Education
Moline High School.
basketball coach basketball player
Moline High School.
Born in Peoria, Illinois, Earl was a star basketball player from Moline High School playing varsity-level basketball for three seasons. He led the Maroons to a 23-4 record in 1988, along with future NFL All-Pro Brad Hopkins. Earl is also currently the number 7th leading all-time scorer in Moline basketball history.
Earl played college basketball at the University of Iowa, being a key recruit for Tom Davis" Hawkeyes.
He appeared in 22 games in his first-year season, with an average of 6 points in 16 minutes, but still managed 50 blocked shots in limited playing time. In his second season, Earl became a key force in the Big Ten Conference, averaging 16.3 points and 6.7 rebounds per game, with 106 total blocked shots.
Iowa made it to the 1991 National Collegiate Athletic Association Tournament where they were defeated by eventual champions Duke Blue Devils in the second round. In his junior year, Earl slightly improved his numbers (managing to block an average of four shots a game), while the college made it to the 1992 National Collegiate Athletic Association Tournament, only to lose, again in the second round and against Duke (also the eventual winners), 75-62, with Earl blocking 8 shot attempts, one shy of the all-time tournament record held by David Robinson.
With Earl still putting up strong numbers in 1992-1993, Iowa again lost in the second round of the National Collegiate Athletic Association Tournament, now to Wake Forest.
He received his undergraduate degree in the fall of 1992 with a degree in Leisure studies. Earl was selected in the first round of the 1993 National Basketball Association Draft by the Boston Celtics with the 19th pick, in a year which included Chris Webber, Jamal Mashburn and Anfernee Hardaway. He played 74 games in his rookie season, averaging 5.5 points and 3.3 rebounds per game.
His statistics dropped in his second year, as he played in only 30 games, being traded to the Toronto Raptors before 1995-1996.
With the Raptors, he posted his best statistical season, scoring 7.5 points per game, adding 3.1 rebounds. On April 12, 1996, against the team that drafted him - the Celtics - Earl posted a double-double, with 40 points and 12 rebounds in a 136-108 loss.
Midway through 1996-1997, he was traded to the Milwaukee Buckinghamshire, appearing in nine games in his final National Basketball Association season. Subsequently, Earl took his game overseas, first appearing for Paris Basket Racing (France), also playing 21 games in Australia for the National Basketball League"s Sydney Kings in 1998-1999.
In 1998, he also played with the College of Business Administration"s LaCrosse Bobcats.
He then represented Türk Telekom Ankara and Darussafaka Istanbul Spor Kulubu (Turkey), Unics Kazan and Saratov Autodor (Russia), Śląsk Wrocław (Poland), Traiskirchen Arkadia Lions (Austria) and KK Budućnost Podgorica (Montenegro), retiring in 2004. He also had a small stint for KB Peja, in Kosovo, helping the team become state champions. Moving into coaching, Earl managed, during 2005, the Tijuana Dragons of the American Basketball Association (American Bar Association) team based in Tijuana, Mexico.