10 Unforgettable Kill Bill Moments

27/Jun/21 13:47 June 27, 2021

Antonis Stroggylakis

27/Jun/21 13:47

Eurohoops.net

Out of a career packed with a ton of highlights, we chose some that have defined Vassilis Spanoulis’ huge legacy.

By Antonis Stroggylakis / info@eurohoops.net

EuroLeague legend Vassilis Spanoulis isn’t an active player anymore since he announced his retirement Saturday (26/6). The news produced a shockwave of reactions in the basketball world with numerous stars bidding their farewell to the Greek superstar and praising his career and impact on hoops.

Even long before decided hang his shoes for good, Spanoulis had become a myth of a player for every imaginable reason. He inspired (and still does) generations of players, influenced careers, became an example and a beacon for the people he shared a locker room with and the ones who faced him as an opponent.

Then there was the huge collection of team titles, individual trophies and historic achievements but also the highlights. The game-winners, the buzzer beaters, the dribbling wizardries, the beautiful passes.

Here are Top 10 Kill Bill moments out of the many he produced throughout his career . In a chronological order because honestly, it’s unfair to rate some of those.

1. The crunch-time bucket vs. Team USA in the 2006 World Cup semifinal

Against all odds and predictions, Greece wasn’t just competitive against Team USA in the 2006 World Cup semifinal but in complete control during the second half and even up by 14 at some point. Yet the miracle was far from its completion, since no lead was safe against LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Carmelo Anthony and company.

With two minutes left in the game and the score 91 – 86, Spanoulis took advantage of the space that Sofoklis Schortsanitis created for him and fired a big-time triple to put Greece up by eight. Three of the most important points out of the team-high 22 he scored overall in one of the most stunning results in the history of national team competitions.

2. Dropping Zoran Planinic to the ground and hitting the game-winner

Two stunning highlights in the package of one. It was Game 2 of the Second Round of the 2007 EuroBasket and against Croatia where Greece was looking to bounce back from an ugly performance and a loss to Spain. With five seconds before the end and the score tied, Spanoulis received the inbounds pass, crossed the court, made Zoran Planinic lose his footing and fall on the floor and then buried the buzzer-beater from way deep.

No wonder that FIBA decided to use this play to bid its farewell to Spanoulis via its social media channels.

3. Panathinaikos‘ last basket in the 2009 championship game

Panathinaikos had a 20-point lead at halftime of the 2009 EuroLeague Final against CSKA Moscow after putting on a clinic of an offensive game in the first 20 minutes. The “Army Men” were the defending champions though and showed that they wouldn’t go down that easily. They steadily began chewing bits and pieces of this deficit to approach by five with three minutes remaining.

Spanoulis had scored 10 points in the first half but was unable to find his way to the basket after the break. His first and only bucket came at a key moment, when he pulled from beyond the arc for the 68 – 60 to give the Greens some much needed breathing room.

Panathinaikos ended up winning the fifth EuroLeague title in the history of the club and Spanoulis his first Final Four MVP. It wouldn’t be his last.

4. The clutch 3-pointer against Turkey in the 2009 EuroBasket

This was the second of Spanoulis’ two 3-pointers in the overtime of an intense quarterfinal game between Greece and Turkey in the EuroBasket 2009 and the one that mattered the most. It was a bomb from way downtown for a crucial six-point lead with 76 seconds to play that further pushed back Turkey’s attempts to go up.

The final tally for Spanoulis in this match was 23 points and seven assists. While he had played much bigger games before with the jersey of his national team, now he was handling an unprecedented challenge since he was the indisputable leader of the squad in light of a first-time absence of both Theo Papaloukas and Dimitris Diamantidis. Greece went on to win the bronze medal for the first time ever and “Kill Bill” was named to the All-Tournament team.

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