Background
Roberts was born in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
Roberts was born in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
Anthony Roberts attended Oral Roberts University (ORU) from 1973-1974 to 1976-1977. During his four-year career, he averaged 21.7 points and 7.4 rebounds per game, including a senior season in which he averaged 34.0 points and 9.2 rebounds. He is only one of two players in National Collegiate Athletic Association (National Collegiate Athletic Association) Division I history, along with Hall of Famer Pete Maravich, to score 60 or more points in a single game versus a Division I opponent more than once.
Roberts scored 66 points on February 19, 1977 against North Carolina A&T and 65 against Oregon on March 9, 1977.
His total against Oregon came in the first round of the National Invitation Tournament (National Institute of Technology), setting the still-standing tournament record.
In 108 career games, Roberts made 1,006 of 2,007 field goal attempts while finishing with 2,341 points and exactly 800 rebounds. He earned honorable mention All-American honors for his final three years as a Titan.
Later on, Roberts would become enshrined in the ORU athletics hall of fame as a member of their inaugural class.
He was selected in the first round as the 21st pick in the 1977 National Basketball Association Draft by the Nuggets and spent five seasons playing the National Basketball Association. Anthony Roberts was shot and killed while arguing with two men in the parking lot outside his apartment complex on March 29, 1997. He was 41 at the time. College Professional On June 10, 1977, Roberts was selected in the first round of that year"s National Basketball Association Draft.
The Denver Nuggets selected him with the 21st overall pick.
He spent his first three National Basketball Association seasons with Denver. He was eventually waived by the Nuggets and then signed by the Washington Bullets for the 1980-1981 season.
On September 2, 1981, the Bullets also waived Roberts, and he would not re-join another National Basketball Association team until February 16, 1984 when the Nuggets signed him to a 10-day contract. Nine days later he was signed for the rest of the season, where he would finish out his National Basketball Association career.
The Nuggets waived him once again on July 25, 1984, and no other National Basketball Association team ever signed him.
Foreign his National Basketball Association career, Roberts scored 1,658 points, grabbed 837 rebounds and recorded 265 assists in 213 games.
Later on, Roberts would become enshrined in the ORU athletics hall of fame as a member of their inaugural class.