another shit kent from greece hahaha
dude stop with teh scout reports
Printable View
another shit kent from greece hahaha
dude stop with teh scout reports
in 2010 spurs wont need him
Where is he then??? Why isn't he in the NBA?
If he wants to prove that to us he needs to be in the NBA and show us, until then I don't give a shit how good people say he is. If he wants some respect from a lot of the people here he's going to have to earn it in the NBA. Like Mountainballer said does he have the mental toughness to do this?
Everyone should get off KBP's back man. People suggest the most retarded shit in this forum, and "most" of the time KBP brings some info. Be it worthless or not, you can't blame him for having passion for his country's players.
Here is his site and his English is ok.
http://www.bourousis.gr/index.php?lang=en
Greek players suck.........unless their name is Rony Seikaly.
Yes he was you moron.......He was born in Lebanon and is 1/2 American but moved to Greece when he was 3......he graduated from HS in Greece and went on to attend Syracuse University.
I figured someone who is allegedly versed in the Greek world would know this......
Since Seikaly is one of my all-time players, I kinda knew where he grew up.
so KBP.....go watch film of some obscure nobody that none of us give a rats ass about and spend the next week defending your stance on said nobody.....
I dont understand why some people in this forum hate the guy so much. I mean I bet you never heard that name before. Actually this is the first time I heard about 7.1 Bourousis as well, and I dont know if he;s gonna be good,is it possible for him to play here or not but at least I watch all clips and datas before making any judgement. Spurs is full of overseas scouts, and believe me it bored me to death. Is it because he is a Greek? or u just dont want to be open minded? At this time I take any help that we can, improvement is badly needed..clock is ticking our superstars are not getting younger
I wish the season would start already.
The last time the Spurs signed a former competitive swimmer standing 7 feet tall they did pretty well.. I'd hire him just for the chance to see him go head-to-head vs Duncan in the pool..:lol
Yes he is IDIOT, MORON, BAFOON, GOOBER, NUMBNUTS, SHIT FOR BRAINS, ASS CLOWN.........now run along you silly poser.....try to spread more bullshit at another forum, cause over here, we know you are nothing more than a no-knowledge dweeb. half the players you bring up couldn't hold the jock of players like Fennis Dembo, Cherokee Parks, or even our very own Derrick Dial. If these guys were worth a hill of snot, then there would be more written about them from sources other than yourself. Just because you are infatuated with scrubs, doesn't mean we are, so stop trying to spoon feed this crap to us as if we are infants in a high chair.
nothing impressive.....sorry
OPA!!!!!
Yes nothing impressive about such player
:rolleyes
http://www.fibaeurope.com/cid_N27pw3...leMode_on.html
Nikos Galis Europe's Greatest Ever Scorer
Since the birth of the European Championships in 1935 and the first European club competition in 1958, literally thousands of players have stepped up to play at the top level. Yet few have had the impact on the record books as that of former Greek superstar, Nick Galis.
Playing in the 1980‘s and early 1990‘s, Galis literally broke scoring records in almost every competition he entered, playing for Aris Thessaloniki and Panathinaikos Athens. He also masterminded the greatest ever achievement of any Greek national team, namely a gold medal at the 1987 European Championship.
Galis displaying his deadly shooting touch
“I’d love to play with Galis in the same team,” said the legendary Drazen Petrovic before his death in 1993.
“I would assist him the ball and he would put it in the basket.”
Nick Galis, a 183 cm guard, was born in New Jersey (USA) on July 23rd 1957. Although he was not born on Greek soil, his Greek nationality was unquestionable. His parents, Giorgos and Stella, hailed from the island of Rhodos and when Galis first came to Greece he was known as Nickos Georgalis-Galis.
Galis’ first sport was actually boxing, but his mother soon put the clamps on his burgeoning career. Her horror at seeing her son come home every day with a new facial injury led to Galis taking up basketball and in 1970 began to play at Union Hill High School.
His prep career was successful enough to earn him a scholarship to the University of Seton Hall and he did not disappoint. In his junior year (1977-78) he averaged 17.3 ppg and as a senior he led the nation in scoring (Indiana State forward Larry Bird was second) at 27.5 ppg, with a career high 48 points against the University of Santa Clara.
Galis was chosen at no. 68 by the Boston Celtics in the 1979 NBA draft, but elected instead to pursue a professional career in Greece.
It was a decision which would literally change the future of Greek basketball.
Panathinaikos and Olympiakos had showed some interest in the newcomer, but it was Aris Thessaloniki who were the most active club. Giorgos Tsiligaridis was sent by Aris to the USA to convince Galis to sign with his team and he managed to return with his signature on a contract.
Galis came to Thessaloniki at the start of the 1979-1980 and it took the young guard all of one game to show his potential. In his debut he lit up rival Thessaloniki club Iraklis for 30 points and an epic career was underway.
Galis’ career is perhaps best summed up by the record books. He played 13 seasons with Aris, winning eight Greek titles, five Greek Cups, one Korac Cup (1985) and also making three EuroLeague Final Four appearances. Of the eight Greek titles, six were consecutive during which Aris put together a remarkable 80 game winning streak.
Along with the team success came the individual accolades. Galis led the Greek League in scoring in every single one of his 15 seasons. He is the league’s all-time leading scorer with a total of 12,849 points in 384 games and a remarkable average of 33.4 ppg.
His career high output was 62 points which came against Nikeas-Aris in 1981. He also torched Panellinios for 57 points in the 1987 final of the Greek Cup and his career high in European competition was 57 against Venice during the 1981 Korac Cup.
Galis was also a loyal servant of the Greek national team. His first game came during the 1980 pre-Olympic tournament and he would go on to play 168 times for his country. He is second on the all-time scoring list to former Aris team-mate Panagiotis Yiannakis at 5,130 points (Yiannakis scored 5,282 points in 351 games for Greece).
Galis’ crowning glory came literally during the 1987 European Championship which was held in Greece. He led his side to the gold medal and also earned tournament MVP honours in the process. He naturally led all players in scoring, including 40 points in the final, a 103-101 victory over the Soviet Union.
That performance led former Soviet Union star Sergey Belov to comment:
“I admire him. When he plays one against one there is no way to stop him. I never thought that could be a player who could on his own beat the Soviet Union.”
The praise from the Soviet Union continued in the form of coach Alexander Gomelski, who called Galis the “player of the 21st century”.
Galis also won a sliver medal at the 1989 European Championship in Zagreb and participated in a total of five European Championships. He was the top scorer at all of them except for the 1989 Championship. Galis participated in one World Championship in 1986, where he again led all players in scoring, and had a 53-point outburst against Panama.
Galis’ ability to put the ball in the basket compounded opposing players and coaches alike.
“I feel that if Galis wants to make a basket, he will do it no matter who his opponent is,” said Lithuanian star Arvydas Sabonis.
For those coaches who he came up against, most strategies to stop him proved futile. Former Nashua Den Bosh coach Rood Harrewain advocated locking Galis in the dressing room before the game, while Wojeck Krajowski of Lech Poznan looked to a higher power:
“Before the game we made our plans on how we will stop the four players of Aris,” he said following a European club competition game.
“For Galis, we made our prayers…”
In some ways, Galis’ scoring feats overshadow the fact that he was also a great playmaker. In 1990 he dished 23 assists in a European Cup game against Finish side Uusikaoupounk and in the 1992/93 season with Panathinaikos he was the Greek League’s best passer at 6.7 apg. During that season he also recorded a remarkable double-double, hitting a perfect 13/13 field goals and dishing 19 assists against former side Aris.
After he stopped playing basketball, Galis founded a Basketball Camp for kids at the village of Pefkochori in Halkidiki. This camp every year has more than 3, 000 kids who learn basketball from the great Nick.
Nick Galis - Scoring Machine
Competition Games Points Average
Greek League 384 12,849 33.4
Greek Cup 55 1,935 35.2
European Cups 146 4,807 32.9
National Team 168 5,130 30.5
Total 753 24,721 32.8
Titles
Competition Titles Year
Greek Championship 8 1983, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, all with Aris Thessaloniki
Greek Cup 6
1985, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1992 with Aris, 1993 with Panathinaikos
European Championship for Men 2
Gold 1987, Silver 1989
European Championship for Clubs Final-Four 4 1988 4th, 1989 4th, 1990 3rd, 1994 3rd
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nick_Galis
Nick Galis (born July 23rd, 1957 in New Jersey, USA), known in Greece as Nikos Galis (Greek: Νίκος Γκάλης), is a retired Greek American professional basketball player and a member of the FIBA Hall of Fame. [1] Widely regarded as one of Europe's all-time greats in the sport, Galis is revered in Greece and is considered by many to be the greatest athlete the country has ever known.
Early Years
The child of a poor immigrant family from Rhodes, Greece, Nick took up boxing in his early years, his father George Georgalis having been a very good boxer in his youth. He was persuaded to give up boxing by his mother, who was shaking with fright every afternoon that her son would return with a new facial injury. As a result, he started playing basketball and attended Union Hill High School in Union City, New Jersey. [2]
After high school, Galis enrolled at Seton Hall University as a college basketball player. In his senior season, Galis, a shooting guard, saw his scoring average reach 27.5 points per game, which led the nation. This included a 48 point outburst against the University of Santa Clara. The famous Boston Celtics player Larry Bird was second in the nation in scoring that season. [3] Galis' agent, Bill Manon, who also managed Diana Ross, did not have Galis work out with any NBA team. [4] Galis was eventually selected by the Boston Celtics in the 4th round of the 1979 NBA Draft, 68th overall.[2]
Due to a severe injury that he suffered during the Celtics pre-season training camp, the franchise was no longer interested in offering him a contract because Gerald Henderson had taken his place [3] and his injury would keep him out for the foreseeable future. It was then that Galis decided to pursue a professional career in Greece's A1 League.
Career in Greece
Galis made the move across the Atlantic and signed to play with Aris of Thessaloniki, Greece in 1979. Panathinaikos and Olympiacos had also shown some interest in signing the newcomer, but it was Aris' interest that was the most persuasive. [2] His move to the country helped Greek basketball reach heights never before imagined. He played in the 1986 FIBA World Championship, where he led all players in scoring average with 33.0 points per game. In that tournament, he had a 56 point outburst against the Panamanian National Team.
Galis next led the Greek National Team to the Eurobasket 1987 gold medal. Averaging 37.0 points per game during the tournament, he was named MVP after scoring 40 points in the final against the Soviet National Team and its legendary player Šarūnas Marčiulionis for a 103-101 victory.
Galis also led Greece to the second place at Eurobasket 1989, averaging 35.6 points per game. Galis is remembered for a stunning effort against the Soviet team led by Marčiulionis and its other star player, Arvydas Sabonis, in the semi-final game. He scored 45 out of his team's 81 total points in a dramatic, last-gasp 81-80 victory. [4] The team settled for a second place finish against the ever-dominant Yugoslavian National Team.
Aris Thessaloniki
Averaging more than 30 points per game every season, Galis was the indisputable leader of Aris BC. Playing alongside other great players at Aris such as Panagiotis Giannakis and Slobodan Subotić, Galis won 8 Greek Championships (7 of them consecutively and 3 undefeated, in the years 1983, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991), 6 Greek Cups (4 of them consecutively, in the years 1985, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1992), and led Aris to 3 consecutive appearances at the European Champions' Cup Final Four (1988-1990). In the one disappointment of an otherwise glittering career with Aris, all three European Champions' Cup appearances ended in defeat in the semi-finals, thus depriving him of the opportunity to shine on Europe's biggest club stage. [2] The team's performances and general standard of play however won the heart of every basketball fan in Greece, as well as creating thousands more Aris supporters. Indeed, cinemas and theaters would often reduce their admission prices on Thursday evenings when Aris was playing and the entire country settled down to watch them on television.
Panathinaikos Athens
After a disappointing season in 1992, Galis was forced to leave Aris. [5] The new president of Aris and the fact that the team was then in decay were the main causes for his departure. Galis, who adored Thessaloniki, insisted about remaining in the club and playing for the team, as he believed that he still could offer much. Giorgos Rampotas, his personal trainer and friend, writes in "Galis' Biography" that Thessaloniki was what mattered most to Galis. Consequently, after he was forced to leave he even contemplated playing for Aris' greatest opponent PAOK, but he never actually decided to do so. [6]
Galis ended up moving to Athens, and specifically Panathinaikos, where he only managed to win one Greek Cup in 1993, his 7th Greek Cup. The following year, he returned to the European Champions' Cup Final Four with Panathinaikos, but as in his previous three attempts with Aris, he lost in the semi-finals and had to be content with being the top scorer in the 3rd-place match against FC Barcelona. His career ended controversially in 1994, when Kostas Politis (the then coach of Panathinaikos) chose not to include him in the starting line-up of a Greek Championship game against Ambelokipi. Galis left the court, never again to return to action. [7]
Retirement
Since his official retirement on September 29, 1995, and up until early 2006, he has been the owner of a summer basketball camp in Halkidiki, Greece. The basketball camp is listed at the Athens Stock Exchange. [8] As a token of appreciation for his contribution to Greek sport, Galis was chosen to be the first torch bearer in the final round of the Olympic Flame for the Athens 2004 Olympics. Galis entered the stadium at the conclusion of the Opening Ceremony and set off the procession of the flame to the altar.
In September of 2007, Nikos Galis was elected as a member of the first class of the FIBA Hall of Fame, which includes the best basketball players in the history of the game internationally. Galis was inducted as a player. Bill Russell of the famous Boston Celtics dynasty was another one of the 16 inaugural player inductees. Galis is also a member of the Greek Basketball Hall of Fame, inducted as a player. Galis is married to Eleni Panagiotou and he has one daughter, named Stella.
Player Profile
It has been noted that Galis was not only a legendary scorer, but was also a great play maker and passer. [2] The vast majority of his points scored came inside the paint area due to his penetrating ability. [9] Another enormous competitive advantage that Galis possessed was his incredible stamina, which was due to his exemplary physical condition. At the Eurobasket 1987, he was never once substituted out of any game after the second day of the competition. [9]
He averaged 33.0 points per game at the Eurobasket 1983, 33.7 points per game at the 1986 FIBA World Championship, 37.0 points per game at the Eurobasket 1987, 35.6 points per game at the Eurobasket 1989, and 32.4 points per game at the Eurobasket 1991. Galis was only a 1.86 m (6'1 1/4") tall shooting guard. In every one of the games that Galis played in these tournaments, the entire defenses of every opposing team was focused on stopping his scoring outbursts.
Personal Achievements
Career
* In 854 official career games played (including his college games), Galis scored a total of 25,995 points, for a scoring average of 30.4 points per game.
* In 753 career games played (excluding his college games), Galis scored a total of 24,721 points, for a career scoring average of 32.8 points per game.
* His career scoring average in the Greek League was 33.4 points per game.
* His career scoring average in the Greek Cup was 35.2 points per game.
* His career scoring average in European continental club competitions was 32.9 points per game.
* Along with Panagiotis Giannakis he led Aris BC to an 80 game winning streak in the 1980s.
Greek National Team
* In 168 FIBA games played with the Greek National Basketball Team, he averaged 30.5 points per game.
* Galis was the leading scorer in every major European and world international competition that he participated in from 1983 onwards, the Eurobasket 1983, the 1986 FIBA World Championship, the Eurobasket 1987, the Eurobasket 1989, and the Eurobasket 1991.
Single Game Achievements Pro Career
* His personal scoring record in one game was 62 points, achieved in a Greek League game in 1981 (Aris vs. Ionikos Nikaias). However, in the same game, Ionikos' superstar Panagiotis Giannakis, who would later go on to become Galis' teammate on Aris, scored 73 points.
* In 1981, he also had a 61 point game against Iraklis.
* Also in 1981, he accomplished his career scoring high in a European continental competition, as he scored 57 points against Pallacanestro Venezia during the 1981 Korac Cup.
* His high scoring game in the Greek Cup was 57 points against Panellinios in the 1987 Cup final.
* Also in 1987, he scored his career high in points in the old FIBA Champions' Cup (now called the Euroleague), as he scored 50 points in a game against Tracer Milano.
* He also holds 4 of the top 15 all-time individual scoring games in the Euroleague's modern record era (since 1991-1992).
* He scored 55 or more points in a game 10 times in his professional club career while playing with Aris Thessaloniki and Panathinaikos Athens.
* In 1990, in a FIBA Champions' Cup (now called the Euroleague) game versus Korihait Uusikaoupounk, he dished out 23 FIBA assists, which is still the all-time single game assist record.
* In 1993, while playing with Panathinaikos in a revenge game against his former team Aris, he had a game for the ages. Galis shot 13/13 from the field and recorded 19 FIBA assists in the game.
Single Game Achievements Greek National Team
* At the 1986 FIBA World Championship, he scored 56 points in a game against the Panamanian National Team.
* In the Eurobasket 1987 final, he scored 40 points against the Soviet National Team.
* In the Eurobasket 1989 semifinal, he scored 45 points against the Soviet National Team.
Team Titles and Personal Awards
Galis won numerous titles and awards during his career. The following are some of them: [2]
Aris and Panathinaikos
* 8 Greek Championships: 1983, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991
* 7 Greek Cups: 1985, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1992, 1993
* In total, he won 15 championships in his pro club career as a player.
* 4-time Greek League regular season Most Valuable Player: 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991
* 5-time Greek League playoff Most Valuable Player: 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991
* 6-time Greek Cup Most Valuable Player: 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1992, 1993
* 15-time Greek League Scoring Champion: 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994
* 4-time Greek League Assist Leader: 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994
* Euroleague Assist Leader: 1994
* 2-time Euroleague Scoring Champion (since 1991-1992 era): 1992 (32.2 ppg), 1994 (23.8 ppg)
* Member of the Greek Basketball Hall of Fame
* Selected to the Euroleague's 50 Greatest Euroleague Contributors as one of the Euroleague's 35 greatest all time players in 2008
Greek National Team
* 1986 FIBA World Championship Scoring Champion: 1986 (33.7 ppg)
* Eurobasket 1987 Gold Medal
* Eurobasket 1987 All-Tournament Team
* Eurobasket 1987 Most Valuable Player
* Eurobasket 1989 Silver Medal
* Eurobasket 1989 All-Tournament Team
* Eurobasket 1991 All-Tournament Team
* 4-time European Championship Scoring Champion: 1983 (33.0 ppg), 1987 (37.0 ppg), 1989 (35.6 ppg), 1991 (32.4 ppg)
* FIBA Europe European Player of the Year 1987
* FIBA Hall of Fame 2007
I give proof Kill_Bill_Pana deep throated my cock last night, while I watched the USA win gold in basketball!! Fucking jerk-off!!:lol:lobt::lobt::lobt::lobt::lobt2::flag: