Fred Carter
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"Fredrick James Carter" is an American former professional basketball player and coach.

A 6' 3" guard from Mount St. Mary's University, Carter was selected by the Washington Wizards/Baltimore Bullets in the third round of the 1969 NBA Draft. He played eight seasons (1969-70 NBA season/1969–1976-77 NBA season/1977) in the National Basketball Association/NBA as a member of the Bullets, Philadelphia 76ers, and Milwaukee Bucks, scoring 9,271 career points. Carter was the leading scorer on the 1972-73 NBA season/1973 Sixers team that lost an NBA record 1972–73 Philadelphia 76ers season/73 of 82 regular-season games. He later coached the Sixers for almost two seasons, from late-1992-93 NBA season/1992 to mid-1993-94 NBA season/1994.

Following his tenure with the Sixers, Carter began a successful career as a basketball analyst for ESPN. During his time as co-host of "the NBA 2Night" he was known for his claim of being "the best player on the worst team in NBA history." He is currently an analyst on NBA TV.

More Fred Carter on Wikipedia.

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He is neither Christian nor right, ... He is the Christian Taliban... He is Mala Robertson. He is no better than those who called for the assassination of Bush... We serve a God who was assassinated for doing good.

The board of control would decide their feeder system, and that would be spelled out. Certainly anyone could attend their school, but not for athletic purposes.

One person can change history, ... Nobody in the liberal press or any kind of press watches CBN, so it could've gone completely unnoticed. But I'm a Chavez fan.

I said, 'Well, this has got to be news,' so I clicked on it, ... It had the whole transcript of what he said. I Googled everybody and nobody had it.

I think there's been even more state championships won by the private schools using (former) public school student-athletes.

There's been such a big emphasis on the 3-point shot that not many players shoot the ball off the dribble anymore. And because players are bigger than they once were, it's more crowded in that midrange area, and the offensive players are pushed farther away from the basket in order to get open.

Fred, it's gone. It's all gone.