]
- Derrick Chievous – "Band-Aid"[29] (who wore one for good luck)[29]
- Nathaniel Clifton - "Sweetwater"[12]
- Craig Claxton – "Speedy"[8]
- Vernal Coles – "Bimbo"[8][21]
- DeMarcus Cousins - "Boogie"
- Bob Cousy – "The Houdini of the Hardwood",[23] "Cooz"[12]
- Forrest Cox – "Frosty"[41]
- Jamal Crawford – "J Crossover", "Crawssover Crawford" "L.A.'s Dance Instructor" [42]
- Billy Cunningham – "Kangaroo Kid"[18]
- Stephen Curry - "Splash Brothers" (Curry and Klay Thompson), "Baby-Faced Assassin", "Chef Curry", "The Golden Boy", "Steph"
D
- Bob Dandridge – "Bobby D"[14]
- Mel Davis – "Killer"[18]
- Glen Davis – "Big Baby",[43] "Uno-Uno"[44]
- Ricky Davis – "Ricky Buckets",[11]
- Darryl Dawkins – "Chocolate Thunder"[9][11]
- Matthew Dellavedova - "Delly",[45] "The Wonder from Down-Under", "Outback Jesus", "D and 3", "Delly Trey", "HellavuaHustle", "The Janitor"
- DeMar DeRozan - "Deebo", "French Assassinator",[46] "Heir Canada", "Straight Outta Compton", "DeMarvelous", "D-Roz", "Double D", "Air Diesel"
- Boris Diaw – "Tea Time"[47] "The French Chef" (because he's always cooking).
- Gorgui Dieng - "The Senegalese Sensation", "Gorgeous", "Green Monster"
- Clyde Drexler – "Clyde the Glide"[8][11][12][17]
- Goran Dragic – "Gold Dragon"[8][11]
- Tim Duncan – "The Big Fundamental"[48] (for his fundamentally sound game), "Slam Duncan",[49] "TD", "Timmy D", "Old Man Riverwalk", "Old Man Duncan", "TD Bank"(because he sometimes uses the glass to score), "Twin Towers" (with David Robinson)
- Kevin Durant – "KD",[50] "Durantula", "Kid Clutch", "The Baddest", "The Servant", "Slim Reaper", "The Traitor" [51]
E
- James Edwards – "Buddha"
- Theodore Edwards – "Blue"[29] (from an older sister, for the color of his face when he was choking as a baby)[29]
- Pervis Ellison – "Never Nervous Pervis" (during his college days),[11] "Out of Service Pervis" (for his frequent injuries in the NBA)
Joel Embiid - "The Process"
- Julius Erving – "Dr. J",[12] The Doctor[11][18]
- Patrick Ewing – "The Beast of the East"[52]
F
- Kenneth Faried – "The Manimal"
- Derek Fisher – "D-Fish"[53]
- Eric Floyd – "Sleepy"[8][12]
- Clarence Francis – "Bevo"[9][12]
- Steve Francis – "Stevie Franchise"[54]
- Walt Frazier – "Clyde"[11][12] (after the film Bonnie and Clyde, due to his flamboyant clothes)
- Lloyd Bernard Free – "World",[12] "World B. Free",[24] "The Prince of Midair"[8]
G
- Dan Gadzuric – "The Flying Dutchman",[55] "12-Ball"
- Harry Gallatin – "The Horse"[23]
- Danilo Gallinari – "Gallo"
- Kevin Garnett – "Go-Go Gadget Arms",[56] "Big Ticket",[57][58] "KG",[58] "The Kid"[58]
- Paul George – "PG13", "Young Trece", "PG", "King George"
- George Gervin – "The Iceman",[59] "Iceberg Slim",[11][12][17] just "Ice"[18]
- Daniel Gibson – "Boobie"[21]
- Armen Gilliam – "The Hammer"[60]
- Artis Gilmore – "A Train"[9]
- Manu Ginobili – "The Magician"[9]
- George Glamack – "The Blind Bomber"[19] (his eyesight was so poor that he had to look at the court lines to determine how hard to shoot).[19]
- Rudy Gobert - "The Stifle Tower"
- Ben Gordon – "Madison Square Gordon"[61]
- Marcin Gortat – "The Polish Hammer"[62]
- Travis Grant – "Machine Gun"[9][63]
- Draymond Green "Deez", "Day-Day", "The Dancing Bear", "Cheap-Shot Green", "Dirty Dray", "Kicky Longstocking", "The Sterilizer"[64]
- Jeff Green - "Iron Man",[65] "Uncle Jeff",[66] "Green Machine", "8-Ball"
- Blake Griffin - "Poster Child" "Blake the Earth Quake Griffin"
- Darrell Griffith – "Dr. Dunkenstein"[8][9][11]
- Robert Gruenig – "Ace"[67]
- Tom Gugliotta – "Googs",[14] "Cue-Ball"
H
- Harold Hairston – "Happy"[8]
- Richard Hamilton – "Rip"[68]
- Tom Hammonds – "The Terminator"[69]
- Anfernee Hardaway – "Penny"[11][29] (from his grandmother's Southern accent calling him "pretty")[29]
- James Harden - "The Beard", "Step Daddy", "No D Harden"
- Gordon Hayward "G Time" "White Mamba"
- Connie Hawkins - "The Hawk"[12]
- John Havlicek – "Hondo"[11][12] (from Mel Nowell, because of Havlicek's interest in Western novels and looking like John Wayne in the film), "Czech" (because of the second syllable of his last name)
- Elvin Hayes – "The Big E",[8][12][23] "E"[14]
- Tommy Heinsohn – "Ack Ack" (from the sound of a machine gun, since Heinsohn "never met a shot he didn't like or wouldn't take"),[18] "Tommy Gun",[63] "Heinie",[12] "Tommy Points"
- Mario Hezonja - "Super Mario"
- Grant Hill – "G",[70] "G-money"[70]
- Darnell Hillman – "Dr. Dunk"[9]
- Fred Hoiberg – "The Mayor";[11] given to him by his Iowa State teammates because of his extraordinary popularity in the school's home city of Ames, Iowa, where he was raised
- Lionel Hollins – "(The) L-Train"[11]
- William Holzman – "Red"[23]
- Robert Horry – "Big Shot Rob"[71] or "Big Shot Bob"[71]
- Dwight Howard – "Superman",[72] "Foul on You",[72] (for the large number of fouls called on Howard during the 2010 NBA Playoffs),[72] "D12", "DH12", "Dizzy Dwight"
- Rodney Hundley – "Hot Rod"[8][11]
I
- Serge Ibaka – "I-block-a", "Serge Protector",[73] "Air Congo"
Andre Iguodala - "Iggy"
- Zydrunas Ilgauskas – "Big Z"[74]
- Ersan İlyasova – "Turkish Thunder",[75]"Ghostface Ilya"
- Kyrie Irving – "Uncle Drew", "Kyriediculous",[76] "Kyrazzle-Dazzle", "Mr. 4th Quarter" "KI"
- Allen Iverson – "The Answer", "Bubba Chuck", "Steven John Ray the Third",[77] "A.I.", "Practice?"
J
- Mark Jackson - "The Reverend", "The Rev", "The Preacher", "Momma-There-Goes-That-Microphone", "MarkyMark", "The Other MJ"
- DeAndre Jordan - "DeAndre the Giant", "DeAndre 3000", "Big Hero 6", "DJ"
- LeBron James – "King James", "(The) L-Train",[11] "LBJ"[21] The Chosen One, The Akron Hammer, Akron Hero, CleBron LeBlock James
- Earvin Johnson – "Magic",[11][29][78] "Buck",[29] "E.J."[29]
- Gus Johnson – "Honeycomb"[9]
- Larry Johnson – "Grandmama"[11] (from his role in a series of Converse commercials in which he portrayed his own grandmother) "LJ"
- Joe Johnson – "Iso Joe", "Joe Cool", "Smooth", "Joey Jo-Jo, Jr.", "Joey J", "Joe-Jesus"
- Vinnie Johnson – "The Microwave"[11] ("gets hot instantly")
- Damon Jones – "The World's Greatest Shooter"[21]
- Ronald Jones – "Popeye"[79]
- Sam Jones - "Sad Sam"[12]
- Michael Jordan – "Air Jordan",[12][80] "His Airness",[11][81] "MJ",[17] "The G.O.A.T", The Black Cat
- Nikola Jokic - "Joke" "Joker"
K
Chris Kaman - "Caveman"
- Greg Kelser – "Special K"[82]
- Shawn Kemp – "The Reignman"[11][33] "The Family Man"
- John Graham Kerr - "Red"[12]
- Jason Kidd – "Mr. triple double" (had a lot of triple doubles in his career, "J-Kidd"
- Andrei Kirilenko – "AK47"[83]
- Kyle Korver -- "Hot Sauce" (as Stacey King refers to him when he sinks a 3-Pointer)
- Toni Kukoc – "Croatian Sensation", "The Waiter", "Euro-Magic" [84]
- Enes Kanter – "Enes The Penis", "Enes Cancer"
L
- Zach LaVine - "LaVine the Machine" "the TrampLavine"
- Meadow Gerge Lemon - "Meadowlark"[12]
- Lafayette Lever – "Fat"[4]
- Kawhi Leonard – "The Claw", "Sugar K", "Who, What, Where and Kawhi" [85] "The Kingslayer" "Kawhiet Storm"
- Meyers Leonard – "The Legend"
- Nancy Lieberman – "Lady Magic"[86]
- Damian Lillard – "Dame", "Dame D.O.L.L.A.", "Big Game Dame"
- Jeremy Lin – "Linsanity", "Super-Lintendo", "Lin-credible", "Lin-tastic", "Lin Dynasty[87]", "Lin-Tense"
- Jim Loscutoff – "Jungle Jim",[11][12][18]
- Bob Love – "Butterbean"[9]
- Kevin Love - "The Beach Boy", "Knuckle-Pushups", "The Disaster Master of Plaster", "K-Love", "Lil Kev", "Droppin' Dimes; Droppin' Dimes"
- Kyle Lowry - "Klow", "The Bulldog"
M
- Ed Macauley – "Easy",[23] "Easy Ed"[12]
Mark Madsen - "Mad Dog"
Corey Maggette - "
- Dan Majerle – "Thunder Dan"[11]
- Thon Maker – "Reaper", "Rainmaker", "Money Maker", "23", "Thin Maker", "Faker"
- Karl Malone – "The Mailman"[11][88] (because he always delivered)[88]
- Earl Manigault – "The Goat"[8]
- Pete Maravich – "Pistol Pete"[8][9][11][12][24]
- Stephon Marbury – "Starbury"[89]
- Shawn Marion – "The Matrix"[90]
- Boban Marjanović - "The Destroyer", "The Big Fella"
- Wesley Matthews – "Iron Man",[91] "The Arrow"
- Cedric Maxwell – "Cornbread"[8][9][11] (after the title character in the film Cornbread, Earl and Me)[92]
- Luc Mbah a Moute – "The Prince",[93] "Moute Kicks Boute" [94]
- Xavier McDaniel – "The X-Man";[11] play on the initial of his first name with the X-Men, a group of superheroes
- Jon McGlocklin – "Jonny Mac"[95]
- Tracy McGrady – "T-Mac"
- Dick McGuire – "Tricky Dick",[23][96] "Richard"
- Kevin McHale – "Herman Munster",[27] "The Black Hole"[29] (because of his interest in shooting, once balls were passed to him, they never came back)[29]
- Dean Meminger – "The Dream"[18]
- Darko Miličić – "The Human Victory Cigar", because his court appearances were at the end of routs.[24] The first to have this nickname was Stojko Vranković.[97]
- Reggie Miller – "The Knick Killer", "Miller Time"
- George Mikan - "The Big Number", "Mr. Basketball[12]
- Harold Miner – "Baby Jordan"[11]
- Bill Mlkvy – "The Owl without a Vowel"[8][11]
- Earl Monroe – "Black Magic",[98] "Earl the Pearl",[11][12][14][98] "Black Jesus"[99]
- Alonzo Mourning – "Zo"[11][23]
- Charles Murphy – "Stretch"[23]
N
- Steve Nash – "Captain Canada", "Hair Canada", "Nashty", "Mr. 50 40 90",[100] "Floor General" "Stevie Wonder"
- Fred Neal – "Curly"[8]
- Jameer Nelson – "Mighty Mouse",[101] "Crib Midget"[101]
- Dirk Nowitzki – "Dirty",[102] "The Big Dagger", "Big D", "The Bavarian Bomber", "Mr. One-Legged Fadeaway", "Kaiser", "Dirk Savage", "Swish41", "Tall Baller from the G", "Ghostface Drillah", "The Germinator", "The German Assassin", "The German Giant", "The German Wunderkind", "Dunking Deutschman", "Dirk Diggler", "The Berlin Tall", "German Jesus"
O
- Lamar Odom – "The Candy Man" L.O [103]
- Mehmet Okur – "Memo"
- Shaquille O'Neal – "Shaq",[104] "Shaq Daddy",[104] "Shaq Fu",[104] "Diesel",[104] "The Big Aristotle",[104] "Superman", "MDE" (Most Dominant Ever),[104] "The Big Maravich",[104] "The Big Fella",[104] "The Big Shaqtus", "The Big Cordially",[104] "Big Shamrock",[105] "Shaqovic" "Shaq Attack"
- Hakeem Olajuwon – "The Dream"[8][11][17][18][106]
- Michael Olowokandi – "Kandi Man"[11]
P
- Petrović Dražen - "Basketball Mozart", "G.S.O.A.T. Greatest shooter of all time"
- Jabari Parker - "12-Ball", "The Duke Skywalker"
- Smush Parker – "Scrub"[21]
- Tony Parker – "TP" The dish man
- Sam Perkins – "Sleepy Sam" "Big Smooth"
- Robert Parish – "The Chief"[11][12] (after the mute, expressionless character in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest)
- Ruben Patterson – "The Kobe Stopper" (which he never did)[107]
- Chris Paul – "CP3", "Cliff Paul", "
- Billy Paultz – "The Whopper"[17][18]
- Gary Payton – "GP", "The Glove"[11] (for his defensive play – his defense "held" opponents like a "baseball in a glove")
- Sam Perkins – "Big Smooth",[108] "Sleepy"
- Elliot Perry – "Socks"[11] (because he always wore his socks to his knees)
- Chuck Person – "The Rifleman" (whose full name is Chuck Connors Person, because his mom was a fan of The Rifleman).[109]
- Kendrick Perkins – "Central Perk", "Perk", "Swamp Thang", "Pendrick Kerkins"
- Paul Pierce – "The Truth"[110]
- Ricky Pierce – "Big Paper Daddy"[108]
- Scottie Pippen – "No Tippin' Pippen",[111] "Pip", "Pipsi Cola"
- Jim Pollard – "Kangaroo Kid"[18]
- Kevin Porter – "Little Drummer Boy"[14]
- Kristaps Porziņģis – "Long Porz", "PorzinGOD", "GOATzingis", "Tre-zing-god" KP [112] "Kris-P" "Zinger" "Zingis Khan" "3-6-Latvia"
- Vitaly Potapenko – "Ukraine Train"[11]
- Joel Przybilla – "Vanilla Gorilla"[113]
R
- Zach Randolph – "Z-Bo", "Mr. 20 and 10", "Junkyard Dog"
- Bryant Reeves – "Big Country"[9][11]
- Jerome Richardson – "Pooh"[8]
- Mitch Richmond – "The Rock"[8]
- Mike Riordan – "Rags"[14]
- Austin Rivers - "Baby Doc"
- Glenn Rivers – "Doc"[8]
- David Robinson – "The Admiral"[8][29] (for his stint in the U.S. Navy)
- Glenn Robinson – "Big Dog"[8][9][11]
- Len Robinson – "Truck"[14][18]
- Nate Robinson – "KryptoNate", "The Killer Midget", "The Biggest Little Man"
- Oscar Robertson – "The Big O"[8][11][12] (coming from the James Thurber story, "The Disappearing O")[18]
- Dennis Rodman – "The Worm"[9][11][63] (for his wriggling when he played pinball)[63] "Most Honorable Friend of the Supreme Leader, Kim Jong-Un"
- Wayne Rollins – "Tree"[12][21][23]
- Derrick Rose – "D-Rose", "Windy City Assassin",[114] "Poohdini" "The Glassman" "Glass Rose"
- Brandon Roy – "The Natural" [115]
- Ricky Rubio - "Tricky Ricky", "Slick Rick", "Bricky Rubio"
- D'Angelo Russell – "Voodoo", "D'Lo" , "DLoading," "Snitchy," "Snitchin' D'"
- Bill Russell – "The Secretary of Defense"
S
- Arvydas Sabonis – "Sabas"[116]
- John Salley – "Spider"[11]
- JaKarr Sampson – "Point Karr"
- Tom Sanders – "Satch" or "Satch Sanders"[9][11][12]
- Kevin Seraphin - "Man Bear Pig"
- Brian Scalabrine – "The White Mamba",[117][118]
- Oscar Schmidt - "Mão Santa" (Portuguese for "Holy Hand")[119]
- Luis Scola - "Ice cream man"[120]
- Jon Scheyer – "The Jewish Jordan"[121]
- Yash Shah - "The Crying Jordan"
- Iman Shumpert – "Shump", "Shumpman", "21 Shump Street"
- Ralph Siewert – "Sky",[96] and later "Timber"[122]
- Dennis Scott – "3D"
- James Silas – "Captain Late"[29] (because he was at his best near the end of games),[29] "The Snake", "The Late Mr. Silas"
- Henry Sims – "Lickface" [123]
- Bobby Smith – "Bingo"[9][21]
- Craig Smith – "Rhino"[11]
- Josh Smith – "J-Smoove"[124]
- Kenny Smith – "The Jet"
- J. R. Smith - "JR Swish"
- Larry Smith – "Mr. Mean"[18]
- Rik Smits – "The Flying Dutchman" or "The Dunkin' Dutchman"[125]
- Marreese Speights – "Mo' Buckets"[126]
- Latrell Sprewell – "Spree"[127]
- Dave Stallworth – "The Rave"[14]
- Nik Stauskas – "Sauce Castillo"
- Lance Stephenson – "Born Ready", "Lance the Great", "Sir Lancealot"
- Maurice Stokes - "Big Mo"[12]
- Amar'e Stoudemire – "STAT" (Standing Tall and Talented)[128]
- Predrag Stojakovic -- "Peja"
T
- Reece Tatum - "Goose"[12]
- Jason Terry – "JET" (his initials)
- Isiah Thomas (born in 1961) – "Zeke",[11][129] "Cuts"[129] (for the cuts he would suffer while driving the lane),[129] "The Baby-Faced Assassin"[129] (for his young appearance contrasted with his shooting skill)[129]
- Isaiah Thomas (born in 1989) – "IT", "Baby Zeke", "Isaiah Jr"
- Kurt Thomas – "Mid Life",[130] "Dirty Kurt", "Big Sexy"
- David Thompson – "The Skywalker"[23]
- Klay Thompson- "splash brothers" (stephen curry) "splashius klay"
- Sedale Threatt – "The Thief"[11]
- Anthony Tolliver – "Tolly Want a Cracker"
- Andrew Toney – "The Boston Strangler" (because he kept "killing" the Boston Celtics in big games)[59]
- Karl-Anthony Towns - "Big KAT"[131] "The KAT-Man" "Special-K" "Katmandu"
- Robert Traylor – "Tractor Traylor"[11][21]
- Melvin Turpin – "Golden Arches"[17]
- Hidayet Türkoğlu – "Hedo", "Mr.4th quarter"
V
- Nick Van Exel – "Nasty Nick",[132] "Nick Van Excellent",[132] "Nick the Quick"[132]
- Anderson Varejão – "Wildman", "Wild Thing", "VareFLOP"[21]
- Jarvis Varnado – "Sharknado"
- Charlie Villanueva – "Charlie Buckets",
- Stojko Vranković – "Human Victory Cigar", because he played at the end of blowout games where Red Auerbach would light his cigar.[97]
- Dick Van Arsdale – "The Original Sun"
- Nikola Vucevic – "Vucci Mane"
W
- Dwyane Wade – "Flash", "D-Wade", "Father Prime"
- Chet Walker – "Chet the Jet"
- Antoine Walker - "Employee Number Night", "'Toine", "'Toine-Juan", "8-Ball"
- John Wall - "J Wow", "Jimmy Franchise", "J Wizzy", "Optimus Dime", "Wall-Star", "The House of Guards" (with Bradley Beal), "Dish" ("Swish & Dish" with Bradley Beal)
- Ben Wallace – "Big Ben"
- Gerald Wallace – "Crash" "G-Force"
- Rasheed Wallace – "Sheed"
- Anthony Jerome Webb - "Spud"[12]
- Chris Webber – "C-Webb"
- Jerry West – "The Logo" (because he was incorporated into the NBA Logo), "Mr. Clutch", "Zeke From Cabin Creek"
- Russell Westbrook – "Beastbrook", "Catalyst", "Fashion Icon", "Mr.Triple-Double", "Westbeast", "Rim Wrecker", "Rim Abuser", "GOATbrook", "Bestbrook", "The Terminator", "Mini-Bron", "Westbeast", "Triple-Double Machine", "One-Man Wrecking Crew", "Brodie", "Loyal"
- Hassan Whiteside - "The Great Wall", "Agent Block", "Block Mamba", "Mount Whiteside", "Blocktopus", "Blockside"
- Andrew Wiggins – "Maple Jordan",[133] "Ender", "Maple", "Wig-sanity"
- Dominique Wilkins – "The Human Highlight Film"
- Jamaal Wilkes – "Smooth as Silk"
- Deron Williams – "D-Will"
- Jason Williams – "White Chocolate"[134]
- John Williams – "Hot Rod"
- Jerome Williams – "Junkyard Dog"
- John Sam Williams – "Hot Plate"
- Metta World Peace - "Ron Artest" "Ron-Ron" "Crazy Ron" "The Panda's Friend"
- James Worthy – "Big Game James" "The Assassin"
- Tony Wroten – "Wrecking Ball Wroten"
Y
- Yao Ming – "Chairman Yao",[54] "Shaquie Chan",[54] "The China Man", "Great Wall of China", "Beast from the far east"
- Nick Young – "Swaggy P" [135]
Z
- Max Zaslofsky – "Slats"[136]
Coaches
- Arnold Auerbach – "Red"[12][23]
- David Blatt – "The Blattchelor"
- Forrest Cox – "Frosty", "Forrest Grump" [41]
- Chuck Daly – "Daddy Rich"
- Clarence Gaines – "Big House"[8][137]
Fred Hoiberg - "The Mayor"
- William Holzman – "Red"[23]
- Dan Issel – "The Horse"[41]
- Phil Jackson – "Zen Master"[138]
- Alvin Julian – "Doggie"[8]
- Mike Krzyzewski – "Coach K"[139]
- Ward Lambert – "Piggy"[96] (because he wore his hair in pigtails as a youngster)[96]
- Don Nelson - "Nellie"[12]
- Gregg Popovich – "Pop"
- Pat Riley - "The godfather"
- John Wooden – "The Wizard of Westwood" (as a coach)[140]
- Rick Carlisle - "Flipper", "Teriyaki chicken"
Teams
College
- Saint Joseph's Hawks men's basketball, 1934–38 – "Mighty Mites"[141]
- Utah Utes men's basketball team, 1943–44 – "Blitz Kids" (freshmen Arnie Ferrin, Herb Wilkinson, Wat Misaka, Bob Lewis, Dick Smuin, Bill Kastlic and sophomore Fred Sheffield)[142]
- Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball in the late 1940s – "Fabulous Five"[143] (Alex Groza, Ralph Beard, Wallace Jones, Cliff Barker and Ken Rollins).[143]
- University of Houston men's basketball from 1982 to 1984 – "Phi Slama Jama"[143] (led by Hakeem Olajuwon and Clyde Drexler)[143]
- Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team, 1992–93 – "Fab Five" (Chris Webber, Jalen Rose, Juwan Howard, Jimmy King, Ray Jackson)[142]
- Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team, 1995–96 – "The Untouchables"[144] (Tony Delk, Antoine Walker)
- University of Illinois men's basketball from 1988 to 1989 – "Flyin' Illini"[143] (led by Kenny Battle, Nick Anderson, Kendall Gill, and Stephen Bardo)[143]
Professional
- Boston Celtics
- "The Big Three" (Larry Bird, Kevin McHale and Robert Parish)
- "The Boston Three Party" (Ray Allen, Kevin Garnett and Paul Pierce, a.k.a. "The Big Three")[145]
- Chicago Bulls
- "The Greatest Team of All Time" (Finished the 1995-1996 NBA Season with 72 wins and 10 losses) 1995–96 Chicago Bulls season (Scottie Pippen, Ron Harper, Dennis Rodman, Luc Longley, Michael Jordan)
- Dallas Mavericks
- "The Big Three" (Steve Nash, Dirk Nowitzki and Michael Finley)[146]
- "Triple J" (Jamal Mashburn, Jason Kidd and Jimmy Jackson)[147]
- Detroit Pistons – The "Bad Boys"[148] (The Bad Boys employs extreme physical style of play and psychological warfare against enemy teams. Arguably the Bad Boys are famous for having the greatest defense in the NBA and holds the record for most brawl fights in the NBA during 1986 up to 1991)
- "The Bad Boys" (the Original from 1986 to 1991) – Isiah Thomas (Zeke / The Captain), Bill Laimbeer (The Black Hat / The Darth Vader of the NBA), Joe Dumars (Mister Louisiana), Rick Mahorn (The Baddest Bad Boy of Them All / The Master of Being Bad), Vinnie Johnson (The Microwave), John Salley (The Spider), Dennis Rodman (The Worm / The Rebound King), James Edwards (Buddha), Mark Aguirre (The Outlaw from Dallas), John Long (The Prolific Piston Scorer), Micheal Williams (Mister Free Throws), Fennis Dembo (The Cowboy)
- "The Bad Boys Version 2" (From 2003 up to 2006. The second generation of Bad Boys are also famous for their great defense although they do not employ extreme physical or psychological methods to defeat enemies, because during this period, the rules in the NBA are sensitive in relation to calling flagrant and technical fouls. During the 2004–05 season, the Pistons got involved with one of the largest fan-player incidents in the history of American sports, known as Pacers–Pistons brawl. The Bad Boys Version 2 consisted of 5 major players) - Ben Wallace (Big Ben), Rasheed Wallace (Sheed), Richard Hamilton (Rip), Tayshaun Prince (The Prince of the Palace), Chauncey Billups (Mister Big Shot)
- Golden State Warriors
- "The Dubs" (short for double-u, as in "The Ws")[149]
- "Splash Brothers" (Stephen Curry & Klay Thompson starting in 2012)[150]
- "Run TMC" (after the hip-hop group Run–D.M.C., for Tim Hardaway, Mitch Richmond and Chris Mullin during the 1990s)[151]
- Houston Rockets - "Twin Towers" and "Clutch City" (Hakeem Olajuwon and Ralph Sampson)[152]
- Los Angeles Clippers --"Lob City", 2011–Present. When Blake Griffin heard of the Chris Paul trade to LA, he told Deandre Jordan it was going to be "lob city" because of all the alley oops CP3 was going to throw to them, resulting in all the crazy dunks they do.
- Los Angeles Lakers, during the 1980s – "Showtime"[153]
- Minnesota Timberwolves – "The Bounce Brothers" (2014–15 season Zach LaVine and Andrew Wiggins)
- Memphis Grizzlies – "The Blue Collar Boys" and "Grit & Grind", 2010s, for their style of play
- Portland Trail Blazers – "Jail Blazers",[154] "Rip City" (the city of Portland)[148]
- Miami Heat
- "Home of the Veterans" (The team acquires plenty of veteran players throughout the years to accompany Dwyane Wade and Udonis Haslem. The veteran players are: (Shaquille O'Neal, Antoine Walker, Jason Williams, Gary Payton, Shane Battier, Juwan Howard, James Jones, Mike Bibby, Chris Andersen, Rashard Lewis, Ray Allen, LeBron James, Chris Bosh, Amar'e Stoudemire, Luol Deng, Joe Johnson, Goran Dragić, Gerald Green)
- "The Big Three" (LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh)
- Los Angeles Clippers – "Lob City" (2012–present, Blake Griffin, Chris Paul, DeAndre Jordan)[155]
- San Antonio Spurs
- "The Twin Towers" (1998–2003, Tim Duncan and David Robinson)[156]
- "The Big Three" (Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobili and Tony Parker)
- "The Beautiful Game" (2014–Present)
- Indiana Pacers
- "The Thugs" (Ron Artest, Jermaine O'Neal and Stephen Jackson)
During the 2004–05 season, the Pacers got involved with one of the largest fan-player incidents in the history of American sports, known as Pacers–Pistons brawl, a.k.a. Malice at the Palace
- Oklahoma City Thunder
- "'Stache Brothers" (Steven Adams and Enes Kanter, because of their moustache) [157]
- Toronto Raptors
- "Jurassic Park" and "Trash Brothers" (Demar Derozan and Kyle Lowry)[158]
International
- United States men's national basketball team, 1992 – "The Dream Team"[159]
- United States men's national basketball team, 2008 – "The Redeem Team"[160]
- Canada men's national basketball team – "The Road Warriors"[161]
- Spain national basketball team – La ÑBA[162]
- Turkey national basketball team – Oniki Dev Adam ("12 Giant Men")[163]
Locations
- Air Canada Centre – "The Hangar", "Jurassic Park"
- American Airlines Center – "The Hangar"
- American Airlines Arena – "Triple-A"[164]
- Bankers Life Fieldhouse - "The Fieldhouse"
- Barclays Center - "Prokhorov's Palace", "Hipster-City"
- Charlotte Coliseum – "The Hive"[165]
- Chesapeake Energy Arena – "Loud City"[166]
- Chicago Stadium – "The Madhouse on Madison (Street)"
- FedExForum – "The Grindhouse"[167]
- Alico Arena – Dunk City[168]
- Human Performance Center – "Chamber of Horrors"[169]
- Izod Center – "The Meadowlands", "The Swamp"[170]
- Key Arena – "The Key"
- Madison Square Garden – "MSG",[171] "The Mecca",[171] "The Garden"
- Oracle Arena – "Roaracle Arena" (Named after the loud noise in the arena)
- Quicken Loans Arena – "The Q"
- Pepsi Center – "The Can"[172]
- Philips Arena – "The Highlight Factory"[173]
- Target Center - "The Den", "The TC"
- TD Banknorth Garden, Boston Garden – "The Garden"
- Time Warner Cable Arena – "The Cable Box"[174]
- United Center – "The UC", "Madhouse on Madison",[175] "The House that Jordan Built"[176]
- US Airways Center – "The Purple Palace"[177]
- Verizon Center – "The Phone Booth"[178]
See also
- Nickname
- List of athletes by nickname
- Lists of nicknames – nickname list articles on Wikipedia
References
- ↑ Hartman, Steve; Smith, Matt (2009). The Great Book of Los Angeles Sports Lists. Basic Civitas Books. p. 30. ISBN 0-7624-3520-8.
- ↑ http://www.basketball-reference.com/players/a/aldemfu01.html
- ↑ Simmons, Bill (2009). The Book of Basketball: The NBA According to the Sports Guy. Random House, Inc. p. 341. ISBN 0-345-51176-X.
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- ↑ Kriegel, Mark (2008). Pistol: The Life of Pete Maravich. Simon and Schuster. p. 316. ISBN 0-7432-8498-4.
- ↑ "NBA Nicknames: Chris Andersen". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 1 May 2014.
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- 1 2 Gastineau, Mike; Thiel, Art; Rudman, Steve (2009). The Great Book of Seattle Sports Lists. Basic Civitas Books. p. 190. ISBN 0-7624-3522-4.
- ↑ Murphy, Keith (November 2006). "Reasonable Doubt". Vibe: 116.
- ↑ Markazi, Arash (April 28, 2010). "Durant definitely a believer in Bryant". ESPNLosAngeles.com.
- ↑ Haugh, David (May 8, 2013). "Ironman Butler emerging as hero for Bulls". Chicago Tribune.
- ↑ Kriegel, Mark (2008). Pistol: The Life of Pete Maravich. Simon and Schuster. p. 190. ISBN 0-7432-8498-4.
- ↑ Drexler, Clyde; Eggers, Kerry (2004). Clyde the Glide. Sports Publishing LLC. p. 344. ISBN 1-58261-742-2.
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- ↑ MacRae, Sloan (2009). The Los Angeles Lakers. The Rosen Publishing Group. p. 13. ISBN 1-4042-8132-0.
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- ↑ Patrick Parker (March 27, 2008). "Shaq vs. Big Baby". ESPN.com. Retrieved July 20, 2008.
- ↑ Benbow, Julian (January 25, 2010). "Davis: Call me 'Uno-Uno'". Celtics Blog.
- ↑ foxsports.com. June 10, 2015 http://www.foxsports.com/ohio/story/nba-finals-matthew-dellavedova-lebron-james-kyrie-irving-cleveland-cavaliers-061015. Retrieved 10 March 2016. Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=anZ3V-DUJcs. Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ Woo, Jeremy (January 2, 2016). "LaMarcus Aldridge nicknamed Boris Diaw 'tea time'". SI.com. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
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- ↑ Hartman, Steve; Smith, Matt (2009). The Great Book of Los Angeles Sports Lists. Basic Civitas Books. p. 32. ISBN 0-7624-3520-8.
- 1 2 3 Banks, Kerry (2005). The Unofficial Guide to Basketball's Nastiest and Most Unusual Records. Greystone Books. p. 39. ISBN 1-55365-122-7.
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- 1 2 3 Brown, Donald H. (2007). A Best of Basketball Story. AuthorHouse. p. 59. ISBN 1-4343-4193-3.
- 1 2 Banks, Kerry (2005). The Unofficial Guide to Basketball's Nastiest and Most Unusual Records. Greystone Books. p. 41. ISBN 1-55365-122-7.
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- ↑ Norman, Wayne; Porter, Robert S. (2005). Hoop tales: UConn Huskies men's basketball. Globe Pequot. p. 162. ISBN 0-7627-3785-9.
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- ↑ Burke, Timothy. "Meanwhile, An Update On Draymond Green". Deadspin.com. Retrieved 24 June 2016.
- ↑ http://nesn.com/2013/01/jeff-green-commemorates-one-year-anniversary-of-heart-surgery-with-explosive-emotional-performance/
- ↑ http://www.nba.com/thunder/team/jeff_green.html
- ↑ Williams, Joe; Brown, Irv (2008). The Great Book of Denver Sports Lists. Running Press. p. 164. ISBN 0-7624-3355-8.
- ↑ Banks, Kerry (2005). The Unofficial Guide to Basketball's Nastiest and Most Unusual Records. Greystone Books. p. 174. ISBN 1-55365-122-7.
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- ↑ http://www.milwaukeemag.com/article/1242012-StillBringingtheThunder
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- ↑ Rubin, Roger; Lennon, David (2006). The Great New York Sports Debate: Two New York Sportswriters Go Head-to-head on the 50 Most Heated Questions. Plume. p. 240. ISBN 0-452-28754-5.
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- 1 2 "Celtics patriarch Auerbach dies at 89". Yahoo Sports. Retrieved August 8, 2012.
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- ↑ The NBA's Best and Worst Nicknames
- ↑ Evans, Thayer (March 29, 2010). "A Quiet and Steady Hand at the Controls for Duke". The New York Times.
- ↑ Conner, Floyd (2001). Basketball's Most Wanted: The Top 10 Book of Hoops' Outrageous Dunkers, Incredible Buzzer-Beaters, and Other Oddities. Brassey's. pp. 85–86. ISBN 1-57488-361-5.
- ↑ http://www.libertyballers.com/2015/4/18/8449977/rtrs-sixers-awards-nba-playoff-predictions-hollis-raps
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- 1 2 3 4 5 Stone, Mike; Regner, Art (2008). The Great Book of Detroit Sports Lists. Running Press. p. 175. ISBN 0-7624-3354-X.
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- 1 2 3 Zeigler, Matt (2002). 1990s NBA Flashback. iUniverse. p. 95. ISBN 0-595-22500-4.
- ↑ Sager, Neate (27 March 2013). "Here comes Maple Jordan: Andrew Wiggins' latest mix of dunking dominance — just watch it". Yahoo Sports.
- ↑ Wise, Mike (April 27, 1999). "His Game, and Name, Create Stir; Jason (White Chocolate) Williams Sets Off Debate on Stereotypes". NY Times.
- ↑ http://www.faniq.com/blog/Nick-Young-explains-where-he-got-his-nickname-and-style-Blog-73861
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- ↑ Ryan, Bob (2014). Scribe: My Life in Sports. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. p. 302. ISBN 9781620405062. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
- ↑ Palestini, Robert H. (2008). A Game Plan for Effective Leadership: Lessons from 10 Successful Coaches in Moving from Theory to Practice. R&L Education. p. 47. ISBN 1-57886-814-9.
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- ↑ Conner, Floyd (2001). Basketball's Most Wanted: The Top 10 Book of Hoops' Outrageous Dunkers, Incredible Buzzer-Beaters, and Other Oddities. Brassey's. p. 91. ISBN 1-57488-361-5.
- ↑ Stone, Mike; Regner, Art (2008). The Great Book of Detroit Sports Lists. Running Press. p. 130. ISBN 0-7624-3354-X.
- 1 2 Conner, Floyd (2001). Basketball's Most Wanted: The Top 10 Book of Hoops' Outrageous Dunkers, Incredible Buzzer-Beaters, and Other Oddities. Brassey's. p. 82. ISBN 1-57488-361-5.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Conner, Floyd (2001). Basketball's Most Wanted: The Top 10 Book of Hoops' Outrageous Dunkers, Incredible Buzzer-Beaters, and Other Oddities. Brassey's. p. 79. ISBN 1-57488-361-5.
- ↑ Bradley, Bill (2009). ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia: The Complete History of the Men's Game. Random House, Inc. p. 236. ISBN 0-345-51392-4.
- ↑ "CELTICS, LAKERS BATTLE FOR NBA CROWN IN GAME 7 ON TSN". June 17, 2010.
- ↑ Zuehlke, Jeffrey (2007). Dirk Nowitzki: Amazing Athletes. Lerner Publications. p. 21. ISBN 0-8225-7661-9.
- ↑ Howell, Timothy. "NBA Draft: The Dallas Mavericks' Top 10 Draft Picks of All Time". Bleacher Report. Retrieved 7 November 2013.
- 1 2 "Portland Trail Blazers History". NBA.com. Retrieved May 13, 2010.
- ↑ "Why are the Golden State Warriors called the Dubs?". Word Counter Blog. November 27, 2015. Retrieved May 31, 2016.
- ↑ "Analyzing the Splash Brothers in a Whole New Way". NBA.com. December 6, 2013. Retrieved January 13, 2014.
- ↑ Banks, Kerry (2005). The Unofficial Guide to Basketball's Nastiest and Most Unusual Records. Greystone Books. p. 38. ISBN 1-55365-122-7.
- ↑ "Rockets History – 1983–85: How Do You Stop Two 7-Footers?". NBA.com. Archived from the original on December 29, 2007. Retrieved February 18, 2009.
- ↑ MacRae, Sloan (2009). The Los Angeles Lakers: Americas Greatest Teams. The Rosen Publishing Group. p. 14. ISBN 1-4042-8132-0.
- ↑ Gottberg, John (2004). Best Places Portland: The Locals' Guide to the Best Restaurants, Lodgings, Sights, Shopping, and More! (6th ed.). Sasquatch Books. p. 362. ISBN 1-57061-400-8.
- ↑ Clippers embracing 'Lob City' nickname
- ↑
- ↑ Tsuji, Alysha (12 March 2016). "'Stache Brothers' Steven Adams and Enes Kanter's glorious mustaches have their own T-shirt". For The Win. Retrieved 20 May 2016.
- ↑
- ↑ "Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Announces Class of 2010" (Press release). Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. April 5, 2010. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
- ↑ Bickley, Dan (2009). Return of the Gold: The Journey of Jerry Colangelo and the Redeem Team. Morgan James Publishing. p. 171. ISBN 1-60037-637-1.
- ↑ Buffery, Steve (July 19, 2011). "Calling Steve Nash, Canada needs you!". Toronto Sun. Retrieved August 24, 2011.
- ↑ "La ÑBA sufre más de la cuenta ante los marfileños" (in Spanish). Marca. August 2, 2010. Retrieved September 12, 2010.
- ↑ Tomasson, Chris (September 5, 2010). "Turkey's '12 Giant Men' Taking Giant Steps in 2010 FIBA World Championship". AOL. Retrieved September 12, 2010.
- ↑ I Team: County Receives Nothing From Heat, Arena Revenue
- ↑
- ↑ Praying for the Home Team in Oklahoma City
- ↑ THE GRINDHOUSE: CREATED BY A TEAM, NOW EMBRACED BY A CITY AND ITS PEOPLE
- ↑ Associated Press (March 22, 2013). "Florida Gulf Coast Eagles vs. Georgetown Hoyas - NCAA Tournament Game - Recap - March 22, 2013 - ESPN". ESPN. Retrieved March 24, 2013.
- ↑ Bradley, Bill (2009). ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia: The Complete History of the Men's Game. Random House, Inc. p. 314. ISBN 0-345-51392-4.
- ↑ Rick Hampson (2003-06-05). "Devils-Nets home doesn't look like the home of champions". USA TODAY. Retrieved 2007-07-19.
- 1 2 Willis, George (February 11, 2015). "MSG will always be the 'Mecca', no matter how bad things get". New York Post. Retrieved March 28, 2015.
- ↑
- ↑ Rebuilding the Highlight Factory
- ↑ New Hornets Jerseys on Sale at Cable Box
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
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