Rex Walters

Rex Walters
Personal information
Born (1970-03-12) March 12, 1970
Omaha, Nebraska, U.S.
Listed height6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)
Listed weight230 lb (104 kg)
Career information
High schoolIndependence
(San Jose, California)
College
NBA draft1993: 1st round, 16th overall
Drafted byNew Jersey Nets
Playing career1993–2003
PositionShooting guard
Number2, 3, 23
Coaching career2003–present
Career history
As a player:
19931995New Jersey Nets
19951998Philadelphia 76ers
19982000Miami Heat
2000Baloncesto León
2000–2001Kansas City Knights
2001–2002CB Gran Canaria
As a coach:
2002–2003Blue Valley NW High School (assistant)
2003–2005Valparaiso (assistant)
2005–2006Florida Atlantic (assistant)
2006–2008Florida Atlantic
2008–2016San Francisco
2016–2017Grand Rapids Drive
2017–2018Detroit Pistons (assistant)
2018–2019Nevada (special assistant)
2019–2020Wake Forest (assistant)
2020–2021New Orleans Pelicans (assistant)
20222024Charlotte Hornets (assistant)
Career highlights
As player:

As coach:

  • WCC Coach of the Year (2014)
Career NBA statistics
Points1,547 (4.6 ppg)
Rebounds403 (1.2 rpg)
Assists569 (1.7 apg)
Stats at NBA.com 
Stats at Basketball Reference 

Rex Andrew Walters Sr. (born March 12, 1970) is an American professional basketball coach and former player who last served as an assistant coach for the Charlotte Hornets of the National Basketball Association (NBA). Previously, he was the associate head coach at Wake Forest University under Danny Manning. Prior to Wake Forest, he spent time at Nevada under Eric Musselman. He has made head coaching stops with the Grand Rapids Drive (NBA G-League), the University of San Francisco and Florida Atlantic University.

Walters pedigree for coaching began as a player, receiving tutelage from some of the game legendary coaches. Roy Williams at the University of Kansas and the NBA's Chuck Daly, Larry Brown and Pat Riley all mentored Walters during his years as a player. Walters played college basketball at Northwestern and Kansas. In 1993, he received a Bachelor of Science in Education degree from the University of Kansas. After Kansas, he played professionally for ten years, including seven seasons in the NBA from 1993 to 2000. Walters has been active on Apple Podcasts hosting his own show Real Talk Basketball with Rex Walters.