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Dražen Dalipagić









Dražen Dalipagić


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Dražen Dalipagić

Dalipagic.JPG
Dalipagić in Umag in 2007

Personal information
Born
(1951-11-27) November 27, 1951 (age 67)
Mostar, PR Bosnia-Herzegovina, FPR Yugoslavia
Nationality Serbian
Listed height 6 ft 5.75 in (1.97 m)
Listed weight 210 lb (95 kg)
Career information
NBA draft
1973 / Undrafted
Playing career 1971–1991
Position Small forward
Number 14, 15
Coaching career 1992–2001
Career history
As player:
1971–1978
1979–1980
Partizan
1980–1981 Carrera Venezia
1981–1982 Partizan
1982–1983 Real Madrid
1983–1985 A.P.U. Udine
1985–1988 Reyer Venezia
1988–1989 Glaxo Verona
1990–1991 Crvena zvezda
As coach:
1992–1996 Nuova Pallacanestro Gorizia
1998–1999 MZT Skopje
2000–2001 KK Astra Banka

Career highlights and awards


  • 4× FIBA European Selection (1978, 1981 2×, 1982)

  • 2× Yugoslav League champion (1976, 1979)


  • Yugoslav Cup winner (1979)

  • 2× FIBA Korać Cup champion (1978, 1979)

  • 2× FIBA Korać Cup Finals Top Scorer (1974, 1978)


  • Italian League Top Scorer (1988)


  • FIBA EuroBasket MVP (1977)


  • FIBA World Cup MVP (1978)


  • The Best Athlete of Yugoslavia (1978)


  • Yugoslav Sportsman of the Year (1978)

  • 2× Mister Europa Player of the Year (1977, 1978)


  • Euroscar Player of the Year (1980)


  • FIBA's 50 Greatest Players (1991)


  • 50 Greatest EuroLeague Contributors (2008)



Basketball Hall of Fame as player
FIBA Hall of Fame as player


Dražen "Praja" Dalipagić (born November 27, 1951) is a Yugoslav-Serbian[1] retired professional basketball player and head coach. He was selected the best athlete of Yugoslavia in the year 1978, and is one of the most decorated athletes in Yugoslavian history. He was named one of FIBA's 50 Greatest Players in 1991. Dalipagić was enshrined into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as a player in 2004, and into the FIBA Hall of Fame, also as a player, in 2007. In 2008, he was named one of the 50 Greatest EuroLeague Contributors.


During his professional playing career, he scored at least 50 points in a game 15 times.[2] His single-game career scoring high was 70 points scored, achieved during an Italian League game, between Venezia and Virtus Bologna, on 25 January, 1987. He was nicknamed "The Sky Jumper".[3]




Contents






  • 1 Professional career


  • 2 Yugoslavian national team


  • 3 Personal life


  • 4 See also


  • 5 References


  • 6 External links





Professional career[edit]


Dalipagić started playing basketball at the age of 19, and one year later he signed his first professional contract with Partizan, in 1971. He stayed in Partizan for eight seasons, until 1980. Over that time, he won the Mr. Europa European Player of the Year award twice, in 1977 and 1978, and the European Player of the Year Euroscar award in 1980. He was declared the best athlete of Yugoslavia in 1978. In the 1975–76 season, he led Partizan to the Yugoslav League title, and also to the European-wide 3rd-tier level FIBA Korać Cup title, in the 1977–78 season. He was also a member of Partizan, at the time when they won the 1978–79 season Korać Cup title, but he was serving in the Yugoslav army at the time.[4]


In the 1980–81 season, he went abroad for the first time in his career. During that season, he played with Reyer Venezia, of the Italian Lega Basket Serie A league. After just one season with Venezia, he returned to his former club, Partizan, for one season. In the following seasons, he played for numerous European teams, including Real Madrid, of the Spanish Primera División, during the 1982–83 season, in which he only played with the club in FIBA European Champions Cup (now called EuroLeague) games. He also played with Reyer Venezia, and Glaxo Verona of the Italian League. He finished his professional career after the 1990–91 season, in which he played with Partizan's arch-rivals, Crvena zvezda.


As a Partizan Belgrade player, he scored 8,278 points, in 305 games played, for a scoring average of 27.1 points per game. While playing in Italy, he scored 7,993 points in 241 games played, for a scoring average of 33.2 points per game. He led the Italian League in scoring average, in the 1987–88 season, with an average of 37.7 points per game.[5]



Yugoslavian national team[edit]


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Dalipagić (#14) and Željko Jerkov (#8) watch Andro Knego and Renzo Vecchiato go up for a rebound, in Yugoslavia's 102–81 blowout win against Italy, at the 1980 Olympics.


Dalipagić debuted for senior the Yugoslavian national basketball team, in 1973. In total, he played in 243 games with Yugoslavia's senior national team, between 1973 and 1986, scoring a total of 3,700 points, which was the most points scored by any player in the history of the Yugoslav national team.


He won the gold medal at the 1978 FIBA World Championship, and the gold medal at the 1980 Summer Olympics. As a member of the Yugoslavian national team, he also won three gold medals at the EuroBasket. His four medals won at the FIBA World Cup (Silver, 1974 FIBA World Championship; Gold, 1978 FIBA World Championship; Bronze, 1982 FIBA World Championship, and 1986 FIBA World Championship) is tied for the all-time international basketball record. A three-time Olympian, Dalipagić was instrumental in the Yugoslavian team's capturing of the gold, at the 1980 Summer Olympics.



Personal life[edit]


Dalipagić finished high school at the Technical School in Mostar, and graduated from the Teachers College in Belgrade. He is married to Sonja Požeg, former Yugoslav tennis player. They have two children, Sanja and Davorin.



See also[edit]



  • Yugoslav First Federal Basketball League career stats leaders

  • List of flag bearers for Yugoslavia at the Olympics



References[edit]





  1. ^ Dalipagić poručio Novoselu: Ja sam građanin Srbije!


  2. ^ Drazen Dalipagic.


  3. ^ Drazen Dalipagic, the sky jumper.


  4. ^ Korać Cup 1978–79.


  5. ^ DRAZEN DALIPAGIC.




External links[edit]







  • Dražen Dalipagić at Basketball-Reference.com

  • Dražen Dalipagić at the Basketball Hall of Fame

  • Dražen Dalipagić at the FIBA Hall of Fame

  • Dražen Dalipagić at the Interbasket.net

  • Dražen Dalipagić FIBA Europe Profile


  • Dražen Dalipagić Italian League Profile (in Italian)

  • Euroleague.net 50 Greatest EuroLeague Contributors












Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dražen_Dalipagić&oldid=878725898"





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