Jun 19, 2007, 1:44 pm
GENEVA (FIBA) - The International Basketball Federation (FIBA) was founded on 18th June 1932 in Geneva. Thus, today, 18th June 2007, FIBA is celebrating its 75th Anniversary and is very proud to announce, on such a special occasion, its Hall of Fame's 2007 Class of Inductees.
Players:
Sergei BELOV
Born on 23rd January 1944, in Nashchyokovo, Russia
Nationality: Russian
Height: 1.90 m
Position: Forward
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
Uralmash Sverdlovsk: 1964-1967
CSKA Moscow: 1968-1980
As a head coach:
CSKA Moscow (1981-1982: Champion of the USSR League), CSKA Moscow Junior School (1983-1989), Cassino -Italy- (1991-1993) and Ural Great Perm (1999-2002: Champion of the Russian League in 2001)
Club Highlights:
2 times Champion of the European Cup for Men's Champion Clubs (current Euroleague): 1969 and 1971
11 times Champion of the USSR League: 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979 and 1980
2 times Champion of the USSR Cup: 1972 and 1973
National Team Highlights:
Olympic Gold medalist in Munich 1972
3 times Olympic Bronze medalist: Mexico 1968, Montreal 1976 and Moscow 1980
2 times World Champion: Montevideo 1967 and Puerto Rico 1974
Silver medalist in the 1978 Manila World Championship
Bronze medalist in the 1970 Ljubljana World Championship
4 times European Champion: Helsinki 1967, Italy 1969, Germany 1971 and Italy 1979
2 times Silver medalist in the European Championships: Belgrade 1975 and Belgium 1977
Bronze medalist in the 1973 Barcelona European Championship
As head coach of the Russian National Team (1993-1998): 2 times Silver medalist in the World Championships of Toronto 1994 and Athens 1998 and Bronze medalist in the 1997 European Championship in Barcelona
Individual Highlights:
Lit the Olympic flame in the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games
President of the Russian Basketball Federation: 1993-1998
President of Ural Great Perm since August 2005
Dra?en DALIPAGIÄ
Born on 27th November 1951, in Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Nationality: Serbian
Height: 1.97 m
Position: Forward
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
Partizan Belgrade: 1971-1978 and 1979-1980 (military service: 1978-1979)
Venezia: 1980-1981
Partizan Belgrade: 1981-1982
Real Madrid: 1982-1983
Udine: 1983-1985
Venezia: 1985-1988
Verona: 1988-1989
Red Star Belgrade: 1990-1991
As a coach:
Gorizia (1992-1996), MZT Skopje (1997-1998) and Astra Banka Belgrade (2000-2001)
As a manager: Sports Manager of Red Star Belgrade (1998-1999), Team Manager of BC Atlas Belgrade (2003-2006) and Member of the Expert Council of the Serbian Basketball Federation (present)
Club Highlights:
Champion of the 1978 Korac Cup
Champion of the 1976 Yugoslavian League
National Team Highlights:
243 appearances with the Yugoslavian National Team between 1973 and 1986
Olympic Gold medalist in Moscow 1980
World Champion in Manila 1978
Olympic Silver medalist in Montreal 1976
Silver medalist in the 1974 World Championship in Puerto Rico
Olympic Bronze medalist in Los Angeles 1984
2 times Bronze medalist in World Championships: Colombia 1982 and Spain 1986
3 times European Champion: Barcelona 1973, Belgrade 1975 and Liege 1977
Silver medalist in the 1981 European Championship in Prague
Bronze medalist in the 1979 European Championship in Turin
Individual Highlights:
MVP and Top Scorer of the 1978 World Championship in Manila
European Player of the Year in 1977, 1978 and 1980
Best Sportsman of the Year 1978 in the former Yugoslavia
3 times Best Sportsman of Belgrade: 1976, 1977 and 1978
Almost perennial top scorer of all leagues and championships in which he took part, Dalipagic averaged over 30 points a game during most of his entire career (in 1981-1982 he averaged 43 points per game for Partizan Belgrade)
Ivo DANEU
Born on 6th October 1937, in Maribor, Slovenia
Nationality: Sloveninan
Height: 1.84 m
Position: Guard
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
Branik Maribor: 1949-1956
Olimpija Ljubljana: 1956-1970
As a coach: Olimpija Ljubljana (1970-1971) and Rudar Trbovlje (1976)
Club Highlights:
5 times Champion of the Yugoslavian League: 1957, 1959, 1961, 1966 and 1970
National Team Highlights:
209 appearances with the Yugoslavian National Team from 1956 to 1970: participated in 3 Olympic Games (Rome 1960, Tokyo 1964 and Mexico 1968) and 3 World Championships (Rio de Janeiro 1963, Montevideo 1967 and Ljubljana 1970)
World Champion in Ljubljana 1970
Olympic Silver medalist in Mexico 1968
2 times Silver medalist in World Championships: Rio de Janeiro 1963 and Montevideo 1967
3 times Silver medalist in European Championships: Belgrade 1961, Germany 1965 and Italy 1969
Bronze medalist in the 1963 European Championship in Wroclaw
Individual Highlights:
MVP of the 1967 World Championship in Montevideo
Best Sportsman of the Year 1967 in the former Yugoslavia
Ivo Daneu mastered the hook shot and used this unstoppable weapon to regularly score even from as far as the 6-7 meter range
Oscar FURLONG
Born on 22nd October 1927, in Buenos Aires, Argentina
Nationality: Argentinean
Height: 1.88 m
Position: Power forward/Center
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
Gimnasia y Esgrima de Villa del Parque: 1944-1956
Southern Methodist University (NCAA): 1953-1956
In 1957, the Argentinean military dictatorship sanctioned all the members of the 1950 World Champion team with the accusation that they had received "compensations and special treatments" from the government of Juan Domingo Per?n in 1950, a time when basketball had an amateur status. Such an unfair sanction, unanimously considered a "sports genocide", forced Furlong to retire when he was 29 years old. The sanction was only lifted in 1967. Too late for Furlong and most of his teammates?
Club Highlights:
6 times Champion of Buenos Aires (the Argentinean national championship was only created in 1984): 1945, 1946, 1947, 1948, 1951 and 1954
National Team Highlights:
50 appearances with the Argentinean National Team from 1947 to 1955: participated in 2 Olympic Games (London 1948 and Helsinki 1952) and in the Buenos Aires 1950 World Championship
World Champion in Buenos Aires 1950
Gold medalist in the World University Games of 1953 in Dortmund
2 times Silver medalist in the Pan American Games: Buenos Aires 1951 and Mexico City 1955
Individual Highlights:
After the 1948 London Games, Furlong received a formal offer to join the Minneapolis Lakers (NBA), but declined it. The Baltimore Bullets where not successful either
MVP and Top Scorer of the 1950 World Championship in Buenos Aires
Furlong introduced the jump-shot in Argentina after learning it during his three seasons in the Southern Methodist University (Division I, NCAA)
Nikos GALIS
Born on 23rd July 1957, in New Jersey, U.S.A.
Nationality: Greek
Height: 1.83 m
Position: Shooting guard
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
Seton Hall University (NCAA): 1975-1979
Aris Thessaloniki: 1979-1992
Panathinaikos: 1992-1995
Club Highlights:
8 times Champion of the Greek League: 1983, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990 and 1991
7 times Champion of the Greek Cup: 1985, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1992 and 1993
National Team Highlights:
European Champion in Athens 1987
Silver medalist in the 1989 European Championship in Zagreb
Individual Highlights:
Nikos Galis is one of the biggest scoring-machines in basketball's history: averaged over 30 points a game during his 16-year career in Europe (both in the national and continental club competitions); top scorer of the 1986 World Championship and in four of the five European Championships in which he took part; 3rd top scorer in the NCAA's 1978-1979 season (27.5 points per game)?
MVP of the 1987 European Championship in Athens
First torchbearer during the Olympic flame's final route at the 2004 Athens Olympic Games
Hortencia MARCARI
Born on 23rd September 1959, in Potirendaba, S?o Paulo, Brazil
Nationality: Brazilian
Height: 1.74 m
Position: Shooting guard
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
S?o Caetano Esporte Clube: 1973-1981
Associa??o Prudentina: 1982-1983
C.A Minercal: 1984-1990
C.A Constecca/Sedox: 1991
NCNB Ponte Preta: 1992-1993
ADC Seara: 1994-1996
Club Highlights:
3 times Champion of the Intercontinental Cup: 1991, 1993 and 1994
2 times Pan American Champion: 1994 and 1995
4 times South American Champion: 1983, 1984, 1993 and 1996
7 times Champion of the Brazilian Cup: 1984, 1987, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1994 and 1995
9 times Champion of the S?o Paulo League: 1982, 1983, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992 and 1993
National Team Highlights:
137 appearances with the Brazilian National Team, averaging 24.4 points per game: participated in 2 Olympic Games (Barcelona 1992 and Atlanta 1996) and in 5 World Championships (Seoul 1979, Brazil 1983, Moscow 1986, Malaysia 1990 and Australia 1994)
World Champion in Australia 1994 (averaging 27.6 points per game)
Olympic Silver medalist in Atlanta 1996
Gold medalist in the Pan American Games of Havana 1991
Silver medalist in the Pan American Games of Indianapolis 1987
Bronze medalist in the Pan American Games of Caracas 1983
4 times Gold medalist in the South American Championships: Bolivia 1978, Peru 1981, Brazil 1986 and Chile 1989
Individual Highlights:
Top scorer of the 1992 Barcelona Olympic Games (94 points in total/18.8 points per game)
Pierluigi MARZORATI
Born on 12th September 1952, in Figino Serenza (Como), Italy
Nationality: Italian
Height: 1.87 m
Position: Playmaker
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
Pallacanestro Cant?: 1969-1991
As an executive: Vice President of Pallacanestro Cant? (1991-1996)
Club Highlights:
2 times Champion of the European Cup for Men's Champion Clubs (current Euroleague): 1982 and 19831
4 times Champion of the European Cup Winner's Cup: 1977, 1978, 1979 and 1981
4 times Champion of the European Cup Radivoj Korac: 1973, 1974, 1975 and 199
2 times Champion of the Intercontinental Cup: 1975 and 1982
2 times Champion of the Italian League: 1975 and 1981
National Team Highlights:
278 appearances (all-time record) and 2,209 points with the Italian National Team: participated in 4 Olympic Games (Munich 1972, Montreal 1976, Moscow 1980 and Los Angeles 1984), 2 World Championships (Manila 1978 and Spain 1986) and 8 European Championships/EuroBaskets (1971, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1979, 1981, 1983 and 1985)
Olympic Silver medalist in Moscow 1980
European Champion in Nantes 1983
3 times Bronze medalist in European Championships: Germany 1971, Yugoslavia 1975 and Germany 1985
Individual Highlights:
Played an impressive number of 22 consecutive seasons (692 games) in the same club, Pallacanestro Cant?, scoring a total of 8,659 points
Pallacanestro Cant? retired his #14 jersey in 1991
On 8th October 2006, Marzorati started in Pallacanestro Cant?'s first game of the season (vs. Benetton Treviso) to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the club, thus becoming the first player in history to compete in official games in five different decades and, at age 54, the oldest player to have ever taken part in an official competition
Ann MEYERS
Born on 26th March 1955, in San Diego (California), U.S.A
Nationality: United States Citizen
Height: 1.75 m
Position: Guard
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
UCLA (Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women -AIAW-): 1974-1978
New Jersey Gems (Women's Professional Basketball League -WBL-): 1979-1980
Club Highlights:
1978 National Collegiate Champion
National Team Highlights:
World Champion in Seoul 1979
Olympic Silver medalist in Montreal 1976
Gold medalist in the Pan American Games of Mexico City 1975
Silver medalist in the Pan American Games of San Juan 1979
Silver medalist in the World University Games of 1977 in Sofia
Individual Highlights:
First woman ever to receive a full athletic scholarship from UCLA
4 times Kodak All-American: 1975, 1976, 1977 and 1978
1978 Broderick Award Winner (recognizing the best collegiate player in the U.S.A.)
Co-MVP and Top Scorer of the WBL in 1979-1980
Only woman ever to sign a free-agent contract with an NBA franchise (in September 1979, with the Indiana Pacers, but did not make the team and was released)
UCLA retired her #15 jersey on 3rd February 1990
Winner of the 2006 United States Sports Academy's (USSA) Ronald Reagan Media Award after over two and a half decades devoted to sports broadcasting and journalism
General Manager of the Phoenix Mercury (WNBA) and Vice President of the Phoenix Suns (NBA) since September 2006
Amaury PASOS
Born on 11th December 1935, in S?o Paulo, Brazil
Nationality: Brazilian
Height: 1.91 m
Position: Power Forward
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
Clube de Regatas Tiet?: 1949-1961
C. R. S?rio: 1962-1965
Corinthians: 1966-1972
Club Highlights:
2 times Champion of the Brazilian League: 1966 and 1969
3 times champion of the S?o Paulo League: 1966, 1968 and 1969
National Team Highlights:
96 appearances with the Brazilian National Team: participated in 3 Olympic Games (Melbourne 1956, Rome 1960 and Tokyo 1964) and in 4 World Championships (Rio de Janeiro 1954, Santiago de Chile 1959, Rio de Janeiro 1963 and Montevideo 1967)
2 times World Champion: Santiago de Chile 1959 and Rio de Janeiro 1963
Silver medalist in the Rio de Janeiro 1954 World Championship
2 times Olympic Bronze medalist: Rome 1960 and Tokyo 1964
Bronze medalist in the Montevideo 1967 World Championship
Silver medalist in the Pan American Games of S?o Paulo 1963
Bronze medalist in the Pan American Games of Mexico City 1955
Individual Highlights:
MVP of the 1959 World Championship in Santiago de Chile
Emiliano RODR?GUEZ
Born on 10th June 1937, in San Feliz de Tor?o (Le?n), Spain
Nationality: Spanish
Height: 1.91 m
Position: Forward
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
Aismalibar: 1958-1960
Real Madrid: 1960-1973
Club Highlights:
4 times Champion of the European Cup for Men's Champion Clubs (current Euroleague): 1964, 1965, 1967 and 1968
12 times Champion of the Spanish League: 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972 and 1973
9 times Champion of the Spanish Cup: 1961, 1962, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1970, 1971, 1972 and 1973
National Team Highlights:
175 consecutive appearances with the Spanish National Team: participated in 2 Olympic Games (Rome 1960 and Mexico 1968) and 7 European Championships/EuroBaskets (1959, 1961, 1963, 1965, 1967, 1969 and 1971)
Individual Highlights:
3 times Top Scorer of the Spanish League: 1959, 1963 and 1964
MVP of the 1963 Wroclaw European Championship/EuroBasket
1973 Fair Play Award from UNESCO
FIBA Order of Merit in 1997
Bill RUSSELL
Born on 12th February 1934, in Monroe (Louisiana), United States
Nationality: USA
Height: 2.13 m
Position: Center
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
University of San Francisco (NCAA): 1953-1956
Boston Celtics: 1956-1969
As a coach:
head coach and player of the Boston Celtics (1966-1969), head coach and general manager of the Seattle SuperSonics (1973-1977) and head coach of the Sacramento Kings (1987-1988)
Club Highlights:
2 times NCAA Champion: 1955 and 1956
11 times NBA Champion: 1957, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1968 and 1969
National Team Highlights:
Olympic Gold medalist in Melbourne 1956
Individual Highlights:
1955 NCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player
5 times MVP of the NBA: 1958, 1961, 1962, 1963 and 1965
Member of 3 All-NBA First Teams (1959, 1963 and 1965), 8 All-NBA Second Teams and of the 1969 NBA All-Defensive First Team
12 times NBA All-Star: 1958-1969
MVP of the 1963 NBA All-Star Game
2nd all-time leading rebounder in NBA history (21,620 rebounds in total/22.5 per game)
The Boston Celtics retired his #6 jersey on 12th March 1972
Named one of the 50 Greatest Players in NBA History in 1996
Uljana SEMJONOVA
Born on 9th March 1952, in Medumi (Daugavpils District), Latvia
Nationality: Latvian
Height: 2.13 m
Position: Center
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
TTT Riga: 1967-1987
Tintoretto (Spain): 1987-1988
Valenciennes Orchies (France): 1988-1989
Club Highlights:
11 times Champion of the European Cup for Women's Champions Clubs (current EuroLeague Women): 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1977, 1981 and 1982
Champion of the 1987 European Cup Liliana Ronchetti
15 times Champion of the USSR League: 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983 and 1984
National Team Highlights:
Played in the USSR Women's National Team for 18 straight years (1968-1986) in which her teams remained completely undefeated
2 times Olympic Gold medalist: Montreal 1976 and Moscow 1980
3 times World Champion: S?o Paulo 1971, Colombia 1975 and Brazil 1983
10 times in a row European Champion: Italy 1968, Netherlands 1970, Bulgaria 1972, Italy 1974, France 1976, Poland 1978, Yugoslavia 1980, Italy 1981, Hungary 1983 and Italy 1985
Individual Highlights:
Winningest player in the history of women's basketball
Named Latvia's Most Popular Athlete 12 times from 1970 to 1985
Chairwoman of the Latvian Olympian Social Foundation (an organization devoted to the support of sports veterans) since 1991
Players:
Sergei BELOV
Born on 23rd January 1944, in Nashchyokovo, Russia
Nationality: Russian
Height: 1.90 m
Position: Forward
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
Uralmash Sverdlovsk: 1964-1967
CSKA Moscow: 1968-1980
As a head coach:
CSKA Moscow (1981-1982: Champion of the USSR League), CSKA Moscow Junior School (1983-1989), Cassino -Italy- (1991-1993) and Ural Great Perm (1999-2002: Champion of the Russian League in 2001)
Club Highlights:
2 times Champion of the European Cup for Men's Champion Clubs (current Euroleague): 1969 and 1971
11 times Champion of the USSR League: 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979 and 1980
2 times Champion of the USSR Cup: 1972 and 1973
National Team Highlights:
Olympic Gold medalist in Munich 1972
3 times Olympic Bronze medalist: Mexico 1968, Montreal 1976 and Moscow 1980
2 times World Champion: Montevideo 1967 and Puerto Rico 1974
Silver medalist in the 1978 Manila World Championship
Bronze medalist in the 1970 Ljubljana World Championship
4 times European Champion: Helsinki 1967, Italy 1969, Germany 1971 and Italy 1979
2 times Silver medalist in the European Championships: Belgrade 1975 and Belgium 1977
Bronze medalist in the 1973 Barcelona European Championship
As head coach of the Russian National Team (1993-1998): 2 times Silver medalist in the World Championships of Toronto 1994 and Athens 1998 and Bronze medalist in the 1997 European Championship in Barcelona
Individual Highlights:
Lit the Olympic flame in the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games
President of the Russian Basketball Federation: 1993-1998
President of Ural Great Perm since August 2005
Dra?en DALIPAGIÄ
Born on 27th November 1951, in Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Nationality: Serbian
Height: 1.97 m
Position: Forward
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
Partizan Belgrade: 1971-1978 and 1979-1980 (military service: 1978-1979)
Venezia: 1980-1981
Partizan Belgrade: 1981-1982
Real Madrid: 1982-1983
Udine: 1983-1985
Venezia: 1985-1988
Verona: 1988-1989
Red Star Belgrade: 1990-1991
As a coach:
Gorizia (1992-1996), MZT Skopje (1997-1998) and Astra Banka Belgrade (2000-2001)
As a manager: Sports Manager of Red Star Belgrade (1998-1999), Team Manager of BC Atlas Belgrade (2003-2006) and Member of the Expert Council of the Serbian Basketball Federation (present)
Club Highlights:
Champion of the 1978 Korac Cup
Champion of the 1976 Yugoslavian League
National Team Highlights:
243 appearances with the Yugoslavian National Team between 1973 and 1986
Olympic Gold medalist in Moscow 1980
World Champion in Manila 1978
Olympic Silver medalist in Montreal 1976
Silver medalist in the 1974 World Championship in Puerto Rico
Olympic Bronze medalist in Los Angeles 1984
2 times Bronze medalist in World Championships: Colombia 1982 and Spain 1986
3 times European Champion: Barcelona 1973, Belgrade 1975 and Liege 1977
Silver medalist in the 1981 European Championship in Prague
Bronze medalist in the 1979 European Championship in Turin
Individual Highlights:
MVP and Top Scorer of the 1978 World Championship in Manila
European Player of the Year in 1977, 1978 and 1980
Best Sportsman of the Year 1978 in the former Yugoslavia
3 times Best Sportsman of Belgrade: 1976, 1977 and 1978
Almost perennial top scorer of all leagues and championships in which he took part, Dalipagic averaged over 30 points a game during most of his entire career (in 1981-1982 he averaged 43 points per game for Partizan Belgrade)
Ivo DANEU
Born on 6th October 1937, in Maribor, Slovenia
Nationality: Sloveninan
Height: 1.84 m
Position: Guard
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
Branik Maribor: 1949-1956
Olimpija Ljubljana: 1956-1970
As a coach: Olimpija Ljubljana (1970-1971) and Rudar Trbovlje (1976)
Club Highlights:
5 times Champion of the Yugoslavian League: 1957, 1959, 1961, 1966 and 1970
National Team Highlights:
209 appearances with the Yugoslavian National Team from 1956 to 1970: participated in 3 Olympic Games (Rome 1960, Tokyo 1964 and Mexico 1968) and 3 World Championships (Rio de Janeiro 1963, Montevideo 1967 and Ljubljana 1970)
World Champion in Ljubljana 1970
Olympic Silver medalist in Mexico 1968
2 times Silver medalist in World Championships: Rio de Janeiro 1963 and Montevideo 1967
3 times Silver medalist in European Championships: Belgrade 1961, Germany 1965 and Italy 1969
Bronze medalist in the 1963 European Championship in Wroclaw
Individual Highlights:
MVP of the 1967 World Championship in Montevideo
Best Sportsman of the Year 1967 in the former Yugoslavia
Ivo Daneu mastered the hook shot and used this unstoppable weapon to regularly score even from as far as the 6-7 meter range
Oscar FURLONG
Born on 22nd October 1927, in Buenos Aires, Argentina
Nationality: Argentinean
Height: 1.88 m
Position: Power forward/Center
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
Gimnasia y Esgrima de Villa del Parque: 1944-1956
Southern Methodist University (NCAA): 1953-1956
In 1957, the Argentinean military dictatorship sanctioned all the members of the 1950 World Champion team with the accusation that they had received "compensations and special treatments" from the government of Juan Domingo Per?n in 1950, a time when basketball had an amateur status. Such an unfair sanction, unanimously considered a "sports genocide", forced Furlong to retire when he was 29 years old. The sanction was only lifted in 1967. Too late for Furlong and most of his teammates?
Club Highlights:
6 times Champion of Buenos Aires (the Argentinean national championship was only created in 1984): 1945, 1946, 1947, 1948, 1951 and 1954
National Team Highlights:
50 appearances with the Argentinean National Team from 1947 to 1955: participated in 2 Olympic Games (London 1948 and Helsinki 1952) and in the Buenos Aires 1950 World Championship
World Champion in Buenos Aires 1950
Gold medalist in the World University Games of 1953 in Dortmund
2 times Silver medalist in the Pan American Games: Buenos Aires 1951 and Mexico City 1955
Individual Highlights:
After the 1948 London Games, Furlong received a formal offer to join the Minneapolis Lakers (NBA), but declined it. The Baltimore Bullets where not successful either
MVP and Top Scorer of the 1950 World Championship in Buenos Aires
Furlong introduced the jump-shot in Argentina after learning it during his three seasons in the Southern Methodist University (Division I, NCAA)
Nikos GALIS
Born on 23rd July 1957, in New Jersey, U.S.A.
Nationality: Greek
Height: 1.83 m
Position: Shooting guard
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
Seton Hall University (NCAA): 1975-1979
Aris Thessaloniki: 1979-1992
Panathinaikos: 1992-1995
Club Highlights:
8 times Champion of the Greek League: 1983, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990 and 1991
7 times Champion of the Greek Cup: 1985, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1992 and 1993
National Team Highlights:
European Champion in Athens 1987
Silver medalist in the 1989 European Championship in Zagreb
Individual Highlights:
Nikos Galis is one of the biggest scoring-machines in basketball's history: averaged over 30 points a game during his 16-year career in Europe (both in the national and continental club competitions); top scorer of the 1986 World Championship and in four of the five European Championships in which he took part; 3rd top scorer in the NCAA's 1978-1979 season (27.5 points per game)?
MVP of the 1987 European Championship in Athens
First torchbearer during the Olympic flame's final route at the 2004 Athens Olympic Games
Hortencia MARCARI
Born on 23rd September 1959, in Potirendaba, S?o Paulo, Brazil
Nationality: Brazilian
Height: 1.74 m
Position: Shooting guard
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
S?o Caetano Esporte Clube: 1973-1981
Associa??o Prudentina: 1982-1983
C.A Minercal: 1984-1990
C.A Constecca/Sedox: 1991
NCNB Ponte Preta: 1992-1993
ADC Seara: 1994-1996
Club Highlights:
3 times Champion of the Intercontinental Cup: 1991, 1993 and 1994
2 times Pan American Champion: 1994 and 1995
4 times South American Champion: 1983, 1984, 1993 and 1996
7 times Champion of the Brazilian Cup: 1984, 1987, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1994 and 1995
9 times Champion of the S?o Paulo League: 1982, 1983, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992 and 1993
National Team Highlights:
137 appearances with the Brazilian National Team, averaging 24.4 points per game: participated in 2 Olympic Games (Barcelona 1992 and Atlanta 1996) and in 5 World Championships (Seoul 1979, Brazil 1983, Moscow 1986, Malaysia 1990 and Australia 1994)
World Champion in Australia 1994 (averaging 27.6 points per game)
Olympic Silver medalist in Atlanta 1996
Gold medalist in the Pan American Games of Havana 1991
Silver medalist in the Pan American Games of Indianapolis 1987
Bronze medalist in the Pan American Games of Caracas 1983
4 times Gold medalist in the South American Championships: Bolivia 1978, Peru 1981, Brazil 1986 and Chile 1989
Individual Highlights:
Top scorer of the 1992 Barcelona Olympic Games (94 points in total/18.8 points per game)
Pierluigi MARZORATI
Born on 12th September 1952, in Figino Serenza (Como), Italy
Nationality: Italian
Height: 1.87 m
Position: Playmaker
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
Pallacanestro Cant?: 1969-1991
As an executive: Vice President of Pallacanestro Cant? (1991-1996)
Club Highlights:
2 times Champion of the European Cup for Men's Champion Clubs (current Euroleague): 1982 and 19831
4 times Champion of the European Cup Winner's Cup: 1977, 1978, 1979 and 1981
4 times Champion of the European Cup Radivoj Korac: 1973, 1974, 1975 and 199
2 times Champion of the Intercontinental Cup: 1975 and 1982
2 times Champion of the Italian League: 1975 and 1981
National Team Highlights:
278 appearances (all-time record) and 2,209 points with the Italian National Team: participated in 4 Olympic Games (Munich 1972, Montreal 1976, Moscow 1980 and Los Angeles 1984), 2 World Championships (Manila 1978 and Spain 1986) and 8 European Championships/EuroBaskets (1971, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1979, 1981, 1983 and 1985)
Olympic Silver medalist in Moscow 1980
European Champion in Nantes 1983
3 times Bronze medalist in European Championships: Germany 1971, Yugoslavia 1975 and Germany 1985
Individual Highlights:
Played an impressive number of 22 consecutive seasons (692 games) in the same club, Pallacanestro Cant?, scoring a total of 8,659 points
Pallacanestro Cant? retired his #14 jersey in 1991
On 8th October 2006, Marzorati started in Pallacanestro Cant?'s first game of the season (vs. Benetton Treviso) to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the club, thus becoming the first player in history to compete in official games in five different decades and, at age 54, the oldest player to have ever taken part in an official competition
Ann MEYERS
Born on 26th March 1955, in San Diego (California), U.S.A
Nationality: United States Citizen
Height: 1.75 m
Position: Guard
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
UCLA (Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women -AIAW-): 1974-1978
New Jersey Gems (Women's Professional Basketball League -WBL-): 1979-1980
Club Highlights:
1978 National Collegiate Champion
National Team Highlights:
World Champion in Seoul 1979
Olympic Silver medalist in Montreal 1976
Gold medalist in the Pan American Games of Mexico City 1975
Silver medalist in the Pan American Games of San Juan 1979
Silver medalist in the World University Games of 1977 in Sofia
Individual Highlights:
First woman ever to receive a full athletic scholarship from UCLA
4 times Kodak All-American: 1975, 1976, 1977 and 1978
1978 Broderick Award Winner (recognizing the best collegiate player in the U.S.A.)
Co-MVP and Top Scorer of the WBL in 1979-1980
Only woman ever to sign a free-agent contract with an NBA franchise (in September 1979, with the Indiana Pacers, but did not make the team and was released)
UCLA retired her #15 jersey on 3rd February 1990
Winner of the 2006 United States Sports Academy's (USSA) Ronald Reagan Media Award after over two and a half decades devoted to sports broadcasting and journalism
General Manager of the Phoenix Mercury (WNBA) and Vice President of the Phoenix Suns (NBA) since September 2006
Amaury PASOS
Born on 11th December 1935, in S?o Paulo, Brazil
Nationality: Brazilian
Height: 1.91 m
Position: Power Forward
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
Clube de Regatas Tiet?: 1949-1961
C. R. S?rio: 1962-1965
Corinthians: 1966-1972
Club Highlights:
2 times Champion of the Brazilian League: 1966 and 1969
3 times champion of the S?o Paulo League: 1966, 1968 and 1969
National Team Highlights:
96 appearances with the Brazilian National Team: participated in 3 Olympic Games (Melbourne 1956, Rome 1960 and Tokyo 1964) and in 4 World Championships (Rio de Janeiro 1954, Santiago de Chile 1959, Rio de Janeiro 1963 and Montevideo 1967)
2 times World Champion: Santiago de Chile 1959 and Rio de Janeiro 1963
Silver medalist in the Rio de Janeiro 1954 World Championship
2 times Olympic Bronze medalist: Rome 1960 and Tokyo 1964
Bronze medalist in the Montevideo 1967 World Championship
Silver medalist in the Pan American Games of S?o Paulo 1963
Bronze medalist in the Pan American Games of Mexico City 1955
Individual Highlights:
MVP of the 1959 World Championship in Santiago de Chile
Emiliano RODR?GUEZ
Born on 10th June 1937, in San Feliz de Tor?o (Le?n), Spain
Nationality: Spanish
Height: 1.91 m
Position: Forward
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
Aismalibar: 1958-1960
Real Madrid: 1960-1973
Club Highlights:
4 times Champion of the European Cup for Men's Champion Clubs (current Euroleague): 1964, 1965, 1967 and 1968
12 times Champion of the Spanish League: 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972 and 1973
9 times Champion of the Spanish Cup: 1961, 1962, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1970, 1971, 1972 and 1973
National Team Highlights:
175 consecutive appearances with the Spanish National Team: participated in 2 Olympic Games (Rome 1960 and Mexico 1968) and 7 European Championships/EuroBaskets (1959, 1961, 1963, 1965, 1967, 1969 and 1971)
Individual Highlights:
3 times Top Scorer of the Spanish League: 1959, 1963 and 1964
MVP of the 1963 Wroclaw European Championship/EuroBasket
1973 Fair Play Award from UNESCO
FIBA Order of Merit in 1997
Bill RUSSELL
Born on 12th February 1934, in Monroe (Louisiana), United States
Nationality: USA
Height: 2.13 m
Position: Center
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
University of San Francisco (NCAA): 1953-1956
Boston Celtics: 1956-1969
As a coach:
head coach and player of the Boston Celtics (1966-1969), head coach and general manager of the Seattle SuperSonics (1973-1977) and head coach of the Sacramento Kings (1987-1988)
Club Highlights:
2 times NCAA Champion: 1955 and 1956
11 times NBA Champion: 1957, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1968 and 1969
National Team Highlights:
Olympic Gold medalist in Melbourne 1956
Individual Highlights:
1955 NCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player
5 times MVP of the NBA: 1958, 1961, 1962, 1963 and 1965
Member of 3 All-NBA First Teams (1959, 1963 and 1965), 8 All-NBA Second Teams and of the 1969 NBA All-Defensive First Team
12 times NBA All-Star: 1958-1969
MVP of the 1963 NBA All-Star Game
2nd all-time leading rebounder in NBA history (21,620 rebounds in total/22.5 per game)
The Boston Celtics retired his #6 jersey on 12th March 1972
Named one of the 50 Greatest Players in NBA History in 1996
Uljana SEMJONOVA
Born on 9th March 1952, in Medumi (Daugavpils District), Latvia
Nationality: Latvian
Height: 2.13 m
Position: Center
Enshrined as a player in the FIBA Hall of Fame on 12th September 2007
Club:
TTT Riga: 1967-1987
Tintoretto (Spain): 1987-1988
Valenciennes Orchies (France): 1988-1989
Club Highlights:
11 times Champion of the European Cup for Women's Champions Clubs (current EuroLeague Women): 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1977, 1981 and 1982
Champion of the 1987 European Cup Liliana Ronchetti
15 times Champion of the USSR League: 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983 and 1984
National Team Highlights:
Played in the USSR Women's National Team for 18 straight years (1968-1986) in which her teams remained completely undefeated
2 times Olympic Gold medalist: Montreal 1976 and Moscow 1980
3 times World Champion: S?o Paulo 1971, Colombia 1975 and Brazil 1983
10 times in a row European Champion: Italy 1968, Netherlands 1970, Bulgaria 1972, Italy 1974, France 1976, Poland 1978, Yugoslavia 1980, Italy 1981, Hungary 1983 and Italy 1985
Individual Highlights:
Winningest player in the history of women's basketball
Named Latvia's Most Popular Athlete 12 times from 1970 to 1985
Chairwoman of the Latvian Olympian Social Foundation (an organization devoted to the support of sports veterans) since 1991
Respect and thanks for everything:
Alvertis, Bodiroga, Jasikevicius, Radja, Wilkins, Vrankovic, Fotsis, Rebraca, Kattash, Gentile, Koch, Middleton, Kutluay, Rogers, Papadopoulos, Becirovic, Tomasevic, Siskauskas, Pekovic, Lakovic, Vujanic, Chatzivrettas, Maljkovic, Spanoulis and many more to follow in the near future.