Kyrie Irving

American basketball player
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External Websites
Also known as: Kyrie Andrew Irving
Quick Facts
In full:
Kyrie Andrew Irving
Born:
March 23, 1992, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Also Known As:
Kyrie Andrew Irving

Kyrie Irving (born March 23, 1992, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia) is a professional basketball player who, with LeBron James, led the Cleveland Cavaliers to an NBA championship in 2016. Irving is known for his exceptional ball-handling skills, elite isolation shooting, and stylish finishes at the rim. However, his on-court achievements have at times been eclipsed by controversies off the court. Since 2023 he has been the starting point guard for the Dallas Mavericks.

Early life

Irving was born into an athletic family. His parents met at Boston University, where his father, Drederick Irving, played basketball and his mother, Elizabeth Ann Larson Irving, was on the basketball and volleyball teams. Basketball brought the family to Australia, where Drederick Irving was playing guard for the Bulleen Boomers of the South East Australian Basketball League when Kyrie Irving was born in Melbourne. They returned to the U.S. about two years later, and the younger Irving soon took up basketball. He excelled as a high-school player, helping his team win a state championship during his junior year, and was recruited to play under legendary coach Mike Krzyzewski at Duke University. However, his college career was cut short because of a nagging toe injury, and he played only 11 games for the Blue Devils, during the 2010–11 season. Nevertheless, Irving demonstrated enough promise to enter the 2011 NBA draft, and on June 23 he was selected number one overall by the Cavaliers.

Success with the Cleveland Cavaliers

In his rookie season Irving averaged 18.5 points, 3.7 rebounds, and 5.4 assists per game, earning him the Rookie of the Year award and serious praise from the sports world. During the next two seasons he produced fine individual performances and was voted to the Eastern Conference All-Star team, but the Cavs struggled and finished with losing records both years. Fortunes reversed dramatically for Irving and the Cavs when LeBron James returned to his home state to sign with the team in the summer of 2014. The dynamic pairing of James, at the height of his prime, and the young phenom Irving quickly vaulted the team to the upper ranks of the league. After the 2014–15 regular season, the Cavaliers made it to the NBA finals, where they faced the ascendant Golden State Warriors, led by star guard Stephen Curry. Irving fractured his kneecap in the first game of the best-of-seven series, and the shorthanded Cavs went on to lose, two games to four.

Irving missed the first 24 games of the 82-game 2015–16 season while recovering from surgery to repair his kneecap. But he shined upon his return and helped propel the Cavaliers back to the playoffs, during which he averaged 25.2 points and 4.7 assists per game. In the NBA finals, the team again faced the Warriors, which had finished the regular season with the best record in NBA history. With the series tied 3–3 and the title on the line, in game seven Irving hit a long three-point shot over Curry with 53 seconds left to play, and the Cavaliers held on to win their first championship in franchise history. That summer Irving, who maintains dual Australian and American citizenship, won a gold medal at the Rio de Janeiro Olympic Games playing for the U.S. men’s basketball team.

Irving had another statistically productive season in 2016–17, averaging 25.2 points per game (a career high to that point) and being voted an All-Star. In the following playoffs the Cavaliers reached the NBA finals and faced off for the third consecutive year against the Warriors, which had added Kevin Durant to an already elite team the previous offseason. Irving performed well, including a 40-point showing in Game 4, but the overmatched Cavs lost the series, 1–4. Despite the overall success he had achieved with the team, Irving had reportedly grown unhappy with his secondary role and felt overshadowed by the superstar James, so he requested a trade. The team granted this wish, sending Irving to the Boston Celtics in August 2017.

Turmoil in Boston and New York

The trade inaugurated a tumultuous period for Irving both professionally and personally. In Boston, surrounded by mostly younger teammates, Irving was unquestionably the top player, but he did not have success with his new franchise. The Celtics had a promising 16–2 start to the 2017–18 season, but Irving’s season was cut short by a knee injury. The following season was marked by inconsistent play and infighting, and, amid speculation that he would not re-sign with the team, Irving’s relationship with fans and the media became increasingly combative. Irving later explained that the death of his grandfather in October 2018 had contributed to these difficulties, saying that after the loss “basketball was the last thing on my mind.” In the 2019 playoffs Irving did not perform to his usual standards, logging career playoff lows in shooting percentage, and the Celtics lost in the second round. In the offseason Irving signed with the Brooklyn Nets, where he was joined by superstars Durant and, later, James Harden.

Irving’s four-season tenure with the Nets was even more turbulent. When he played, he excelled, hitting a career high of 27.4 points per game in both the 2019–20 and 2021–22 seasons. But his first season was cut short by a shoulder injury, and in his second year with the team a sprained ankle limited him in the playoffs. With his third Nets season set to start in October 2021, the team announced that Irving had chosen to not be vaccinated for COVID-19, making him ineligible to practice or play. He eventually was allowed to participate in away games and, in March 2022, home games, but he played only 29 total games that season. In the subsequent playoffs the Nets lost in the first round to the Celtics, 0–4. The tensions that had arisen between Irving and the Nets, initially over his refusal to be vaccinated, boiled over when in October 2022 Irving shared a link to an anti-Semitic documentary on his Twitter (now X) page. After he declined to clearly rebuke the views contained in the film, Irving was suspended for eight games without pay by the Nets, which said in a statement that he was “currently unfit to be associated with the Brooklyn Nets.” Though Irving apologized, his relationship with the team did not recover, and he was traded to the Dallas Mavericks in February 2023.

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A new start in Dallas

Irving appears to have found stability in his new basketball home, where he plays alongside Slovenian superstar Luka Dončić under head coach Jason Kidd. He and Dončić have formed a potent duo on offense, and the team won its first-round matchup against the Los Angeles Clippers in the 2024 playoffs.

Stuart Hicar Will Gosner