Former Chinese basketball star Mu Tiezhu, who died at 59 of heart attack in Beijing on Sunday noon, was a Chinese basketball icon and Asia's "super center" in the 1970s, said a media chief with the Beijing Olympic organizers .
Mu, who stood 2.28 meters, two centimeters taller than Chinese NBA star Yao Ming, was a household name in China in the 1970s and 1980s.
"Mu was the only super center in Asia during his player career and he developed a classic Chinese playing style which is still used by Yao Ming," said Xu Jicheng, the BOCOG's deputy media director and the executive deputy director of the Main Press Center for the ongoing Paralympic Games.
Xu, a former hoopster who is also the best known basketball commentator in China, said Mu "read the game better" than Yao Ming, but the younger generation of Chinese centers including Yao, Wang Zhizhi and Menk Bateer are "more athletic and physically stronger".
Mu joined the People's Liberation Army in 1972 and made it to the Bayi team in 1973. Four years later, Mu was called to the national team.
Mu led the Chinese team to its first Asian championship title in 1977, the Asian Games gold medal in 1978 and an 11th-place finish in the world championship the same year.
Mu, who averaged over 20 points, had once scored 80 points in a domestic game.
The basketball giant left the Chinese national team in 1983, thus missing the 1984 Olympics. He ended his playing career in 1987 to coach the Bayi team and moonlight in movie business. He starred in a few comedy movies, such as "The Silly Manager", "Dark Corridor" and "Overnight Singing Star".
Mu, who had the PLA rank as a senior colonel of the civil service, retired in 2000.
His last public appearance was at the Chinese women's team's Olympic game against the Czech Republic on Aug. 17.
Mu is survived by his wife Wang Zhuanhong and two adult children.
Source: Xinhua
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