科尔曼:谁说我破产了?根据basketball-reference.com的数据,41岁的德里克-科尔曼(Derrick Coleman)在他长达15年的职业生涯收入超过了9100万美元。而退役之后,他也成功转型成一个在他家乡底特律开店的成功商人。但是最近网上有流言声称其因为投资失败,科尔曼失去了自己所有的资产。而上周末同时出现了一个科尔曼房地产出卖的广告,有博客标题直接写到:“糟糕经济形式的信号--科尔曼出卖房产--他还没有挂掉”
而这位曾经的状元秀不得不澄清这些流言,他要让人知道他的财政情况还很优良。“我在这里还要去尝试做出一些正面的影响,总有人打电话询问我破产问题。”而关于出卖房产的问题,科尔曼不过是把他2001年因为效力76人买的房子卖掉而已,他现在想把家搬回密歇根州。
科尔曼还透露自己投资的Tim Hortons餐厅即将开幕,看起来小日子过的不错哦。

Former Pistons forward Derrick Coleman (Detroit Northern).
Former Pistons, prep star Derrick Coleman says his finances are OKDecember 16, 2008
Derrick Coleman wants the world to know that reports of his financial demise are greatly exaggerated.
Coleman, 41, earned more than $91 million, according to basketball-reference.com, during a 15-year NBA career, which ended after five games with the Pistons in 2004-05. Since then, he has been regarded as a successful businessman for opening stores in his hometown of Detroit.
But the Internet has gone wild with rumors that he squandered all the money. What fueled the speculation? An advertisement for "The Derrick Coleman Estate Sale" at the Sherwood Studios Warehouse in Farmington Hills last weekend. One blogger even penned this headline: "Sign of a bad economy: There's a Derrick Coleman Estate Sale -- and he's not dead."
All the attention irked Coleman, the No. 1 pick in the 1990 NBA draft. He told the Free Press on Monday that the sale was for furniture from a Franklin Lakes, N.J., house he bought in 2001, when he played for the 76ers. Coleman said the furniture had been in storage since he moved back to Michigan.
"Here I am, trying to do something positive," Coleman said, referring to his business ventures, "and people spend all day calling my phone about a liquidation."
Only adding to the buzz of Coleman's financial situation was a Free Press article last week in which he talked about his latest venture, a Tim Hortons restaurant in the Millender Center downtown. It opened Monday, making it the 125th Tim Hortons in Michigan and 500th in the country.
"I'm about trying to help revitalize the city," Coleman said in the article, "and bring a recognized brand downtown."
Coleman said he recently decided to sell his furniture because his Beverly Hills home was furnished and he got tired of paying for storage. Sherwood Studios, from which he bought the furniture, will hold another sale -- which it billed as "75% off" for "many custom pieces ... plus stunning accessories" -- on Jan. 24-25.
"These are items he doesn't need anymore," said owner Mark Morganroth.
Sherwood Studios has handled Coleman's home furnishings since he began his NBA career. Coleman was introduced to Morganroth by Detroit businessman Dave Bing, a former Piston who has been an important figure in Coleman's life since his days at Detroit Northern. Both played at Syracuse. Coleman was in attendance when Bing kicked off his mayoral campaign in October.