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Wikipedia

Vlade Divac

Vlade Divac (Serbian Cyrillic: Владе Дивац, pronounced [ʋlǎːde dǐːʋats]; born February 3, 1968) is a Serbian professional basketball executive and former player who was most recently the vice president of basketball operations and general manager of the Sacramento Kings of the National Basketball Association (NBA).

Vlade Divac
Владе Дивац
Divac in 2016.
President of KK Partizan
In office
2000–2004
Preceded byIvica Dačić
Succeeded byPredrag Danilović
President of the Serbian Olympic Committee
In office
2009–2017
Preceded byIvan Ćurković
Succeeded byBožidar Maljković
Personal details
Born (1968-02-03) February 3, 1968 (age 54)
Prijepolje, SR Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia
Occupation
  • Basketball player
  • sports administrator
  • basketball executive
  • businessman
Basketball career
Personal information
Listed height7 ft 1 in (2.16 m)
Listed weight260 lb (118 kg)
Career information
NBA draft1989 / Round: 1 / Pick: 26th overall
Selected by the Los Angeles Lakers
Playing career1983–2005
PositionCenter
Number12, 21
Career history
1983–1986Sloga
1986–1989Partizan
19891996Los Angeles Lakers
19961998Charlotte Hornets
1999Crvena zvezda
19982004Sacramento Kings
2004–2005Los Angeles Lakers
Career highlights and awards
Career NBA statistics
Points13,398 (11.8 ppg)
Rebounds9,326 (8.2 rpg)
Blocks1,631 (1.4 bpg)
Stats  at NBA.com
Stats at Basketball-Reference.com
Basketball Hall of Fame as player
FIBA Hall of Fame as player

Divac spent most of his playing career in the NBA. At 7 ft 1 in (2.16 m),[1] he played center and was known for his passing skills. He was among the first group of European basketball players to transfer to the NBA in the late 1980s and was named one of the 50 Greatest EuroLeague Contributors.[2] He is one of seven players in NBA history to record 13,000 points, 9,000 rebounds, 3,000 assists, and 1,500 blocked shots, along with Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Hakeem Olajuwon, Shaquille O'Neal, Tim Duncan, Kevin Garnett, and Pau Gasol.[3][n 1] Divac was also the first player born and trained outside the United States to play in over 1,000 games in the NBA. On August 20, 2010, he was inducted into the FIBA Hall of Fame in recognition of his play in international competition.[4] He was elected to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2019.[5]

Divac is a humanitarian, helping children in his native country of Serbia and in Africa.[6] In October 2008, he was appointed as government adviser in Serbia for humanitarian issues.[7] In February 2009, he was elected President of the Serbian Olympic Committee for a four-year term[8] and re-elected in November 2012.[9] In 2013, Divac received an honor from the World Sports Humanitarian Hall of Fame.[10]

Professional career

Sloga (1983–1986)

Divac began playing basketball in his home town Prijepolje for the team KK Elan. He began his professional career in Yugoslavia playing for Sloga from Kraljevo, and was immediately noted for scoring 27 points against Crvena zvezda.[11]

Partizan (1986–1989)

In the summer of 1986, Divac was the top star of the basketball transfer season, and he ended up signing with KK Partizan for DM14,000.[11]

In the 1986-87 Yugoslav First League season, with players like Divac, Aleksandar Đorđević, Žarko Paspalj, Željko Obradović, and with coach Duško Vujošević at the helm, Partizan had a "dream team", which won the Yugoslavian League title. In the subsequent 1987-88 FIBA European Champions Cup season (now called EuroLeague), the club failed to reach the top of the EuroLeague, after having lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semifinal in Ghent.[12] Jugoplastika, with Dino Rađa and Toni Kukoč, was a stronger team in the subsequent three years, reigning both in Yugoslavia and in Europe.

Divac had an unusual style compared to most other centers of his generation: despite his height, he possessed good mobility, had good control of the ball, and was a decent shooter. On occasion, he would also act as a play maker. His trademark moves included a mid-range shot at the top of the key and flip shots around the rim, while facing the complete opposite direction. His quirky moves complemented how he liked playing gags on the court: in the 1989 EuroBasket, he lifted teammate Zoran Radović for a slam dunk. In just four professional seasons in Europe, he became the most sought-after big man on the continent, after Arvydas Sabonis.[11]

Los Angeles Lakers (1989–1996)

Drafted into the NBA in 1989 by the Los Angeles Lakers, Divac became one of the first European players to have an impact in the league. Under the mentorship of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Magic Johnson, he improved his play and adapted to the American style of basketball. Though he spoke no English, he quickly became popular among his teammates and the public for his charm and joviality. In the 1989–90 season, he was selected into the NBA All-Rookie Team.[11]

Divac earned a reputation for flopping, or deceiving the officials into calling a foul on the other team by purposely falling to the floor upon contact with an opposing player.[13] Veteran NBA forward P.J. Brown claimed that Divac might have been the best of all time at flopping.[14] Divac freely admitted doing so, adding that he usually did it when he felt like the officials had missed some calls and owed him.[15] However, when the NBA instituted anti-flopping penalties in 2012, Divac expressed his support for such rules, stating that he felt players after him were "overdo[ing] it" with respect to flopping.[16] Ian Thomsen, a Sports Illustrated columnist, grouped Divac with fellow international players Anderson Varejão and Manu Ginóbili as the players who "made [flopping] famous", exaggerating contact on the court in a manner analogous to diving in FIBA games.[17]

Charlotte Hornets (1996–1998)

 
Divac (playing for the Hornets) being marked by Shaquille O'Neal in 1996

On July 1, 1996, Divac was traded to the Charlotte Hornets for the draft rights to Kobe Bryant. After initially considering retirement upon being traded to the Hornets, Divac developed a close relationship with head coach Dave Cowens and flourished in Charlotte's system.[18] On February 12, 1997, Divac scored 18 points, grabbed 9 rebounds, and recorded a career high 12 blocks in a 113-100 win over the New Jersey Nets.[19][20] Alongside Glen Rice, Anthony Mason, and Muggsy Bogues, Divac helped the Hornets to a franchise record 54 regular season wins that season. That postseason, Divac averaged 18 points, 8.7 rebounds, and 2 blocks per game in a first round loss to the New York Knicks.[21]

The next year, during the 1998 NBA playoffs, the Hornets beat their division rival Atlanta Hawks in the first round, before losing to the defending champion Chicago Bulls in the conference semifinals.[18]

Crvena zvezda (1999)

During the 1998–99 NBA lockout, in January 1999, Divac played 2 games for Partizan's eternal rival KK Crvena zvezda, in the 1998–99 EuroLeague season.[22]

His debut for the crveno-beli took place mid-season, on Orthodox Christmas, versus a heavily favoured Žalgiris side led by Tyus Edney, Mindaugas Žukauskas, Saulius Štombergas, and Jiří Zídek Jr. Supported by a raucous home crowd and energized by Divac's arrival, as well as his 16 points and 8 rebounds, Crvena zvezda pulled off a 77–69 memorable upset win.[23]

Divac's brief stint with Crvena zvezda, for which he reportedly got paid US$250,000 per game,[23] immediately became a sore point with KK Partizan fans, who unfurled a banner calling him a traitor, at their club's next game.[23]

The issue of playing for the hated cross-town rival reignited several years later, when Divac returned to KK Partizan as club president. At the time, he stated his decision to play for Crvena zvezda was "a mistake".[23]

Sacramento Kings (1999–2004)

On January 22, 1999, Divac signed a six-year, $62.5 million contract as a free agent with the Sacramento Kings,[24] where he played for six seasons alongside fellow countryman Peja Stojaković. Teamed with Stojaković, Hedo Türkoğlu, Chris Webber and Mike Bibby, Divac revitalized the Sacramento Kings franchise. The Kings rose in the NBA ranks, becoming a perennial playoff contender and eventually a championship contender, leading the league in wins in 2001-02.[25] The Kings, however, could not get past the Los Angeles Lakers, who beat them controversially in a 7-game series in 2002,[26] which has later been dubbed by some as the 'greatest tragedy in sports history'.

Return to the Lakers (2004–2005)

After the 2003–04 NBA season, Divac became a free agent. On July 20, 2004, he signed a two-year contract to return to the Lakers, part of Mitch Kupchak's plan to overhaul Laker basketball. The Lakers, following a defeat in the NBA Finals, had traded away or released most of their players, including Shaquille O'Neal, Gary Payton, Karl Malone, Derek Fisher, and more; Divac was supposed to help fill that void.

However, Divac suffered back problems and could not play most of the season, and even when he returned, could only play about nine minutes per game, averaging 2.3 points per game and 2.1 rebounds per game in 15 games, he played 8 games early in the season and 7 more in the final month of the season.

On July 14, 2005, 37-year-old Divac announced his retirement, ending his 16-year NBA and 22-year professional basketball career.[27] Divac accepted a position with the Lakers as a European liaison to help with scouting overseas.

The Kings retired Divac's No. 21 jersey in a ceremony on March 31, 2009.[28] Over his 16 years in the NBA, Divac earned over $93 million in salary.[29] In September 2009, he played for the "NBA Generations" team in the 2009 NBA Asia Challenge, a series of exhibitions against Korean Basketball League and Philippine Basketball Association players.[30]

National team career

 
Divac (fourth from right, at centre) with the Yugoslavia team that won the EuroBasket 1989.
 
Divac with Dražen Petrović in the 1990 FIBA World Championship held in Argentina.

In summer 1986, at 18, right after signing for KK Partizan, Divac debuted for the senior Yugoslavia national basketball team at the 1986 FIBA World Championship in Madrid, on invitation by the head coach Krešimir Ćosić. However, the excellent rookie's performance was spoiled by the event in the semi-finals against the Soviet Union. Forty-five seconds before the end, Yugoslavia had a comfortable lead of 9 points, but the Soviets scored two three-pointers within a few seconds and cut the difference to 3 points. Yugoslavia tried to hold the ball for the remaining time, opting to continue the play with throw-ins instead of free throws following fouls, but with only 14 seconds left, Divac committed a double dribble, the Soviets were awarded the ball, and tied the score with another three-pointer. In the overtime, the Soviets won by 1 point and Yugoslavs had to be content with the bronze.[11][31]

The next year, Divac participated in the team that took the gold at the 1987 FIBA Junior World Championship (which was later split into separate under-19 and under-21 events) in Bormio, Italy. That event launched the young generation of Yugoslavian basketball players, also featuring stars like Rađa and Kukoč, regarded as likely the best in history. Before the breakup of Yugoslavia, they would also take the titles at EuroBasket 1989 and the 1990 FIBA World Championship in Argentina,[11] where they were led by Dražen Petrović,[32] as well as the EuroBasket 1991 title, with Aleksandar Đorđević at point guard.[33]

When Yugoslavia won the gold in the 1990 FIBA World Championship, fans rushed onto the court. One of them was holding a Croatian flag, one of the six republics that made up Yugoslavia. Divac claims that he told the man that he should not be waving that flag, since this was a win for Yugoslavia. Divac claims the man made a derogatory remark about the Yugoslav flag, at which point Divac took his flag from him. This happened during a very tense time where nationalistic pride was threatening to tear Yugoslavia apart and ignite a war. The taking of the flag made Divac a hero to Serbs, and a villain to Croatians. Divac has stated that he did not mean it as an act against Croatia and he would have taken away a Serbian flag if a Serb fan had done the same.[34][35]

This action, along with the Yugoslav Wars, alienated Divac from many of his former Croatian friends, particularly Dražen Petrović, whom he considered his best friend.[34] When FR Yugoslavia won the gold medal at the EuroBasket 1995, and Croatia won bronze, Croatia, still at war with Serbs from Croatia, walked off the podium during the medal ceremony. The teams had not faced each other in the tournament.

In 2002, Divac was part of the team that won the FIBA World Cup in Indianapolis, beating Argentina in the final and the USA earlier on.

NBA career statistics

 
Divac is one of seven players in NBA history to record 13,000 points, 9,000 rebounds, 3,000 assists, and 1,500 blocked shots.
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
1989–90 LA Lakers 82 5 19.6 .499 .000 .708 6.2 .9 1.0 1.4 8.5
1990–91 LA Lakers 82 81 28.2 .565 .357 .703 8.1 1.1 1.3 1.5 11.2
1991–92 LA Lakers 36 18 27.2 .495 .263 .768 6.9 1.7 1.5 1.0 11.3
1992–93 LA Lakers 82 69 30.8 .485 .280 .689 8.9 2.8 1.6 1.7 12.8
1993–94 LA Lakers 79 73 34.0 .506 .191 .686 10.8 3.9 1.2 1.4 14.2
1994–95 LA Lakers 80 80 35.1 .507 .185 .777 10.4 4.1 1.4 2.2 16.0
1995–96 LA Lakers 79 79 31.3 .513 .167 .641 8.6 3.3 1.0 1.7 12.9
1996–97 Charlotte 81 80 35.1 .494 .234 .683 9.0 3.7 1.3 2.2 12.6
1997–98 Charlotte 64 41 28.2 .498 .214 .691 8.1 2.7 1.3 1.5 10.4
1998–99 Sacramento 50 50 35.2 .470 .256 .702 10.0 4.3 .9 1.0 14.3
1999–2000 Sacramento 82 81 29.0 .503 .269 .691 8.0 3.0 1.3 1.3 12.3
2000–01 Sacramento 81 81 29.9 .482 .286 .691 8.3 2.9 1.1 1.1 12.0
2001–02 Sacramento 80 80 30.3 .472 .231 .615 8.4 3.7 1.0 1.2 11.1
2002–03 Sacramento 80 80 29.8 .466 .240 .713 7.2 3.4 1.0 1.3 9.9
2003–04 Sacramento 81 81 28.6 .470 .154 .654 5.7 5.3 .7 .1 9.9
2004–05 LA Lakers 15 0 8.7 .419 .000 .667 2.1 1.3 .3 .1 2.3
Career 1134 979 29.8 .495 .235 .692 8.2 3.1 1.1 1.4 11.8
All-Star 1 0 9.0 .667 .000 6.0 1.0 2.0 .0 8.0

Playoffs

Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
1990 LA Lakers 9 1 19.4 .727 .500 .895 5.3 1.1 0.9 1.7 9.1
1991 LA Lakers 19 19 32.1 .564 .167 .803 6.7 1.1 1.4 2.2 13.3
1992 LA Lakers 4 4 35.8 .349 .000 .900 5.5 3.8 1.3 0.8 9.8
1993 LA Lakers 5 5 33.4 .500 .444 .545 9.4 5.6 1.2 2.4 18.0
1995 LA Lakers 10 10 38.8 .467 .222 .645 8.5 3.1 0.8 1.3 15.6
1996 LA Lakers 4 4 28.8 .429 .200 .625 7.5 2.0 0.0 1.3 9.0
1997 Charlotte 3 3 38.7 .457 .000 .800 8.7 3.3 1.0 2.0 18.0
1998 Charlotte 9 9 38.5 .483 .000 .606 10.9 3.4 0.8 1.6 11.6
1999 Sacramento 5 5 39.6 .446 .200 .833 10.0 4.6 1.6 0.8 16.2
2000 Sacramento 5 5 32.0 .357 .000 .696 7.2 2.8 1.4 0.8 11.2
2001 Sacramento 8 8 28.1 .350 .333 .763 8.4 2.4 1.0 1.5 10.8
2002 Sacramento 16 16 33.4 .464 .268 .755 9.3 1.7 1.1 1.3 13.5
2003 Sacramento 12 12 26.4 .560 .000 .673 5.8 2.3 0.7 0.9 11.4
2004 Sacramento 12 12 19.6 .437 .000 .739 4.9 1.8 0.3 0.4 6.6
Career 121 113 30.8 .480 .241 .731 7.5 2.4 1.0 1.4 12.1

Major career achievements

KK Partizan

Yugoslavia national team

NBA

  • Named to the 1989–90 NBA All-Rookie First Team after averaging 8.5 ppg and 6.2 rpg for the Lakers
  • Appeared in the 1991 NBA Finals against the Chicago Bulls and averaged 12.1 ppg, 7.5 rpg and 2.4 apg in 121 career NBA Playoff games
  • Ranks 4th in Lakers franchise history with 830 blocked shots
  • Ranked 2nd on the Kings in scoring (14.3 ppg), rebounds (10.0 rpg, 10th in the NBA), assists (4.3 apg) and blocked shots (1.02 bpg) in 1998–99
  • Named NBA All-Star, 2001
  • One of only five basketball players born and trained in Europe to play at least 1,000 NBA games (1,134; along with Dirk Nowitzki, Tony Parker, Pau Gasol, Boris Diaw)
  • One of only four basketball players born and trained in Europe (Peja Stojaković, Dražen Petrović and Zydrunas Ilgauskas are the others) to have his number retired by an NBA team

Administrative career

Through the twilight of his playing career and afterwards, Divac focused on three fields: humanitarian work, sport management, and investment.

KK Partizan president

In late 2000, following the overthrow of Slobodan Milošević whose policies Divac had been openly critical of throughout mid-to-late 1990s,[36] Divac and former teammate Predrag Danilović took over their former club KK Partizan. They did so on initiative by Ivica Dačić, the club's outgoing president and, more importantly, a suddenly marginalized politician who, due to his association with Milošević, was forced to leave his post at the club. Seeing that various state-owned companies and community property were being taken over in a dubious manner during the power vacuum that resulted from régime change, Dačić saw it prudent to bring the club's two former greats as a safeguard against the same happening to KK Partizan. Divac became the club's president while Danilović took the vice-president role.[37]

Freshly retired from playing, Danilović was actually running the club's day-to-day operations since Divac was still very actively involved with the Sacramento Kings at the time. The head coach they inherited, Darko Russo, finished out the 2000–01 season before they decided in summer 2001 to bring back their mentor Duško Vujošević to be the new head coach.

Though the duo never stated so outright, their additional motivation in getting involved with KK Partizan again was perceived to be gaining the upper hand on the club's eventual privatisation process once the new Law on Sports was passed in the Serbian parliament. Since the exact ownership structure of a publicly owned KK Partizan was not and still is not really clear, potential investors decided to stay away, at least until the law came into effect. Divac and Danilović appeared pretty much out of nowhere in this regard but enjoyed plenty of fan and public support because most preferred to see their beloved club owned and operated by its former stars rather than a faceless corporation or a group of politicians, managers or businessmen close to the ruling coalition. However, after a few years the duo ran out of patience and pulled out of the venture in late 2004 because it became too much of a financial burden with no end goal in sight. While he stopped performing any official functions at the club, Divac continued to be involved with it in a lesser capacity for a few years afterwards.

LA Lakers scout

In October 2005, right after ending his playing career with the Los Angeles Lakers, Divac got hired as the Lakers' European scout, reporting directly to the team's general manager Mitch Kupchak.[38] He left the position in 2006.

Real Madrid Baloncesto club management

In June 2006, through his friendship with Predrag Mijatović, Divac linked up with Ramón Calderón as part of the lawyer's candidate bid for the presidency of Real Madrid.[39] When Calderón closely won the club elections on July 2, 2006, Divac was announced as the head of operations at Real Madrid basketball club though the scope of his job description soon got reduced to consulting duties as president Calderón's adviser for basketball and club's international coordinator.[40][41]

However, Divac's role in the club's day-to-day operations turned out to be largely symbolic, and he even admitted as much in a March 2007 interview for Croatian weekly Globus: "I literally do nothing and I only serve as part of the royal club's image. I only accepted the job because of Mijatović, who is currently the football director at Real".[42] By the end of 2007, following a financial settlement between the two parties, Divac moved on from the post for which he had been reportedly receiving an annual compensation of 300,000.[40][43]

Serbian Deputy Prime Minister's adviser

In October 2008, Divac's political advisory engagement within the Serbian government as the sports, diaspora, and humanitarian advisor to the Deputy Prime Minister and Internal Affairs Minister Ivica Dačić, got announced.[44][45][46]

Olympic Committee of Serbia president

Divac was proposed in 2000 as Yugoslavia's candidate for the Sport Commission of the International Olympic Committee in spring 2000. This candidature was withdrawn under pressure from Milošević regime.[47] In February 2009, Divac ran for presidency of the Olympic Committee of Serbia against incumbent president Ivan Ćurković.[48] He won the race after Ćurković withdrew just before the scheduled voting.[8] In November 2012, he was re-elected as the sole candidate; the end of his second mandate coincides with the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.[9]

In December 2014, Kosovo was accepted as a full member of the International Olympic Committee. Divac and the Serbian Olympic Committee have been criticised, chiefly by the Democratic Party of Serbia, for failing to take any effort to prevent that.[49] Divac stated that he is not happy with the decision of the IOC, but could not have prevented it as it had already been made, and said he would accept it "in the interest of the athletes".[50]

On May 9, 2017, he was succeeded by Serbian former basketball coach Božidar Maljković on position of the president of Olympic Committee of Serbia.[51]

Sacramento Kings front office

Initial advisory role

In early March 2015, Divac was hired by the Sacramento Kings as their vice president of basketball and franchise operations.[52] Brought into the organization by the principal owner Vivek Ranadivé towards the end of a turbulent season, Divac's arrival came in the wake of head coach Mike Malone's firing and the eventual hiring of George Karl. Working alongside the team's general manager Pete D'Alessandro, Divac's initial duties with the Kings were reported to be advising the front office and coaches as well as assisting with branding and fan outreach.[52] However, such broadly defined job responsibilities immediately led to press speculation about Divac's role within the organization that in addition to general manager D'Alessandro also featured assistant GM Mike Bratz, special assistant to the GM Mitch Richmond, director of player personnel and analytics Dean Oliver, adviser to the chairman Chris Mullin, as well as a head coach, Karl, who has always wanted to be involved in personnel issues.[53] Within a month of Divac's hiring, ESPN's Marc Stein reported that "despite the Kings not yet announcing their new power structure, Divac is indeed already regarded as the team's top basketball official by owner Ranadivé".[54]

On June 10, 2015, two weeks before the NBA draft, general manager D'Alessandro left the Kings by accepting a front-office position with the Denver Nuggets amid reports he did so due to being stripped of his decision-making power after Ranadivé hired Divac.[55][56]

Only days before the draft, animosity between head coach Karl and the team's star center DeMarcus Cousins reignited, as Karl reportedly lobbied Divac, as well as multiple players on the Kings' roster, in order to make the case to owner Ranadive that Cousins needs to be traded.[57] As a result, against the backdrop of Cousins calling Karl a "snake" on Twitter,[58] Divac reportedly discussed multiple Cousins trade scenarios with various teams, but ultimately no deal got made.[59] At the 2015 NBA draft, with the 6th pick, the Kings selected 21-year-old center Willie Cauley-Stein out of Kentucky. Less than a week following the draft, with the dissolution of the Karl—Cousins relationship on public display, the Kings' ultimately unsuccessful attempt at landing University of Kentucky head coach John Calipari to replace Karl was reported.[60]

In early July 2015, in an effort of clearing salary cap space in order to immediately go after free agents, the Kings agreed to a trade with the Philadelphia 76ers, sending Nik Stauskas, Carl Landry, and Jason Thompson, along with the Kings' future first round draft pick to the Sixers as well as the rights to swap first round picks in 2016 and 2017 while receiving the rights to Sixers overseas players Artūras Gudaitis and Luka Mitrović in return.[61] Two days later, they announced the acquisitions of two free agents: 29-year-old Marco Belinelli on a three-year US$19 million contract and 29-year-old point guard Rajon Rondo for one year for US$10 million.[62] This was followed by signing twenty-six-year-old center Kosta Koufos for four years and US$33 million with his role envisioned as the backup for Cousins.[63]

With the free agent signings done, Divac turned his attention to attempting to mend the relations between the team's head coach Karl and its star center Cousins ahead of the 2015-16 season, admitting publicly on July 9, 2015 on CBS Sports Radio's The Jim Rome Show that the relationship between the two "isn't pretty right now".[64] A few days later, on July 13, 2015, during a 2015 NBA Summer League game in Las Vegas, the two shared an awkward on-camera handshake as Karl approached and Cousins reluctantly shook the coach's hand before turning away.[65][66] Later that week, Divac summoned Cousins and Karl to a private counseling session.[66]

General manager

Divac was promoted to the Kings' vice president of basketball operations and general manager on August 31, 2015.[67]

Amid a tense[68] and incident-filled[69] season that saw the team briefly reach the final playoff spot in the Western Conference before unravelling with extended losing streaks in late January and early February 2016, the organization reportedly made a decision to fire their head coach George Karl during the upcoming All-Star break, a move pushed for by Divac.[70] However, in a quick about-face, Karl got retained after meeting with Divac and reportedly pledging to make changes to address concerns within the organization about his defensive schemes and practice policies.[71] It was later reported that the move to fire Karl on this occasion got scuttled by the Kings minority owners over financial concerns.[72] A month and a half later, in late March 2016, Divac signed a multi-year contract extension with the organization.[73] The team finished the season 33–49, eight games out of the playoffs, good for 10th spot in the Western Conference. Their final season in Sleep Train Arena, the team's home since 1988, it was also their first 30 plus win campaign after seven consecutive seasons of fewer than 30 wins.

Early into the team's offseason, in mid April 2016, the Kings organization fired head coach Karl, a decision made by Divac who had reportedly been pushing for it for months.[72] Within three weeks, during which Divac interviewed head coaching candidates Sam Mitchell, Vinny Del Negro, Mike Woodson, David Blatt, Mark Jackson, Jeff Hornacek, Nate McMillan, Patrick Ewing, Elston Turner, and Corliss Williamson,[74] the Kings hired Dave Joerger as their new head coach, signing him to a four-year deal worth US$16 million.[74] At the 2016 NBA draft, with the 8th pick, the Kings selected Marquese Chriss out of the University of Washington, but traded him to the Phoenix Suns for rights to Bogdan Bogdanović as well as the Suns' 2016 draft 13th and 28th picks, Georgios Papagiannis and Skal Labissière, respectively.

At the 2017 NBA draft, with the 5th pick, the Kings selected point guard De'Aaron Fox out of Kentucky. At the 2018 NBA draft, the Kings selected Marvin Bagley III with the second overall pick, passing on Luka Dončić who would become a MVP candidate within two years into his NBA career.[75] In 2018–19 season the Sacramento Kings finished 9th in the Western conference. However, the season was evaluated as successful for the Kings.[76]

The 2019–20 NBA season was suspended in March as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the Sacramento Kings were invited to the 22-team 2020 NBA Bubble. However, the Kings did not manage to qualify for the playoffs, their 14th consecutive season without a playoff appearance, and finished the season with a 31–41 record. Shortly thereafter, on August 14, 2020, Divac stepped down as general manager.[77]

Investments

Divac has been involved in many non-basketball endeavors while still actively playing in the NBA, and more so after he retired. He is an active restaurant investor in the Sacramento, California area. However, his attempts to make major investments in Serbia failed, for a variety of reasons.

The most notable affair was a highly publicized business venture—takeover bid of profitable beverage producer Knjaz Miloš. Divac's company "Apurna", in a joint venture with French dairy giant Danone, ostensibly proposed the best bid, but the takeover was aborted by the Serbia's Securities Commission, because Danone/Apurna allegedly offered extra money to small shareholders.[78] In the repeated bid, Divac and Danone eventually withdrew and the sale went to FPP Balkan Ltd., a privatization fund from the Cayman Islands. The entire messy affair caused great friction within the Serbian government, wide speculation about corruption, resignation of the Securities Commission chief, and even a police investigation.[79]

Another similar, though less spectacular, episode happened with 2005 Divac's attempt to take over the Večernje novosti, a Serbian high-circulation daily.[80] He made an agreement with small shareholders to take over the company by means of registering a new company with joint capital, which would increase the share capital. However, the Serbian Government intervened and halted what should have been a mere technical move. While the attempted takeover was a "backdoor" one indeed, it was legal and similar cases had already occurred. The government ostensibly feared lack of control over the influential daily. Even though the Supreme Court of Serbia eventually ruled in Divac's favor, he withdrew from the contest, citing "friendly advice" by unnamed persons.[81] Embittered, he decided to stop his attempts to invest in Serbia: "All of this is ugly and I'm very upset... I realized that there's no place for me in Serbia and my friends can meet me in Madrid from now on... In Serbia, some different rules are in effect, and I can't conceive them".[82]

However, that turned out not to be true, as in October 2007 Divac got legally registered as the 100% owner of Voda Voda, a bottled water brand previously owned by businessman Vojin Đorđević. That transaction was also followed by a stir of controversy, as Đorđević publicly accused Divac of deceit, asserting that he broke a gentlemen's agreement they had, and questioning the validity of the contract that Divac presented to the Serbian Business Registers Agency. The circumstances surrounding the deal (as of November 2007) are still unclear: Divac claims that he indeed loaned some money to Đorđević's Si&Si company, which was in financial trouble, and after Đorđević failed to fulfill his part of the deal, just used the contract, already properly signed by Đorđević, to claim ownership of the company.[83][84]

Humanitarian work

 
Vlade Divac (rear, center) alongside Crown Prince Alexander II in 2005, at an event for World Heart Day

Divac is a humanitarian worker, focusing on aid to children worldwide and refugees in his home country. Along with six Serbian basketball teammates, Divac established the charity called Group Seven, later renamed to "Divac's Children Foundation", and works closely with International Orthodox Christian Charities (IOCC), helping them to raise around US$500,000 for humanitarian assistance in Serbia since 1997.[85] Divac's own foundation, presided by his wife Snežana, provided over $2,500,000 in humanitarian assistance through 1998–2007.[86]

In 2000, the NBA named Divac as the recipient of the J. Walter Kennedy Citizenship Award. The honor is presented annually to a player, coach or athletic trainer who shows outstanding service and dedication to the community.[87]

In late 2007, Divac founded a humanitarian organization, "You Can Too" (Serbian: Можеш и ти/Možeš i ti), with the goal of restoring abandoned homes in villages throughout Serbia and Africa, thereby providing shelter for homeless refugees.[86] Around 7,800 of those people still live in collective centers under poor conditions, so the organization has employed itself to buy abandoned countryside houses, in an attempt to finally solve their accommodation problem.[88]

From September 21 to 23, 2007, Divac organized an official farewell from his active basketball career in his hometown Prijepolje and Belgrade, simultaneously promoting the "You Can Too" campaign. The spectacle culminated in a gathering of Divac and his worldwide friends in front of 10,000 people outside the National Assembly building.[89]

In popular culture

In the early 1990s, the song "Vlade Divac" by Belgrade band Deca Loših Muzičara, devoted to his move to the Lakers, was a big hit; the band finally got to personally meet Divac and perform the song with him on his farewell party in 2007.[90]

During his time with the Lakers, Divac's popularity and marketing potential, in addition to his entertaining and good-natured personality, were picked up on by the American TV industry. As a result, he appeared quite a few times on Los Angeles-based late night programmes such as The Arsenio Hall Show and The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. In 1990, he was featured in a commercial with Laker teammates A. C. Green and Mychal Thompson for the Schick brand razor company.[91] He also appeared in American sitcoms Married... with Children and Coach, as well as in the short lived Good Sports sitcom. On the big screen Divac took part in basketball-based movies Eddie, Space Jam and Juwanna Mann. Later in his career, he appeared on Larry King Live in 1999 and The Late Late Show in 2002.

In Serbia, throughout his playing career, Divac regularly appeared in commercials pitching products ranging from Atlas Beer to Société Générale mortgage credit plans. He appeared in a national TV commercial in the United States alongside former NBA star Darryl Dawkins for Taco Bell.

Divac appeared as a special guest on Eurovision 2008. He threw a ball into the audience, which marked the beginning of televoting.

Divac features in the ESPN 30 for 30 documentary Once Brothers, where he discusses the exploits of the Yugoslavia national basketball team in the late 1980s and early 1990s and how the Yugoslav Wars tore them apart, especially in context of his broken friendship with Croatian player Dražen Petrović.[34]

Divac appears in Boris Malagurski's documentary film The Weight of Chains, in which he talks about the 1999 NATO bombing of Yugoslavia.

In March 2020, Belgian footballer Divock Origi revealed that he was named after Divac.[92]

Personal life

Divac and his wife, Snežana, have two sons, Luka and Matija, and an adopted daughter, Petra, whose biological parents were killed by Kosovo Liberation Army snipers.[36] On January 7, 2014, Divac's father Milenko died after injuries sustained in a car accident.[93] Divac is fluent in 3 languages, Serbian, Russian and English.[94]

Filmography

Film

Year Title Role Notes
1991 Driving Me Crazy Yugo Boss
1996 Eddie Himself (Los Angeles Lakers)
1996 Space Jam Himself
2002 Juwanna Mann Beat Player Morse
2006 We Are Not Angels 3: Rock & Roll Strike Back Pretpostavljeni

Selected television

Year Title Role Notes
1991 Good Sports Himself Episode: "The Reviews Are In"
1992 Coach Delivery Man Episode: "Dateline-Bangkok"
1992 Rachel Gunn, R.N. Father Squires Episode: "Rachel Sees Red"
1993 Married... with Children Vlade Divac Episode: "A Tisket, a Tasket, Can Peg Make a Basket?"
2000 Driving Me Crazy Gene Viglione TV movie
2003 Crni Gruja Vampir Toza Episode: "Kolac"
2010 30 for 30 Himself Episode: Once Brothers (Documentary)
2010 The Weight of Chains Himself Documentary

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The NBA did not record blocked shots before the 1973–74 season, so earlier players such as Bill Russell and Wilt Chamberlain probably had similar career achievements.

References

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Further reading

  • Đorđević, Ivan (2007). Владе Дивац – недовршена транзициона бајка (PDF). Glasnik Etnografskog Instituta SANU (in Serbian). 55 (1): 61–75. doi:10.2298/GEI0701061D.

External links

  • Career statistics and player information from NBA.com   and Basketball-Reference.com  
  • Euroleague.net 50 greatest contributors
  • Vlade Divac at Olympedia
  • Vlade Divac at IMDb

vlade, divac, serbian, cyrillic, Владе, Дивац, pronounced, ʋlǎːde, dǐːʋats, born, february, 1968, serbian, professional, basketball, executive, former, player, most, recently, vice, president, basketball, operations, general, manager, sacramento, kings, nation. Vlade Divac Serbian Cyrillic Vlade Divac pronounced ʋlǎːde dǐːʋats born February 3 1968 is a Serbian professional basketball executive and former player who was most recently the vice president of basketball operations and general manager of the Sacramento Kings of the National Basketball Association NBA Vlade DivacVlade DivacDivac in 2016 President of KK PartizanIn office 2000 2004Preceded byIvica DacicSucceeded byPredrag DanilovicPresident of the Serbian Olympic CommitteeIn office 2009 2017Preceded byIvan CurkovicSucceeded byBozidar MaljkovicPersonal detailsBorn 1968 02 03 February 3 1968 age 54 Prijepolje SR Serbia SFR YugoslaviaOccupationBasketball playersports administratorbasketball executivebusinessmanBasketball careerPersonal informationListed height7 ft 1 in 2 16 m Listed weight260 lb 118 kg Career informationNBA draft1989 Round 1 Pick 26th overallSelected by the Los Angeles LakersPlaying career1983 2005PositionCenterNumber12 21Career history1983 1986Sloga1986 1989Partizan1989 1996Los Angeles Lakers1996 1998Charlotte Hornets1999Crvena zvezda1998 2004Sacramento Kings2004 2005Los Angeles LakersCareer highlights and awardsNBA All Star 2001 NBA All Rookie First Team 1990 No 21 retired by Sacramento Kings FIBA Korac Cup champion 1989 Yugoslav League champion 1987 Yugoslav Cup winner 1989 Mister Europa Player of the Year 1989 FIBA s 50 Greatest Players 1991 50 Greatest EuroLeague Contributors 2008 Olympic Order 2016 Career NBA statisticsPoints13 398 11 8 ppg Rebounds9 326 8 2 rpg Blocks1 631 1 4 bpg Stats at NBA comStats at Basketball Reference comBasketball Hall of Fame as playerFIBA Hall of Fame as playerMedals Men s basketballRepresenting YugoslaviaSummer Olympic Games1988 Seoul TeamFIBA World Cup1990 Argentina Team1986 Spain TeamFIBA Eurobasket1989 Yugoslavia Team1991 Italy Team1987 Greece TeamUniversiade1987 Zagreb TeamFIBA U19 Basketball World Cup1987 Italy Under 19European Championship for Cadets1985 Bulgaria Under 16Representing FR YugoslaviaSummer Olympic Games1996 Atlanta TeamFIBA World Cup2002 Indianapolis TeamFIBA Eurobasket1995 Greece Team1999 France TeamDivac spent most of his playing career in the NBA At 7 ft 1 in 2 16 m 1 he played center and was known for his passing skills He was among the first group of European basketball players to transfer to the NBA in the late 1980s and was named one of the 50 Greatest EuroLeague Contributors 2 He is one of seven players in NBA history to record 13 000 points 9 000 rebounds 3 000 assists and 1 500 blocked shots along with Kareem Abdul Jabbar Hakeem Olajuwon Shaquille O Neal Tim Duncan Kevin Garnett and Pau Gasol 3 n 1 Divac was also the first player born and trained outside the United States to play in over 1 000 games in the NBA On August 20 2010 he was inducted into the FIBA Hall of Fame in recognition of his play in international competition 4 He was elected to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2019 5 Divac is a humanitarian helping children in his native country of Serbia and in Africa 6 In October 2008 he was appointed as government adviser in Serbia for humanitarian issues 7 In February 2009 he was elected President of the Serbian Olympic Committee for a four year term 8 and re elected in November 2012 9 In 2013 Divac received an honor from the World Sports Humanitarian Hall of Fame 10 Contents 1 Professional career 1 1 Sloga 1983 1986 1 2 Partizan 1986 1989 1 3 Los Angeles Lakers 1989 1996 1 4 Charlotte Hornets 1996 1998 1 5 Crvena zvezda 1999 1 6 Sacramento Kings 1999 2004 1 7 Return to the Lakers 2004 2005 2 National team career 3 NBA career statistics 3 1 Regular season 3 2 Playoffs 4 Major career achievements 4 1 KK Partizan 4 2 Yugoslavia national team 4 3 NBA 5 Administrative career 5 1 KK Partizan president 5 2 LA Lakers scout 5 3 Real Madrid Baloncesto club management 5 4 Serbian Deputy Prime Minister s adviser 5 5 Olympic Committee of Serbia president 5 6 Sacramento Kings front office 5 6 1 Initial advisory role 5 6 2 General manager 6 Investments 7 Humanitarian work 8 In popular culture 9 Personal life 10 Filmography 10 1 Film 10 2 Selected television 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksProfessional career EditSloga 1983 1986 Edit Divac began playing basketball in his home town Prijepolje for the team KK Elan He began his professional career in Yugoslavia playing for Sloga from Kraljevo and was immediately noted for scoring 27 points against Crvena zvezda 11 Partizan 1986 1989 Edit In the summer of 1986 Divac was the top star of the basketball transfer season and he ended up signing with KK Partizan for DM14 000 11 In the 1986 87 Yugoslav First League season with players like Divac Aleksandar Đorđevic Zarko Paspalj Zeljko Obradovic and with coach Dusko Vujosevic at the helm Partizan had a dream team which won the Yugoslavian League title In the subsequent 1987 88 FIBA European Champions Cup season now called EuroLeague the club failed to reach the top of the EuroLeague after having lost to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the semifinal in Ghent 12 Jugoplastika with Dino Rađa and Toni Kukoc was a stronger team in the subsequent three years reigning both in Yugoslavia and in Europe Divac had an unusual style compared to most other centers of his generation despite his height he possessed good mobility had good control of the ball and was a decent shooter On occasion he would also act as a play maker His trademark moves included a mid range shot at the top of the key and flip shots around the rim while facing the complete opposite direction His quirky moves complemented how he liked playing gags on the court in the 1989 EuroBasket he lifted teammate Zoran Radovic for a slam dunk In just four professional seasons in Europe he became the most sought after big man on the continent after Arvydas Sabonis 11 Los Angeles Lakers 1989 1996 Edit Drafted into the NBA in 1989 by the Los Angeles Lakers Divac became one of the first European players to have an impact in the league Under the mentorship of Kareem Abdul Jabbar and Magic Johnson he improved his play and adapted to the American style of basketball Though he spoke no English he quickly became popular among his teammates and the public for his charm and joviality In the 1989 90 season he was selected into the NBA All Rookie Team 11 Divac earned a reputation for flopping or deceiving the officials into calling a foul on the other team by purposely falling to the floor upon contact with an opposing player 13 Veteran NBA forward P J Brown claimed that Divac might have been the best of all time at flopping 14 Divac freely admitted doing so adding that he usually did it when he felt like the officials had missed some calls and owed him 15 However when the NBA instituted anti flopping penalties in 2012 Divac expressed his support for such rules stating that he felt players after him were overdo ing it with respect to flopping 16 Ian Thomsen a Sports Illustrated columnist grouped Divac with fellow international players Anderson Varejao and Manu Ginobili as the players who made flopping famous exaggerating contact on the court in a manner analogous to diving in FIBA games 17 Charlotte Hornets 1996 1998 Edit Divac playing for the Hornets being marked by Shaquille O Neal in 1996 On July 1 1996 Divac was traded to the Charlotte Hornets for the draft rights to Kobe Bryant After initially considering retirement upon being traded to the Hornets Divac developed a close relationship with head coach Dave Cowens and flourished in Charlotte s system 18 On February 12 1997 Divac scored 18 points grabbed 9 rebounds and recorded a career high 12 blocks in a 113 100 win over the New Jersey Nets 19 20 Alongside Glen Rice Anthony Mason and Muggsy Bogues Divac helped the Hornets to a franchise record 54 regular season wins that season That postseason Divac averaged 18 points 8 7 rebounds and 2 blocks per game in a first round loss to the New York Knicks 21 The next year during the 1998 NBA playoffs the Hornets beat their division rival Atlanta Hawks in the first round before losing to the defending champion Chicago Bulls in the conference semifinals 18 Crvena zvezda 1999 Edit During the 1998 99 NBA lockout in January 1999 Divac played 2 games for Partizan s eternal rival KK Crvena zvezda in the 1998 99 EuroLeague season 22 His debut for the crveno beli took place mid season on Orthodox Christmas versus a heavily favoured Zalgiris side led by Tyus Edney Mindaugas Zukauskas Saulius Stombergas and Jiri Zidek Jr Supported by a raucous home crowd and energized by Divac s arrival as well as his 16 points and 8 rebounds Crvena zvezda pulled off a 77 69 memorable upset win 23 Divac s brief stint with Crvena zvezda for which he reportedly got paid US 250 000 per game 23 immediately became a sore point with KK Partizan fans who unfurled a banner calling him a traitor at their club s next game 23 The issue of playing for the hated cross town rival reignited several years later when Divac returned to KK Partizan as club president At the time he stated his decision to play for Crvena zvezda was a mistake 23 Sacramento Kings 1999 2004 Edit On January 22 1999 Divac signed a six year 62 5 million contract as a free agent with the Sacramento Kings 24 where he played for six seasons alongside fellow countryman Peja Stojakovic Teamed with Stojakovic Hedo Turkoglu Chris Webber and Mike Bibby Divac revitalized the Sacramento Kings franchise The Kings rose in the NBA ranks becoming a perennial playoff contender and eventually a championship contender leading the league in wins in 2001 02 25 The Kings however could not get past the Los Angeles Lakers who beat them controversially in a 7 game series in 2002 26 which has later been dubbed by some as the greatest tragedy in sports history Return to the Lakers 2004 2005 Edit After the 2003 04 NBA season Divac became a free agent On July 20 2004 he signed a two year contract to return to the Lakers part of Mitch Kupchak s plan to overhaul Laker basketball The Lakers following a defeat in the NBA Finals had traded away or released most of their players including Shaquille O Neal Gary Payton Karl Malone Derek Fisher and more Divac was supposed to help fill that void However Divac suffered back problems and could not play most of the season and even when he returned could only play about nine minutes per game averaging 2 3 points per game and 2 1 rebounds per game in 15 games he played 8 games early in the season and 7 more in the final month of the season On July 14 2005 37 year old Divac announced his retirement ending his 16 year NBA and 22 year professional basketball career 27 Divac accepted a position with the Lakers as a European liaison to help with scouting overseas The Kings retired Divac s No 21 jersey in a ceremony on March 31 2009 28 Over his 16 years in the NBA Divac earned over 93 million in salary 29 In September 2009 he played for the NBA Generations team in the 2009 NBA Asia Challenge a series of exhibitions against Korean Basketball League and Philippine Basketball Association players 30 National team career Edit Divac fourth from right at centre with the Yugoslavia team that won the EuroBasket 1989 Divac with Drazen Petrovic in the 1990 FIBA World Championship held in Argentina In summer 1986 at 18 right after signing for KK Partizan Divac debuted for the senior Yugoslavia national basketball team at the 1986 FIBA World Championship in Madrid on invitation by the head coach Kresimir Cosic However the excellent rookie s performance was spoiled by the event in the semi finals against the Soviet Union Forty five seconds before the end Yugoslavia had a comfortable lead of 9 points but the Soviets scored two three pointers within a few seconds and cut the difference to 3 points Yugoslavia tried to hold the ball for the remaining time opting to continue the play with throw ins instead of free throws following fouls but with only 14 seconds left Divac committed a double dribble the Soviets were awarded the ball and tied the score with another three pointer In the overtime the Soviets won by 1 point and Yugoslavs had to be content with the bronze 11 31 The next year Divac participated in the team that took the gold at the 1987 FIBA Junior World Championship which was later split into separate under 19 and under 21 events in Bormio Italy That event launched the young generation of Yugoslavian basketball players also featuring stars like Rađa and Kukoc regarded as likely the best in history Before the breakup of Yugoslavia they would also take the titles at EuroBasket 1989 and the 1990 FIBA World Championship in Argentina 11 where they were led by Drazen Petrovic 32 as well as the EuroBasket 1991 title with Aleksandar Đorđevic at point guard 33 When Yugoslavia won the gold in the 1990 FIBA World Championship fans rushed onto the court One of them was holding a Croatian flag one of the six republics that made up Yugoslavia Divac claims that he told the man that he should not be waving that flag since this was a win for Yugoslavia Divac claims the man made a derogatory remark about the Yugoslav flag at which point Divac took his flag from him This happened during a very tense time where nationalistic pride was threatening to tear Yugoslavia apart and ignite a war The taking of the flag made Divac a hero to Serbs and a villain to Croatians Divac has stated that he did not mean it as an act against Croatia and he would have taken away a Serbian flag if a Serb fan had done the same 34 35 This action along with the Yugoslav Wars alienated Divac from many of his former Croatian friends particularly Drazen Petrovic whom he considered his best friend 34 When FR Yugoslavia won the gold medal at the EuroBasket 1995 and Croatia won bronze Croatia still at war with Serbs from Croatia walked off the podium during the medal ceremony The teams had not faced each other in the tournament In 2002 Divac was part of the team that won the FIBA World Cup in Indianapolis beating Argentina in the final and the USA earlier on NBA career statistics Edit Divac is one of seven players in NBA history to record 13 000 points 9 000 rebounds 3 000 assists and 1 500 blocked shots 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 highRegular season Edit Year Team GP GS MPG FG 3P FT RPG APG SPG BPG PPG1989 90 LA Lakers 82 5 19 6 499 000 708 6 2 9 1 0 1 4 8 51990 91 LA Lakers 82 81 28 2 565 357 703 8 1 1 1 1 3 1 5 11 21991 92 LA Lakers 36 18 27 2 495 263 768 6 9 1 7 1 5 1 0 11 31992 93 LA Lakers 82 69 30 8 485 280 689 8 9 2 8 1 6 1 7 12 81993 94 LA Lakers 79 73 34 0 506 191 686 10 8 3 9 1 2 1 4 14 21994 95 LA Lakers 80 80 35 1 507 185 777 10 4 4 1 1 4 2 2 16 01995 96 LA Lakers 79 79 31 3 513 167 641 8 6 3 3 1 0 1 7 12 91996 97 Charlotte 81 80 35 1 494 234 683 9 0 3 7 1 3 2 2 12 61997 98 Charlotte 64 41 28 2 498 214 691 8 1 2 7 1 3 1 5 10 41998 99 Sacramento 50 50 35 2 470 256 702 10 0 4 3 9 1 0 14 31999 2000 Sacramento 82 81 29 0 503 269 691 8 0 3 0 1 3 1 3 12 32000 01 Sacramento 81 81 29 9 482 286 691 8 3 2 9 1 1 1 1 12 02001 02 Sacramento 80 80 30 3 472 231 615 8 4 3 7 1 0 1 2 11 12002 03 Sacramento 80 80 29 8 466 240 713 7 2 3 4 1 0 1 3 9 92003 04 Sacramento 81 81 28 6 470 154 654 5 7 5 3 7 1 9 92004 05 LA Lakers 15 0 8 7 419 000 667 2 1 1 3 3 1 2 3Career 1134 979 29 8 495 235 692 8 2 3 1 1 1 1 4 11 8All Star 1 0 9 0 667 000 6 0 1 0 2 0 0 8 0Playoffs Edit Year Team GP GS MPG FG 3P FT RPG APG SPG BPG PPG1990 LA Lakers 9 1 19 4 727 500 895 5 3 1 1 0 9 1 7 9 11991 LA Lakers 19 19 32 1 564 167 803 6 7 1 1 1 4 2 2 13 31992 LA Lakers 4 4 35 8 349 000 900 5 5 3 8 1 3 0 8 9 81993 LA Lakers 5 5 33 4 500 444 545 9 4 5 6 1 2 2 4 18 01995 LA Lakers 10 10 38 8 467 222 645 8 5 3 1 0 8 1 3 15 61996 LA Lakers 4 4 28 8 429 200 625 7 5 2 0 0 0 1 3 9 01997 Charlotte 3 3 38 7 457 000 800 8 7 3 3 1 0 2 0 18 01998 Charlotte 9 9 38 5 483 000 606 10 9 3 4 0 8 1 6 11 61999 Sacramento 5 5 39 6 446 200 833 10 0 4 6 1 6 0 8 16 22000 Sacramento 5 5 32 0 357 000 696 7 2 2 8 1 4 0 8 11 22001 Sacramento 8 8 28 1 350 333 763 8 4 2 4 1 0 1 5 10 82002 Sacramento 16 16 33 4 464 268 755 9 3 1 7 1 1 1 3 13 52003 Sacramento 12 12 26 4 560 000 673 5 8 2 3 0 7 0 9 11 42004 Sacramento 12 12 19 6 437 000 739 4 9 1 8 0 3 0 4 6 6Career 121 113 30 8 480 241 731 7 5 2 4 1 0 1 4 12 1Major career achievements EditKK Partizan Edit Yugoslav League Champion 1987 1988 EuroLeague Final Four 3rd Place Yugoslav Cup Winner 1989 Korac Cup Winner 1989 Yugoslavia national team Edit Earned gold medal with Yugoslavia s under 18 nationals at the 1985 FIBA Europe Under 16 Championship in Rousse Bulgaria Earned gold medal with Yugoslavia s under 21 nationals at the 1986 FIBA Europe Under 18 Championship in Gmunden Austria Earned gold medal with Yugoslavia s under 21 nationals at the 1987 FIBA Under 19 World Cup in Bormio Italy defeating the U S team twice in that tournament Earned silver medals in 1988 Summer Olympic Games for SFR Yugoslavia and 1996 Summer Olympic Games for FR Yugoslavia Earned gold medals with SFRY at the 1990 FIBA World Championship Argentina and with FRY at the 2002 FIBA World Championship U S Earned gold medals at EuroBasket in Zagreb 1989 and Rome 1991 with SFRY and in Athens 1995 with FRY NBA Edit Named to the 1989 90 NBA All Rookie First Team after averaging 8 5 ppg and 6 2 rpg for the Lakers Appeared in the 1991 NBA Finals against the Chicago Bulls and averaged 12 1 ppg 7 5 rpg and 2 4 apg in 121 career NBA Playoff games Ranks 4th in Lakers franchise history with 830 blocked shots Ranked 2nd on the Kings in scoring 14 3 ppg rebounds 10 0 rpg 10th in the NBA assists 4 3 apg and blocked shots 1 02 bpg in 1998 99 Named NBA All Star 2001 One of only five basketball players born and trained in Europe to play at least 1 000 NBA games 1 134 along with Dirk Nowitzki Tony Parker Pau Gasol Boris Diaw One of only four basketball players born and trained in Europe Peja Stojakovic Drazen Petrovic and Zydrunas Ilgauskas are the others to have his number retired by an NBA teamAdministrative career EditThrough the twilight of his playing career and afterwards Divac focused on three fields humanitarian work sport management and investment KK Partizan president Edit In late 2000 following the overthrow of Slobodan Milosevic whose policies Divac had been openly critical of throughout mid to late 1990s 36 Divac and former teammate Predrag Danilovic took over their former club KK Partizan They did so on initiative by Ivica Dacic the club s outgoing president and more importantly a suddenly marginalized politician who due to his association with Milosevic was forced to leave his post at the club Seeing that various state owned companies and community property were being taken over in a dubious manner during the power vacuum that resulted from regime change Dacic saw it prudent to bring the club s two former greats as a safeguard against the same happening to KK Partizan Divac became the club s president while Danilovic took the vice president role 37 Freshly retired from playing Danilovic was actually running the club s day to day operations since Divac was still very actively involved with the Sacramento Kings at the time The head coach they inherited Darko Russo finished out the 2000 01 season before they decided in summer 2001 to bring back their mentor Dusko Vujosevic to be the new head coach Though the duo never stated so outright their additional motivation in getting involved with KK Partizan again was perceived to be gaining the upper hand on the club s eventual privatisation process once the new Law on Sports was passed in the Serbian parliament Since the exact ownership structure of a publicly owned KK Partizan was not and still is not really clear potential investors decided to stay away at least until the law came into effect Divac and Danilovic appeared pretty much out of nowhere in this regard but enjoyed plenty of fan and public support because most preferred to see their beloved club owned and operated by its former stars rather than a faceless corporation or a group of politicians managers or businessmen close to the ruling coalition However after a few years the duo ran out of patience and pulled out of the venture in late 2004 because it became too much of a financial burden with no end goal in sight While he stopped performing any official functions at the club Divac continued to be involved with it in a lesser capacity for a few years afterwards LA Lakers scout Edit In October 2005 right after ending his playing career with the Los Angeles Lakers Divac got hired as the Lakers European scout reporting directly to the team s general manager Mitch Kupchak 38 He left the position in 2006 Real Madrid Baloncesto club management Edit In June 2006 through his friendship with Predrag Mijatovic Divac linked up with Ramon Calderon as part of the lawyer s candidate bid for the presidency of Real Madrid 39 When Calderon closely won the club elections on July 2 2006 Divac was announced as the head of operations at Real Madrid basketball club though the scope of his job description soon got reduced to consulting duties as president Calderon s adviser for basketball and club s international coordinator 40 41 However Divac s role in the club s day to day operations turned out to be largely symbolic and he even admitted as much in a March 2007 interview for Croatian weekly Globus I literally do nothing and I only serve as part of the royal club s image I only accepted the job because of Mijatovic who is currently the football director at Real 42 By the end of 2007 following a financial settlement between the two parties Divac moved on from the post for which he had been reportedly receiving an annual compensation of 300 000 40 43 Serbian Deputy Prime Minister s adviser Edit In October 2008 Divac s political advisory engagement within the Serbian government as the sports diaspora and humanitarian advisor to the Deputy Prime Minister and Internal Affairs Minister Ivica Dacic got announced 44 45 46 Olympic Committee of Serbia president Edit Divac was proposed in 2000 as Yugoslavia s candidate for the Sport Commission of the International Olympic Committee in spring 2000 This candidature was withdrawn under pressure from Milosevic regime 47 In February 2009 Divac ran for presidency of the Olympic Committee of Serbia against incumbent president Ivan Curkovic 48 He won the race after Curkovic withdrew just before the scheduled voting 8 In November 2012 he was re elected as the sole candidate the end of his second mandate coincides with the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro 9 In December 2014 Kosovo was accepted as a full member of the International Olympic Committee Divac and the Serbian Olympic Committee have been criticised chiefly by the Democratic Party of Serbia for failing to take any effort to prevent that 49 Divac stated that he is not happy with the decision of the IOC but could not have prevented it as it had already been made and said he would accept it in the interest of the athletes 50 On May 9 2017 he was succeeded by Serbian former basketball coach Bozidar Maljkovic on position of the president of Olympic Committee of Serbia 51 Sacramento Kings front office Edit Initial advisory role Edit In early March 2015 Divac was hired by the Sacramento Kings as their vice president of basketball and franchise operations 52 Brought into the organization by the principal owner Vivek Ranadive towards the end of a turbulent season Divac s arrival came in the wake of head coach Mike Malone s firing and the eventual hiring of George Karl Working alongside the team s general manager Pete D Alessandro Divac s initial duties with the Kings were reported to be advising the front office and coaches as well as assisting with branding and fan outreach 52 However such broadly defined job responsibilities immediately led to press speculation about Divac s role within the organization that in addition to general manager D Alessandro also featured assistant GM Mike Bratz special assistant to the GM Mitch Richmond director of player personnel and analytics Dean Oliver adviser to the chairman Chris Mullin as well as a head coach Karl who has always wanted to be involved in personnel issues 53 Within a month of Divac s hiring ESPN s Marc Stein reported that despite the Kings not yet announcing their new power structure Divac is indeed already regarded as the team s top basketball official by owner Ranadive 54 On June 10 2015 two weeks before the NBA draft general manager D Alessandro left the Kings by accepting a front office position with the Denver Nuggets amid reports he did so due to being stripped of his decision making power after Ranadive hired Divac 55 56 Only days before the draft animosity between head coach Karl and the team s star center DeMarcus Cousins reignited as Karl reportedly lobbied Divac as well as multiple players on the Kings roster in order to make the case to owner Ranadive that Cousins needs to be traded 57 As a result against the backdrop of Cousins calling Karl a snake on Twitter 58 Divac reportedly discussed multiple Cousins trade scenarios with various teams but ultimately no deal got made 59 At the 2015 NBA draft with the 6th pick the Kings selected 21 year old center Willie Cauley Stein out of Kentucky Less than a week following the draft with the dissolution of the Karl Cousins relationship on public display the Kings ultimately unsuccessful attempt at landing University of Kentucky head coach John Calipari to replace Karl was reported 60 In early July 2015 in an effort of clearing salary cap space in order to immediately go after free agents the Kings agreed to a trade with the Philadelphia 76ers sending Nik Stauskas Carl Landry and Jason Thompson along with the Kings future first round draft pick to the Sixers as well as the rights to swap first round picks in 2016 and 2017 while receiving the rights to Sixers overseas players Arturas Gudaitis and Luka Mitrovic in return 61 Two days later they announced the acquisitions of two free agents 29 year old Marco Belinelli on a three year US 19 million contract and 29 year old point guard Rajon Rondo for one year for US 10 million 62 This was followed by signing twenty six year old center Kosta Koufos for four years and US 33 million with his role envisioned as the backup for Cousins 63 With the free agent signings done Divac turned his attention to attempting to mend the relations between the team s head coach Karl and its star center Cousins ahead of the 2015 16 season admitting publicly on July 9 2015 on CBS Sports Radio s The Jim Rome Show that the relationship between the two isn t pretty right now 64 A few days later on July 13 2015 during a 2015 NBA Summer League game in Las Vegas the two shared an awkward on camera handshake as Karl approached and Cousins reluctantly shook the coach s hand before turning away 65 66 Later that week Divac summoned Cousins and Karl to a private counseling session 66 General manager Edit Divac was promoted to the Kings vice president of basketball operations and general manager on August 31 2015 67 Amid a tense 68 and incident filled 69 season that saw the team briefly reach the final playoff spot in the Western Conference before unravelling with extended losing streaks in late January and early February 2016 the organization reportedly made a decision to fire their head coach George Karl during the upcoming All Star break a move pushed for by Divac 70 However in a quick about face Karl got retained after meeting with Divac and reportedly pledging to make changes to address concerns within the organization about his defensive schemes and practice policies 71 It was later reported that the move to fire Karl on this occasion got scuttled by the Kings minority owners over financial concerns 72 A month and a half later in late March 2016 Divac signed a multi year contract extension with the organization 73 The team finished the season 33 49 eight games out of the playoffs good for 10th spot in the Western Conference Their final season in Sleep Train Arena the team s home since 1988 it was also their first 30 plus win campaign after seven consecutive seasons of fewer than 30 wins Early into the team s offseason in mid April 2016 the Kings organization fired head coach Karl a decision made by Divac who had reportedly been pushing for it for months 72 Within three weeks during which Divac interviewed head coaching candidates Sam Mitchell Vinny Del Negro Mike Woodson David Blatt Mark Jackson Jeff Hornacek Nate McMillan Patrick Ewing Elston Turner and Corliss Williamson 74 the Kings hired Dave Joerger as their new head coach signing him to a four year deal worth US 16 million 74 At the 2016 NBA draft with the 8th pick the Kings selected Marquese Chriss out of the University of Washington but traded him to the Phoenix Suns for rights to Bogdan Bogdanovic as well as the Suns 2016 draft 13th and 28th picks Georgios Papagiannis and Skal Labissiere respectively At the 2017 NBA draft with the 5th pick the Kings selected point guard De Aaron Fox out of Kentucky At the 2018 NBA draft the Kings selected Marvin Bagley III with the second overall pick passing on Luka Doncic who would become a MVP candidate within two years into his NBA career 75 In 2018 19 season the Sacramento Kings finished 9th in the Western conference However the season was evaluated as successful for the Kings 76 The 2019 20 NBA season was suspended in March as a result of the COVID 19 pandemic and the Sacramento Kings were invited to the 22 team 2020 NBA Bubble However the Kings did not manage to qualify for the playoffs their 14th consecutive season without a playoff appearance and finished the season with a 31 41 record Shortly thereafter on August 14 2020 Divac stepped down as general manager 77 Investments EditDivac has been involved in many non basketball endeavors while still actively playing in the NBA and more so after he retired He is an active restaurant investor in the Sacramento California area However his attempts to make major investments in Serbia failed for a variety of reasons The most notable affair was a highly publicized business venture takeover bid of profitable beverage producer Knjaz Milos Divac s company Apurna in a joint venture with French dairy giant Danone ostensibly proposed the best bid but the takeover was aborted by the Serbia s Securities Commission because Danone Apurna allegedly offered extra money to small shareholders 78 In the repeated bid Divac and Danone eventually withdrew and the sale went to FPP Balkan Ltd a privatization fund from the Cayman Islands The entire messy affair caused great friction within the Serbian government wide speculation about corruption resignation of the Securities Commission chief and even a police investigation 79 Another similar though less spectacular episode happened with 2005 Divac s attempt to take over the Vecernje novosti a Serbian high circulation daily 80 He made an agreement with small shareholders to take over the company by means of registering a new company with joint capital which would increase the share capital However the Serbian Government intervened and halted what should have been a mere technical move While the attempted takeover was a backdoor one indeed it was legal and similar cases had already occurred The government ostensibly feared lack of control over the influential daily Even though the Supreme Court of Serbia eventually ruled in Divac s favor he withdrew from the contest citing friendly advice by unnamed persons 81 Embittered he decided to stop his attempts to invest in Serbia All of this is ugly and I m very upset I realized that there s no place for me in Serbia and my friends can meet me in Madrid from now on In Serbia some different rules are in effect and I can t conceive them 82 However that turned out not to be true as in October 2007 Divac got legally registered as the 100 owner of Voda Voda a bottled water brand previously owned by businessman Vojin Đorđevic That transaction was also followed by a stir of controversy as Đorđevic publicly accused Divac of deceit asserting that he broke a gentlemen s agreement they had and questioning the validity of the contract that Divac presented to the Serbian Business Registers Agency The circumstances surrounding the deal as of November 2007 are still unclear Divac claims that he indeed loaned some money to Đorđevic s Si amp Si company which was in financial trouble and after Đorđevic failed to fulfill his part of the deal just used the contract already properly signed by Đorđevic to claim ownership of the company 83 84 Humanitarian work Edit Vlade Divac rear center alongside Crown Prince Alexander II in 2005 at an event for World Heart Day Divac is a humanitarian worker focusing on aid to children worldwide and refugees in his home country Along with six Serbian basketball teammates Divac established the charity called Group Seven later renamed to Divac s Children Foundation and works closely with International Orthodox Christian Charities IOCC helping them to raise around US 500 000 for humanitarian assistance in Serbia since 1997 85 Divac s own foundation presided by his wife Snezana provided over 2 500 000 in humanitarian assistance through 1998 2007 86 In 2000 the NBA named Divac as the recipient of the J Walter Kennedy Citizenship Award The honor is presented annually to a player coach or athletic trainer who shows outstanding service and dedication to the community 87 In late 2007 Divac founded a humanitarian organization You Can Too Serbian Mozhesh i ti Mozes i ti with the goal of restoring abandoned homes in villages throughout Serbia and Africa thereby providing shelter for homeless refugees 86 Around 7 800 of those people still live in collective centers under poor conditions so the organization has employed itself to buy abandoned countryside houses in an attempt to finally solve their accommodation problem 88 From September 21 to 23 2007 Divac organized an official farewell from his active basketball career in his hometown Prijepolje and Belgrade simultaneously promoting the You Can Too campaign The spectacle culminated in a gathering of Divac and his worldwide friends in front of 10 000 people outside the National Assembly building 89 In popular culture EditIn the early 1990s the song Vlade Divac by Belgrade band Deca Losih Muzicara devoted to his move to the Lakers was a big hit the band finally got to personally meet Divac and perform the song with him on his farewell party in 2007 90 During his time with the Lakers Divac s popularity and marketing potential in addition to his entertaining and good natured personality were picked up on by the American TV industry As a result he appeared quite a few times on Los Angeles based late night programmes such as The Arsenio Hall Show and The Tonight Show with Jay Leno In 1990 he was featured in a commercial with Laker teammates A C Green and Mychal Thompson for the Schick brand razor company 91 He also appeared in American sitcoms Married with Children and Coach as well as in the short lived Good Sports sitcom On the big screen Divac took part in basketball based movies Eddie Space Jam and Juwanna Mann Later in his career he appeared on Larry King Live in 1999 and The Late Late Show in 2002 In Serbia throughout his playing career Divac regularly appeared in commercials pitching products ranging from Atlas Beer to Societe Generale mortgage credit plans He appeared in a national TV commercial in the United States alongside former NBA star Darryl Dawkins for Taco Bell Divac appeared as a special guest on Eurovision 2008 He threw a ball into the audience which marked the beginning of televoting Divac features in the ESPN 30 for 30 documentary Once Brothers where he discusses the exploits of the Yugoslavia national basketball team in the late 1980s and early 1990s and how the Yugoslav Wars tore them apart especially in context of his broken friendship with Croatian player Drazen Petrovic 34 Divac appears in Boris Malagurski s documentary film The Weight of Chains in which he talks about the 1999 NATO bombing of Yugoslavia In March 2020 Belgian footballer Divock Origi revealed that he was named after Divac 92 Personal life EditDivac and his wife Snezana have two sons Luka and Matija and an adopted daughter Petra whose biological parents were killed by Kosovo Liberation Army snipers 36 On January 7 2014 Divac s father Milenko died after injuries sustained in a car accident 93 Divac is fluent in 3 languages Serbian Russian and English 94 Filmography EditFilm Edit Year Title Role Notes1991 Driving Me Crazy Yugo Boss1996 Eddie Himself Los Angeles Lakers 1996 Space Jam Himself2002 Juwanna Mann Beat Player Morse2006 We Are Not Angels 3 Rock amp Roll Strike Back PretpostavljeniSelected television Edit Year Title Role Notes1991 Good Sports Himself Episode The Reviews Are In 1992 Coach Delivery Man Episode Dateline Bangkok 1992 Rachel Gunn R N Father Squires Episode Rachel Sees Red 1993 Married with Children Vlade Divac Episode A Tisket a Tasket Can Peg Make a Basket 2000 Driving Me Crazy Gene Viglione TV movie2003 Crni Gruja Vampir Toza Episode Kolac 2010 30 for 30 Himself Episode Once Brothers Documentary 2010 The Weight of Chains Himself DocumentarySee also EditList of National Basketball Association career blocks leaders List of National Basketball Association players with 10 or more blocks in a game List of Serbian NBA playersNotes Edit The NBA did not record blocked shots before the 1973 74 season so earlier players such as Bill Russell and Wilt Chamberlain probably had similar career achievements References Edit Vlade Divac Stats Basketball Reference com Archived from the original on April 4 2013 Retrieved January 29 2020 Experts decide European Club Basketball s 50 greatest contributors 50 YEARS Welcome to EUROLEAGUE BASKETBALL Euroleague net Retrieved January 24 2013 Vlade Divac Announces Retirement Accepts Position With Lakers amp 124 Nba com Retrieved January 24 2013 FIBA announces 2010 Hall of Fame Class FIBA August 20 2010 Archived from the original on October 19 2010 Divac Sikma Moncrief headline Hall of Fame Class of 2019 National Basketball Association April 6 2019 Divac Creates New Team With You Can Too Campaign NBA com September 22 2007 Archived from the original on October 11 2007 Retrieved January 24 2013 Ex NBA star appointed government adviser Yahoo Sports Associated Press October 16 2008 Archived from the original on October 20 2008 Retrieved October 17 2008 a b Divac na celu OKS naredne cetiri godine in Serbian Blic February 24 2009 Archived from the original on February 27 2009 a b Vlade Divac ponovo izabran za predsednika Olimpijskog komiteta Vlade Divac re elected for the President of the Olympic Committee in Serbian Beta November 7 2012 Kings News Full The Official Site Of The Sacramento Kings Nba com Retrieved January 24 2013 a b c d e f Slobodan Georgijev September 20 2007 Srbin broj jedan van Srbije in Serbian Vreme Istorija Novi Dream Team Partizan official website Retrieved September 24 2007 dead link Tim Povtak January 28 2007 Shutting down acting school Orlando Sentinel Archived from the original on September 7 2012 Retrieved April 29 2007 Flopping keeps cropping up by Doug Haller The Arizona Republic published March 18 2007 retrieved April 29 2007 BEST ACTOR DIVAC IN FLOP WARS II Archived October 18 2015 at the Wayback Machine by Kevin Modesti Los Angeles Daily News published May 22 2002 Even Vlade Divac thinks flopping has gotten out of hand USA Today Retrieved February 21 2017 Thomsen Ian September 28 2012 NBA s new flopping policy the best response to a difficult problem Sports Illustrated cnn com Retrieved September 28 2012 The ugly trend of faking physical contact began in soccer a sport in which gamesmanship has given way to players writhing in false agony around the world Soccer has been unable to fix its problem but now the NBA will have an opportunity to deter players from trying to simulate violent contact in ways made famous by Vlade Divac Manu Ginobili and Anderson Varejao a b Flirting with Retirement How A Trade to Charlotte Saved Vlade Divac s NBA Career Nba com Retrieved March 3 2022 New Jersey Nets at Charlotte Hornets Box Score February 12 1997 Basketball Reference com Retrieved March 3 2022 Vlade Divac Stats Basketball Reference com Archived from the original on April 4 2013 Retrieved March 3 2022 1997 NBA Eastern Conference First Round Hornets vs Knicks Basketball Reference com Retrieved March 3 2022 profile Fibaeurope com Retrieved January 24 2013 a b c d Prosli put protiv Zalgirisa za Zvezdu je igrao mondo rs February 4 2015 Retrieved February 4 2015 Kings Sign Center Vlade Divac Cbsnews com Retrieved March 3 2022 NBA Standings 2001 2002 Sports espn go com Retrieved January 24 2013 Ex referee Tim Donaghy blows whistle on NBA dirty secrets New York Daily News Retrieved February 21 2017 Vlade Divac Announces Retirement Accepts Position With Lakers THE OFFICIAL SITE OF THE LOS ANGELES LAKERS NBA com Retrieved February 21 2017 Kings retire Divac s No 21 Jersey permanent dead link Yahoo Sports March 31 2009 Vlade Divac NBA amp ABA Stats Basketball Reference com Archived from the original on April 4 2013 Retrieved January 24 2013 NBA Asia Challenge 2009 NBA com Retrieved April 21 2015 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Yugoslavia USSR 1986 Basketball Word Cup semi final YouTube Eurobasket 1989 FIBA Eurobasket 1991 FIBA a b c Scott Tobias October 12 2010 Once Brothers A V club John Scheibe December 10 2010 Television review Vlade Divac searches for closure in ESPN s Once Brothers LA Times a b Rick Reilly May 24 1999 Vlade Divac s Private War Sports Illustrated Z Jevtic October 16 2008 Divac savetuje Dacica Blic Divac to serve as scout liaison in Europe Associated Press ESPN com October 19 2005 Retrieved April 15 2018 Calderon presenta su proyecto para el Real Madrid con Mijatovic como director deportivo El Pais June 5 2006 Retrieved April 16 2018 a b El increible caso de Vlade Divac El Mundo April 4 2008 Retrieved July 10 2018 Divac llega al Real Madrid como asesor y con el gran reto de traer la NBA a Europa El Pais September 22 2006 Retrieved July 10 2018 Divac Kandidovacu se za predsednika Srbije in Serbian MONDO web portal March 8 2007 Vlade Divac cobro 300 000 euros por no hacer nada Sport es July 14 2008 Retrieved July 10 2018 J Z October 17 2008 Divac dobija kancelariju u Vladi Blic Retrieved April 16 2018 Vlade Divac appointed adviser to Serbia Toronto Star October 16 2008 Retrieved April 16 2018 Carr Janis October 16 2008 Divac playing new role Orange County Register Retrieved April 16 2018 Apel Vremena H A Samaranu Retrieved February 21 2017 Curkovic backs Divac bid Blic February 13 2009 Archived from the original on February 15 2009 DSS Da li je Divac pokusao da spreci ulazak Kosova u MOK in Serbian Radio Television of Vojvodina December 14 2014 Karolos Grohmann December 10 2014 Kosovo earns Olympic recognition Serbia furious Reuters Medic Jelena Bozidar Maljkovic novi predsednik Olimpijskog komiteta Srbije Blic rs Retrieved March 3 2022 a b Adi Joseph March 3 2015 Kings hire Vlade Divac as vice president adviser USA Today Sports Ziller Tom March 20 2015 The Kings are trying hard to be the Warriors and failing miserably SB Nation Retrieved April 15 2018 Stein Marc April 8 2015 Vlade Divac emerges as Kings lead voice ESPN com Retrieved April 14 2018 Jones Jason June 10 2015 Kings general manager Pete D Alessandro takes job with Nuggets Sacramento Bee Retrieved April 14 2018 Ziller Tom June 11 2015 The Kings front office is even messier than it appears SB Nation Retrieved April 15 2018 Wojnarowski Adrian June 23 2015 Sources George Karl pushing for Kings to trade DeMarcus Cousins Yahoo Sports Retrieved June 23 2018 Zller Tom June 23 2015 A brief history of NBA stars calling George Karl a snake SB Nation Retrieved June 23 2018 Wojnarowski Adrian June 24 2015 Sources Kings talking to Lakers about DeMarcus Cousins trade fielding offers from other teams Yahoo Sports Retrieved June 23 2018 Wojnarowski Adrian June 30 2015 Sources Kings probing John Calipari about coaching front office jobs Yahoo Sports Retrieved June 23 2018 Feldman Dan July 1 2015 76ers get Nik Stauskas first rounder in salary dump trade with Kings NBC Sports Retrieved July 2 2018 Herbert James July 3 2015 Rajon Rondo Kings agree to 1 year 10 million deal CBSSports com Retrieved July 8 2018 Golliver Ben July 7 2015 Grade the deal Kings cap strange summer by signing Kosta Koufos SI com Retrieved July 2 2018 ESPN com news services July 9 2015 Vlade Divac working to make Karl Cousins relationship better ESPN com Retrieved July 8 2018 ESPN com news services July 14 2015 Kings coach George Karl DeMarcus Cousins share awkward handshake Abcnews go com Retrieved July 8 2018 a b Voisin Ailene April 30 2016 George Karl reflective after firing by Kings Sacramento Bee Retrieved July 8 2018 Kings Announce Basketball Operations Update NBA com Turner Sports Interactive Inc August 31 2015 Retrieved August 31 2015 ESPN com news services June 14 2016 Rajon Rondo details Kings woes sends thoughts to Orlando ESPN com Retrieved June 23 2018 Slam staff November 11 2015 DeMarcus Cousins Reportedly Cursed Out George Karl Monday Night Slam Retrieved June 23 2018 Stein Marc February 9 2016 Sources Kings planning to fire coach George Karl in coming days ESPN com Retrieved June 23 2018 Stein Marc February 9 2016 Kings to retain George Karl after meeting with Vlade Divac ESPN com Retrieved June 23 2018 a b Stein Marc April 14 2016 Kings fire George Karl ESPN com Retrieved June 23 2018 Marc Stein March 30 2016 Kings extend contract of VP Vlade Divac ESPN com a b ESPN com news services May 10 2016 Dave Joerger agrees to four year deal to coach Kings ESPN com Retrieved June 23 2018 Ham James August 14 2020 Vlade Divac s Luka Doncic miss not only reason he s out as Kings GM nbcsports com Retrieved August 15 2020 Roberts Jonathan Sacramento Kings Playoffs or not the 2018 19 season is a success aroyalpain com Retrieved August 15 2020 Quinn Sam August 14 2020 Vlade Divac to step down as GM of the Kings Joe Dumars named interim VP of basketball operations cbssports com Retrieved August 15 2020 Chris Mercer December 3 2004 Knjaz Milos auction descends into chaos CEE foodindustry com Retrieved September 25 2007 Chris Mercer December 8 2004 Danone pulls out of Serbian soft drink bidding race CEE foodindustry com Retrieved September 25 2007 Vera Didanovic January 3 2006 Drzava preigrala Divca nuns org Archived from the original on December 28 2009 Retrieved July 26 2009 Georgi Mitev Shantek July 6 2006 NBA ace Vlade Divac slam dunks the Serbian government Southeast European Times Retrieved September 25 2007 Lj Malesevic July 21 2006 Vukcevic Dijaspora ce zapamtiti kako je prosao Divac in Serbian Dnevnik Novi Sad Retrieved September 25 2007 dead link You are insulting me while you have debts Blic October 31 2007 Archived from the original on April 16 2013 Retrieved November 5 2007 Government to intervene in Voda Voda feud B92 November 2 2007 Archived from the original on November 7 2007 Retrieved November 5 2007 About us Divac s Children Foundation Retrieved September 25 2007 a b Divac Creates New Team With You Can Too Campaign NBA com September 22 2007 Archived from the original on October 11 2007 Retrieved September 25 2007 NBA J Walter Kennedy Citizenship Award Winners Nba com Retrieved August 16 2021 Divac za 7 850 izbeglica in Serbian B92 September 23 2007 Retrieved September 25 2007 Spektakularni oprostaj Divca in Serbian B92 September 23 2007 Retrieved September 25 2007 Deca Losih Muzicara pevaju za Divca Kurir September 22 2007 Retrieved September 25 2007 1990 Schick Vlade Divac A C Green Mychal Thompson YouTube September 5 2008 Archived from the original on June 29 2013 Retrieved January 24 2013 Wells Adam March 24 2020 Divock Origi Talks 2019 UCL Final Jurgen Klopp s Hugs LeBron More in B R AMA Bleacher Report Retrieved December 1 2022 It came from the name Vlade Divac My parents watched him play and wanted to personalize the name a little bit Vlade Divac s father dies in car crash in Serbia Apnews com January 8 2014 Retrieved September 15 2021 Berkow Ira June 10 1991 BASKETBALL SPORTS OF THE TIMES Divac Learns the Language The New York Times Retrieved July 1 2022 Further reading EditĐorđevic Ivan 2007 Vlade Divac nedovrshena tranziciona baјka PDF Glasnik Etnografskog Instituta SANU in Serbian 55 1 61 75 doi 10 2298 GEI0701061D External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vlade Divac Career statistics and player information from NBA com and Basketball Reference com Euroleague net 50 greatest contributors Vlade Divac at Olympedia Vlade Divac at IMDb Portals Basketball Biography Sports Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vlade Divac amp oldid 1130352489, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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