Last Updated on April 14, 2026 by Mat Diekhake
Here is detailed information about basketballer Josh Howard:
Player Profile
- Full Name: Joshua Jay Howard
- Nationality: American
- Date of Birth: April 28, 1980
- Hometown: Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA
- Height: 6 feet 7 inches (201 cm)
- Weight: 210 pounds (95 kg)
- Wingspan: 6 feet 11 inches (211 cm)
- Shoe Size: Size 15 (US)
- Position: Small Forward / Shooting Guard
- Jersey Number: 5 (primarily)
- High School: Glenn High School, Kernersville, North Carolina
- College: Wake Forest University (Demon Deacons) (1999–2003)
- Senior year: Named ACC Player of the Year in 2003 and earned consensus first-team All-American honors.
- NBA Draft: Selected 29th overall in the 2003 NBA Draft by the Dallas Mavericks.
- Teams Played For:
- Dallas Mavericks (2003–2010): Had his best years with Dallas, earning an All-Star selection in 2007.
- Washington Wizards (2010–2011)
- Utah Jazz (2011–2012)
- Minnesota Timberwolves (2012–2013)
- Championship Rings: None
- Children: Known to have children but details are limited.
- Siblings:
- Grew up in a single-parent household with his mother and has siblings, but specific details are not widely available.
Notable Achievements and Legacy:
- Known for his two-way versatility, athleticism, and contributions to the Mavericks during their playoff runs in the mid-2000s.
- After retiring, Howard has been involved in coaching and community initiatives, including founding the Josh Howard Foundation to support youth education and development.
Player Archetype / Play Style
Josh Howard was a rangy, athletic two-way wing who fit the mold of a slashing secondary scorer rather than a pure primary creator: at 6-foot-7 and 210 pounds, he brought long-striding open-floor speed, functional strength, and enough length to bother wings at the point of attack. Offensively, he did much of his best work attacking in space, finishing in transition, cutting, and creating from isolation or straight-line drives, while Dallas also leaned on him as a legitimate second scoring option during his peak years. Defensively, his value came from checking perimeter threats, supplying point-of-attack resistance, and giving his team a plus defender on the wing. In full, Howard’s game was built on athletic scoring, defensive versatility, and glue-guy rebounding from the forward spot, making him the kind of player who could impact both ends without needing an offense built entirely around him. (Mavs Moneyball)
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NBA.com — Josh Howard
