NBA news: Elden Campbell, former Lakers center, dead at 57

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NBA champion and former Los Angeles Lakers center Elden Campbell has died at age 57, his alma mater Clemson announced Wednesday.
The cause of death was not immediately known.
“We mourn the loss of Elden Campbell, our all-time leading scorer, All-American and three-time All-ACC player, who passed away at the age of 57,” Clemson said in a statement.
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Elden Campbell of the Los Angeles Lakers shoots a free throw during the Washington Bullets game at USAir Arena in Landover, Maryland on November 26, 1994. (Mitchell Layton/Getty Images)
Campbell is also the winningest player in Clemson history, having been part of a program-record 84 wins. He is also the leading scorer on the only Clemson team to win the ACC championship in program history.
Campbell played in the NBA for 15 seasons and, growing up in Inglewood, California, was a Lakers fan as a child. The 6-foot-11 center played eight and a half seasons for his boyhood team.
The Lakers drafted Campbell in the first round of the 1990 NBA Draft out of Clemson.
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Elden Campbell of the Detroit Pistons in action against Shaquille O’Neal of the Heat in Miami, Florida on May 25, 2005. (Bill Frakes/Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)
Campbell defeated the Lakers in the NBA Finals while a member of the Detroit Pistons in the 2003-2004 season. Campbell played in 14 games during the Pistons’ title run.
Campbell played for six different teams during his career: the Lakers, Charlotte Hornets, Pistons, New Orleans Hornets, Seattle SuperSonics and New Jersey Nets. In 1,044 career games, he averaged 10.3 points, 5.9 rebounds and 1.1 assists per game.
Campbell earned the nicknames “Big E” and “Easy E” for his demeanor and style of play. Byron Scott, who was a teammate of Campbell during two separate stints with the Lakers, said he was a “good dude”.
“I just remember his behavior. That’s why we nicknamed him ‘Easy E,'” Scott told the Los Angeles Times. “He was so cool, nothing was going to rush him. He was going to take his time. He was just easy. He was such a good guy. I loved Easy, man.”
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Kwame Brown of the Washington Wizards knocks the ball away from Elden Campbell of the Hornets in Charlotte, North Carolina, April 5, 2002. (Nell Redmond/AFP via Getty Images)
Another former Lakers teammate and childhood friend of Campbell’s, Cedric Ceballos, took to social media to mourn his death.
“This one hurt me to the bone. I grew up together as kids,” Ceballos posted on Instagram.
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