Michael Ray Richardson, a dynamic guard and four-time All-Star known for his defensive brilliance and later drug-policy ban.
Michael Ray Richardson passed away on November 11, 2025, in Lawton, Oklahoma, at the age of 70, after battling prostate cancer. The New York Knicks remembered the former NBA standout as “one of the fiercest defensive players of his era.”
Drafted fourth overall in 1978 by the Knicks out of the University of Montana, Richardson quickly made his mark.
We’re saddened to hear of the passing of former Nets All-Star, Michael Ray Richardson. The Nets family sends their deepest condolences to the Richardson family today. pic.twitter.com/XLUSss2yjR
— Brooklyn Nets (@BrooklynNets) November 11, 2025
He led the league in assists and steals in the same season, became a four-time All-Star, and helped reshape the guard position toward two-way impact. Between 1978 and 1986, he averaged 14.8 points, 7.0 assists, and 2.6 steals per game. (turn0search10)
Yet his career took a dramatic turn. In 1986, he became the first player banned for life by the NBA after a third drug policy violation.
He never returned to the league and continued his career overseas, eventually retiring in 2002. The ban remains one of the landmark moments in the league’s approach to substance abuse.
What Richardson leaves behind
Richardson’s legacy is layered. On one level, he was an elite defender whose every guard feared his steal-line numbers and bursts into transition.
On the other hand, he stands as a profoundly human story of talent, excess, and second acts, playing for more than a decade in Europe, coaching in lower-level leagues, and working at youth basketball clinics.
Magic Johnson said he’d hear trash talk from him the whole game.
Isiah Thomas feared him.
He would defend the opponents best player, drop 20, and be a triple-double threat all at once.
“Sugar Ray.” A sweet but short prime. An underrated legend.
RIP Michael Ray Richardson pic.twitter.com/fDgDmHU92u
— Let’s Talk Knicks (LTK) (@LetsTalkKnicks_) November 11, 2025
His autobiography, Banned: How I Squandered an All-Star NBA Career Before Finding My Redemption, encapsulates a rare blend of superstar peak and personal upheaval.
For the Knicks and Nets franchises he represented, Richardson’s career remains a reminder that impact cannot be measured solely by longevity in the NBA.
His stints in the CBA and Europe extended his influence and kept his name in conversations long after most peers faded.
A complicated legacy worth remembering
Michael Ray Richardson was more than his statistics. He was an All-Star, a deterrent on defense, and a pioneer in the way guards attacked both ends of the floor. He also embodied a cautionary journey through fame, addiction, and rebirth.
His passing at 70 invites reflection not only on what might have been but on what was: a fierce competitor, a restless spirit, and a symbol of an era when the NBA changed fast.
In remembering “Sugar” Ray, we honor his brilliance, acknowledge his struggles, and recognize the full arc of a life lived inside and beyond the hardwood.