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Famous Like Me > Actress > L > Nancy Lieberman

Profile of Nancy Lieberman on Famous Like Me

 
Name: Nancy Lieberman  
   
Also Know As:
   
Date of Birth: 1st July 1958
   
Place of Birth: Brooklyn, New York, USA
   
Profession: Actress
 
 
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia

Nancy Elizabeth Lieberman (born July 1, 1958 in Brooklyn, New York) is a former standout collegiate and professional basketball player. She is currently a women's basketball TV analyst and coach. She is regarded as one of the greatest figures in women's basketball.

Early years

In 1974, while attending Far Rockaway High School in Queens, New York, she established herself as one of the top women's basketball players in the country by earning one of only 12 slots on the USA's National Team. The following year, Lieberman was named to the USA Team designated to play in the World Championships and Pan American Games where she brought home a gold medal in 1975 and a silver medal in 1979.

At age 17, Lieberman was named to the 1976 USA Women's Olympic Basketball Team, which she would compete at the Montreal Games in the first-ever Women's Olympic Basketball Team Competition. Shortly after turning 18, Lieberman became the youngest basketball player in Olympic history to win a medal as the United States captured the Silver Medal.

Old Dominion University

From 1976 to 1980, Lieberman attended Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia, and played on the women's basketball team there. During that time, she and her team won two consecutive AIAW National Championships (1979, 1980) and one NWIT (Women's National Invitation Tournament) Championship in 1978. She was a two-time winner of the prestigious Wade Trophy, a national "player of the year" award in college women's basketball and was selected as the Broderick Award winner for basketball as the top women's player in America. Lieberman also won three consecutive Kodak All-America awards (1978,'79,'80)

Professional career

In 1980, Lieberman earned a slot on the 1980 Olympic team but elected to withdraw from the squad in support of U.S. President Jimmy Carter's boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow.

In the 1980s, she dropped out of college to embark on a professional career in basketball. She played for several basketball teams and leagues, including the Dallas Diamonds of the Women's Pro Basketball League (WBL), then in a men's league called the United States Basketball League (USBL), and also with the Washington Generals, who served as the regular opponent of the Harlem Globetrotters. One of her teammates with the Generals was Tim Cline, and the two eventually married. They have since divorced.

She was elected to the Basketball Hall of Fame as a player in 1996 and to the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 1999.

In the newly-formed Women's National Basketball Association's (WNBA) inaugural year in 1997, Lieberman played for the Phoenix Mercury, even though she was 38.

In 1998, she was hired as General Manager and Head Coach of the WNBA's Detroit Shock, a team she coached for three seasons.

Off the court life

In 2000, she returned to Old Dominion University to complete her undergraduate degree in interdisciplinary studies. At the time, she had been serving as president of the Women's Sports Foundation.

In 2004, she became the Head Coach for the Dallas Fury of the National Women's Basketball League (NWBL), and guided the team to a championship that season.

She currently lives in Carrollton, Texas with her son Timothy, Jr., and writes a regular column on women's basketball for ESPN's website and appears as a TV commentator for the network.

She has authored several books and videotapes, most of which were "how-to" advice to young female basketball players. But her first book, published in 1991, is her autobiography entitled Lady Magic: The Nancy Lieberman Story. She later co-authored her second book Basketball for Women with ESPN and ABC-TV commentator Robin Roberts.

In addition, she is heavily involved with charities such as the Special Olympics, the Jimmy V Foundation (named after the late Jim Valvano), and is the local chairperson of the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation's "Race For The Cure" in Plano, Texas, a support group for victims of breast cancer. She also hosts annual basketball camps for girls in Dallas and in Detroit.

She has also made guest appearances on the TV sitcoms "The Cosby Show" and "Joanie Loves Chachi", as well as the PBS series "Square One". She was also featured in a 1989 low-budget comedy movie called Perfect Profile.

On a more trivial note, she served as a personal trainer to tennis star Martina Navratilova during the 1980s. Their relationship became the subject of a song by lesbian folksinger Phranc.

This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Nancy Lieberman