Artikel: 2000 in basketball GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi

    • Source: 2000 in basketball
    • The following are the basketball events of the year 2000 throughout the world.


      Championships




      = 2000 Olympics

      =
      Men:
      United States
      France
      Lithuania
      Women:
      United States
      Australia
      Brazil


      = Professional

      =
      Men
      2000 NBA Finals: Los Angeles Lakers over the Indiana Pacers 4-2. MVP: Shaquille O'Neal
      1999–2000 NBA season, 2000 NBA Playoffs, 2000 NBA draft, 2000 NBA All-Star Game
      Women
      WNBA Finals: Houston Comets over the New York Liberty 2-0. MVP: Cynthia Cooper
      2000 WNBA season, 2000 WNBA Playoffs, 2000 WNBA draft, 2000 WNBA All-Star Game


      = College

      =
      Men
      NCAA Division I: Michigan State University 89, University of Florida 76
      National Invitation Tournament: Wake Forest University 71, University of Notre Dame 61
      NCAA Division II: Metropolitan State College of Denver 97, Kentucky Wesleyan College 79
      NCAA Division III: Catholic 76, William Paterson College 62
      NAIA Division I: Life University (Ga.) 61, Georgetown College (Ky.) 59
      NAIA Division II: Embry–Riddle Aeronautical University (Florida) 75, University of the Ozarks (Mo.) 63
      NJCAA Division I: Southeastern C.C., W. Burlington, Iowa 84, Calhoun C.C., Decatur, Alabama 70
      Women
      NCAA Division I: University of Connecticut 71, University of Tennessee 52
      NCAA Division II: Northern Kentucky 71, North Dakota State University 62 (OT)
      NCAA Division III Washington (Mo.) 77, University of Southern Maine 33
      NAIA Division I: Oklahoma City University 64, Simon Fraser (BC) 55
      NAIA Division II University of Mary (N.D.) 59, Northwestern (Iowa) 49


      Awards and honors




      = Professional

      =
      Men
      NBA Most Valuable Player Award: Shaquille O'Neal
      NBA Rookie of the Year Award: (tie) Elton Brand & Steve Francis
      NBA Defensive Player of the Year Award: Alonzo Mourning
      NBA Coach of the Year Award: Doc Rivers, Orlando Magic
      Euroscar Award: Gregor Fučka, Fortitudo Bologna and Italy
      Mr. Europa: Gregor Fučka, Fortitudo Bologna and Italy
      Women
      WNBA Most Valuable Player Award: Sheryl Swoopes, Houston Comets
      WNBA Defensive Player of the Year Award: Sheryl Swoopes, Houston Comets
      WNBA Rookie of the Year Award: Betty Lennox, Minnesota Lynx
      WNBA Most Improved Player Award: Tari Phillips, New York Liberty
      Kim Perrot Sportsmanship Award: Suzie McConnell Serio, Cleveland Rockers
      WNBA Coach of the Year Award: Michael Cooper, Los Angeles Sparks
      WNBA All-Star Game MVP: Tina Thompson, Houston Comets
      WNBA Finals Most Valuable Player Award: Cynthia Cooper, Houston Comets


      = Collegiate

      =
      Combined
      Legends of Coaching Award: Mike Krzyzewski, Duke
      Men
      John R. Wooden Award: Kenyon Martin, Cincinnati
      Naismith College Coach of the Year: Mike Montgomery, Stanford
      Frances Pomeroy Naismith Award: Scoonie Penn, Ohio State
      Associated Press College Basketball Player of the Year: Kenyon Martin, Cincinnati
      NCAA basketball tournament Most Outstanding Player: Shane Battier, Duke
      USBWA National Freshman of the Year: Jason Gardner, Arizona
      Associated Press College Basketball Coach of the Year: Larry Eustachy, Iowa State
      Naismith Outstanding Contribution to Basketball: Bill Wall
      Women
      Naismith College Player of the Year: Tamika Catchings, Tennessee
      Naismith College Coach of the Year: Geno Auriemma, Connecticut
      Wade Trophy: Edwina Brown, Texas
      Frances Pomeroy Naismith Award: Helen Darling, Penn State
      Associated Press Women's College Basketball Player of the Year: Tamika Catchings, Tennessee
      NCAA basketball tournament Most Outstanding Player: Shea Ralph, UConn
      Carol Eckman Award: Kathy Delaney-Smith, Harvard University
      Associated Press College Basketball Coach of the Year: Geno Auriemma, Connecticut
      Nancy Lieberman Award: Sue Bird, Connecticut
      Naismith Outstanding Contribution to Basketball: Harley Redin


      = Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame

      =
      Class of 2000:
      Daniel "Danny" Biasone
      Robert A. McAdoo
      Charles Martin Newton
      Pat Head Summitt
      Isiah L. Thomas
      Morgan B. Wootten


      = Women's Basketball Hall of Fame

      =
      Class of 2000


      Events


      The Gary Steelheads joins the CBA
      January: Mark Cuban becomes owner of the Dallas Mavericks
      November 17: For the Phoenix Suns against the New York Knicks, Jason Kidd is debited with an NBA-record 14 turnovers in one game


      Movies


      Finding Forrester
      Love & Basketball
      Whatever Happened to Micheal Ray?


      Deaths


      January 4 — Al Schrecker, American NBL player (Pittsburgh Raiders) (born 1917)
      January 12 — Bobby Phills, Cleveland Cavaliers and Charlotte Hornets guard (born 1969)
      January 16 — Örlygur Aron Sturluson, Icelandic basketball player (Njarðvík) (born 1981)
      February 21 — Antonio Díaz-Miguel, Hall of Fame Spanish coach (born 1933)
      February 24 — Bernard Opper, All-American college player (Kentucky), NBL and original ABL player (born 1915)
      March 7 — Darrell Floyd, American college basketball player and national scoring champion (Furman)
      March 8 — Joe Mullaney, American college coach (Providence College) (born 1925)
      March 12 — Aleksandar Nikolić, Hall of Fame Serbian coach (born 1924)
      April 6 — Stan Watts, Hall of Fame college coach at Brigham Young University (born 1911)
      April 9 — Jack Gardner, Hall of Fame college coach at Kansas State and Utah (born 1910)
      May 5 — Bill Musselman, ABA, NBA and college coach. The first head coach of the Minnesota Timberwolves franchise (born 1940)
      May 9 — John Nucatola, Hall of Fame college and professional referee (born 1907)
      May 20 — Malik Sealy, Minnesota Timberwolves guard (born 1970)
      June 9 — John "Brooms" Abramovic, First college player to score 2000+ points and early professional (born 1919)
      June 16 — Mike Silliman, American NBA player (Buffalo Braves) and Olympic gold medalist (1968) (born 1944)
      June 28 — Haskell Cohen, former NBA public relations director and creator of Parade High School All-America teams (born 1914)
      July 7 — Denny Price, 62, American AAU player (Phillips 66ers) and college coach (Sam Houston State, Phillips).
      July 10 — Conrad McRae, Syracuse forward who played in Europe (born 1971)
      August 25 — Leo Barnhorst, Two-time NBA All-Star with the Indianapolis Olympians (born 1924)
      September 13 — Duane Swanson, American Olympic gold medalist (1936) (born 1913)
      October 6 — John Keller, American Olympic gold medalist (1952) (born 1928)
      October 7 — Ed Beisser, American college All-American (Creighton) and AAU (Phillips 66ers) player (born 1919)
      December 15 — Haris Brkić, Serbian player (Partizan) (born 1974)
      December 31 — Wayne Glasgow, American Olympic gold medalist (1952) (born 1926)


      References




      External links


      Media related to 2000 in basketball at Wikimedia Commons

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