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Kee-Kee Clark

Keydren Clark
Free agent
Position Point guard
Personal information
Born (1984-10-08) October 8, 1984 (age 32)
Tuscaloosa, Alabama
Nationality American / Bulgarian
Listed height 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
Listed weight 185 lb (84 kg)
Career information
High school Rice (New York City, New York)
College Saint Peter's (2002–2006)
NBA draft 2006 / Undrafted
Playing career 2006–present
Career history
2006–2007 Egaleo
2007–2008 Scavolini Pesaro
2008–2010 Aris Thessaloniki
2010–2013 Umana Venezia Reyer
2013–2014 Cimberio Varese
2014 JSF Nanterre
2014–2015 SLUC Nancy
2015–2016 Acıbadem Üniversitesi
2016–2017 Promitheas Patras
Career highlights and awards

Keydren "Kee-Kee" Clark (born October 8, 1984) is an American professional basketball player who last played for Promitheas Patras of the Greek Basket League. He is 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in) in height and he plays at the point guard position. He also holds Bulgarian citizenship.

Clark was one of the most prolific scorers in NCAA Division I history, amassing 3,058 points and averaging 25.9 points per game for his career. Not heavily recruited from a Rice High School team in New York City that featured four Division I-bound seniors, Clark became one of the shortest players ever to lead the Division I in scoring at 5 ft 11 (1.80 m), doing so twice.

A guard at Saint Peter's College from 2002 to 2006, Clark scored 435 three-pointers in his college career, briefly holding the record for the most three-point shots made in NCAA history during the end of his senior season. Clark finished as the career leader at the end of the 2006 MAAC tournament, but was soon passed by J. J. Redick, who held the NCAA record for three point field goals made with 457 until 2014 when Oakland's Travis Bader (461+) surpassed him.

Clark finished his career as number six on the list of all-time NCAA scoring leaders. Clark, along with Pete Maravich of LSU (3,667), Freeman Williams of Portland State (3,249), Lionel Simmons of La Salle (3,217), Alphonso Ford of Mississippi Valley State (3,165), Harry Kelly of Texas Southern (3,066), Hersey Hawkins of Bradley (3,008), and Doug McDermott of Creighton as the only eight players to score over 3,000 points in their college careers.


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Wikipedia

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