In the 1989-90 season, the Portland Trail Blazers bought out Dražen
Petrović’s contract with Real Madrid and convinced him to join the NBA. This
would mark the start of a trailblazing career that was tragically cut short.
Dražen Petrović was born in Šibenik, Croatia on the 22nd
of October, 1964. At the age of 15, he was already in the first team of his
hometown club, and by the age of 18, Petrović had blossomed into a
star for Šibenik. After serving in the
military for a year, he moved to Cibona in 1984, where he would play till 1988.
At Cibona, Petrović shined. He once scored 112 points in a Yugoslavian
League game (40/60
FG, 10/20 3Pts, 22/22 FT), which is possibly the most efficient performance in
any European league ever. He averaged 37.7 points in the Yugoslavian first
division and 33.8 points in European competitions in his 4 years at Cibona,
cementing his status as a European star. In 1988, at the age of 23, he moved to
Real Madrid, where he stayed for one season before joining the Portland Trail
Blazers.
After
winning innumerable honors in Europe, Petrović made the jump to the
NBA. However, his NBA career was fraught with obstacles. The Trail Blazers did
not see Petrović as a primary ball handler, instead wanting to use him as a
3-point specialist. However, Petrović was not used to playing off the ball.
Additionally, the Blazers already had many serviceable guards, with star Clyde
Drexler and veterans Terry Porter and Danny Young. The addition of Danny Ainge
in the 1990-91 season dropped Petrović’s playing time from 12 minutes to 7 minutes per
game. In January of 1991, he would be traded to the New Jersey Nets, where he
would soon blossom into a 20-point scorer. In both his full seasons in New
Jersey, he averaged over 20 points per game on 50/40/80 shooting splits, making
the All-NBA Third Team in the 1993 season, despite not making the All-Star
team. Petrović shot 43.7% from 3 for his career, and despite the low volume
(career high of 3.4 attempts per game), he was one of the most feared 3-point
shooters in the league.
In June 1993, Petrović was travelling to Croatia with his
girlfriend after playing a Eurobasket qualification tournament. On the 7th
of June, he was involved in a car accident on the Autobahn (the German
freeway). A sleeping Petrović was killed, and his girlfriend and another
passenger in the back seat were left with grave injuries.
After the news of his death, the basketball community was
devastated. A moment of silence was observed before the start of Game 1 of
the 1993 NBA Finals. Cibona, the team with whom he became a European star,
renamed their stadium in his honor. The New Jersey Nets retired his number 3
jersey, and multiple trophies were named after him.
Petrović is enshrined in both the basketball Hall Of Fame and
the FIBA Hall Of Fame. He is also one of the original European stars who made
the jump to the NBA and is one of the reasons why many European players now
play in the NBA. The career of Dražen Petrović is a flame that burnt bright,
but was extinguished far too soon.
Every sports fan, diehard or casual, has watched Moneyball, the movie about the use of statistics in baseball. While sports has become more receptive to the use of statistics to identify players, many fans still do not like to use or misuse statistics to back up their opinions. As an avid NBA fan, I too love to concoct fictitious trades to help make my team better. Through the use of statistics, I am going to try to make well informed decisions regarding player acquisitions for the San Antonio Spurs, my favourite NBA team. To tackle this problem, I used a linear regression model. To create the model, I first collected box score data for the Spurs’ 2019-20 season. This data was then used to create a model that will give a composite score, which predicts a team’s record. According to the model, a score closer to 1 indicates a better record, while a score closer to 0 indicates a worse record. Using Basketball Reference, I identified 8 players who the Spurs could feasibly acquire and who...
Nice. Do keep writing.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the support.
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ReplyDeleteThough this is a factual post, and I have never heard of him before, emotion welled up reading this, Ratnam. Please do add a picture of Drazen for some readers like myself who'd need a face to the name :(
ReplyDeleteI will keep that in mind for the next post. Thanks for the feedback.
DeleteNice post. Never read anything like this before which involves such minute details about any player, with so much passion.
ReplyDeleteThank you.
DeleteFantastic ! Great article and thanks for acknowledging the pioneer. The likes of Nowitzki have a lot to thank Drazen for!! Eager to read more from you.
ReplyDeleteExcellent article with good analyzation. Keep writing.
ReplyDelete