Alvan Adams was the other Suns participant in the slam dunk competition that year (which they featured weekly at halftime) but he was eliminated in the first round when he was a no-show (probably due to an injury).LazarusLong wrote: ↑Tue Dec 09, 2025 5:51 pmCorrect on best bet. Ronnie Lee won when Skywalker missed a 360.BKinSJC wrote: ↑Tue Dec 09, 2025 5:35 pmOkay, I'm gonna guess that this was tied to the season-long dunk contest that they'd show at halftime of games in 1977. That seems to jibe with Thompson being part of it. Looking at the Suns roster for that year, I think the best bet is probably Ronnie Lee (who was hyper-athletic and would've been young enough to find it fun, probably). Second choice, Ricky Sobers. Outside chance that it was Paul Westphal, although Westy wasn't really known as a super athlete.LazarusLong wrote: ↑Tue Dec 09, 2025 5:06 pmGood guess, but no cigar.BKinSJC wrote: ↑Tue Dec 09, 2025 4:42 pmLarry Nance?LazarusLong wrote: ↑Tue Dec 09, 2025 1:39 pmAnother item...
This Suns player beat David Thompson in a head-to-head slam dunk contest that was part of a special series on national TV.
He is ...?
The dunk contest clips were featured at halftime of NBA feature games on CBS.
Lee's best dunk had him slamming the ball to the floor at the top of the key, and as the ball bounced near the rim, he caught it and dunked it.
The TV footage was cool -- the ball floated into view, then a second later, Lee flies in drops it through.
Lee was a joy to watch.
CBS then switched to a H.O.R.S.E. competition the next year which was won by Paul Westphal. Westphal won the final round when Pete Maravich was out due to a knee injury.