- Miles Simon
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Miles Julian Simon (born November 21, 1975 in Stockholm, Sweden) is a retired American professional basketball player.
Simon was born in Stockholm to an American father and a Norwegian mother.[1] He played guard for the University of Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team,[2] where he formed a formidable backcourt duo with current Miami Heat point guard Mike Bibby. He won the Most Outstanding Player award in the 1997 NCAA Tournament in which Arizona defeated the University of Kentucky in overtime to win the national championship.[3]
After college, Simon played briefly with the Orlando Magic of the NBA.[2] He played for two seasons for the Dakota Wizards of the CBA, whom he led to a CBA championship in 2002.[2] Simon earned enough awards and honors in 2001–2002 to make him the most decorated player in CBA history. He received honors as Player of the Week four times. He was named the CBA Newcomer of the Year, the CBA MVP, and the Playoff MVP.[2] He also holds the CBA record for most free throws made in a row at 60.
In 2005, Simon was announced as an assistant coach under his collegiate head coach Lute Olson at his alma mater and served until May 2008,[2] when it was announced by the Arizona athletics department that his coaching contract would not be renewed.[4]
Simon is employed with ESPN as an analyst for the 2010-2011 college basketball season.
Team affiliations
Season Team Country Notes 1994–1998 Arizona Wildcats (NCAA) 1998–1999 Orlando Magic 2000–2001 Maccabi Raanana 2001 Mabo Livorno 2001–2002 Dakota Wizards 2002 Metis Varese 2002–2003 Seattle SuperSonics (pre-season) 2002–2003 Dakota Wizards 2004 Tuborg Pilsener 2005–2008 Arizona Wildcats (assistant coach) United States References
- ^ Detroit’s Mr. Do-It-All. SLAM Online. Retrieved on December 16, 2009.
- ^ a b c d e "Miles Simon: Assistant Coach". arizonaathletics.com. 2006-08-17. Archived from the original on October 27, 2007. http://web.archive.org/web/20071027071952/http://www.arizonaathletics.com/m-basketball/coachbio.aspx?id=1482. Retrieved 2008-05-10.
- ^ "Final Four Most Outstanding Players". cbs.sportsline.com. http://www.sportsline.com/collegebasketball/mayhem/history/outstandingplayer. Retrieved 2008-05-10.
- ^ Rivera, Steve (2008-05-02). "Simon out as UA hoops assistant". Tucson Citizen. http://www.azcentral.com/sports/ua/articles/2008/05/02/20080502simon-ON.html. Retrieved 2008-05-10.
Arizona Wildcats Men's Basketball 1996–97 NCAA Champions 10 Mike Bibby | 12 Josh Pastner | 13 Donnell Harris | 21 Bennett Davison | 23 Michael Dickerson | 31 Jason Terry | 33 Eugene Edgerson | 34 Miles Simon (MOP) | 42 A. J. Bramlett
Coach Lute Olson
Assistant Coaches: Jessie Evans | Phil L. JohnsonNCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament Most Outstanding Player 1939: Hull | 1940: Huffman | 1941: Kotz | 1942: Dallmar | 1943: Sailors | 1944: Ferrin | 1945: Kurland | 1946: Kurland | 1947: Kaftan | 1948: Groza | 1949: Groza | 1950: Dambrot | 1951: Spivey | 1952: Lovellette | 1953: Born | 1954: Gola | 1955: Russell | 1956: Lear | 1957: Chamberlain | 1958: Baylor | 1959: West | 1960: Lucas | 1961: Lucas | 1962: Hogue | 1963: Heyman | 1964: Hazzard | 1965: Bradley | 1966: Chambers | 1967: Alcindor | 1968: Alcindor | 1969: Alcindor | 1970: Wicks | 1971: Porter * | 1972: Walton | 1973: Walton | 1974: Thompson | 1975: Washington | 1976: Benson | 1977: Lee | 1978: Givens | 1979: Johnson | 1980: Griffith | 1981: Thomas | 1982: Worthy | 1983: Olajuwon | 1984: Ewing | 1985: Pinckney | 1986: Ellison | 1987: Smart | 1988: Manning | 1989: Rice | 1990: Hunt | 1991: Laettner | 1992: Hurley | 1993: Williams | 1994: Williamson | 1995: O'Bannon | 1996: Delk | 1997: Simon | 1998: Sheppard | 1999: Hamilton | 2000: Cleaves | 2001: Battier | 2002: Dixon | 2003: Anthony | 2004: Okafor | 2005: May | 2006: Noah | 2007: Brewer | 2008: Chalmers | 2009: Ellington | 2010: Singler | 2011: Walker
*Ruled ineligible after tournament1998 NCAA Men's Basketball Consensus All-Americans First Team
Mike Bibby • Antawn Jamison • Raef LaFrentz • Paul Pierce • Miles SimonSecond Team
Vince Carter • Mateen Cleaves • Pat Garrity • Richard Hamilton • Ansu Sesay1998 NBA Draft First round Michael Olowokandi · Mike Bibby · Raef LaFrentz · Antawn Jamison · Vince Carter · Robert Traylor · Jason Williams · Larry Hughes · Dirk Nowitzki · Paul Pierce · Bonzi Wells · Michael Doleac · Keon Clark · Michael Dickerson · Matt Harpring · Bryce Drew · Radoslav Nesterović · Mirsad Türkcan · Pat Garrity · Roshown McLeod · Ricky Davis · Brian Skinner · Tyronn Lue · Felipe López · Al Harrington · Sam Jacobson · Vladimir Stepania · Corey Benjamin · Nazr MohammedSecond round Ansu Sesay · Ruben Patterson · Rashard Lewis · Jelani McCoy · Shammond Williams · Bruno Šundov · Jerome James · Casey Shaw · DeMarco Johnson · Rafer Alston · Korleone Young · Cuttino Mobley · Miles Simon · Jahidi White · Sean Marks · Toby Bailey · Andrae Patterson · Tyson Wheeler · Ryan Stack · Cory Carr · Andrew Betts · Corey Brewer · Derrick Dial · Greg Buckner · Tremaine Fowlkes · Ryan Bowen · J. R. Henderson · Torraye Braggs · Maceo BastonCategories:- 1975 births
- Living people
- African American basketball players
- American expatriate basketball people in Israel
- American expatriate basketball people in Italy
- American expatriate basketball people in Turkey
- Arizona Wildcats men's basketball coaches
- Arizona Wildcats men's basketball players
- College basketball announcers in the United States
- Dakota Wizards (CBA) players
- Israeli Basketball Super League players
- Maccabi Ra'anana players
- Orlando Magic draft picks
- Orlando Magic players
- People from Stockholm
- Point guards
- American basketball biography, 1970s birth stubs
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