By Eurohoops team / info@eurohoops.net As Stankovic himself says, "They say there are two kinds of coaches: the ones that start building a team with a reliable point guard and the ones that build the team around a quality center. Normally, the coaches coming from the "Yugoslav School" tend to fall in the first group, while American coaches tend to like the big man better. Myself, as a "proper Yugoslav", I share the idea that in order for the team to work properly, you need a good playmaker who can also score when necessary. Taking a walk down memory lane, I came up with this list of 10 point guards that I liked the most, but I also think that some others deserve to, at least, be mentioned. I am talking about Juan Antonio Corbalan, Mike D'Antoni, Aldo Ossola, Nacho Solozabal, Rato Tvrdic, Jure Zdovc, Rafa Jofresa, David Rivers, Elmer Bennett and Tyus Edney. However, memory is something relative, because it can be influenced by factors like having seen one player more times than another, as in my case. Some of these playmakers are still active, and some others are accomplished coaches or sport directors, but all of them played a big role in the history of European basketball." 10. IVO DANEU (1937) The 'patriarch' of Slovenian basketball. He was the great captain of Olimpija Ljubljana and the Yugoslav national team during the sixties, also a world champ in 1970. He formed a great duo on the national team with Radivoj Korac, an unforgettable scorer, but many of those points came from Daneu's assists. He was a born leader, a fighter, an ideologist of the game and also a scorer if the team needed it. He was the great frustrated signing of Santiago Bernabeu, president of Real Madrid, after Daneu's great performance at the Madrid Final Four in 1967 with Olimpija. His son Jaka played in Olimpija and his grandson Jure is also playing there right now. 9. JOAN 'CHICHI' CREUS (1956) I can't vouch for Creus being a better player than Solozabal or Corbalan, but since it's a subjective choice, I choose him simply because of the length of his career and because of the fact that he managed to lead a team like TDK Manresa to the Spanish League title at more than 40 years old in 1998, and coming from sixth place in the league. He won two Spanish titles (the first with FC Barcelona in 1981), three Spanish King's Cups (Barcelona 1981 and 1982 and Manresa 1996), the last of which he secured with a three-pointer on the buzzer over Barcelona, 94-92. He also won a silver medal with the Spanish national team in the 1983 EuroBasket. 8. ZORAN 'MOKA' SLAVNIC (1949) He made his debut with the Yugoslav national team at 24 years old for the 1973 EuroBasket, and he would become the starting point guard in the team for the following 10 years. That team would go on to win three EuroBaskets, the World Championship, the Olympic gold and also an Olympic silver. He also formed a great duo with shooting guard Dragan Kicanovic. His game was fun, imaginative and unpredictable. He was also a Yugoslav champ with Crvena Zvezda and also a Spanish champ with Joventut. He also played in Italy, in Sibenik as a player-coach, where he gave a chance to some young kid named Drazen Petrovic at 15 years old. A great fighter, motivator and joker. A true champ. 7. PANAGIOTIS GIANNAKIS (1959) Like in the cases of Daneu-Korac or Slavnic-Kicanovic, the name of Panagiotis Giannakis will forever be put together with that of Nikos Galis. They played together for Aris Thessaloniki and the Greek national team, but before being teammates they were opponents and protagonists of a historic game which Ionikos took from Aris by 114-113 with 73 points by Giannakis and 62 by Galis... At heart, Giannakis was a point guard for the team. He dished assists and also was the brains on court if others were scoring. But if points were lacking, he stepped up in that aspect, too. After three failed attempts with Aris, he finally won the EuroLeague with Panathinaikos in 1996. 6. THEODOROS PAPALOUKAS (1977) An example of how talent, hard work and patience can become a successful combination. Papaloukas started in humble Abelokipi and then moved on to the not-so-much-bigger Dafni. After that, Panionios was a big step forward, and then Olympiacos would be the confirmation of his talent and progression. CSKA Moscow would become the summit of his career and the club with which he won two EuroLeague titles; in 2006, as Final Four MVP, and again in 2008. In between, in 2007, he was the EuroLeague MVP despite coming off the bench for years, a first in the competition. Still today, he ranks second all-time in steals (335 in 252 games) and fourth in assists (977) in the EuroLeague. In other words, he was a life insurance for his coaches and teammates. 5. MILOS TEODOSIC (1987) The other 'Teo' is probably the most attractive EuroLeague player of the last years and arguably the best passer in the world. His passes "have eyes" and always find the impossible spaces. His game proves that basketball is a game of imagination. Teodosic is also a great shooter as his three-point accuracy in 237 EuroLeague games is 37.6% However, his main thing is organizing the team, attractive play and having fun on the court. After four years in Olympiacos and six in CSKA, making the Final Four almost constantly, he became a EuroLeague champion in 2016. He currently ranks second all-time in three-pointers made (471) and third in assists (1,126). But what every fan loves most is to watch this magician at work, to see what he conjures up next. 4. DIMITRIS DIAMANTIDIS (1980) The fact that he is the player with the most assists (1,255 in 278 games) and steals (434) in in EuroLeague history says it all about how Diamantidis dominated both ends of the floor like few, if any, point guards in basketball history. Diamantidis was a natural leader and also the complete package: a great organizer, a great shooter and the best defender in the league, as voted by EuroLeague coaches six times! He was also the EuroLeague MVP in 2011 and the Final Four MVP in 2007 and 2011. He was the undisputed leader of the Panathinaikos team that won the EuroLeague in 2007, 2009 and 2011. As a two-way player on the ball, either in his hands or his opponent's, he was unmatched. 3. VASSILIS SPANOULIS (1982) Diamantidis and Spanoulis were teammates in Panathinaikos for four seasons, after which Kill Bill (Spanoulis's nickname) has been the undisputed leader at Olympiacos Piraeus for last six, including EuroLeague title runs in 2012 and 2013. A charismatic, decisive and leading player who makes his teammates play better, Spanoulis collects individual accolades thanks to his efficient and attractive basketball. Perhaps no player in recent memory has had a greater ability to take over big games at the end, especially if his team is behind, than Spanoulis. It's hard to decide whether he's a better passer, shooter or scorer, but he is an all-time great player for sure. One of the EuroLeague icons. 2. ALEKSANDAR DJORDJEVIC (1967) The man of "the last shot". With his talent, technique and winning character, his shot and his ambition he earned the right to have the last shot in his hands. A shot that gave big wins to his teams, be it clubs or the national team. As many in this Top 10, he was a scoring playmaker, but who also excelled at organizing his team and passing the ball. His three won a EuroLeague title for Partizan in 1992 and after that he played in several big teams in Europe: Milan, Bologna, Barcelona, Madrid... He left a major mark on all of them. 1. SARUNAS JASIKEVICIUS (1976) One of the best representatives of the Lithuanian school, the country of basketball. A natural born talent, one of those players who makes his teams and teammates better. To his native talent he added his American experience at Solanco High School and Maryland University. However, his potential flourished in 1999, when he signed for Olimpija Ljubljana. After a good season there, he signed for FC Barcelona. There, Jasikevicius exploded and led the team to its first EuroLeague title in 2003. He repeated twice more with Maccabi Tel Aviv in 2004 and 2005. And years later, he won his fourth crown with Panathinaikos in 2009. Organizer, passer, scorer and winner. There was little that "Saras" didn't do on a basketball court, and he did it all with a competitive flair that was second to none. He was an artist between the hoops.