Grant Hill (born October 5, 1972, Dallas, Texas, U.S.) is a former professional basketball player who played the position of forward for the Detroit Pistons in the National Basketball Association (NBA) and was a member of the second “Dream Team,” the basketball team that represented the United States in the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. He started his basketball career early as an outstanding high-school and college player.
Hill’s father, Calvin Hill, was a graduate of Yale University and played professional football for the Dallas Cowboys. His mother, Janet Hill, a lawyer, graduated from Wellesley College. Grant Hill’s outstanding ability in basketball was noticed during his freshman year in high school, and he began to be recruited by colleges. In high school he won the Amateur Athletic Union award for most valuable player in the national championships, was a member of the U.S. junior national team, and won a gold medal at the junior championships.
The 6-foot 8-inch (2.03 meter), 225-pound (102-kg) Grant attended Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. He helped the Blue Devils win the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) basketball championship in 1991 and 1992. He set Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) career records with more than 1,900 points, 700 rebounds, 400 assists, 200 steals, and 100 blocked shots. In his four years at Duke he averaged 14.9 points and 6 rebounds a game, and he scored on 53 percent of his shots and 70 percent of his free throws. He was a first team All-American his freshman year, second team All-American as a sophomore and junior, and first team All-American and ACC Player of the Year as a senior. He also was honored as the best defensive player in college basketball. Duke retired his uniform number after his graduation. Although he was offered huge salaries to turn professional after his junior year, he elected to finish a bachelor’s degree in history before starting his NBA career.
In the 1994 NBA draft the Detroit Pistons picked Hill in the first round; he was the third player chosen. In his first year with the Pistons he scored a total of 1,394 points and tied for NBA Rookie of the Year with Jason Kidd. He also received the most votes for the NBA All-Star Eastern Conference team, the first rookie ever to place first in the conference voting. In his second year he was not only chosen to be an All-Star, but he was also named to the 1996 Olympic basketball team. The United States team beat Yugoslavia, 95–69, to win the gold medal; Hill scored 58 points in the Olympic tournament and led the U.S. team in steals with 18. He led the league in triple doubles (getting 10 or more points, rebounds, and assists in a single game) in his second and third seasons. Toward the end of the 1999–2000 season, Hill injured his left ankle. He continued to play, however, but, during a playoff series against the Miami Heat, he broke his left ankle. In 2000 Hill left the Pistons for the Orlando Magic. In all but one of his six seasons for Detroit, he was an NBA All-Star. On the Pistons, he scored 9,393 points, averaging 21.59 points per game.
Hill’s ankle continued to plague him. In his seven seasons with Orlando, he played in only 200 games, and he sat out the 2003–04 season. Nevertheless, he helped lead the team to the playoffs in the 2006–07 season. He joined the Phoenix Suns in 2007, and the Suns went to the playoffs in the 2007–08 and 2009–10 seasons. In the latter, the Suns reached the Western Conference finals, where they were defeated by the Los Angeles Lakers. Hill had his strongest playoffs, accumulating 154 points, 93 rebounds, and 36 assists. After five seasons with Phoenix, he moved to the Los Angeles Clippers for the 2012–13 season, his last. He had spent 19 seasons in the NBA. He ended his career with 17,137 total points and was an NBA All-Star seven times.
Hill is a noted collector of African American art, and an exhibition of pieces from his collection, particularly works by Romare Bearden and Elizabeth Catlett, toured the United States. Hill and his father wrote an essay for a book that accompanied the exhibition, Something All Our Own: The Grant Hill Collection of African American Art (2003). Since 2015 Hill has been a co-owner of the Atlanta Hawks and vice chairman of the team’s board. In 2023 he and his wife, Canadian singer Tamia, became part owners of Orlando City SC in Major League Soccer and the Orlando Pride in the National Women’s Soccer League. He was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2018. He wrote an autobiography, Game (2022).