J.R. Smith

© The Upper Deck Co.

Sport: Basketball
Born: September 9, 1985
Town: Freehold, New Jersey

Earl Joseph Smith III (J.R. Smith) was born September 9, 1985 in Freehold, NJ to Ida and Earl Smith, Jr. J.R was one of four children. Their father played varsity basketball for Monmouth University. J.R. attended four different high schools as a teenager and played basketball for two: Lakewood High School and Saint Benedicts Preparatory School in Newark. A gifted scorer, his career average was 27 points a game over four seasons.

As a high-school junior J.R. signed a letter of intent to attend the University of North Carolina. After his senior year, however, he changed his mind and decided to declare himself eligible for the 2004 NBA Draft. J.R. was taken as the 18th overall pick by the New Orleans Hornets. He averaged 10.3 points a game as a rookie and made it to the Rising Stars Slam Dunk Contest, where he faced Dwight Howard and Amar’e Stoudemire. J.R. played one more season in New Orleans before being traded to the Chicago Bulls in the summer of 2006. Six days later, he was traded to the Denver Nuggets.

In Denver, J.R. became one of the NBA’s top three-point threats. He helped the Nuggets make the playoffs in each of the five years he was on the team, but they only had one year in which they made it out of the first round. J.R. averaged 13,5 points a game and had a three-point percentage of .384. He finished in the NBA’s Top Ten in three-pointers made in 2008-09 and 2009-10

During the NBA lockout in 2011, J.R. decided to play in the Chinese Basketball Association. The rule for NBA players playing in the CBA is they have to play the full season before they are eligible to return to the NBA. J.R played the 32 game season with the Zhejiang Golden Bulls, averaging 34.4 points per game to lead the CBA. 

When the season in China ended, J.R. was a member of the Knicks and found himself right in the middle of “Linsanity.” J.R. was reunited with his former Denver teammate Carmelo Anthony, who is the godfather of his children. J.R. averaged 12.5 points per game and had a .337 three-point percentage with the Knicks. He helped them make the playoffs, but unfortunately they lost in the first round to the Miami Heat. 

J.R. stayed with the Knicks in 2012–13 and came off the bench most of the year. He delivered buzzer-beating victories and 30-point performances to help the club reach 50 wins for the first time in more than a decade. J.R. average 18.1 points per game and was an easy pick for the NBA Sixth Man Award. The following season, he assumed more of a playmaking role, but still averaged 14.5 points per game. That being said, he was never shy about heaving up a trey; in a 2014 loss to the Heat, he set an NBA record by attempting 22 3-pointers—taking 10 in the fourth quarter alone. A highlight of that season was the opportunity to play alongside his younger brother, Chris, who had also played for St. Benedict’s Prep. 

JR’s next stop was the Cleveland Cavaliers. He joined the LeBron James-led club midway through the 2014-15 season, providing scoring punch and experience. In Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals, he came off the bench to score 28 points against the Atlanta Hawks, including a franchise-record eight 3-pointers.The Cavs dropped the NBA Finals to Golden State, as Kyrie Irving and Kevin Love were injured. The Warriors keyed on JR and James and took the series in six games.

It was a very different story in 2016, as the Cavs crushed their playoff opponents on the way to a rematch with Golden State. In the second round, they set a playoff record with 20 3-pointers in Game 2 against the Hawks. JR hit 7 of them. After falling behind 0–2 in the finals. Cleveland won Game 3 with help from JR’s 20 points. The Cavs evened the series at 3–3 but their 3-point shooting wasn’t there in Game 7. Scoring many of their points in the paint, they kept it close until the last minute, when Irving canned the winning shot—a 3-pointer over Steph Curry. JR was understandably emotional after the final buzzer. The championship had come on Father’s Day, and his dad, Earl, was on hand to congratulate him.

J.R. re-signed with the Cavs after he season and helped them reach the NBA Finals again in 2017. The road to the postseason wasn’t an easy one for him. He fractured his thumb in a December game and missed almost half the season before making it back onto the court. JR shot well from three-point range during the playoffs. During the regular season he cracked the all-time Top 15 three-point scorers in NBA history. In 2017–18, JR—by now in his early 30s—started 60-plus games for Cleveland. However, he was relegated to the bench in 2018–19 and, after complaining loudly about the Cavs’ interest in winning, he was suspended and was released after the season, having played in fewer than a dozen games.

J.R. stayed in relatively good shape hoping to earn a bench role with a contender in 2019–20. He had not received an offer when the NBA shutdown in March, but was signed by the Lakers once the season restarted in July. He saw action in 6 regular-season games and 10 playoff games as LA, led by LeBron James, went on to win the NBA Finals for JR’s second championship ring.

J.R. averaged 12.4 points per game during his career despite being a starter in only four seasons. Having never attended college, he decide to get his degree and enrolled at North Carolina A&T. During his freshman year, he joined the school’s golf team.