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During Murray's 12 year career, he has made his mark in the NBA Record Books.
Tracy has earned the reputation as one of the best shooters in the league. During the 1998 season, he became the Wizard's all time three-point field goal leader setting a new franchise record with 158, a record previously held by Bullet Guard Michael Adams (Tracy reached this milestone in 103 fewer games). In the same season, Murray scored 50 points against the Golden State Warriors on February 10, 1998. It was only the sixth such effort in Franchise history.
With the Toronto Raptors, Tracy was one of the top candidates for "Most Improved Player" as his scoring average improved from 4.8 PPG to 16.2 PPG, an 11.4 PPG increase, the largest in the league. Tracy was the only Toronto Player to see action in all 82 games averaging 16.2 PPG, 4.3 RPG and 1.6 APG during the year.
Murray was a member of the 94-95 NBA World Champion Houston Rockets and played with the Portland Trailblazers during the 93-94 season leading the NBA in three-point field goal percentage with a .459 (50-109) mark.
During his three years at UCLA, Tracy had career averages of 18.5 PPG, 6.4 RPG and 1.5 APG in 98 games. He left school ranked fifth in school history in points and scoring average even though he was only at UCLA for three years. Murray received Chevrolet Player of the Year honors in all three NCAA tournament games played at the end of the 1992 season.
Tracy attended Glendora High School and played under Coach Mike Le Duc where he led the nation in scoring his senior year averaging 44.3 points per game. Murray ended his three year high school career with 3,053 points as California's all-time leading scorer.
SLAM - T-Time - Finding Tracy Murray
TRACY MURRAY - From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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