Top 10 European Basketball centers

26/Jun/17 21:10 June 26, 2017

Antonis Stroggylakis

26/Jun/17 21:10

Eurohoops.net

Veteran journalist Vladimir Stankovic had a difficult task but managed to compile his personal list of the Top 10 centers in the history of European basketball.

By Eurohoops team/ info@eurohoops.net

Here’s the article on the Top 10 Centers, presented by EuroLeague.net:

I must admit, this has been the hardest list to put together. Before I cut it down to 10 names, I had to go through many championships, games and names, adding and then subtracting candidates, looking for criteria… Eventually, I had to settle on 10, but I think the short list had about 20 more names. But as some coach said about impossible missions, “You cannot put a liter and a half inside a one-liter bottle.” Some big names are not included just because their presence at club level in Europe was limited, such as Marc Gasol and Rick Smits. Others are not here because they won most of their titles with national teams, like Trajko Rajkovic, Vinko Jelovac, Ratko Radovanovic, Stojko Vrankovic , Zeljko Jerkov and Zeljko Rebraca for Yugoslavia, or Panagiotis Fasoulas of Greece or Alzhan Zarmuhamedov and Vladimir Andreeev from the Soviet Union.

Atanas Golomeev of Bulgaria was the top scorer in the 1973 and 1975 EuroBaskets with more than 22 points per game, but his team never won anything. Jiri Zidek Sr. came closer and won medals in the late 1960s, when he was the pillar of great club and national teams in Czechoslovakia. The likes of Fabricio Oberto, Erazem Lorbek, Dejan Tomasevic, Nenad Krstic and Rudy Gobert nearly made the list, and I also kept out Aleksandar Belov, the author of the infamous Olympics gold-medal winning basket in Munich in 1972. So these are the remaining 10. Oh, by the way, the list is not necessarily in order, and again, it’s my opinion only!

10. NIKOLA VUJCIC (1978)

Arguably the most versatile big man this century, Vujcic helped Maccabi Tel Aviv reach the top again. Together they made three consecutive EuroLeague championship games and won the first two of them, in 2004 and 2005. That made Maccabi the only back-to-back EuroLeague champ between 1991 and 2013. Vujcic made it to another EuroLeague final with Olympiacos Piraeus in 2010 and also played for his hometown team, Split, as well as ASVEL Lyon-Villeurbanne and Efes Pilsen Istanbul. He was voted to the All-EuroLeague Team five times, including three consecutive first-team appearances from 2005 to 2007, and authored the competition’s only two triple-doubles to date. He is also the only EuroLeague player to collect at least 2,000 career points (2,444), 1,000 rebounds (1,037) and 500 assists (524).

9. DINO RADJA (1967)

The great Jugoplastika center, Radja was a continental club champion in 1989 and 1990. He was also a member of the Yugoslav national team that was the European gold medalist in 1989 and 1991. He was an Olympic finalist in 1988 with Yugoslavia and in 1992 with Croatia. He was also a junior world champion with Yugoslavia in 1987. He stood 2.10 meters and had great technique. He was also smart and passed the ball well. Before the breakup of the former Yugoslavia, he formed a killer duo with Vlade Divac on the national team as the power forward. In the NBA, he played four good seasons in Boston, where he averaged 16.7 points and 8.4 rebounds in 224 games.

8. JANIS KRUMINS (1930-1994)

Latvian by birth, he was the first giant of European basketball. At 2.18 meters tall, Krumins was a determinant factor in ASK Riga’s three straight titles in the first three editions of the top continental competition, from 1958 to 1960. He also led the USSR team to a trio of EuroBasket gold medals (1959, 1961 and 1963) and three Olympic silvers (1956, 1960 and 1964). He was a bit clumsy, but his height, strength and rebounding more than made up for that.

7. VLADIMIR TKACHENKO (1957)

Another Soviet giant, the heir of Krumins in the 1980s stood even taller, 2.21 meters. Tkachenko was slow, but also strong and dominant. He was a European champ with the USSR three times – in 1979, 1981 and 1985 – and a finalist twice (1977, 1987). He was also a world champion in 1982, runner-up in 1978 and 1986, and also won Olympic bronzes in 1976 and 1980. He started playing in Stroitel Kiyv, but his best moments at the club level were with CSKA Moscow. His duels with Arvydas Sabonis of Zalgiris Kaunas are legendary. Coach Evgeniy Gomelskiy was known to put hours and hours of work in with Tkachenko to improve his individual technique and it paid off.

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