All-Time Gators Men’s Basketball Bio: Vernon Maxwell (1984-88)

While he was most certainly a flawed human being who found trouble in almost every stop, “Mad Max” was unquestionably a baller on the court.

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Vernon Maxwell (1984-88) – Point/Shooting Guard

Vernon Maxwell was a very controversial person in Florida lore. While he left Gainesville as the Gators’ all-time leading scorer, his role in uncovering the program’s cash payoff scheme for athletes which resulted in harsh NCAA sanctions tarnished his legacy at UF.

Maxwell was a hometown boy, born in Gainesville and attending Buchholz High School where he was named Mr. Basketball of the state of Florida his senior year and was also an all-state defensive back in football. With an athletic scholarship in hand, he joined head coach Norm Sloan’s team in 1984.

The star guard excelled in his four years at UF, averaging 20 points a game his junior and senior season — just missing the mark his sophomore year with a 19.6 average — and still holds 15 Gators team records. During his senior season he upped his secondary game, averaging career highs in rebounds (4.2) and assists (4.3) per game while barely missing his best mark with just under two steals per game.

However, due to the aforementioned scandal in which Maxwell testified to a grand jury that he received money from Sloan, an assistant and University of Florida boosters which he used to buy cocaine, all of the points he amassed his junior and senior seasons were erased from the records. His 2,450 career points would still be the best in Gators men’s basketball history had they not been revoked.

Rescinded statistics notwithstanding, Maxwell finished his collegiate career the No. 2 scorer in Southeastern Conference history behind LSU’s Pete Maravich. However, despite his achievements on the court, he fell down into the second round of the 1988 NBA Draft, where he was selected 47th overall by the Denver Nuggets but quickly traded on draft day to the San Antonio Spurs for a second-round pick the following year.

Maxwell only played a season-and-a-half in San Antonio before he was sold to the Houston Rockets, where his game flourished alongside Hakeem Olajuwon and company. After a slow start to his NBA career his first two years, the young guard found his footing and from 1990 to 1992 he reached career highs in points per game with 17.0 and 17.2, respectively. Known for his deadly shooting from outside of the arc, he owned the NBA record for most 3-pointers made in a season from 1991 until 1993; he was also renown for his clutch shooting, sinking numerous game-winning shots throughout his career.

The former Gator earned an NBA championship ring with the Rockets for the first of their repeat titles in 1993-94; he missed out on the second ring when he quit the team after its opening first-round game loss to Utah in the 1995 playoffs in frustration due to recently acquired Clyde Drexler taking his starting spot and playing time. He would produce his third-highest career offensive output the following season with the Philadelphia 76ers before his career began to decline.

Overall, Maxwell played 13 total seasons in the NBA with eight different teams, accumulating almost 11,000 points for a career average of 12.8 per game and averaging double-digit scoring in 11 seasons while sinking 1,256 three-point shots at a 32 percent clip. “Hawk” also averaged 3.4 assists per game for his career, reaching his high-water mark of 5.1 per game in 1993-1994.

While Maxwell was most certainly a flawed human being who found trouble in almost every stop of his adult life, “Mad Max” was unquestionably a baller on the court. When considering how much he achieved when his sneakers were laced up — both with the Gators and in the pros — it is easy to place him among the greatest basketball players in UF’s program history.

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Former Longhorn Bobby Dillon To The NFL Hall of Fame

Former Longhorns defensive back Bobby Dillon has been elected to the 2020 NFL Hall of Fame class.

The Texas Longhorns welcomed another member to the NFL Hall of Fame with former defensive back Bobby Dillon who joins the 2020 class. Dillon played for Texas from 1949-1951, he also lettered in track. He recorded 13 interceptions during those three years in Austin. In 1951, Dillon was named First Team All-American. He was a member to both the football and track & field conference champions in 1950.

Dillon would be drafted in the third round of the 1952 NFL Draft by the Green Bay Packers. Nicknamed “Hawk” for his ability to snag interceptions at the highest level of football. Dillon recorded 52 interceptions during that eight-year career and he is still the Packers all-time leader in interceptions.

During his career, Dillon was named All-Pro team six straight times as well as four Pro Bowl selections. Bobby Dillon is also a member of the Packers Hall of Fame. He joins three other student athletes from Texas in the Hall of Fame with Tom Landry, Bobby Layne and Earl Campbell. Tex Schramm is also in the NFL Hall of Fame but he wasn’t a student athlete at Texas.

Bobby Dillon passed away at the age of 89 in August of 2019.