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Rumors

|Chris Dudley
“This is some real s—,” Klempner says as he continues …

“This is some real s—,” Klempner says as he continues to rifle through the foot-high stack, flinging contracts and letters signed by the likes of George Gervin, Larry Bird and LeBron James. Some papers have historical significance: docs connected to the league’s first collective bargaining agreement, salary cap and drug program, plus records from lockouts and lawsuits past. A manila folder emerges with a JOHNSON MAGIC sticker attached. Other pieces veer towards esoterica. There is a stack of signatures from players who came together to protest the changing of the regulation basketball in 2006. A collection of 1990s Knicks stars—Patrick Ewing, Larry Johnson, Latrell Sprewell—signed a sheet to verify they’d received 1099s. On top of it is a hot pink sticky note, addressed to Klempner and signed by Chris Dudley, who wrote, “Didn’t realize I still had these… Hope it didn’t cause too much of a problem.”

Yahoo! Sports


A witness to the fight said that Chris Dudley, a Yale basketball player who was friends with Mr. Kavanaugh, then hit the man in the ear with a glass, according to the police report, which was obtained by The New York Times. The report said that the victim, Dom Cozzolino, “was bleeding from the right ear” and was later treated at a local hospital. A detective was notified of the incident at 1:20 a.m. Mr. Dudley denied the accusation, according to the report.

New York Times

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“I went out with him all the time," Dudley told the Washington Post. "He never blacked out. Never even close to blacked out. There was drinking, and there was alcohol. Brett drank, and I drank. Did he get inebriated sometimes? Yes. Did I? Yes. Just like every other college kid in America.”

USA Today Sports


Chris Dudley, a former professional basketball player who was the 2010 Republican candidate for Oregon governor, said Saturday he's moving to the San Diego area and leaving behind his short career in Oregon politics. Dudley's wife, also named Chris, has a business opportunity in the area, he told The Oregonian. He declined to describe the opportunity. Dudley played for 16 years in the NBA including two stints with the Portland Trailblazers and has lived in Lake Oswego, outside Portland, since 2003. In his 2010 campaign for governor, Dudley spent heavily but lost by 1.5 percentage points to Democrat John Kitzhaber. It was the closest any Republican has come to winning the office in decades. "Frankly, she's been following my lead for 15 years whether it's through the NBA or having your husband run for governor," Dudley said of his wife. "And I want to follow what makes sense for my wife and my family."

MyNews4.com

John Canzano: Chris Dudley is courtside with his kid, …

John Canzano: Chris Dudley is courtside with his kid, who is wearing a Kevin Love jersey. Said Duds: "He's known him since he was real little." Asked Dudley's kid if he wished dad would have won the governor's race. Kid: "Would have been great, but now he can coach all my teams."

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Yet the Yale-educated diabetes advocate, who seemed to be a political novelty when he announced his campaign, still gets a glint in his eye when the discussion turns to politics. The loss — by a single percentage point — left Dudley and his family battered, but not defeated. He’s staying involved in the Republican Party and some hope he will run for political office again. In the most detailed interview since the race, Dudley and his wife, Chris Love Dudley, tell The Oregonian they haven’t ruled out the possibility of another campaign, although when and for what office is far from decided.

The Bulletin


Former NBA center Chris Dudley was 16 when he exhibited the classic signs of Type 1 diabetes. "I was incredibly thirsty and going to the bathroom all of the time," said Dudley. His uncle, a diabetic, recognized what was going on, and after a home test kit showed Dudley's blood sugar was sky high, he went to the hospital. "I was scared because I didn't know what diabetes was," recalled Dudley, who went on to play 16 seasons in the NBA. The first question he asked his doctor was if he'd be OK; the second was whether he'd be able to play basketball.

Los Angeles Times

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