- Martin Müürsepp
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Martin Müürsepp No. 13, 31, 33 Power forward
Small forwardPersonal information Date of birth September 26, 1974
Tallinn, EstoniaListed height 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) Listed weight 235 lb (107 kg) Career information NBA Draft 1996 / Round: 1 / Pick: 25th overall Selected by the Utah Jazz Pro career 1990–2010 Career history As player:
- 1990–1992 Tallinna Kalev
- 1992–1993 Alvik Stockholm
- 1993–1995 Maccabi Tel Aviv
- 1995–1996 Tallinna Kalev
- 1996–1997 Miami Heat
- 1997–1998 Dallas Mavericks
- 1998 SK Erger Nybit Tallinn
- 1999 Aris Thessaloniki
- 1999–2001 AEK Athens
- 2001–2002 UNICS Kazan
- 2002 Dynamo Moscow
- 2002–2003 Ural Great
- 2003–2004 UNICS Kazan
- 2004–2005 CSKA Moscow
- 2005–2006 UNICS Kazan
- 2006–2007 Tartu Ülikool/Rock
- 2007 Melbourne Tigers
- 2008–2009 BC Kalev/Cramo
- 2009–2010 BC Rakvere Tarvas
As coach:
- 2010–present BC Kalev/Cramo
Career highlights and awards - FIBA EuroCup Winner (2004)
- FIBA EuroCup Finals MVP (2004)
- Saporta Cup Winner (2000)
- Estonian Champion (1996, 2007)
- Russian Champion (2005)
- Greek Cup Winner (2000, 2001)
- Russian Cup Winner (2005)
- Estonian Cup Winner (2008)
- 7× Estonian Basketball Player of the Year (1996, 2000–2005)
Career NBA statistics Points 389 Rebounds 181 Assists 50 Stats at NBA.com Martin Müürsepp (born September 26, 1974 in Tallinn, Estonia) is an Estonian retired professional basketball player and basketball coach.
Contents
Club career
In the 1996 NBA Draft he was selected in the 1st round (25th overall) by the Utah Jazz. After the draft, Müürsepp was traded to Miami Heat for a future draft pick (no. 23 in the 2000 draft).
He has played 83 games in the NBA for Dallas Mavericks and the Heat, averaging 4.7 points, 2.2 rebounds in 11.5 minutes per game. His career highs include 24 points, 14 rebounds and 37 minutes played. He still stands as the only Estonian to have ever played basketball in the NBA.
After the NBA he spent three years playing in Greece for Aris Thessaloniki and AEK Athens. With AEK he won the 2000 Saporta Cup and the 2000 and 2001 Greek Basketball Cups.
Müürsepp became the silver medalist of the 2001–02 and 2003–04 Russian National League with UNICS Kazan and the 2002–03 with Ural Great Perm. He competed in the 2003–04 Uleb Cup with UNICS Kazan. He played with CSKA Moscow in 2004–05 before returning to UNICS Kazan. After playing for one season in Estonia, Müürsepp signed for the Australian NBL's Melbourne Tigers On August 2007.[1] Because of an injury, he left the team mid-season, returning to Estonia. In February 2008 he signed with BC Kalev/Cramo. He was a member of the team for almost a year, but played no official games. In March 2010 Müürsepp made his comeback with BC Rakvere Tarvas in KML.
Martin Müürsepp is the BC Kalev/Cramo's assistant coach in 2010–11.
International career
He used to be a key member of the Estonian national team. In 2005, he announced his retirement from active international competition. However, he agreed to return for the 2007 EuroBasket qualifying tournament.
Honours
Club
- 1995–96 Estonian Basketball League (Tallinna Kalev)
- 1999–00 Saporta Cup (AEK Athens)
- 1999–00 Greek Basketball Cup (AEK Athens)
- 2000–01 Greek Basketball Cup (AEK Athens)
- 2003–04 FIBA EuroCup (UNICS Kazan)
- 2004–05 Russian Basketball Super League (CSKA Moscow)
- 2004–05 Russian Basketball Cup (CSKA Moscow)
- 2006–07 Estonian Basketball League (Tartu Ülikool/Rock)
- 2008–09 Estonian Basketball Cup (BC Kalev/Cramo)
Individual
- 2003–04 FIBA EuroCup Finals MVP (UNICS Kazan)
NBA career statistics
Legend GP Games played GS Games started MPG Minutes per game FG% Field-goal percentage 3P% 3-point field-goal percentage FT% Free-throw percentage RPG Rebounds per game APG Assists per game SPG Steals per game BPG Blocks per game PPG Points per game Bold Career high Regular season
Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG 1996–97 Miami 10 0 2.7 .357 .250 .429 .5 .3 .0 .1 1.7 1996–97 Dallas 32 0 10.0 .419 .150 .679 1.9 .5 .4 .3 4.3 1997–98 Dallas 41 7 14.7 .435 .421 .761 2.8 .7 .7 .3 5.7 Career 83 7 11.5 .425 .323 .693 2.2 .6 .5 .3 4.7 References
External links
- Basketball-Reference.com: Martin Müürsepp
- CSKA Moscow player file
- AEK player profile
- Euroleague player file
- NBA player file
- UlebCup Profile
Estonia squad – EuroBasket 2001 – 16th place Estonian Basketball Player of the Year Award 1996 NBA Draft First round Allen Iverson · Marcus Camby · Shareef Abdur-Rahim · Stephon Marbury · Ray Allen · Antoine Walker · Lorenzen Wright · Kerry Kittles · Samaki Walker · Erick Dampier · Todd Fuller · Vitaly Potapenko · Kobe Bryant · Predrag Stojaković · Steve Nash · Tony Delk · Jermaine O'Neal · John Wallace · Walter McCarty · Žydrūnas Ilgauskas · Dontae' Jones · Roy Rogers · Efthimios Rentzias · Derek Fisher · Martin Müürsepp · Jerome Williams · Brian Evans · Priest Lauderdale · Travis KnightSecond round Othella Harrington · Mark Hendrickson · Ryan Minor · Moochie Norris · Shawn Harvey · Joseph Blair · Doron Sheffer · Jeff McInnis · Steve Hamer · Russ Millard · Marcus Mann · Jason Sasser · Randy Livingston · Ben Davis · Malik Rose · Joe Vogel · Marcus Brown · Ron Riley · Jamie Feick · Amal McCaskill · Terrell Bell · Chris Robinson · Mark Pope · Jeff Nordgaard · Shandon Anderson · Ronnie Henderson · Reggie Geary · Drew Barry · Darnell RobinsonCategories:- 1974 births
- Living people
- People from Tallinn
- AEK Athens B.C. players
- PBC CSKA Moscow players
- Dallas Mavericks players
- BC Dynamo Moscow players
- Aris B.C. players
- Tartu Ülikool/Rock players
- BC Kalev/Cramo players
- Estonian basketball players
- Estonian expatriates in Russia
- Expatriate basketball people in the United States
- Estonian expatriates in the United States
- Expatriate basketball people in Australia
- Estonian expatriates in Australia
- Estonian expatriates in Greece
- Estonian expatriates in Sweden
- Korvpalli Meistriliiga players
- Miami Heat players
- Small forwards
- Power forwards (basketball)
- Utah Jazz draft picks
- Expatriate basketball people in Greece
- Expatriate basketball people in Sweden
- Expatriate basketball people in Russia
- Estonian expatriate basketball people
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