Nancy Lieberman

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Nancy Lieberman

Hebrew: ננסי אליזבט ליברמן
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, United States
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About Nancy Lieberman

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nancy_Lieberman

Nancy Elizabeth Lieberman (born July 1, 1958), nicknamed "Lady Magic,"[1] is a former professional basketball player and coach in the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) who is currently a broadcaster for the New Orleans Pelicans of the National Basketball Association (NBA) as well as the head coach of Power, a team in the BIG3 which she led to its 2018 Championship.[2][3] Lieberman is regarded as one of the greatest figures in American women's basketball.[4][5]

In 2000, she was inducted into the Nassau County Sports Hall of Fame. Lieberman is a member of the Basketball Hall of Fame,[6] the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame[7] the St. Louis Jewish Sports Hall of Fame (inducted in 2014),[8] and the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame.[9]

Contents Early years Lieberman was born in Brooklyn, New York, to Jerome and Renee Lieberman. She is Jewish (and described herself as "just a poor, skinny, redheaded Jewish girl from Queens").[10][11] Her family lived in Brooklyn when she was born, but soon moved to Far Rockaway, New York where she grew up with her older brother Clifford.[12] She lost great-grandparents in the Holocaust, and her paternal grandparents had concentration camp numbers on their wrists.[13]

Her mother brought up the children after a separation and divorce.[14] While growing up, she was very interested in a variety of sports, playing baseball, softball and football with boys, before settling on basketball as her primary sport.[14] She played basketball primarily on pickup teams with boys, not playing on a girls' team until she was a high school sophomore.[14] 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. In 1975, 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 [15]

Lieberman's mother, Renee, was not supportive of her daughter's passion for basketball. During one instance when Lieberman was practicing dribbling techniques indoors, because it was cold outside, her mother demanded she stop dribbling because of all the noise. When she did not stop, her mother punctured the basketball with a screwdriver. Lieberman found another ball and continued, but her mother punctured that one as well. This continued until five balls were ruined. Nancy then decided she had better go outside before she ran out of basketballs.[16]

During the school year, she played for her high school team, but in the summer, played with an AAU team in Harlem, the New York Chuckles.[17]

She told former Knick Walt Frazier that he was her hero and that it was because of him that she wore No. 10, saying: "You might not even know this, but you thought you were affecting young guys but you were affecting young, white Jewish women, not just boys."[18] As she describes it, "So my mother, this little Jewish lady from New York, goes up to Ali, and tells him that her daughter is the greatest of all time. Ali just looks at her and says, 'Lady, there's only one greatest of all time and that's me.'"[19]

In 2010, she said in an interview, "I am 100% Jewish. My father’s parents were deeply religious, we had two sets of silverware when we went and ate over there. My mother’s side observed the major holidays. It was more relaxed. I went to Hebrew school as well."[13] In 2011, she visited Israel with her mother, saying "It has changed my outlook of Israel. I know as a Jewish woman how important it is for me to be connected to this culture and to this community."[20]

USA Basketball At age 17, Lieberman was named to the USA Basketball team roster. She would play for the team in the 1975 USA Women's Pan American Team, three years younger than the next youngest teammates.[21] The games were originally planned for Santiago, Chile, then Sao Paulo, Brazil and finally held in Mexico City, Mexico in October. The Pan Am team had failed to win the gold in 1967 and 1971. This year, the team would be more successful, compiling a 7–0 record, and winning the gold medal for the first time since 1963.[21]

Lieberman continued with the USA team to the 1976 Olympics in Montreal in the first-ever Women's Olympic Basketball Team Competition.[22] 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.[23]

Lieberman was named to the team representing the US at the 1979 William Jones Cup competition in Taipei, Taiwan. The USA team won all six games en route to the gold medal. Lieberman earned a spot on the Jones Cup All-Tournament Team[24]

Lieberman finished her USA Basketball career with the Pan American Team, at the 1979 games in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Although the team would win most of their games with ease, including a 38-point win over Brazil in the semi-final, they were unable to beat the team from Cuba, and lost the title match 91–86, settling for the silver medal.[25]

College years From 1976 to 1980, Lieberman attended Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia, and played on the women's basketball team there.[26] During that time, she and her team won two consecutive AIAW National Championships (1979, 1980)[27] and one WNIT (Women's National Invitation Tournament) Championship in 1978. She was the first two-time winner of the prestigious Wade Trophy,[28] 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.[29] Lieberman also won three consecutive Kodak All-America awards (1978, '79, '80).[30] Lieberman was one of six young adults to win the Young American Award from the Boy Scouts of America in 1980.[31]

Lieberman earned the nickname "Lady Magic," a nod to Earvin "Magic" Johnson of NBA fame.[32] Lieberman set a school record for career assists (961) that still stands today. She led the team in assists each of the four years she was on the team—in her sophomore year she averaged 8.9 per game.[33] Lieberman amassed 2,430 points along with 1,167 rebounds in her collegiate career, producing an average of 18.1 points per game.[33] Lieberman achieved a triple double (40 points, 15 rebounds, 11 assists) against Norfolk State in her sophomore year.[33] Lieberman stole the ball 562 times and assisted a basket 961 times in her college career, believed to be modern records.[14] She is the holder of several single-game and single-season records, including best free-throw shooting percentage in her freshman and sophomore years.[33]

Lieberman earned her degree in Interdisciplinary Studies from Old Dominion University on May 6, 1980.[34] She was inducted into the ODU Sports Hall of Fame in 1985.[35]

Old Dominion University statistics Source[36]

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 Year	Team	GP	Points	FG%	FT%	RPG	APG	BPG	PPG 1976-77	Old Dominion University	27	563	47.3%	70.9%	10.1	7.9	0.0	20.9 1977-78	Old Dominion University	34	681	43.2%	73.0%	9.6	5.9	0.0	20.0 1978-79	Old Dominion University	36	625	47.8%	79.0%	7.7	7.1	0.4	17.4 1979-80	Old Dominion University	37	561	53.3%	77.9%	8.0	8.0	0.6	15.2 Career		134	2430	47.2%	75.7%	8.7	7.2	0.3	18.1 Awards and honors 1979-Winner of the Honda Sports Award for basketball[37][38] 1979-The Honda-Broderick Cup winner for all sports.[39][38] 1980-Winner of the Honda Sports Award for basketball[37][38] 1999-Inducted into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame[38] Professional career

Lieberman presenting trophy to Moriah Jefferson. In 1980, Lieberman earned a slot on the 1980 Olympic team, but withdrew from the squad in support of U.S. President Jimmy Carter's boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow.[40]

In the 1980s, Lieberman dropped out of college to embark on a professional career in basketball. In 1981, she played for the Los Angeles Lakers Summer Pro League team.[41] She played for several basketball teams and leagues, including the Dallas Diamonds of the Women's Pro Basketball League (WBL),[42] a men's league called the United States Basketball League (USBL),[43] and also with the Washington Generals,[44] who served as the regular opponent of the Harlem Globetrotters. She was the number one draft pick of the Dallas Diamonds.[45] One of her teammates with the Generals was Tim Cline, whom she married in 1988,[46] taking the surname Lieberman-Cline until the couple's divorce on March 15, 2001.[47] Their son T. J., who is Jewish, played college basketball for the Richmond Spiders, and in November 2017 signed to play for Israeli team Hapoel Holon which plays in the Ligat HaAl, the top division of Israeli basketball.[48][49]

Lieberman was a contestant on the season 4 Gold Medal Challenge of Champions special of American Gladiators. She was eliminated after the third event with the lowest score of the three female competitors.

Lieberman's WBL career is featured in the book "Mad Seasons: The Story of the First Women's Professional Basketball League, 1978–1981," by Karra Porter (University of Nebraska Press, 2006).

She was elected to the Basketball Hall of Fame[6] as a player in 1996 and to the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame[7] in 1999.

In the newly formed WNBA's inaugural year in 1997, Lieberman played for the Phoenix Mercury.[50] At the age of 39, she was the WNBA's oldest player.[5]

In 1998, she was hired as General Manager and Head Coach of the WNBA's Detroit Shock. She coached for three seasons. After leaving the Shock, Lieberman worked as a women's basketball analyst on ESPN.

On July 24, 2008, at 50 years old, Lieberman signed a seven-day contract with the Detroit Shock,[51] breaking her own previous record as the oldest player in league history. She played one game and had two assists and two turnovers against the Houston Comets. The Comets defeated the Shock 79–61.

On August 13, 2008, she was part of the inaugural class to be inducted into the Hampton Roads Sports Hall of Fame, honoring athletes, coaches and administrators who made contributions to sports in Southeastern Virginia.

NBA coaching career In November 2009, Nancy Lieberman became the coach of the Texas Legends in the NBA Development League, an affiliate of the Dallas Mavericks, thus becoming the first woman to coach a professional men's basketball team. The team began play in November 2010.[52] She later moved to a front office position with the Legends before joining Fox Sports Oklahoma as an analyst for the Oklahoma City Thunder studio shows, Thunder Live.

In July 2015, she was hired by the Sacramento Kings as an assistant coach, becoming the second female assistant coach in NBA history.[53] She took two leaves of absences to care for her ailing mother before stepping away from the Kings in 2017.[54] After leaving the Kings, she became a broadcaster with the New Orleans Pelicans.[55]

About ננסי ליברמן (עברית)

ננסי אליזבת ליברמן

''''''(באנגלית; Nancy Elizabeth Lieberman, נולדה ב-1 ביולי 1958) היא כדורסלנית יהודייה-אמריקאית בעבר ומאמנת בליגת ה-WNBA. נחשבת לאחת מגדולות הכדורסלניות בכל הזמנים, וב-1999 נבחרה הן להיכל התהילה של הכדורסל והן להיכל התהילה של כדורסל הנשים.

ביוגרפיה ליברמן נולדה בברוקלין, ניו יורק, לג'רום ולרנה ליברמן. משפחתה עברה בהמשך לקווינס בניו יורק, והוריה התגרשו. מגיל צעיר שיחקה במגוון משחקי כדור, עד שבחרה להתמקד בכדורסל. לאורך ילדותה נהגה לשחק בקבוצות בנים, ורק בבית הספר התיכון נכנסה לקבוצת כדורסל בנות. כבר אז נחשבה לאחת הכדורסלניות הבולטות במדינה, ובגיל 17 זומנה לנבחרת ארצות הברית בכדורסל נשים. היא בלטה במשחקי הנבחרת במסגרת המשחקים הפאן-אמריקאיים של 1975, ותרמה לזכיית הנבחרת במדליית זהב; ב-1979 זכתה עם הנבחרת במדליית כסף במסגרת משחקים אלו. גם באולימפיאדת מונטריאול (1976) תרמה לזכיית הנבחרת במדליית כסף, ובכך הייתה לכדורסלנית הצעירה ביותר שזכתה במדליה אולימפית.

בשנים 1976–1980 למדה ליברמן לתואר בלימודים בינתחומיים באוניברסיטת אולד דומיניון בנורפוק, שבווירג'יניה שם שיחקה בקבוצת הנשים של האוניברסיטה. בתקופה זו זכתה קבוצתה פעמיים באליפות האתלטיקה הבין-אוניברסיטאית לנשים (במסגרת איגוד AIAW), ופעם אחת באליפות הטורניר הלאומי לנשים (במסגרת איגוד WNIT). בתקופה זו הייתה הראשונה שזכתה פעמיים ב"פרס וייד" של איגוד NCAA לכדורסלנית הטובה ביותר של שנת 1979 ו-1980. ליברמן זכתה בתקופה זו לכינוי "ליידי מג'יק", על שם אחד הכדורסלנים הטובים בארצות הברית, מג'יק ג'ונסון. היא קבעה מספר שיאים במהלך משחקיה במכללות, בהם שיא במספר האסיסטים לקריירה במכללות (961 אסיסטים), שנכון ל-2011 עדיין לא נשבר.

לאחר סיום לימודיה, שיחקה ליברמן במספר קבוצות במסגרת מקצוענית, בהן "דאלאס דיימונדס" במסגרת ליגת הנשים WBL, במסגרת ליגת גברים בשם USBL, וכן במסגרת קבוצת הראווה הגברית "Washington Generals", בה הכירה את השחקן טים קליין, לו נישאה ב-1988; הם התגרשו ב-2001. לאורך הקריירה המקצוענית שלה זכתה להערכה ולפרסים. ב-1997, לאחר שהוקמה ליגת הנשים WNBA, שיחקה בקבוצת "פיניקס מרקורי", ובגיל 39 הפכה בכך לשחקנית המבוגרת ביותר ששיחקה במסגרת ליגה זו.

ב-1998 החלה בקריירת אימון; היא הייתה המאמנת הראשית והמנכ"לית בקבוצת הנשים "טלסה שוק". לאחר שלוש שנים נאלצה לעזוב, לאחר שהואשמה על ידי שחקניות בקבוצה בקיום קשר מיני עם השחקנית אנה דה'פורג'. היא עברה לתחום העיתונות ושימשה כפרשנית ספורט ברשת הטלוויזיה ESPN.

ב-2008, בגיל 50, חתמה באופן סמלי על חוזה של שבעה ימים עם קבוצת "דטרויט שוק", ואף שיחקה במסגרת הקבוצה משחק אחד, ובכך שברה את השיא שקבעה בעצמה כשחקנית המבוגרת ביותר בליגת הנשים. ב-2009 החלה לאמן את קבוצת "טקסס לג'נד", במסגרת הליגה החצי-מקצוענית NBDL, ובכך הפכה לאישה הראשונה שאימנה קבוצת כדורסל גברים. נכון ל-2011 היא ממשיכה לאמן קבוצה זו, וכן מארגנת מדי קיץ מחנה אימונים בכדורסל לבנים ובנות בסמוך למקום מגוריה, דאלאס שבטקסס.

בנה, טי ג'יי קליין (אנ'), הוא שחקן כדורסל. קבוצתו הנוכחית היא הפועל חולון.

על שמה נקרא "פרס ננסי ליברמן" של ארגון רוטרי מדטרויט, המוענק מדי שנה החל משנת 2000, לכדורסלניות קולג' מצטיינות בתפקידי רכז.

קישורים חיצוניים ויקישיתוף מדיה וקבצים בנושא ננסי ליברמן בוויקישיתוף פרופיל אולימפי, באתר Sports-Reference פרופיל , באתר פיב"א פרופיל , באתר ליגת ה-WNBA פרופיל , באתר היכל התהילה של הכדורסל האתר הרשמי של ליברמן

(באנגלית) ננסי ליברמן , באנציקלופדיית נשים יהודיות (באנגלית) מאמרים של ליברמן , באתר רשת הטלוויזיה ESPN (באנגלית) ננסי ליברמן , באתר היכל התהילה של כדורסל הנשים (באנגלית) הגיל שאפשר להתחיל: בת 50 חתמה ב-WNBA , באתר ONE‏, 24 ביולי 2008 לימור שפיגל, מאמנת על עקבים: ננסי ליברמן על הקווים , באתר ynet, 4 בדצמבר 2010 רענן וייס, ynet - ספורט - עוד שיא? ננסי ליברמן: "אשמח לאמן בישראל" , באתר ynet, 3 ביוני 2011 שרון קינן, ‏צעד וחצי לשוויון , באתר ישראל היום, 14 באוגוסט 2015 https://he.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D7%A0%D7%A0%D7%A1%D7%99_%D7%9C%D7%99...

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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nancy_Lieberman

Nancy Elizabeth Lieberman (born July 1, 1958), nicknamed "Lady Magic,"[1] is a former professional basketball player and coach in the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) who is currently a broadcaster for the New Orleans Pelicans of the National Basketball Association (NBA) as well as the head coach of Power, a team in the BIG3 which she led to its 2018 Championship.[2][3] Lieberman is regarded as one of the greatest figures in American women's basketball.[4][5]

In 2000, she was inducted into the Nassau County Sports Hall of Fame. Lieberman is a member of the Basketball Hall of Fame,[6] the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame[7] the St. Louis Jewish Sports Hall of Fame (inducted in 2014),[8] and the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame.[9]

Contents Early years Lieberman was born in Brooklyn, New York, to Jerome and Renee Lieberman. She is Jewish (and described herself as "just a poor, skinny, redheaded Jewish girl from Queens").[10][11] Her family lived in Brooklyn when she was born, but soon moved to Far Rockaway, New York where she grew up with her older brother Clifford.[12] She lost great-grandparents in the Holocaust, and her paternal grandparents had concentration camp numbers on their wrists.[13]

Her mother brought up the children after a separation and divorce.[14] While growing up, she was very interested in a variety of sports, playing baseball, softball and football with boys, before settling on basketball as her primary sport.[14] She played basketball primarily on pickup teams with boys, not playing on a girls' team until she was a high school sophomore.[14] 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. In 1975, 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 [15]

Lieberman's mother, Renee, was not supportive of her daughter's passion for basketball. During one instance when Lieberman was practicing dribbling techniques indoors, because it was cold outside, her mother demanded she stop dribbling because of all the noise. When she did not stop, her mother punctured the basketball with a screwdriver. Lieberman found another ball and continued, but her mother punctured that one as well. This continued until five balls were ruined. Nancy then decided she had better go outside before she ran out of basketballs.[16]

During the school year, she played for her high school team, but in the summer, played with an AAU team in Harlem, the New York Chuckles.[17]

She told former Knick Walt Frazier that he was her hero and that it was because of him that she wore No. 10, saying: "You might not even know this, but you thought you were affecting young guys but you were affecting young, white Jewish women, not just boys."[18] As she describes it, "So my mother, this little Jewish lady from New York, goes up to Ali, and tells him that her daughter is the greatest of all time. Ali just looks at her and says, 'Lady, there's only one greatest of all time and that's me.'"[19]

In 2010, she said in an interview, "I am 100% Jewish. My father’s parents were deeply religious, we had two sets of silverware when we went and ate over there. My mother’s side observed the major holidays. It was more relaxed. I went to Hebrew school as well."[13] In 2011, she visited Israel with her mother, saying "It has changed my outlook of Israel. I know as a Jewish woman how important it is for me to be connected to this culture and to this community."[20]

USA Basketball At age 17, Lieberman was named to the USA Basketball team roster. She would play for the team in the 1975 USA Women's Pan American Team, three years younger than the next youngest teammates.[21] The games were originally planned for Santiago, Chile, then Sao Paulo, Brazil and finally held in Mexico City, Mexico in October. The Pan Am team had failed to win the gold in 1967 and 1971. This year, the team would be more successful, compiling a 7–0 record, and winning the gold medal for the first time since 1963.[21]

Lieberman continued with the USA team to the 1976 Olympics in Montreal in the first-ever Women's Olympic Basketball Team Competition.[22] 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.[23]

Lieberman was named to the team representing the US at the 1979 William Jones Cup competition in Taipei, Taiwan. The USA team won all six games en route to the gold medal. Lieberman earned a spot on the Jones Cup All-Tournament Team[24]

Lieberman finished her USA Basketball career with the Pan American Team, at the 1979 games in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Although the team would win most of their games with ease, including a 38-point win over Brazil in the semi-final, they were unable to beat the team from Cuba, and lost the title match 91–86, settling for the silver medal.[25]

College years From 1976 to 1980, Lieberman attended Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia, and played on the women's basketball team there.[26] During that time, she and her team won two consecutive AIAW National Championships (1979, 1980)[27] and one WNIT (Women's National Invitation Tournament) Championship in 1978. She was the first two-time winner of the prestigious Wade Trophy,[28] 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.[29] Lieberman also won three consecutive Kodak All-America awards (1978, '79, '80).[30] Lieberman was one of six young adults to win the Young American Award from the Boy Scouts of America in 1980.[31]

Lieberman earned the nickname "Lady Magic," a nod to Earvin "Magic" Johnson of NBA fame.[32] Lieberman set a school record for career assists (961) that still stands today. She led the team in assists each of the four years she was on the team—in her sophomore year she averaged 8.9 per game.[33] Lieberman amassed 2,430 points along with 1,167 rebounds in her collegiate career, producing an average of 18.1 points per game.[33] Lieberman achieved a triple double (40 points, 15 rebounds, 11 assists) against Norfolk State in her sophomore year.[33] Lieberman stole the ball 562 times and assisted a basket 961 times in her college career, believed to be modern records.[14] She is the holder of several single-game and single-season records, including best free-throw shooting percentage in her freshman and sophomore years.[33]

Lieberman earned her degree in Interdisciplinary Studies from Old Dominion University on May 6, 1980.[34] She was inducted into the ODU Sports Hall of Fame in 1985.[35]

Old Dominion University statistics Source[36]

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 Year	Team	GP	Points	FG%	FT%	RPG	APG	BPG	PPG 1976-77	Old Dominion University	27	563	47.3%	70.9%	10.1	7.9	0.0	20.9 1977-78	Old Dominion University	34	681	43.2%	73.0%	9.6	5.9	0.0	20.0 1978-79	Old Dominion University	36	625	47.8%	79.0%	7.7	7.1	0.4	17.4 1979-80	Old Dominion University	37	561	53.3%	77.9%	8.0	8.0	0.6	15.2 Career		134	2430	47.2%	75.7%	8.7	7.2	0.3	18.1 Awards and honors 1979-Winner of the Honda Sports Award for basketball[37][38] 1979-The Honda-Broderick Cup winner for all sports.[39][38] 1980-Winner of the Honda Sports Award for basketball[37][38] 1999-Inducted into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame[38] Professional career

Lieberman presenting trophy to Moriah Jefferson. In 1980, Lieberman earned a slot on the 1980 Olympic team, but withdrew from the squad in support of U.S. President Jimmy Carter's boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow.[40]

In the 1980s, Lieberman dropped out of college to embark on a professional career in basketball. In 1981, she played for the Los Angeles Lakers Summer Pro League team.[41] She played for several basketball teams and leagues, including the Dallas Diamonds of the Women's Pro Basketball League (WBL),[42] a men's league called the United States Basketball League (USBL),[43] and also with the Washington Generals,[44] who served as the regular opponent of the Harlem Globetrotters. She was the number one draft pick of the Dallas Diamonds.[45] One of her teammates with the Generals was Tim Cline, whom she married in 1988,[46] taking the surname Lieberman-Cline until the couple's divorce on March 15, 2001.[47] Their son T. J., who is Jewish, played college basketball for the Richmond Spiders, and in November 2017 signed to play for Israeli team Hapoel Holon which plays in the Ligat HaAl, the top division of Israeli basketball.[48][49]

Lieberman was a contestant on the season 4 Gold Medal Challenge of Champions special of American Gladiators. She was eliminated after the third event with the lowest score of the three female competitors.

Lieberman's WBL career is featured in the book "Mad Seasons: The Story of the First Women's Professional Basketball League, 1978–1981," by Karra Porter (University of Nebraska Press, 2006).

She was elected to the Basketball Hall of Fame[6] as a player in 1996 and to the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame[7] in 1999.

In the newly formed WNBA's inaugural year in 1997, Lieberman played for the Phoenix Mercury.[50] At the age of 39, she was the WNBA's oldest player.[5]

In 1998, she was hired as General Manager and Head Coach of the WNBA's Detroit Shock. She coached for three seasons. After leaving the Shock, Lieberman worked as a women's basketball analyst on ESPN.

On July 24, 2008, at 50 years old, Lieberman signed a seven-day contract with the Detroit Shock,[51] breaking her own previous record as the oldest player in league history. She played one game and had two assists and two turnovers against the Houston Comets. The Comets defeated the Shock 79–61.

On August 13, 2008, she was part of the inaugural class to be inducted into the Hampton Roads Sports Hall of Fame, honoring athletes, coaches and administrators who made contributions to sports in Southeastern Virginia.

NBA coaching career In November 2009, Nancy Lieberman became the coach of the Texas Legends in the NBA Development League, an affiliate of the Dallas Mavericks, thus becoming the first woman to coach a professional men's basketball team. The team began play in November 2010.[52] She later moved to a front office position with the Legends before joining Fox Sports Oklahoma as an analyst for the Oklahoma City Thunder studio shows, Thunder Live.

In July 2015, she was hired by the Sacramento Kings as an assistant coach, becoming the second female assistant coach in NBA history.[53] She took two leaves of absences to care for her ailing mother before stepping away from the Kings in 2017.[54] After leaving the Kings, she became a broadcaster with the New Orleans Pelicans.[55]

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Nancy Lieberman's Timeline

1958
July 1, 1958
Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, United States