Former NBA player Shawn Bradley paralyzed in bike accident

Former NBA player Shawn Bradley paralyzed in bike accident

Kurt Helin

Wed, March 17, 2021, 6:00 PM

It’s hard to forget Shawn Bradley — all 7’6″ of him — if you watched him play for the Dallas Mavericks (or Philadelphia 76ers, or New Jersey Nets) during his eventful 12-year NBA career. Through a lot of ups and downs, he played the game with joy — you could see it in his face.

Bradley announced Wednesday that he suffered a traumatic spinal cord injury in a bicycle accident a block from home in St. George, Utah, which has left him paralyzed.

Here is the statement, via the Dallas Mavericks:

Shawn Bradley released the first public details today of the accident he suffered on January 20, 2021. Bradley, the 7’6″ former NBA player with the Dallas Mavericks, was struck from behind by an automobile while riding his bicycle a mere block from his home in St. George, Utah. The accident caused a traumatic spinal cord injury that left him paralyzed. After undergoing neck fusion surgery, Bradley has spent the last eight weeks hospitalized and undergoing rehabilitation.

Bradley, a devout member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, spent two years performing missionary work in Australia after his freshman year at Brigham Young University. Following his mission, Bradley was drafted by the Philadelphia 76ers as the number two pick in the 1993 NBA Draft, but he spent the majority of his career with the Dallas Mavericks. His very strong sense of faith is being tested as he participates in grueling physical therapy and learns how to cope with the challenges of paraplegia. Doctors have advised him that his road to recovery will be both long and arduous, perhaps an even more difficult physical challenge than playing professional basketball.

With his wife Carrie at his side around the clock, and supported by an amazing team of rehabilitation specialists and family, Bradley is in good spirits. He plans to use his accident as a platform to bring greater public awareness to the importance of bicycle safety.

Bradley asked to convey his deep appreciation for the outpouring of well wishes and prayers he has received from family, friends and fans. Their support has energized his recovery and bolstered his confidence that he will manage the long process ahead successfully. He does not plan to issue further public updates, preferring to devote his full concentration on his rehabilitation.

Bradley was the No. 2 pick in the 1993 NBA Draft, taken by the Philadelphia 76ers. He played with the Nets as well but spent the final eight years of his career in Dallas. Bradley averaged 8.1 points, 6.3 rebounds, and 2.5 blocks a game during his career.

Hate hearing about shit like this. Hope he can come back farther than anyone ever thought he could. Unthinkable pain, both physically and emotionally. Someone who has the identity of a professional athlete. Damn it.
Glad he’s in good spirits, for the most part and committed to his faith. Faith is the only thing that can get you through some shit like that.

I have a nephew who wiped-out his quad and pile-drived his head into an embankment at the age of 18. Luckily he survived but his spinal cord didn’t, paralyzed from the chest down. It’s devastating for the individual and the family’s. Having money like Bradley does makes it a little easier to afford what he needs to make his life a little more manageable…but being 7’6" and being in a wheelchair has to bring some of it’s own challenges.

A month or so ago, the son of a guy we know, hit a telephone pole with his snowmobile so hard that it broke the telephone pole, he died the next morning.
Being paralyzed is not fun but I think this young man losing his life brought some light to my nephew only being paralyzed…but I still feel horrible when I hear someone lost the use of their legs.

This sort of thing can screw up your identity and change your ideas about everything. It takes away most of the means by which you meet your emotional needs, and you literally have to figure out a new life and become a different person. Extremely challenging.

Sending love to your family, man!

Yeah, it’s tough for an 18 year old when you think you’re invincible and used to going coyote hunting with your dad running through field after field chasing them down. I know when his accident happened, he wished he hadn’t survived. I think now he’s come to grips with it and making the best of his life he can. It definitely would test your will to want to be alive and stay positive.
Thanks for the love, my man.

For sure, brother!
Hate that he was so young too.