On tattoo removal

Nice Knicks-themed article in AM New York today about tattoo removal in the NBA. They talk to Tyson Chandler and Mike Bibby, both of whom are undergoing tattoo removal treatment—you can see the current state of Chandler’s first tattoo above. The article also quotes Bill Walker and (former Knick) Larry Hughes, both of whom insist they would never have a tattoo removed. The highlight is when Tyson Chandler backpedals from his claim that he “definitely see[s] guys getting ink removed” by explaining, in truth, “You don’t know if it’s a bad tattoo or if they’re getting it removed.”



New York Knicks 2011-12

Tattoo percentage:67% (10 players with tattoos, 5 without)

Last year the Knicks tied with the Lakers for the team with the most tattooed players. There isn’t anything really to be read into the numbers, or the decline—both rookies have tattoos, and their key free agency pickup (Tyson Chandler) has some of the most distinctive designs in the league. A lot of good stories in this collection of tattoos…

Players with tattoos:

Carmelo Anthony
Anthony’s tattoos pretty much speak for themselves—flaming basketballs, West Baltimore, the Puerto Rican flag—so he doesn’t speak to them that often. When he does, it’s pretty funny, as in this interview with Complex:

Complex: Who’s your tattoo artist?
Carmelo: I go to a guy out of Atlanta. I don’t like to get stuck by too many people’s needles. One guy. I did most of them by myself, though.

Complex: Most of the tattoos? You serious?
Carmelo: No. [Laughs]

Mike Bibby
Bibby’s website features a detailed rundown of all of his tattoos.

Tyson Chandler
One of the storylines of the Mavericks’ 2011 championship was Chandler’s maturation. In the offseason, this development manifested itself in his tattoos. He’s in the process of having his first tattoo—a flaming basketball with his name under it—removed. His newest work is a portrait of his son, which is not only one of my favorite designs in recent memory, but also furthers this idea of turning away from self-involvement (tattoo of his name) to the world around him (tattoo of family).

There’s also some evidence in his tattoos that he’s more self-possessed and able to stand on his own. Last March I pointed out that he has an almost-identical tattoo to Allen Iverson. These days he’s filled the design out and added a bunch of work around it, making it his own.

Baron Davis
While the design is a mystery, Davis does have a back tattoo that peeks out of the left side of his uni occasionally.

Josh Harrellson
Although it’s mostly hidden by his jersey, Harrellson has a tattoo of a cross in memory of his grandfather. The Lexington Herald-Ledger article that shares that info also mentions that Jorts “visits children’s hospitals and homeless shelters. He regularly goes to the Humane Society to play with the dogs. ‘I don’t think they get enough love and affection up there,’ he said.”

Jared Jeffries
If you haven’t already, please read this. Jeffries has a crowned basketball tattooed on his left arm.

Iman Shumpert
According to a NY Post profile, Shumpert has “about 15” tattoos.

J.R. Smith
Smith is one of the most heavily tattooed players in the league. This profile from Dime Magazine which covers both his Yankees-flipping “Young Money” neck tattoo and his “married to the game” ring finger NBA tattoo (which includes “I Do” in script) best covers the spectrum of his work. 

Amar’e Stoudemire
If I didn’t do this blog I would do a blog that charts out all of the NBA references in Brick Squad songs. “You know Flocka shoot first like John Starks” being my favorite. This French Montana song about Amar’e Stoudemire is pretty likable, even if it’s a little direct. Also, I’m skeptical of the edit but I like thinking that STAT still has a kickflip. Anyway, there’s a visit to the tattoo parlor in the video which is why I’ve included it here. If you are interested in a rundown of all of Stoudemire’s tattoos, I recommend The Macrophenomenal Pro Basketball Almanac.

Bill Walker
During his rookie year, Walker had the number “1023” tattooed on his neck. The significance, as explained to the Providence Journal, was “to remind myself to never forget where I came from.” Walker grew up at 1023 Minton Street, in Huntington, West Virginia.

Players without tattoos:

Toney Douglas
Landry Fields
Jerome Jordan
Jeremy Lin
Steve Novak

No longer on roster:

Renaldo Balkman:Balkman has “HUSTLE” and “HARDER” tattooed on his calves and on his eyelids.



New York Knicks, 2010-11

Tattoo percentage: 80% (12 players with tattoos, 3 without)

The easy thing to do would be to talk about Melo and Amar’e, about how the two most tattooed players on the team are the only vital players on the team. About how their tattoo coverage and content puts them in an elite top-20 category of tattooed players, much in the same way they’re both elite, top-20 talents. I’ve spent a lot of this year thinking about tattoos, and I’m certain there isn’t a single design as strangely intense as Stoudemire’s “Poverty/Prophecy” with the two different letterings and shared “P.” I have a similar fascination with Anthony’s “WHO CAN I TRUST” tattoo, with its missing question mark and its even block capitals that resemble the letters on the “do not open” terrorist watch posters at the post office. That Stoudemire has an N.W.A. logo tattooed on his shoulder, and the fact that he got it done in the last two years (instead of like, on his 16th birthday), makes me unspeakably happy.

But it’s just too hard for me to dismiss the rest of the team like that. This mutant combination, built from Zeke-era insanity, Walsh’s scorched earth policy, and baffling trade acquisitions, is necessarily impossible to wrap my head around. For whatever reason, the Knicks ended up tied with the Lakers for most tattooed players on one team in 2010-11, and that’s without Eddy Curry. Or Wilson Chandler, Nate Robinson, Starbury, Al Harrington, Quentin Richardson, or any of the other heavily tattooed guys to wear a Knicks uniform in the last few years. I have no idea what’s driving it, but it does make me happy.



Players with tattoos:

Carmelo Anthony

Anthony’s tattoos pretty much speak for themselves—flaming basketballs, West Baltimore, the Puerto Rican flag—so he doesn’t speak to them that often. When he does, it’s pretty funny, as in this interview with Complex:

Complex: Who’s your tattoo artist?
Carmelo: I go to a guy out of Atlanta. I don’t like to get stuck by too many people’s needles. One guy. I did most of them by myself, though.

Complex: Most of the tattoos? You serious?
Carmelo: No. [Laughs]


Renaldo Balkman 
In 2007, Balkman arrived at training camp with the words “HUSTLE” and “HARDER” tattooed on his left and right calves, respectively. In 2010, Balkman added this motto to his eyelids.

Chauncey Billups
When asked about the “No Pain, No Fame” tattoos on his arms, Billups replied, “that’s me right there. No one can outwork me.”

Anthony Carter
Carter has tattoos covering both arms.

Jared Jeffries
Jeffries has a tattoo of a crowned basketball on his left arm.

Roger Mason Jr.
In 2007, Mason covered his left arm in a meticulous, richly-symbolic tribute to his father. “There’s references from five different centuries and three or four different genres of art,” his tattoo artist, Grant Cobb explained to the Washington Post. “It was something that kind of needed some work, but it means a lot to him, it was real personal….It was really cool to be able to do something like that for him.” Or, in the words of Mason’s then-teammate, DeShawn Stevenson, “that’s blazin’.” Mason himself feels indifferent to the praise: “”Everybody loves it who sees it, but the meaning is what’s important. That’s why I got it.”

Andy Rautins
Rautins has several tattoos: a maple leaf for his native Canada; his name on his bicep; and a tricky design that reads “family” in one direction and “forever” in the other. His father, who also played in the NBA and is currently coach of the Canadian national team and a commentator for the Toronto Raptors, also has the “family/forever” design tattooed on the back of his neck.

Amar’e Stoudemire  
Stoudemire runs some of the most complicated and immediately recognizable tattoos in the league, designs that have earned him honors from Inked Magazine and saw him participate in PETA’s “Ink Not Mink” campaign.

Ronny Turiaf 
Turiaf has some great tattoos including a lion’s head and the letters “N L F” for “Never Lose Faith,” but when asked to describe his tattoos in this video, he goes straight to the Chinese character on his neck: “”Well I have the first one right here on my neck and it means family because I’m a big family guy.”

Bill Walker 
During Walker’s rookie year, he had the number 1023 tattooed on his neck, which he explained to the Providence Journal was, “to remind myself to never forget where I came from.” Walker grew up at 1023 Minton St. in Huntington, West Virginia.

Shawne Williams
Williams has a tattoo on his left forearm.

Shelden Williams
In January of 2011, Atlanta’s Tattoos by Randy posted photos of Shelden Williams with a new tattoo on his chest.

Players without tattoos:

Derrick Brown  

Toney Douglas  

Landry Fields: confirmed he had no plans to get any tattoos on Twitter.



NBA tattoos


2012-13 NBA overall tattoo percentage: 56%
250 players with tattoos, 196 without [details]


2011-12 NBA overall tattoo percentage: 55% [details]
2010-11 NBA overall tattoo percentage: 53% [details]

A player-by-player, team-by-team guide to tattoos in the NBA. It is not an attempt to document every tattoo of every player–rather it is an attempt to provide a series of tools for sorting overall tattoo statistics in the NBA alongside glimpses into tattoo trends. Click on any team name below for player details of that team:

Hawks - Celtics - Nets - Bobcats - Bulls - Cavaliers
Mavericks - Nuggets - Pistons - Warriors - Rockets - Pacers
Clippers - Lakers - Grizzlies - Heat - Bucks - Timberwolves
Hornets - Knicks - Thunder - Magic - Sixers - Suns
Trail Blazers - Kings - Spurs - Raptors - Jazz - Wizards

Click HERE for a complete list of NBA players discussed on this blog.

Disclaimer: This info is collected completely anecdotally, mostly by watching games, but also through study of photos, interviews, and player profiles. It’s very likely that tattoos have gone unobserved or remain hidden, especially on non-superstar players. Every effort has been made to present the best possible information, but statistics should not be considered definitive. Please use Ask Me to share any relevant information.