DALLAS (AP) -- Roy Tarpley, the former Dallas Mavericks star center
whose NBA career was cut short by drug abuse, died Friday. He was 50.
According
to a Tarrant County medical examiner's report, Tarpley died at Texas
Health Arlington Memorial Hospital in Arlington, near Dallas. No cause
of death was given in the online report.
"If Roy had stayed
healthy, he could have been one of the top-50 players ever," Brad Davis,
the Mavericks' radio analyst and player-development coach who played
with Tarpley, told The Dallas Morning News. "He could do it all --
shoot, score, rebound, pass and defend. We're all sorry to hear of his
passing."
The 7-foot Tarpley was the seventh overall pick in the
1986 NBA draft out of Michigan. He played for the Mavericks until
October 1991, when he was kicked out of the NBA for using cocaine.
Norm
Sonju was the Mavericks' chief executive when he drafted Tarpley. He
remembers Tarpley as "likable. He was witty. He was funny."
"It's
sad. What breaks your heart is he was just 50 years old," Sonju told
The Associated Press. "He potentially could have been just an incredible
player."
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