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, born Milton "J. R." Henderson (October 30, 1976), is an American-Japanese professional basketball player. Raised in Bakersfield, Sakuragi played college basketball at University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), and was a member of their 1995 National Championship team. On the NCAA championship team in his freshman year, Sakuragi was named the team's most valuable freshman along with Toby Bailey.〔Finney 2010, p.111〕 He was named to the All-Pac-10 first team during his sophomore and senior seasons,〔Finney 2010, p.105〕 and was also named the Bruins' co-most valuable player both years as well.〔Finney 2010, p.110〕 He averaged 14.2 points per game in his four-year career at the school. He was selected by the Vancouver Grizzlies in the 2nd round (56th pick) of the 1998 NBA Draft where he played one season.〔Kaz Nagatsuka, (Former UCLA player gets Japanese citizenship, spot on national hoops team ), ''The Japan Times'', July 17, 2007.〕 Sakuragi played the next two years for teams in Las Vegas and France and summer-league teams in Puerto Rico and the Philippines.〔 In 2001, he moved to Japan to play for the Aisin Seahorses of the JBL Super League, averaging 21.5 points and 11.6 rebounds per game in 2006.〔 Sakuragi's application to become a Japanese citizen cleared on July 2, 2007, and he changed his name from J.R. Henderson to J.R. Sakuragi.〔〔Jerry Crowe, (Former Bruin a true citizen of the world ), ''Los Angeles Times'', July 24, 2007.〕 He chose his new name for two reasons: firstly, he thought a Japanese name would speed up the naturalization, and secondly for the Japanese sakura cherry blossoms. It also corresponded to the name of Hanamichi Sakuragi, the protagonist of the popular basketball manga ''Slam Dunk''.〔(Former Bruin is now Japan’s J.R. Sakuragi ), ''Los Angeles Times'', January 21, 2008.〕 Sakuragi played for the Japan national basketball team as they competed in the 2007 FIBA Asia Championship, a qualifier for the 2008 Summer Olympics.〔Jerry Crowe, (Former Bruin finds security in his adopted homeland ), ''Los Angeles Times'', July 24, 2007.〕 To comply with Japanese naturalization requirements, Sakuragi taught himself to read, speak and write Japanese at a "rudimentary level". He plans to stay in Japan and has no intention of returning to the U.S. soon.〔 ==See also== * 1994-95 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「J. R. Sakuragi」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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