Former Wake Forest star and 12-year NBA player Rodney Rogers has died. He was 54.
Rodney Rogers, the ‘Durham Bull’ who starred at Wake Forest before a 12-year NBA career, dies at 54
Former Wake Forest star and 12-year NBA player Rodney Rogers has died. He was 54.
The school announced Saturday that Rogers had died on Friday. Rogers – the No. 9 overall NBA draft pick in 1993 – had been paralyzed from the shoulders down since a dirt bike accident in November 2008. Rogers died of natural causes linked to his spinal cord injury, according to a statement from the National Basketball Players Association on behalf of Rogers’ family.
“The last 17 years have been both challenging and profoundly blessed,” the NBPA statement said. “Through every moment, Rodney remained a light – positive, motivated, and full of the quiet strength that inspired everyone around him.”
Rogers was the Atlantic Coast Conference rookie of the year in 1991 and player of the year in 1993 whose No. 54 jersey was retired by the Demon Deacons. The burly 6-foot-7 forward with powerful athleticism earned the “Durham Bull” nickname during his prep career, then went on to score nearly 9,500 points in the NBA while being named league sixth man of the year in 2000.
