- Mengke Bateer
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Mengke Bateer No. 9 Xinjiang Flying Tigers Center Personal information Date of birth November 20, 1975 Place of birth Hanggin Banner, Inner Mongolia Nationality Chinese Listed height 6 ft 10 3⁄4 in (2.10 m) Listed weight 290 lb (132 kg) Career information Pro career 1997–present League Chinese Basketball Association Career history - Beijing Ducks (China) (1997–2002, 2005–2007)
- Denver Nuggets (2002)
- San Antonio Spurs (2002–2003)
- Toronto Raptors (2003–2004)
- Huntsville Flight (2004–2005)
- Xinjiang Flying Tigers (China) (2007–present)
Career highlights and awards - 1× NBA Champion (2003)
MedalsMen’s Basketball Competitor for People's Republic of China Summer Universiade Silver 2001 Beijing Team competition Mengke Bateer Chinese name Traditional Chinese 孟克·巴特爾 Simplified Chinese 孟克·巴特尔 Transcriptions Mandarin - Hanyu Pinyin Mèngkè Bātèěr - Wade–Giles Meng4k'o4 Pa1t'e4erh3 Cantonese (Yue) - Jyutping Maang6 hak1 Baa1 dak6 ji5 - Yale Romanization Meng4 ke4 Ba1 te4 er3 Mongolian name Mongolian Мөнхийн Баатар
Mönkhiin BaatarMengke Bateer or Menk Batere (Mongolian: Мөнхбаатар; Mönkhbaatar, simplified Chinese: 孟克·巴特尔; traditional Chinese: 孟克·巴特爾; pinyin: Mèngkè Bātè'ěr; born November 20, 1975), commonly referred to simply as Bateer, is a Chinese professional basketball player, formerly in the NBA. He currently plays center for Xinjiang Guanghui.
Bateer is an ethnic minority from China's Inner Mongolia region. Like many other ethnic Mongols, he does not have a family name, and his full name is a composition of two words: Mönkh (Eternal) and Baatar (Hero). In China, he is only referred to as "Ba Te Er" in the country's tradition. In China, Bateer is sometimes affectionately called "Da Ba"(大巴).
At 2m11cm (6'11") [1] and 140 kg (309 lbs.),[2] Bateer is a strong center who is an accomplished screen-setter and passer (having dished out 6 assists in one NBA game, on March 30, 2002, against the Chicago Bulls). However, he is severely hindered by his lack of speed.
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Basketball career
As a member of the Beijing Ducks, Bateer made his debut for China's basketball team in the 1994 Asian Games, aged 19. Three years later, although a regular fixture, he was cut from the team after "disciplinary problems". A filial son, Bateer had several times in his career attempted to voluntarily leave his teams to be back in his hometown with his family.
In 1999, while training with the national team, Bateer was invited to play in a pre-draft tournament held in Phoenix, where he suffered from jet lag and did not impress. He also made a short appearance in another pre-draft venue, in Treviso, Italy.
In October 2001, Bateer joined the Denver Nuggets in the side's preseason training camp. He was cut after 2 preseason games, but in April, already deep into the season, he would join the team again, as the Nuggets were in desperate need of a big man after trading Raef LaFrentz.
Bateer played the remaining 25 games, averaging 5.5 points while battling foul problems. Because of the shortage of the big men on the Nuggets, he ended up starting 10 out of those games, and became the first Chinese player to ever start an NBA game, as the first to join the competition, Wang Zhizhi, never started while with the Dallas Mavericks.
In the summer of 2002, Bateer was traded to the Detroit Pistons with Don Reid, for Rodney White and a future first-round pick. However, after an impressive showing against Team USA in the 2002 World Championships in Indianapolis, where he scored 19 (also leading China in scoring 5 out of 7 games in the tournament), for a team that already included recently drafted Yao Ming, American assistant coach Gregg Popovich, of the San Antonio Spurs, decided to take a chance at Bateer and dealt for him for a second-round pick. Internationally, the trio of 7'1" Wang Zhizhi, 7' 6" Yao Ming and Bateer were known as the "Walking Great Wall".
Although playing occasionally, Bateer was a member of the Spurs' 2002–03 championship team. The following season, he signed as a free agent with the Toronto Raptors. He was later traded by the Raptors to the Orlando Magic who would waive him just 3 days later. In October 2004, the New York Knicks signed Bateer as a training camp invite. He was waived prior to the start of the 2004-05 NBA season.
After being waived by the Knicks, Bateer played for the Huntsville Flight of the National Basketball Development League for a while. He rejoined the Ducks, in the Chinese Basketball Association, in mid-February 2005, a couple of weeks before the end of the 2004–05 regular season, also being named MVP of the 2005 All-Star Game.
After carrying the Ducks team to a franchise-best CBA North Division title while averaging 25 points, 11 rebounds and 5 assists, Bateer failed to receive the season's MVP due to a rule forbidding suspended players from any awards (in mid-season, he received the heaviest fine in the competition's history for arguing with a referee and sat out two games as a result). Bateer played for the team until the end of 2006–07, being traded to fellow league team Xinjiang Guanghui.
Bateer has ventured into acting in recent years.
Filmography
Year English Title Original Title Role Notes 2005 The Blue Xanadu 蔚藍色的杭蓋 Yela 2009 Bodyguards and Assassins 十月圍城 Wang Fuming 2010 Here Comes Fortune 財神到 Gong hitter cameo References
External links
- Mengke Bateer historical page at NBA.com
- NBA D-League Bio
- BasketballReference.com NBA Stats
- Beijing Ducks Player Profile
- Basketpedya.com Profile
China squad – 2000 Summer Olympics – 10th place China squad – 2004 Summer Olympics – 8th place San Antonio Spurs 2002–03 NBA Champions 3 Stephen Jackson | 8 Steve Smith | 9 Tony Parker | 10 Speedy Claxton | 12 Bruce Bowen | 20 Manu Ginóbili | 21 Tim Duncan (Finals MVP) | 25 Steve Kerr | 31 Malik Rose | 34 Mengke Bateer | 35 Danny Ferry | 42 Kevin Willis | 50 David Robinson
Head coach Gregg Popovich
Assistant coaches P. J. Carlesimo | Mike Brown | Mike Budenholzer | Joe PruntyCategories:- 1975 births
- Living people
- Basketball players at the 2004 Summer Olympics
- Beijing Ducks players
- Centers (basketball)
- Chinese film actors
- Chinese basketball players
- Chinese expatriate basketball people in the United States
- Chinese expatriates in Canada
- Denver Nuggets players
- Expatriate sportspeople in Canada
- Olympic basketball players of China
- People from Ordos
- San Antonio Spurs players
- Toronto Raptors players
- Undrafted National Basketball Association players
- Huntsville Flight players
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