1928 United States presidential election

 1920
November 4, 1924
1928 

531 members of the Electoral College
266 electoral votes needed to win
Turnout71.8%
 
Nominee Alf Landon Huey P. Long Henry A. Wallace
Party Republican Union Democratic
Home state Kansas Louisiana New York
Running mate Henry Knox William Lemke Cordell Hull
Electoral vote 324 116 91
States carried 27 12 9
Popular vote 24,366,243 17,029,129 15,762,830
Percentage 42.5% 29.7% 27.5%

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Presidential election results map. Red denotes states won by Coolidge/Dawes, blue denotes those won by Davis/Bryan, light green denotes Wisconsin, the state won by La Follette/Wheeler. Numbers indicate the number of electoral votes allotted to each state.

President before election

Calvin Coolidge
Republican Party (United States)

Elected President

Calvin Coolidge
Republican Party (United States)

Battle of Dogger Bank
Part of Second World War

German battleship Bismarck firing her guns during the battle
DateApril 15, 1942
Location
Result German tactical and strategic victory
Belligerents
German Empire Germany United Kingdom United Kingdom
Commanders and leaders

German Empire Admiral Erich Raeder

German Empire Vice Admiral Alfred Saalwächter

United Kingdom Admiral Andrew Cunningham

United Kingdom Vice Admiral James Somerville (WIA)
Strength

2 aircraft carriers
4 battleships
2 battlecruisers
3 heavy cruisers
1 pocket battleship
5 light cruisers
25 destroyers

120 carrier aircraft

3 aircraft carriers
5 battleships
3 battlecruisers
5 heavy cruisers
2 light cruisers
30 destroyers

180 carrier aircraft
Casualties and losses

2 destroyers sunk
3 battleships damaged
7 other ships damaged
34 aircraft

550 men

1 battleship sunk, 2 lightly damaged
1 battlecruiser sunk, 1 damaged
1 destroyer sunk
4 other ships damaged
31 aircraft

2,100 men

The Battle of Dogger Bank was a naval battle fought during the Second World War on April 15, 1942, between the German Imperial Navy and the British Royal Navy. Admiral Erich Raeder, ranking officer within the German Navy, led the bulk of the German surface fleet into the North Sea to lure the British out to a fight. Admiral Andrew Cunningham, commander of the Home Fleet, sortied out with the intention of destroying Raeder's force. It was the first major naval battle between the German Empire and the United Kingdom during the war and, at the time, the largest naval battle in history if counting by total tonnage of ships involved (beating the Battle of Jutland).

Admiral Raeder (like Vice Admiral Reinhard Scheer before him at Jutland) planned to lure out a portion of the Royal Navy with the presence of his ships, and then destroy them piecemeal. With the completion of training trials for his new aircraft carriers Graf Zeppelin and Seydlitz, he could risk bringing his fleet to battle with British aircraft carriers. Making Graf Zeppelin his flagship, he commanded the so-called "Main Task Group". He delegated command of the battleships Bismarck and Tirpitz, along with the battlecruiser Roon and other fast ships, to Vice Admiral Saalwächter, commanding the "Fast Reaction Group".

With the intelligence community at Bletchley Park having uncovered the planned German sortie, Admiral Cunningham sortied his own ships; he too made a carrier, HMS Illustrious, his flagship. He put Vice Admiral Somerville in command of the "Quick Squadron" of battlecruisers and fast battleships; HMS Hood was his flagship.

The battle began when Somerville's Quick Squadron came into contact with Saalwächter's Fast Reaction Group; Somerville then turned south, with the intention of leading the German battlecruisers and fast battleships towards the carriers and battleships of Cunningham's main force. Saalwächter suspected this and radioed Raeder to come to his aid. As the two fast fleets continued the gunnery duel (resulting in heavy damage to HMS Repulse, which had to disengage southwest), aircraft from both fleet's carriers began to engage each other over the scene of the battle. Raeder dispatched the battleships Scharnhorst and Gneisenau to join Saalwächter's force; at the same time, German torpedo bombers fatally wounded Somerville's flagship, HMS Hood; after being wounded by machine-gun fire, he was brought aboard a nearby destroyer, and Hood sank 10 minutes later. After another half hour of gunnery duel, the battleship HMS Barham was struck by a salvo of 15-inch shells from the battleship Bismarck which ignited her aft magazine, destroying the ship and instantly killing over 840 of her crew. At 1312 hours, Cunningham disengaged towards the West.

The battle was immediately recognized as a stunning German victory. The newly-revived Kaiserliche Marine, having suffered defeat during World War I and being severely outnumbered at the start of World War II, had fought the Royal Navy openly in the North Sea and defeated it despite being outnumbered. As a result of public outcry and the displeasure of the admiralty, Admiral Cunningham was redeployed to serve in the Indian Ocean. Somerville, having shown bravery and skill in the first phase of the battle despite being wounded, was promoted to full Admiral and given command over the Home Fleet.

In Germany, the battle was met with jubilation. Raeder was promoted to the rank of full Grand Admiral, and both he and Saalwächter were rewarded as Commanders of the House Order of Hohenzollern; furthermore, Raeder received the Grand Cross of the Iron Cross, having received the Iron Cross 1st Class during the First World War.

Exercise One
DateMarch 3, 1938
Location
Result Scouting Fleet victory, adoption of Raeder doctrine
Belligerents
German Empire German Empire German Empire German Empire
Commanders and leaders
German Empire Rear Admiral Alfred Saalwächter German Empire Rear Admiral Hermann Boehm
Units involved
Battle Fleet Scouting Fleet
Strength

3 pocket battleships
2 heavy cruisers
3 light cruisers

23 destroyers

2 light carriers
2 heavy cruisers
5 light cruisers

18 destroyers
Casualties and losses

1 pocket battleship sunk, 1 damaged
1 heavy cruiser sunk, 1 damaged
1 light cruiser sunk
3 destroyers damaged

Over 2,000 men

2 destroyers damaged
11 aircraft

80 men
June Revolution

Revolutionaries attack a unit of mounted police, June 19
DateJune 19–27, 1937
Location
France
Result Fall of the Third Republic, creation of the People's Republic of France
Belligerents
France French Third Republic French revolutionaries/People's Republic of France
Commanders and leaders

France Government

France French Army

Units involved

Republican Guard

Most of the Gendarmerie

About half of the French Army

Elements of the Gendarmerie

About half of the French Army

Citizenry
Strength

2,000 Republican Guard

6,500 Gendarmerie

280,000 men

Unknown number of Republican Guard

2,000 Gendarmerie

At least 150,000 men

Popular citizenry (tens of thousands)
Casualties and losses

Several dozen Republican Guard

250 Gendarmerie

870 men (executed)

1,556 men (battle)

270,000 men surrendered

Several dozen Gendarmerie

1,218 men (battle)

About 1,000 citizens
Battle of Philadelphia

Delaware troops at the Battle of Philadelphia
Date23 May, 1776
Location
West of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Result British tactical and strategical victory
Belligerents
United States Thirteen Colonies Kingdom of Great Britain Kingdom of Great Britain
Commanders and leaders
United States Major General Lord Stirling
United States Brigadier General Nathanael Greene
United States Brigadier General Benjamin Lincoln
Kingdom of Great Britain Major General Sir William Howe
Kingdom of Great Britain Major General Lord Cornwallis
Kingdom of Great Britain Major General James Grant
Strength
5,100 men
15 guns
9,900 men
40 guns
Casualties and losses
529 killed, wounded, and missing 398 killed, wounded, and missing
Paulskirche Massacre
Date10 October 1849, 3:10 pm
Location
Paulskirche, Frankfurt-am-Main, German Republic
Result Victory for the anti-democratic mob and Nocobins
Belligerents
Shoeless savages National Assembly of Germany Ebin Nocobins
Commanders and leaders
Unknown Alexander Nast†
Julius Kühn (wounded)
Georg Wolfsegen
Strength
5,000, potentially more (all without shoes) 497 delegates 3 men with no honor
Casualties and losses
None 57 killed, over 300 wounded A pair of shoes
Battle of Marshfield
Part of American Revolutionary War
Date19 August, 1775
Location
West of Marshfield, Massachusetts
Result American tactical and strategic victory
Belligerents
United States United States Kingdom of Great Britain Kingdom of Great Britain
Commanders and leaders
United States General William Sharpe
United States Major General Aubrey Adams
United States Brigadier General Henry Owen
Kingdom of Great Britain Lieutenant General James Clint
Kingdom of Great Britain Major General Isaac Wattles
Strength
9,000, 31 guns 5,946, 16 guns
Casualties and losses
298 killed, wounded, and missing 257 killed, wounded, and missing


Second Korean War
Date19 July – 12 August, 2017
Location
Korean Peninsula, Sea of Japan, East China Sea, Yellow Sea
Result

Allied victory

  • Collapse of North Korea
  • Unification of Korea
Participants

South Korea
United States

  • Various NATO countries

North Korea

China (material support)
Commanders and leaders

Park Geun-hye
Jang Jun-Kyu
Donald Trump

Joseph Dunford

Kim Jong-un
Hyon Chol-hae
Ri Myong-su

Ri Yong-gil
Casualties and losses

213,000+
98,496

Other NATO countries: 24,605
563,000+
Battle of Jeju Strait
Part of Russo-Japanese War

The Japanese Combined Fleet sailing to battle
Date20 May 1903
Location
Jeju Strait, Yellow Sea
Result Tactically indecisive; Russo-American strategic victory
Belligerents
Russian Empire
United States
Empire of Japan
Commanders and leaders
Russian Empire Stepan Makarov
Robley D. Evans
Empire of Japan Tōgō Heihachirō
Units involved
Russian Empire Pacific Squadron
Asiatic Fleet
Empire of Japan Combined Fleet
Strength
12 battleships
6 armored cruisers
7 light cruisers
18 destroyers and torpedo boats
6 battleships
5 armored cruisers
9 light cruisers
23 destroyers and torpedo boats
Casualties and losses
1 battleship
1 armored cruiser
2 light cruisers
2 destroyers
1,106 sailors killed and wounded
1 battleship
2 light cruisers
3 destroyers
1,284 sailors killed and wounded
United States presidential election, 1908

 1904
November 3, 1904
1912 

All 483 electoral votes of the Electoral College
242 electoral votes needed to win
 
Nominee Theodore Roosevelt PJ Kennedy
Party Republican Democratic
Home state New York Massachusetts
Running mate Robert La Follette Sr. James E. Campbell
Electoral vote 388 95
States carried 38 8
Popular vote 7,583,991 7,094,347
Percentage 52.5% 46.7%

Presidential election results map. Blue denotes states won by Parker/Davis, Red denotes those won by Roosevelt/Fairbanks, and light green denotes those won by Bryan/Watson. Numbers indicate the number of electoral votes allotted to each state.

President before election

Theodore Roosevelt
Republican

Elected President

Theodore Roosevelt
Republican

Northern Virginia Campaign
Part of American Civil War

George B. McClellan and Robert E. Lee, respective commanders of the Union (American Civil War) Army of the Potomac and Confederate Army of Northern Virginia during the Northern Virginia Campaign
Date25 April – 8 June 1862
Location
Northern Virginia
Result Confederate victory※
Belligerents
United States United States (Union) Confederate States of America CSA (Confederacy)
Commanders and leaders
United States Major General George B. McClellan Confederate States of America General Joseph E. Johnston (WIA)
Confederate States of America General Robert E. Lee
Units involved
Army of the Potomac Army of Northern Virginia
Strength
99,375※※ "deployed" 43,850 "present for service"
Casualties and losses
20,037 17,195
※ Many individual battles were Union tactical victories, though McClellan failed to seize the initiative
※※ About 26,000 present in the Valley Campaign and not present for most of the fighting
Battle of Goodwin Hollow
(Battle of Lebanon)
Part of American Civil War

The Battle of Goodwin Hollow, Missouri. by Kurz and Allison
Date16 May 1862
Location
Result Union victory
Belligerents
United States United States (Union) Confederate States of America CSA (Confederacy)
Commanders and leaders
United States Major General Nathaniel Lyon Confederate States of America Major General Earl Van Dorn
Units involved
Army of the West Army of Arkansas
Strength
18,035 "present for duty" 9,500
Casualties and losses
1,063 1,686
Battle of Bowling Green
Part of American Civil War

Union troops at the Battle of Bowling Green.
Date8 June 1862
Location
Result Confederate Pyrrhic victory
Belligerents
United States United States (Union) Confederate States of America CSA (Confederacy)
Commanders and leaders
United States Major General Ulysses S. Grant (WIA)
United States Brigadier General William B. Franklin
Confederate States of America General Albert S. Johnston
Units involved
Army of the Kentucky Army of Kentucky
Strength
47,000 49,000
Casualties and losses
10,262 11,110
Jackson's Valley-Maryland Campaign
Part of American Civil War

The Battle of Cross Keys
Date17 April – 18 May 1862
Location
Result Decisive Confederate victory
Belligerents
United States United States (Union) Confederate States of America CSA (Confederacy)
Commanders and leaders
United States Brigadier General Darius Couch
United States Brigadier General Samuel Heintzelman
Confederate States of America Major General Thomas J. Jackson
Units involved
Army of the Potomac
*III Corps
*IV Corps
Army of Northern Virginia
*Jackson's wing
Strength
25,000 6,400
Casualties and losses
3,055 1,188
Battle of Warsaw
Part of Twelve Months' War (Poland Campaign)

Russian prisoners after the battle, December 1907
Date2 September – 9 November 1907
Location
Result Decisive Central Powers victory
Belligerents
German Empire
Kingdom of Italy
Russian Empire
Commanders and leaders
Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg
General Max von Fabeck
General Maximilian von Prittwitz
General August von Mackensen
General Prince Emanuele Filiberto, Duke of Aosta
Field Marshal Alexei Kuropatkin (Minister of War)
Field Marshal Grand Duke Nikolay Nikolayevich (commander-in-chief)
General Paul von Rennenkampf
General Thadeus von Sievers 
General Nikolay Ivanov (POW)
Units involved
2nd Army
6th Army
8th Army
12th Army
Italian Expeditionary Force
1st Army
4th Army
19th Army
3rd, 5th, 6th, & 11th Armies (elements)
Strength
378,000 (max. at any one time), est. 500,000 total
67,000
Total: Over 500,000
315,000 – 470,000 (varied)
Casualties and losses
172,000 – 190,000
10,581
Total: Up to 200,000 killed, wounded, and missing
Around 190,000 killed, wounded, and missing
Over 100,000 captured
Battle of Pazardzhik
Part of Balkan War

By the Bayonet, depicting a Bulgarian soldier charging Ottoman lines
Date5 – 19 August 1907
Location
Result Ottoman victory
Belligerents
Ottoman Empire Principality of Bulgaria
Commanders and leaders
General Nazım Pasha
General Muhtar Pasha
Lieutenant General Vasil Kutinchev
Units involved
15th Corps
Reformed Corps
4th Corps
Strength
89,000 men
160 guns
75,312 men "present for duty"
183 guns
Casualties and losses
Up to 22,000 killed, wounded, and missing 26,365 killed, wounded, and missing
Second Battle of Tonghua
Part of Russo-Japanese War

One of many failed Japanese assaults on Russian positions during the battle
Date6 – 18 May 1903
Location
Result Ottoman victory
Belligerents
Russian Empire Greater Japanese Empire
Commanders and leaders
Field Marshal Alexei Kuropatkin
General Nikolay Linevich (WIA)
Field Marshal Ōyama Iwao
General Kuroki Tamemoto
Units involved
2nd Army
7th Army
12th Army
2nd Army
3rd Army
6th Army
7th Army
Strength
230,000 210,000
Casualties and losses
39,818 41,700 (estimated)
Bowling Green Campaign
Part of American Civil War

Union troops advancing on Confederate positions at Franklin, 11 September 1862
Date29 July – 15 September 1862
Location
Western Kentucky
Result Decisive Union victory
Belligerents
United States United States (Union) Confederate States of America CSA (Confederacy)
Commanders and leaders
United States Major General Nathaniel Lyon
United States Brigadier General William S. Rosecrans
Confederate States of America General Albert S. Johnston
Units involved
Army of the Kentucky
Army of the Ohio
Army of Kentucky
Strength
48,000 45,000
Casualties and losses
9,148 8,100 – 8,267
Battle of Stones River
(Second Battle of Murfreesboro)
Part of American Civil War

Union troops of Thomas' XXII Corps at Stones River
Date13 April 1863
Location
Result Confederate victory
Belligerents
United States United States (Union) Confederate States of America CSA (Confederacy)
Commanders and leaders
United States Major General Nathaniel Lyon Confederate States of America General Albert S. Johnston
Units involved
Army of the Tennessee Army of Tennessee
Strength
45,000 44,000
Casualties and losses
13,977 10,947


Battle of London
Part of American Civil War

Union troops storming Confederate positions, 11 March 1863
Date11 March 1863
Location
Result Union victory
Belligerents
United States United States (Union) Confederate States of America CSA (Confederacy)
Commanders and leaders
United States Major General Ulysses S. Grant Confederate States of America Major General Braxton Bragg (POW)
Units involved
Army of the Kentucky Army of Tennessee
Strength
32,000 7,600
Casualties and losses
2,152 7,600
1,800 killed
5,800 captured
Battle of the Ohio
Part of Kaintuck War

The Cherokee overrun the French battery, 1867
Date9 May 1730
Location
Result Decisive French victory
*End of the Kaintuck War
Belligerents
Kingdom of France Cherokee
Commanders and leaders
Major General Laurence Lamarque Chief Rough Saddle 
Strength
1700 infantry
350 cavalry
12 guns
Total: 2,300
1100 infantry
400 cavalry
1 gun
Total: 1600
Casualties and losses
199 killed
Around 350 wounded
47 missing
Total: About 600
694 – 900
Battle of Chambersburg
Part of American Civil War

Meade leads VI Corps during Longstreet's advance
Date1 – 3 July 1863
Location
Result

Disputed

  • Tactical Confederate victory
  • Strategic Union victory
Belligerents
United States United States (Union) Confederate States of America CSA (Confederacy)
Commanders and leaders
United States Major General Joseph Hooker Confederate States of America General Robert E. Lee
Units involved
Army of the Potomac Army of Northern Virginia
Strength
94,000 71,000
Casualties and losses
3,656 killed
14,701 wounded
5,617 captured/missing
Total: 24,374
2,995 killed
16,894 wounded
1,641 captured/missing
Total: 21,530
Battle of Danevirke
Part of Second Schleswig War

Danish troops counterattack at Danevirke, date unknown
Date29 February 1864 – Present
Location
Belligerents
Kingdom of Denmark
United Kingdoms of Sweden and Norway
French Empire
Kingdom of Prussia
Commanders and leaders
General Christian de Meza
Major General Ernst von Vegesack
Marshal Aimable Pélissier
Field Marshal Friedrich von Wrangel
Strength
18,000
48,000
21,000
57,000
Casualties and losses
Up to 2,000 total 1,362–2,400
New York Revolution
Part of Presidency of Donald Trump

Fighting in Harlem
Date20 July 2017 – Present
Location
Status Ongoing
Belligerents
United States United States National Democratic Council
Commanders and leaders
United States President Donald Trump
United States James Mattis
Andrew Cuomo
People's Commissar Bill de Blasio
Units involved
United States United States Armed Forces
New York National Guard
National People's Army
Strength
United States 8000 Marines
29,000 National Guardsmen
45,000 NYPD Officers
60,000+ People's Revolutionary Guard
Casualties and losses
Up to 200 killed; 3,613 wounded; 230–400 missing 6000–9000 killed, wounded, and missing
War of the Final Coalition
Part of Collapse of the British Empire

The Battle of Woking
Date1868 – 1869
Location
Basically everywhere
  • Europe
    • British Isles
  • Africa
  • Asia
  • North America
  • South America
Result Decisive Coalition victory
Belligerents
United Kingdom

Coalition of the Willing

Commanders and leaders
Victoria
Units involved
The Legions of Hell The greatest armed force ever assembled in the history of mankind
Strength
600,000–800,000 Up to 5,000,000
Casualties and losses
Innumerable Heavy
Franco-German War
Part of Franco-German Wars

Bismarck assaults Strasbourg
Date17 March 1868 – ??? April 1871
(ceasefire 26 November 1868 – 11 May 1870)
Location
Belligerents
France French Empire
Germany German Republic (from October 1870)
German Empire German Empire
Austrian Empire Austrian Empire
Commanders and leaders
France Napoleon III
France Marshal Patrice de MacMahon (POW)
France Marshal François Certain Canrobert (POW)
France Marshal François Certain Canrobert
France Marshal Edmond Le Bœuf
France Marshal François Achille Bazaine
France Marshal Charles Auguste Frossard
Germany General Franz Sigel
and others

German Empire Wilhelm
German Empire
Chancellor Otto von Bismarck (POW)
German Empire Field Marshal Helmuth von Moltke (POW)
German Empire Duke Friedrich of Baden
German Empire Prince Albert of Saxony 
German Empire Prince Friedrich Karl of Prussia (POW)
German Empire Prince Friedrich Karl of Prussia

Austrian Empire Franz Josef
Austrian Empire General Alexander von Mensdorff-Pouilly
and others
Units involved
France Army of the Rhine
France Army of Luxembourg
France Army of the Moselle
France Army of Alsace
German Empire I Army
German Empire II Army
German Empire III Army
German Empire IV Army
Strength
660,000+ (August 1868)
1,100,000+ (November 1868)
1,300,000+ (March 1871)
620,000+ (August 1868)
900,000+ (November 1868)
Around 800,000 (March 1871)
Casualties and losses
132,206 killed
Over 300,000 wounded
Over 230,000 captured
~25,000 missing
Total: 650,000–700,000
187,000 killed
530,000–600,000 wounded
240,000 captured
31,030 missing
Total: 992,000–1,050,000
Sino-Soviet border war
"Harbin incident"

Soviet troops carrying captured NRA banners
Date22 July – 21 September 1929
Location
Result

Disputed; Treaty of Moscow

  • China purchases Chinese Eastern Railway from Soviets
  • China accepts blame for the conflict
Belligerents
Republic of China Soviet Union
Commanders and leaders
Marshal Zhang Xueliang
General Chen Cheng
General Vasily Blyukher
Units involved

Northeastern Army

  • ~15 divisions

Special Red Banner Far Eastern Army

  • 9—12 divisions
Strength
~160,000
6 tanks
25 aircraft
100,000 at peak
40 tanks
75+ aircraft
Casualties and losses
2200 killed
1500+ wounded
837 captured
430 missing
4 aircraft
TOTAL: 4,815
600—800 killed
1500 wounded
~190 captured
150 missing
8 aircraft
4 tanks
TOTAL: 2300—2700
Attempted coup of Donald Trump
Part of Presidency of Donald Trump

The aftermath of a bomb explosion in downtown Washington, DC
Date17–19 July 2017
Location
Result

Coup failure

Belligerents

United States United States

Joint Chiefs of Staff

Commanders and leaders

United States President Donald Trump

Joint Chiefs of Staff
Units involved
United States
Strength
United States


Battle of Cape Verde
Part of Second World War

SMS Bismarck firing on British and French warships on 18 August.
Date17–18 November 1943
Location
Result Decisive Allied victory
Belligerents
German Empire German Empire
United States United States
United Kingdom Union of Britain
France Commune of France
Commanders and leaders
German Empire Grand Admiral Erich Raeder
German Empire Admiral Hermann Boehm
German Empire Admiral Alfred Saalwächter
United States Fleet Admiral Raymond Spruance
United States Admiral William Halsey Jr.
United Kingdom Admiral Andrew Cunningham
United Kingdom Admiral James Somerville
France Admiral François Darlan
Strength
10 fleet carriers
2 light carriers
14 battleships
6 battlecruisers
8 heavy cruisers
14 light cruisers
85 destroyers
4–6 submarines
8 fleet carriers
4 light carriers
7 battleships
4 battlecruisers
8 heavy cruisers
19 light cruisers
67 destroyers
6 submarines
Casualties and losses
1 fleet carrier
2 battleships
1 heavy cruiser
117 aircraft
1,530 killed
3 fleet carriers
1 light carrier
1 battleship
1 battlecruiser
2 destroyers
1 submarine
~350 aircraft
4,682 killed
Battle of Kungälv
Date17 April 1259
Location
Result Decisive Danish victory
Subjugation of Norway
Belligerents
Denmark Sweden Norway Norway
Commanders and leaders
Denmark King Eric V 
Denmark Crown Prince Eric(afterward, King Eric VI)
Denmark Prince Canute
Denmark Prince Frederick Magnus
Norway King Magnus VI 
Norway Crown Prince Olaf 
Strength
4400 levy (incl. 1500 archers)
1200 men at arms (incl. 200 knights)
3500–5000, including 500 knights
Casualties and losses
300–400 levy, approximately 200 cavalry Over 2000
John Bryant Parry
Personal information
Born (2004-05-21) 21 May 2004 (age 22)
NationalityAmerican
Listed height6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
Listed weight212 lb (96 kg)
Career information
High schoolWard Melville High School
CollegeBucknell University (2022–26)
NBA draft2026: 2nd round, 27th overall pick
Drafted byNew York Knicks
Playing career2026–2041
PositionPoint guard
Number31
Career history
2026–2041New York Knicks
Career statistics
Points23,174
Rebounds11,573
Assists4,516
Basketball Hall of Fame

John Bryant Parry (born 21 May 2004), also known by his initials JBP and JP, is an American former professional basketball player, television personality, actor, author, and sports color commentator. He played 14 seasons in the National Basketball Association as a point guard for the New York Knicks. At his jersey retirement ceremony on 30 November 2040, he was acclaimed by NBA Hall of Famers, coaches, players, and sports media as "the greatest Knick and one of the greatest players of all time." In 2032 he led the Knicks to their first championship in 59 years, and secured the franchise's first threepeat, and the NBA's first since the Golden State Warriors did so between 2017 and 2019.

Parry led Bucknell University's men's basketball team to the second round of March Madness in 2026. He was drafted early in the second round by the Knicks that summer. He did not play a game in the NBA's following season until the Knick's bench point guard was injured. Parry stunned crowds with his flashy passing, ability to score, and surprising athleticism, to the point that he had taken the place as the team's starting point guard by the end of the season. Over the following decade, he led the Knicks to continual playoff berths and ultimately the franchise's first championship in over half a century. By his retirement, he had been named an NBA All-Star twelve times, League MVP six times, Finals MVP thrice, and numerous All-NBA teams. Further, he led the league twice in scoring, assists eight times, and steals twice.

After his career, Parry was regarded as "one of the best point guards ever" by acclaimed sports historian Harrison Tyball; some have championed him as the greatest basketball player of all time. Parry has also become recognized in popular culture for his unassuming nature and his hobbies, particularly musicianship and video games.

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Parry played the point guard position for his entire collegiate and professional career; however, he was also capable of playing as a shooting guard, which he notably did multiple times during the 2032 and 2034 NBA Finals. He was regarded as one of the League's best inside scorers, able to make highly-contested layups and shots close to the basket. During his first NBA game, he shocked fans by dunking five times in just seventeen minutes of play. Though he entered the NBA a relatively poor shooter, he improved his ability quickly over time, so that by his third season he ranked fourth in the NBA in three-point shooting percentage with over two-hundred shots attempted.

Parry's greatest strength is widely regarded to be his passing ability. He possessed unusually good court vision and capitalized on it, leading the league in assists eight times (tying Bob Cousy and bested only by John Stockton for the all-time record) and placing him fourth in career assist totals.

As is common for his position, Parry was adept at stealing the ball, leading the league twice in that category. Furthermore, he was considered both a top perimeter and post defender at various points in his career; in his youth, he averaged more than one blocked shot per game near the basket, leading point guards in this category for two years. Statistically, his defensive abilities ranked him among the top five guards defensively during every season he played. He was a top candidate for the Defensive Player of the Year award multiple times, but never won it. However, he was named to the All-Defense First Team four times and the Second Team a further seven times.

His health also remained good for much of his career, despite a major injury in his third year that forced him to miss 35 games, and a tibia fracture in the opening game of his final season that forced him to miss all but the last two games.