Last Updated on April 16, 2026 by Mat Diekhake
Here’s the detailed information on And1 streetballer and NBA player, Rafer Alston, aka Skip to my Lou:
Player Profile
- Full Name: Rafer Jamel Alston.
- Nickname: “Skip 2 My Lou” / “Skip to My Lou.”
- Nationality: American / United States.
- Date of Birth: July 24, 1976.
- Hometown: Jamaica, Queens, New York, USA. (Wikipedia)
- Height: 6’2″ (1.88 m).
- Weight: 175 lb (79 kg) on NBA.com; some basketball databases list him closer to 190 lb during parts of his career. (NBA)
- Wingspan: 6’4″. (2K Ratings)
- Shoe Size: Not reliably documented in authoritative public sources I could verify.
- Jersey Number:
- College: #11 — Fresno State (widely pictured/merchandised as #11
- NBA: #11 — Milwaukee Bucks, Miami Heat, Toronto Raptors; #24 — Milwaukee Bucks; #12 — Toronto Raptors, Houston Rockets; #1 — Orlando Magic, New Jersey Nets. (Land of Basketball)
- Position: Point guard.
- High School: Benjamin N. Cardozo High School (Queens, New York). (Wikipedia)
- College: Ventura College; Fresno City College; Fresno State. (Wikipedia)
- NBA Draft: Milwaukee Bucks, 1998, 39th overall pick in the second round. (NBA)
- Player Archetype: Creative streetball-influenced lead guard / shot-creating table-setter.
- Primary Offensive Role: Primary ball-handler, pick-and-roll organizer, drive-and-kick playmaker, secondary scoring guard. His NBA career averages were 4.8 assists per game, and he regularly handled starting point guard duties. (NBA)
- Defensive Role: Point-of-attack guard defender who could pressure the ball and generate steals, but was more functional than shutdown because of size. His career average was 1.2 steals per game. (Wikipedia)
- Play Style: Flashy handle, improvised off-the-dribble creativity, live-dribble passing, crossover-heavy attack, streaky perimeter shooting, and an overall playground-to-pro translation of flair into usable NBA point-guard play. (Los Angeles Times)
- Handedness / Shooting Hand: Right-handed shooter.
- Athletic Profile: Quick-twitch guard with strong change-of-direction, loose handle, deceptive pacing, and functional NBA burst rather than elite vertical pop. (Los Angeles Times)
- Recruiting Status: Not a blue-chip high school recruit in the modern rankings sense; he came through the junior-college route before finishing at Fresno State. (Wikipedia)
- Draft Status Detail: Second-round pick with an unconventional path: streetball star, JUCO stops, one season at Fresno State, then selected 39th overall by Milwaukee in 1998. (Wikipedia)
- Injury Status Category: Retired / inactive; no current active-player injury designation. His later career did include some short-term injury notes, including a right-hand issue in 2010. (sportsforecaster.com)
- Career Stage: Retired former NBA point guard and streetball icon; later moved into coaching/youth development. (Chron)
- Comparison Style: Stylistically closer to a streetball-inflected mix of Jason Williams and Rod Strickland than to a pure pass-first caretaker.
- Teams Played For:
- Idaho Stampede — 1999
- Milwaukee Bucks — 1999–2000
- Mobile Revelers — 2000–2001
- Toronto Raptors — 2001–2004
- Miami Heat — 2004
- Toronto Raptors — 2004
- Houston Rockets — 2005–2009
- Orlando Magic — 2009
- New Jersey Nets — 2010
- Zhejiang Guangsha Lions — 2011
- Los Angeles D-Fenders — 2012
- Championship Rings: 0 NBA championships. He reached the 2009 NBA Finals with Orlando but did not win the title. (Fresno State)
- Parents: Not reliably documented in authoritative public sources I could verify.
- Children: At least one son, Reese Alston. (Houston Chronicle)
- Siblings: A brother, Ramar Alston, is referenced publicly, but I did not find a strong independent biographical source beyond Rafer’s own social post snippet surfaced in search results. (Instagram)
- Athlete Relatives: Son Reese Alston, a highly regarded high school point guard recruit. (Houston Chronicle)
- Retirement Age: Approximately 35 at the end of his final pro season in 2012, turning 36 later that year. This is inferred from his birth date and last documented pro stop. (NBA)
- Retirement Year: 2012. (Wikipedia)
Player Archetype / Play Style
Rafer Alston’s player archetype was that of a creative, streetball-bred lead guard: a shifty point guard who blended flashy handle with real NBA table-setting value. Offensively, he operated mainly as a primary ball-handler and pick-and-roll organizer who could create off the dribble, collapse the defense, and spray passes to shooters, while still giving teams some scoring pop from deep and in transition. Defensively, he fit best as a point-of-attack guard who competed, jumped passing lanes, and generated steals rather than overpowering bigger matchups. Physically, Alston was a 6-foot-2 guard with quick change-of-direction ability, loose hips, and the kind of live-dribble control that let him play faster than his raw measurables. His play style summary is straightforward: improvisational, crafty, rhythm-based, and unusually creative for a long-term NBA point guard, with his playground flair refined enough to function inside structured offenses. (NBA)
Sources:
NBA.com — Rafer Alston | Guard | Houston Rockets | NBA.com
Basketball-Reference — Rafer Alston Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Draft Status and more
Los Angeles Times — From ‘Skip’ to Rafer — his ultimate crossover
SLAM — Introducing The SLAM Legend of the Week: Rafer Alston
Fresno State Athletics — Former Dog Alston Heading to NBA Finals
Houston Chronicle — Second Baptist point guard Reese Alston wins Guy V. Lewis Award as Houston’s top boys basketball player
