Phil Chenier
Age: 74
Philip Chenier (born October 30, 1950) is an American former professional basketball player, a guard in the National Basketball Association for ten seasons. He is now a television sports broadcaster for the NBA's Washington Wizards.
Early years
Born and raised in Berkeley, California, Chenier graduated from Berkeley High School and played college basketball at the University of California in Berkeley.
NBA playing career
Chenier was selected fourth in the 1971 NBA Hardship Draft by the Baltimore Bullets, and played for them for eight seasons, from 1971 to 1979. The franchise moved from Baltimore to Washington in 1973, after his second season.
Chenier was one of the better shooting guards in the NBA for the first six seasons in his career, but he suffered a back injury early in the 1977-78 season and had season-ending surgery. The Bullets went on to win the NBA title with Kevin Grevey as the shooting guard. Chenier was never the same player after that; he came back from his surgery late the next season, but never could crack the Bullets' starting lineup again.
Chenier was released by the Bullets after the 1978-79 season, and played briefly for the Indiana Pacers and Golden State Warriors and retired after the 1980-81 season.
Chenier, who was a 1972 NBA All-Rookie Team selection, averaged 17.2 points per game for his career, and was named to three NBA All-Star teams.
Broadcasting career
Chenier, who got his start in television sports broadcasting with Home Team Sports back in 1985, has announced black college games alongside broadcasters Charlie Neil and James Brown for Black Entertainment Television, and Washington Bullets and Washington Wizards games on television since 1987, presently working for CSN Washington alongside play-by-play commentator, Steve Buckhantz.
Personal
Chenier resides in Columbia, Maryland, with his family and his mother. He has two daughters, a son, and grandchildren. His son, Phil Jr., followed his father into basketball, and is a coach for Wilde Lake High School's varsity basketball team.