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Remembering Carroll Great Lawrence Moten

Lawrence Moten was more than a basketball phenom — for Archbishop Carroll High School in Washington, D.C., he was a symbol of what could be achieved through grit, dual-sport excellence, and loyalty to your roots. His journey from Carroll Lion to Syracuse legend, to pro, coach, and community figure, is a story of rising and giving back — and his recent passing at 53 has prompted reflections on the full arc of his influence.


Archbishop Carroll High School: Roots, Impact & What He Meant There

  • At Archbishop Carroll High School, Moten was a multi-sport standout in basketball and football. He was the only athlete in the Washington Metropolitan area to be named First-Team All-Met in both sports in both his junior and senior years.

  • On the basketball court at Carroll: senior year averages approached 28 points, 10 rebounds, and 4 steals per game, including over 60 three-pointers in the season; a high game of 42 points.

  • In football, his senior year was equally impressive: 13 interceptions (one returned 101 yards for a touchdown), multiple touchdowns on offense and special teams, and recognition as Washington Post Defensive Player of the Year.

  • Carroll’s coaches and community saw in Moten not only athletic excellence but a model student-athlete: someone who listened, steadily improved, and carried the school’s pride. His decision to attend Syracuse over other major programs was a big moment for Carroll, reinforcing the school’s reputation for producing talent.

  • Long after he left, his career remains a point of pride for Carroll. His later role at Digital Pioneers Academy — in part because of his Carroll roots — showed how schools in D.C. looked back to him as an alumnus who could help shape future generations.

In short, Archbishop Carroll was where Moten’s potential first shone, where he built a reputation, and where the values of hard work, dual sports excellence, and character were instilled — values that carried him forward.


College & Professional Accomplishments

  • At Syracuse University (1991–1995), Moten became the program’s all-time leading scorer with 2,334 points, averaging ~19.3 points per game. He scored in double figures in 118 of 121 games. He was First-team All-Big East in 1993-1995, Third-team All-Big East in 1992, and earned Third-team All-American status in 1995. His number #21 was retired by Syracuse in 2018.

  • Professionally, he was drafted 36th overall in 1995 by the Vancouver Grizzlies. He played parts of three seasons in the NBA (with Vancouver and Washington Wizards), averaging 6.3 points per game. Beyond the NBA, he played in international leagues and U.S. minor leagues (CBA, ABA), earning ABA All-Star honors in 2005 and 2006 with the Maryland Nighthawks.

  • After retiring from playing, he turned to coaching, mentorship, and sports administration: roles with the Maryland Nighthawks, head coach for the Rochester Razorsharks (led them to a Premier Basketball League championship in 2014), later assistant coach at Gallaudet University, and in June 2025 he became general manager for boys’ and girls’ basketball programs at Digital Pioneers Academy in D.C.


Death & Legacy

  • On September 30, 2025, Moten was found deceased in his home in Washington, D.C. His daughter, Lawrencia Moten, confirmed his passing. He was 53 years old.

  • No cause of death has been publicly disclosed, and there are no indications of foul play.

  • His death sparked outpourings of grief and remembrance from his alma mater, teammates, coaches, and the broader basketball and D.C. communities. He is remembered for both his on-court achievements and his off-court impact — mentoring youth, staying rooted, and giving back.


From Archbishop Carroll to Syracuse, then to pro basketball, coaching, and finally taking a leadership role in youth athletics back in his hometown, Moten’s life was one of sustained excellence and returning home. His legacy is not only in the points scored, games won, or the records he set, but in what he meant to the schools he was part of — especially Carroll, which first embraced, developed, and celebrated him — and in how he inspired others who came after.

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