Charles Barkley
In 1984, the Philadelphia 76ers drafted Charles Barkley with the No. 5 overall pick. Prior to his NBA debut, the Alabama native spent three years at Auburn University where he still holds the school record for his field goal percentage (62.6%). Barkley joined the NBA All-Rookie First Team in his first year with the 76ers. After eight seasons of learning from Philadelphia greats like Julius Erving, Maurice Cheeks, and Moses Malone, the power forward became the NBA MVP in 1993 with the Phoenix Suns.
Along the way, Barkley represented the U.S. at the 1992 and 1996 Olympics, winning two gold medals. The 11-time All-Star eventually played for Houston Rockets, rounding out his 16-year NBA career as the Round Mound of Rebound. Since his retirement in 2000, Barkley has had a successful career as an NBA commentator, earning four Sports Emmy Awards for his work on TNT.
- Birthday: February 20, 1963
- Hometown: Leeds, Alabama
- College: Auburn University
- Height: 6’6″
- Spouse: Maureen Blumhardt (m. 1989)
- Children: Christiana Barkley
- Jersey: No. 34 (Phoenix Suns) and No. 32 (Philadelphia 76ers)
- Number of NBA championship wins: 0
- Number of NBA championship appearances: 1 (1993)
Visit Charles Barkley’s profile on Basketball-Reference.com.
Read the latest articles about Charles Barkley:
Charles Barkley doesn’t think that his spat with former friend and Dream Team teammate Michael Jordan will end anytime soon.
Even as a member of the Dream Team, nothing could stop Charles Barkley from going out on the town and hitting the local clubs.
Luc Longley was never a superstar in the NBA, but he surprisingly made more money than Charles Barkley in his basketball career.
In a recent conversation with Kentucky head coach John Calipari, Charles Barkley listed his top five NBA players of all time.
A look back on how Michael Jordan was not the best player on the 1992 Dream Team that won the gold medal at the Barcelona Olympics.
Draymond Green thinks Charles Barkley is jealous of his success. so the TNT basketball analyst fired back in vintage Charles Barkley fashion.
A look at how the controversial Nike spot featuring Charles Barkley telling the world “I Am Not a Role Model” came to be.
Michael Jordan, Charles Barkley, and Karl Malone highlight the 1986-87 Fleer basketball trading card set, the most prized among collectors.
In 1991, Charles Barkley infamously spit on a fan. That terrible moment, however, actually saved the forward’s NBA career.
Charles Barkley is far from conventional, but imitating the ‘Karate Kid’ in a street fight takes things to a whole new level.