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http://www.blackamericaweb.com/?q=articles/news/the_black_diaspora_news/34060

 

 

Wayman Lawrence Tisdale was a star professional NBA player and legendary bass guitarist in the jazz world. The National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Famer was a team veteran with the Indiana Pacers, the Sacramento Kings and the Phoenix Suns.

 

A native of Tulsa, Oklahoma, Tisdale was raised in a well-known spiritual family. His father was pastor of Friendship Church for 21 years. Upon his death in 1997, the city renamed a local Expressway the L.L. Tisdale Parkway in his father’s honor. It was at his father’s church that Tisdale learned and mastered the bass guitar. Jazz was his future.

 

By the time he was a high school grad, Tisdale had become one of the most heavily recruited basketball players in the country. The coach at the University of Oklahoma wanted Tisdale on the team, so he changed the team’s practice schedule so Tisdale could attend his father’s church services on Sunday in Tulsa.

 

Tisdale was a three-time Big Eight Conference Player of the Year and the first player in collegiate history to be named a first-team All-American in his first three seasons. Tisdale holds the record at University of Oklahoma for the most points scored by any player through his freshman and sophomore seasons. He won a gold medal on the 1984 U.S. Olympic basketball team.

In 1997, Tisdale became the first player in any sport to have his jersey, number 23, retired by the University of Oklahoma.

 

In March 2007, Tisdale was diagnosed and treated for bone cancer after falling and suffering a broken leg.

Read more at http://www.blackamericaweb.com/?q=articles/news/the_black_diaspora_news/34060