Nick DeWitz
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Mesa, Arizona)
| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Born | September 16, 1982 Chandler, Arizona, U.S. |
| Listed height | 203 cm (6 ft 8 in) |
| Listed weight | 104 kg (229 lb) |
| Career information | |
| High school | Dobson (Mesa, Arizona) |
| College |
|
| NBA draft | 2006: undrafted |
| Playing career | 2006–2010 |
| Position | Forward |
| Career history | |
| 2006–2007 | Porvoon Tarmo |
| 2007 | Salem Stampede |
| 2007–2008 | Sendai 89ers |
| 2008–2009 | Osaka Evessa |
| 2009–2010 | S.L. Benfica |
| Career highlights | |
| |
Nicholas Adam DeWitz (born September 16, 1982) is an American former professional basketball player.
In high school, DeWitz attended Dobson High School in Mesa, Arizona.[1] He was nominated for All-America honors and was an all-state selection. Helped Dobson and head coach Rick McConnell to a 28–3 record his senior year.
College career
In 2001, DeWitz attended Utah Valley State College, in Orem, Utah. During his time at UVSC, he completed his associate degree in 1.5 years. Then he transferred to the University of Iowa[2] (2003–04) where he played only half the season before transferring to Oregon State University to play under his former head coach, Jeff Reinert at UVSC. In his first year at OSU he was the first recipient of the Pac-10's Fred Hessler Award, given to the league's top non-freshman newcomer. Set the OSU single-season record for three-point percentage (50.0%, 34-for-68) and ranked second in the Pac-10. Had 37 blocks in conference play, which is tied for first on OSU’s single-season Pac-10 list.
He had a dunk vs. Washington State that was #5 on SportsCenter’s top plays of the day. DeWitz posted a career-high 28 points (the most by an OSU player in 2004–05) in a home win against California. In that game, tied the school and Gill Coliseum records with seven three-pointers made(Gary Payton), and set a school single-game record for three-point percentage with a minimum of eight attempts (.778, 7-for-9).
In OSU’s record books, ended his career first in three-point percentage (43.6%), first in blocked shots per game (2.06).