- Dino Rađa
-
The title of this article contains the character đ. Where it is unavailable or not desired, the name may be represented as Dino Radja.
Dino Rađa No. 40, 14 Power forward / Center Personal information Date of birth April 24, 1967 Place of birth Split, SR Croatia, SFR Yugoslavia Nationality Croatian Listed height 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m) Listed weight 225 lb (102 kg) Career information NBA Draft 1989 / Round: 2 / Pick: 40th overall Selected by the Boston Celtics Pro career 1985–2003 Career history 1985–1990 KK Split (Yugoslavia) 1990–1993 Il Messaggero / Virtus Roma (Italy) 1993–1997 Boston Celtics 1997–1999 Panathinaikos (Greece) 1999–2000 KK Zadar (Croatia) 2000–2001 Olympiacos (Greece) 2001–2002 KK Cibona (Croatia) 2002–2003 KK Split (Croatia) Career highlights and awards - NBA All-Rookie Second Team (1990)
- Euroleague Final Four MVP (1989)
Career NBA statistics Points 3,733 Rebounds 1,883 Stats at NBA.com Stats at Basketball-Reference.com MedalsMen's Basketball Silver 1988 Seoul Yugoslavia Silver 1992 Barcelona Croatia World Championships Bronze 1994 Canada Croatia European Championships Gold 1989 Yugoslavia Yugoslavia Gold 1991 Italy Yugoslavia Bronze 1987 Greece Yugoslavia Bronze 1993 Germany Croatia Bronze 1995 Greece Croatia Dino Rađa, transcribed in English as Dino Radja (born April 24, 1967, in Split, SR Croatia, SFR Yugoslavia), is a retired Croatian basketball player. He was a member of the Jugoplastika (now named KK Split) team of the late 1980s and early 1990s, which he helped in winning two European Championship titles. In the United States he is best known for the three and a half seasons spent with the Boston Celtics of the NBA. Dino Rađa is currently the president of his first professional team KK Split.
Contents
Split
Rađa began his basketball life in his native town, as a junior at KK Dalvin. From there he went on to KK Split to polish his professional career. He marvelled with Jugoplastika and POP 84 (two most notable sponsorships borne by KK Split), as he and his friend Toni Kukoč led the team to the pinnacle of European club basketball twice in a row (1989 and 1990). Rađa would not stay in Split for a historic three-peat the club achieved, led by Kukoč, the following year, but would instead leave for Italy; although he was drafted by the Boston Celtics in the 1989 NBA Draft, in 1990 he signed for Virtus Roma, where he spent the next three years.
Rome
Rađa averaged 18.1 points in his first season with Il Messaggero (Virtus Roma enjoyed sponsorship from that popular Roman newspaper at the time). European sports journalists voted him the second best European player that season, shadowed only by his former teammate and friend Kukoč. He improved his scoring average each of the next two seasons with the Roman club, averaging 20.2 and 21.5 points, respectively. In 1992 he led Virtus to a Korać Cup title.
Boston
He joined the Celtics in 1993. In his first season Radja averaged 15.1 points and 7.2 rebounds, earning All-NBA Rookie Second Team honors, along with Kukoč, at that time a rookie with the Chicago Bulls. He spent three successful years with the Celtics, averaging 16.7 points and 8.4 rebounds. In 1997 a trade that was to send Radja to the Philadelphia 76ers for Clarence Weatherspoon fell through when he failed his physical on June 24, 1997.
Return to Europe
He returned to Europe in 1997, joining Panathinaikos BC. He spent two years there, winning two Greek Championships, but returned in 1999 to his native Croatia to play for KK Zadar. He left Panathinaikos because of an encounter with the club president's son in the locker room after the game. The president's son allegedly cursed at Dino, but at that time Dino didn't know that the person he argued with was the son of the club president.[1]
In 2000 he returned to Greece, joining Panathinaikos' long-time rivals, Olympiacos BC, in an unsuccessful attempt to regain the Greek Championship.
He returned, once again, to Croatia, joining KK Cibona for the 2001-2002 season. Radja finished his career in 2003, winning the Croatian championship with his first team, KK Split.
National teams
Radja was on the Yugoslavian team that won the silver medal in the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul. He was also a part of golden Yugoslavian teams at the 1987 FIBA Junior World Championship[2] in Bormio, Italy, 1989 Eurobasket in Zagreb, and the 1991 Eurobasket in Rome.
Following Croatian independence, Radja became an important part of the Croatian national basketball team, most notably at the 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona, where Croatia won the silver medal. Radja was also on the Croatian teams that won the bronze at the 1993 Eurobasket in Germany, 1994 World Championship in Toronto and the 1995 Eurobasket in Athens.
Notes
- ^ http://www.blog.hr/print/id/1623177546/dezbjego-show-slobodan-subotic.html (Croatian)
- ^ Since split into separate under-19 and under-21 events.
External links
- Fibaeurope.com Profile
- Dino Rađa Statistics at Basketball-Reference.com
- Career basketpedya.com
Euroleague's 50 Greatest Contributors List Players
Fragiskos Alvertis • Sergei Belov • Miki Berkovich • Dejan Bodiroga • Wayne Brabender • Juan Antonio Corbalan • Krešimir Ćosić • Mike D'Antoni • Dražen Dalipagić • Predrag Danilović • Mirza Delibašić • Vlade Divac • Aleksandar Đorđević • Nikos Galis • Manu Ginóbili • Saras Jasikevičius • Radivoj Korać • Toni Kukoč • Clifford Luyk • Pierluigi Marzorati • Bob McAdoo • Dino Meneghin • Bob Morse • Aldo Ossola • Theo Papaloukas • Anthony Parker • Dražen Petrović • Dino Rađa • Manolo Raga • Antonello Riva • Emiliano Rodríguez • Arvydas Sabonis • J.A. San Epifanio • Walter Szczerbiak • Panagiotis Yannakis
Coaches
Pedro Ferrándiz • Pini Gershon • Alexandar Gomelskiy • Dušan Ivković • Božidar Maljković • Ettore Messina • Aca Nikolić • Željko Obradović • Dan Peterson • Lolo Sainz
Referees
Artenik Aradabjian • Mikhail Davidov • Lubomir Kotleba • Yvan Mainini • Costas RigasEuroleague Final Four MVP Award 1988: McAdoo | 1989: Rađa | 1990: Kukoč | 1991: Kukoč | 1992: Danilović | 1993: Kukoč | 1994: Paspalj | 1995: Sabonis | 1996: Wilkins | 1997: Rivers | 1998: Savić | 1999: Edney | 2000: Rebrača | 2001: McDonald & Ginóbili | 2002: Bodiroga | 2003: Bodiroga | 2004: Parker | 2005: Jasikevičius | 2006: Papaloukas | 2007: Diamantidis | 2008: Langdon | 2009: Spanoulis | 2010: Navarro | 2011: Diamantidis1989 NBA Draft First round Pervis Ellison · Danny Ferry · Sean Elliott · Glen Rice · J. R. Reid · Stacey King · George McCloud · Randy White · Tom Hammonds · Pooh Richardson · Nick Anderson · Mookie Blaylock · Michael Smith · Tim Hardaway · Todd Lichti · Dana Barros · Shawn Kemp · B. J. Armstrong · Kenny Payne · Jeff Sanders · Blue Edwards · Byron Irvin · Roy Marble · Anthony Cook · John Morton · Vlade Divac · Kenny BattleSecond round Sherman Douglas · Dyron Nix · Frank Kornet · Jeff Martin · Stanley Brundy · Jay Edwards · Gary Leonard · Pat Durham · Clifford Robinson · Michael Ansley · Doug West · Ed Horton · Dino Rađa · Doug Roth · Michael Cutright · Chucky Brown · Reggie Cross · Scott Haffner · Ricky Blanton · Reggie Turner · Junie Lewis · Haywoode Workman · Brian Quinnett · Mike Morrison · Greg Grant · Jeff Hodge · Toney Mack1988 Olympic Silver Medalists Men's Basketball – Yugoslavia 1992 Olympic Silver Medalists Men's Basketball – Croatia Croatia squad – 1994 FIBA World Championship – Bronze medal 4 J. Vranković | 5 Gregov | 6 Komazec | 7 Kukoč | 8 Alanović | 9 Žurić | 10 Pejčinović | 11 S. Vranković | 12 Cvjetičanin | 13 Jurić | 14 Rađa | 15 Mršić | Coach: ĐerđaCategories:- 1967 births
- Living people
- Yugoslav basketball players
- Croatian basketball players
- Croatian expatriate basketball people in the United States
- Expatriate basketball people in Italy
- Expatriates in Greece
- Olympic basketball players of Croatia
- Olympic basketball players of Yugoslavia
- Basketball players at the 1988 Summer Olympics
- Basketball players at the 1992 Summer Olympics
- Olympic silver medalists for Croatia
- Olympic silver medalists for Yugoslavia
- Boston Celtics draft picks
- Boston Celtics players
- KK Cibona players
- KK Split players
- KK Zadar players
- Olympiacos B.C. players
- Panathinaikos BC players
- Pallacanestro Virtus Roma players
- People from Split
- Power forwards (basketball)
- Eurobasket-winning players
- Olympic medalists in basketball
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.