Certainly one of the more over-looked point guards...he's now mayor of Sacramento
http://nationalpost.pa-sportsticker.com ... 225936901AWhile Barack Obama made history Tuesday in becoming the first African-American to be elected president of the United States, former Phoenix Suns point guard Kevin Johnson was securing a similar victory of his own - albeit on a much smaller scale.
Johnson was elected mayor of Sacramento on Tuesday, the first African American to accomplish the feat. He defeated incumbent Heather Fargo in Tuesday's runoff election, capping off a grueling eight-month process since he announced his candidacy in March.
Election day was June 3, but the fact that neither Johnson nor Fargo earned a majority vote necessitated Tuesday's runoff. The Sacramento Bee reported that Johnson received nearly 58 percent of the final vote. Approximately 118,000 ballots were cast, though more than 50,000 absentee ballots have yet to be counted.
"Obama and myself, we ran on the promise and the theme of change. No more business as usual," Johnson said in a Sacramento Bee report. "I am so ready and so humbled to accept this great honor that has been bestowed upon me today."
He is expected to officially take office on November 25.
Johnson grew up in the area, starring at Sacramento High School, where he averaged a state-high 32.5 points per game as a senior. He played college ball at nearby University of California-Berkeley. After being selected seventh overall by the Cleveland Cavaliers in 1987, he found most of his success with the Suns, whom he helped lead to the NBA Finals in 1993.
Phoenix acquired him in a trade with Cleveland his rookie season and he manned the point for most of the next decade. Despite being dogged by nagging injuries throughout his career, Johnson was a three-time All-Star selection and an All-NBA selection five times - four times for the second team and once for the third team.
In 12 seasons, he averaged 17.9 points and 9.1 assists while shooting 49 percent from the field. For three straight seasons from 1988-91, he posted at least 20 points and 10 assists per game - joining Oscar Robertson and Isiah Thomas as the only players in NBA history to do so.
During the 1993 Finals, he logged 62 minutes - a league record for a Finals game - in Game Three to lead the Suns to a 129-121 victory in triple overtime.