Are there any NBA players that didnt play AAU?

Kendrick Perkins is critical of AAU basketball and the tournaments

Anthony was cut from the varsity basketball team standing just over six feet tall, and then got his lucky break.

“I grew four inches and I thought I was going to die, literally,” Anthony said. Via CigarAficionado.

The growth spurt may have been hard to deal with physically at the time, but it gave the future ten-time NBA All-Star the jump start he needed to carve out a prolific career.


Melo wasn’t the only high profile player to not quite make the cut during his high school basketball career. Two of the greatest champions in NBA history, and sports history, also experienced setbacks trying to advance playing the game they loved.

Bill Russell

The 11-time NBA champion, who played with the Boston Celtics in the 1950s and '60s, had to work hard to earn a spot on the junior varsity team. Still very visible at events like NBA All-Star weekend, Bill Russell went from struggling for playing time as a teenager to being an ambassador for the sport all over the country.

“As I stared at the list of players on the bulletin board who advanced to the next tryout, I did not find my name on it, no matter how many times I read it,” Russell wrote in an article for the USA Today.

Fortunately for Russell, his middle school coach met up with him after the tough news and told him that he wanted the youngster to really work on his game, and practice each day at the local Boys and Girls Club.

Russell took that advice to heart, and the rest, as they say, is history.


Michael Jordan

But the most famous story of an NBA player not being deemed good enough to play on his high school varsity team belongs to none other than “The Last Dance” hero himself, Michael Jordan. Jordan’s story at Laney High School is well chronicled, and perhaps debated among some as to how the events truly unfolded.

At the end of the day, likely the greatest basketball player who ever lived was told he was not good enough, and that should be motivation enough for anyone to keep working at their craft. Jordan was bypassed on the Laney varsity roster, and was instead relegated to the junior varsity team.

“Whenever I was working out and got tired and figured I ought to stop, I’d close my eyes and see that list in the locker room without my name on it. That usually got me going again.” Jordan confirmed via Newsweek.

The future Chicago Bulls NBA champion lit up the competition at that level, and was fueled by the slight.

Do all NBA players play AAU basketball?

Founded in 1888, AAU has been around since the inception of basketball. Nearly every NBA player participated in an AAU event at the youth or high school level, and the organization is running strong to this day.

What NBA player never played AAU?

Otto Porter Jr. didn't play AAU basketball. That makes the 24-year-old Washington Wizards forward something of an anomaly in today's NBA.

Did Kobe play AAU?

Kobe Bryant and the greatest AAU team Kobe Bryant is one of those players who made his way into the NBA without going to college, straight out of high school. However, he also played in the AAU, which is to date, considered one of the best squads that the New Jersey Patterson team ever assembled in 1994.

What NBA players did AAU?

Famous NBA names played or coached in the AAU Tournaments such as David Robinson, Larry Brown, Gregg Popovich, Bob Kurland, Mike Krzyzewski (as a coach), Jay Triano, Phil Jordon, Roger Brown, George Yardley, Jim Pollard, Clyde Lovellette and Bob Boozer.