Peter Aluma (born
23 April 1973 in Lagos) is a retired Nigerian professional basketball player.
After high school at Okota Grammar School in Isolo, Nigeria, the
6'10" center became a star at Liberty University in Virginia,
USA.
He led the Big South conference in scoring in 1996 and was the
conference’s top shot blocker in 1996 with 3.9 bpg and 1997 with 3.0 bpg.
He was a first-team Big South all-conference selection in 1996
and 1997. He earned second-team honors in 1995. He was named to the
conference’s all-rookie team in 1994. He was named the Big South Tournament MVP
in 1994 and 1997 and was a three-time all-tournament selection. He was named
all-region selection by the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC)
in 1997.
Aluma was also honored as an all-state team selection by both
the Richmond Times-Dispatch and the Virginia Sports Information Directors
(VaSID) in 1996 and 1997. In 1996, he was selected for the all-state first team
by the Richmond Times-Dispatch.
In April 1997, he was invited to participate in the Portsmouth
Invitational Tournament. The P.I.T. invites 64 of the best senior college
basketball players from across the nation to participate. It is a four-day,
twelve-game tournament. Every NBA team sends scouts to this tournament.
He was
not invited to attend the NBA's pre-draft camps in Phoenix or Chicago. On June
25, 1997, he was not taken in the 1997 NBA Draft. Aluma did play briefly for
the NBA's Sacramento Kings during
the lockout-shortened 1998-1999 season. He was waived on February 19,
1999. During the 1999-2000 preseason, he was signed by the Phoenix Suns, but
was waived on October 16, 1999. He was invited to join the Knicks 2000 summer
league team. He was released on July 21, 2000.
In 1998, he played professionally in Venezuela for Toros De
Aragua. He also played for Nigeria in the 1998 World FIBA Championship. Around
February 25, 1999, he was waived by the Connecticut Pride of the Continental
Basketball Association (CBA). In 1999, he played in Belarus for the Gomel
Wildcats Sozh. In 2001, he played with the Harlem Globetrotters.
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