Maryland's greatest player — drafted second overall by Boston Celtics, dead two days later at 22.
Leonard Kevin Bias was born in Landover, Maryland in 1963. He attended the University of Maryland and became the most celebrated player in the school's history and one of the most decorated in ACC history. He was a two-time ACC Player of the Year (1985, 1986) and a two-time consensus All-American. He averaged 19.6 points and 7.0 rebounds per game across four seasons. Boston Celtics selected him second overall in the 1986 NBA Draft — the selection was widely celebrated as the piece that would give the Larry Bird Celtics another decade of dominance. On June 19, 1986 — two days after the draft — he died of cocaine-induced cardiac arrhythmia at the University of Maryland campus. He was 22 years old. His death is cited as one of the most significant moments in the history of basketball and in American drug policy — the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986 was partly inspired by his death and passed within months. His Maryland career — four years of consistent excellence in the most demanding conference in college basketball — represents a player whose ceiling was genuinely unlimited. His number 34 was retired by Maryland. The tragedy of Len Bias is one of sport's most enduring and painful stories.
ACC Player of Year 2x
Career Honours
- ACC Player of Year 2x
- Consensus All-American 2x
- Second overall pick 1986
- ACC Tournament MVP