Eddie House

Eddie House

House with the Celtics in 2008
Personal information
Born (1978-05-14) May 14, 1978
Berkeley, California
Nationality American
Listed height 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Listed weight 190 lb (86 kg)
Career information
High school Hayward (Hayward, California)
College Arizona State (1996–2000)
NBA draft 2000 / Round: 2 / Pick: 37th overall
Selected by the Miami Heat
Playing career 2000–2011
Position Guard
Number 5, 50, 55
Career history
20002003 Miami Heat
2003–2004 Los Angeles Clippers
2004 Milwaukee Bucks
2004–2005 Charlotte Bobcats
2005 Sacramento Kings
2005–2006 Phoenix Suns
2006–2007 New Jersey Nets
20072010 Boston Celtics
2010 New York Knicks
2010–2011 Miami Heat
Career highlights and awards
Career statistics
Points 5,356 (7.5 ppg)
3-pointers made 817
3P% .390
Stats at Basketball-Reference.com

Edward Lee House II (born May 14, 1978) is an American retired professional basketball player who last played for the Miami Heat of the NBA.

Early life

Eddie was born in the city of Berkeley, California, and was raised primarily in Union City, California, where he attended James Logan High School. House transferred to Hayward High School because he was forbidden from playing on the Logan varsity team in his freshman year. At Hayward, House was named All-Hayward Area Athletic League and All-Eastbay in both his junior and senior years, and graduated in 1996. He wanted to play for University of California, Berkeley, but coaches of that school felt that House wasn't ready for a major college basketball program, and recommended that House begin at a junior college.[1]

College career

House attended Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona, on a full-ride scholarship.[1] He is the all-time scoring leader at ASU with 2,044 points in his career, and is the only player to score more than 2,000 points. He, Ike Diogu, and James Harden are the only three Sun Devils to be named Pac-10 Player of the Year, and he was the fifth Sun Devil to be voted onto the All-Conference team twice.

He also is the career record-holder at Arizona State for field goals and steals, and set the single-season scoring average record for the school with 23.0 points per game in 1999–2000. During that season he was named Pac-10 Player of the Week a record-tying four times (matched only by Ed O'Bannon, Chris Mills, Gary Payton, and Quincy Pondexter).

House set a single-game Arizona State record with a 61-point effort in a 111–108 double-overtime victory against the California Golden Bears on the road in his senior season. It also was a memorable homecoming of sorts for him, as he had starred in high school for nearby Hayward High School. House also set a record in the game with 18 made free throws in 19 attempts. House is the first Pac-10 player to notch four 40-point games in one season as he had 61 vs. Cal, 46 vs. San Diego State, 42 vs. Penn State and 40 vs. UCLA. He also posted eight 30-point games that same season and set ASU records in points (736) and points per game (23.0). Also led the team in assists (111) and steals (74), as the 74 steals is tied for second on ASU single-season list. He is one of only three players to average in double figures in four consecutive seasons at Arizona State since it joined the Pac-10.

During his career at Arizona State, House went 0-8 against the University of Arizona Men's Basketball team. Ironically, during the 2014 Fiesta Bowl, House gave a motivational speech to the Boise State Football team on the importance of beating the Arizona Wildcats, Boise State's opponent. Incidentally, the Broncos won 38-30.

NBA career

House was selected by the Miami Heat in the second round (37th overall) of the 2000 NBA draft. He played in Miami for three seasons before leaving for the Los Angeles Clippers in free agency. After just one year in Los Angeles, House was traded to the Charlotte Bobcats. He then spent the 2004–05 NBA season playing for Charlotte, Milwaukee Bucks and Sacramento Kings. The following season House was signed by the Phoenix Suns; they reached the Western Conference Finals before losing to the Dallas Mavericks.

On August 17, 2006, he signed a one-year, $1.5 million deal with the New Jersey Nets.

House receiving his ring in the 2008 NBA Finals.

On August 9, 2007, he signed a one-year, $1.5 million deal with the Boston Celtics.[2][3] He joined a cast of all-stars dubbed as the Big Three – Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen. The team won the 2008 NBA Finals with House playing as a backup guard for either Ray Allen or Rajon Rondo. On July 23, 2008, he re-signed with the Celtics on a 2-year, $5.6 million deal, with the second year as player's option.[4][5] During the 2008–09 regular season, he broke Danny Ainge's Celtics team record for best 3-point percentage in a season by shooting 44.4%.[6]

On February 18, 2010, House, Bill Walker and J.R. Giddens were traded to the New York Knicks for Nate Robinson and Marcus Landry.[7]

In July 2010 House's agent said that the guard agreed to terms on a $2.8 million, two-year contract with the Miami Heat.[8]

On April 13, 2011, vs the Toronto Raptors, House scored a career high 35 points, beating his career NBA record by four points. The Heat made the 2011 NBA Finals and were defeated by the Dallas Mavericks in six games.

On June 30, 2011, House exercised an option clause in his contract, agreeing to a one-year, $1.4 million extension with the Heat.[9] On Christmas Eve he was waived by the Heat.

Personal

He is the son of Edward House and Deborah Buck, and has two brothers, Diallo Buck and Mychal House. During his rookie season with Miami in 2000–01, he married the sister of professional basketball player Mike Bibby. The couple has three sons, Jaelen and twins Kaden and Kalek and are now divorced. Both Eddie House and Mike Bibby played for the Sacramento Kings in 2004–05 and the Miami Heat in 2010–11.

NBA career statistics

Legend
  GP Games played   GS  Games started  MPG  Minutes per game
 FG%  Field goal percentage  3P%  3-point field goal percentage  FT%  Free throw percentage
 RPG  Rebounds per game  APG  Assists per game  SPG  Steals per game
 BPG  Blocks per game  PPG  Points per game  Bold  Career high
Denotes season in which House won an NBA championship

Regular season

Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
2000–01 Miami 50 0 11.0 .421 .345 .686 .8 1.0 .3 .0 5.0
2001–02 Miami 64 3 19.2 .399 .344 .857 1.7 1.9 .7 .1 8.0
2002–03 Miami 55 7 18.6 .387 .300 .861 1.8 1.6 .8 .0 7.5
2003–04 L.A. Clippers 60 10 19.8 .359 .375 .800 2.3 2.5 1.1 .1 6.8
2004–05 Charlotte 13 5 23.1 .452 .414 .769 1.5 1.8 1.8 .2 11.1
2004–05 Milwaukee 5 0 8.2 .353 .667 .000 .6 1.0 .4 .0 3.2
2004–05 Sacramento 50 2 11.0 .458 .452 .929 1.2 1.3 .4 .1 4.7
2005–06 Phoenix 81 0 17.5 .422 .389 .805 1.6 1.8 .5 .1 9.8
2006–07 New Jersey 56 1 16.9 .428 .429 .917 1.6 1.2 .5 .1 8.4
2007–08 Boston 78 2 19.0 .409 .393 .917 2.1 1.9 .8 .1 7.5
2008–09 Boston 81 0 18.3 .445 .444 .792 1.9 1.1 .8 .1 8.5
2009–10 Boston 50 0 16.9 .401 .383 .900 1.4 1.0 .6 .1 7.2
2009–10 New York 18 0 20.6 .331 .250 1.000 2.2 2.1 .7 .0 6.4
2010–11 Miami 56 1 17.5 .399 .389 .950 1.6 1.1 .6 .1 6.5
Career 717 31 17.3 .409 .390 .851 1.7 1.6 .7 .1 7.5

Playoffs

Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
2001 Miami 3 0 21.3 .400 .286 .800 1.7 1.7 1.0 .3 12.7
2005 Sacramento 3 0 7.7 .375 1.000 1.000 .7 1.3 .0 .0 3.0
2006 Phoenix 14 0 9.3 .365 .214 .750 .6 .4 .1 .1 3.1
2007 New Jersey 4 0 4.5 .250 .167 .000 .5 .3 .3 .0 1.3
2008 Boston 21 0 7.9 .304 .355 .875 1.0 .9 .2 .0 2.5
2009 Boston 14 0 16.6 .519 .486 .909 1.4 .9 .8 .0 7.7
2011 Miami 7 0 6.9 .235 .300 .000 .7 .1 .6 .0 1.6
Career 66 0 10.3 .391 .368 .867 1.0 .7 .4 .1 4.0

See also

References

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