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ZELJKO REBRACA - 101 Greats of European Basketball

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78-58, with 12 points from Rebraca. In the 1997-98<br />

EuroLeague, Benetton reached the Final Four played<br />

in Barcelona but fell to AEK Athens in the semis 69-66.<br />

Getting third place by beating Partizan 96-89 was no<br />

big consolation. The following year, Benetton lost the<br />

Italian Cup final to Kinder 73-55, but Rebraca’s empty<br />

season at the club level was compensated with a Yugoslavia<br />

win at the 1998 World Cup in Athens. Even though<br />

the MVP <strong>of</strong> the tourney was Bodiroga, many believed<br />

that Rebraca deserved the accolade because he averaged<br />

13.1 points and 9.1 rebounds. In the final, a 64-62<br />

win against Russia, Rebraca was the key man with 16<br />

points and 11 rebounds. The all-tournament team included<br />

Rebraca, Bodiroga, Vasily Karasev, Alberto Herreros<br />

and Gregor Fucka. At the end <strong>of</strong> the year, at a FIBA<br />

all-star event in Berlin – where he had 14 points and 10<br />

rebounds and was MVP <strong>of</strong> the game – Rebraca received<br />

the award for best <strong>European</strong> player <strong>of</strong> the year, chosen<br />

in a survey <strong>of</strong> the magazine FIBA <strong>Basketball</strong> Monthly,<br />

which gave the award an <strong>of</strong>ficial status.<br />

In Rebraca’s third season, Benetton ended up with a<br />

triumph in the Saporta Cup. On April 13, 1999, in Zaragoza,<br />

Spain, Benetton defeated Pamesa Valencia 64-60 with<br />

6 points and 5 rebounds by Rebraca. It was his second<br />

<strong>European</strong> trophy, again with Obradovic on the bench.<br />

After four years, 143 games, 2,029 points (14.3 per<br />

game) and 6.5 rebounds in Treviso, Rebraca moved<br />

with Obradovic to Panathinaikos, where he played with<br />

his friend and national teammate Dejan Bodiroga. At<br />

the 2000 Final Four in Thessaloniki, Panathinaikos defeated<br />

Efes Pilsen in the semifinal, 81-71, with 22 points<br />

from Bodiroga and 15 from Rebraca. In the title game,<br />

the Greens overcame Maccabi Tel Aviv, their biggest<br />

rival at the turn <strong>of</strong> the century, by the score <strong>of</strong> 82-74.<br />

Rebraca was brilliant, with 20 points and 8 rebounds in<br />

30 minutes. He made 5 <strong>of</strong> 6 field goals and 10 <strong>of</strong> 14 free<br />

throws. Of course, he was chosen MVP.<br />

That season, Panathinaikos also won the Greek<br />

League and Greek Cup, with Rebraca being voted MVP<br />

<strong>of</strong> the league. His big dream was winning the gold medal<br />

with Yugoslavia in the 2000 Olympics in Sydney, but Steve<br />

Nash and Canada ended that dream in the quarterfinals.<br />

Going to the NBA<br />

Eventually, in the summer <strong>of</strong> 2001, at 29 years old,<br />

Rebraca decided to try the NBA. He spent more than six<br />

seasons there, suffering several injuries that kept him<br />

sidelined. He played for Detroit, Atlanta and the Los<br />

Angeles Clippers for a total 215 games, averaging 5.9<br />

points and 3.2 rebounds. As in Europe, his main asset<br />

was that you could always count on getting what you<br />

expected from him. He was not a star in the NBA, but<br />

he was a solid player.<br />

I was a direct witness to almost all <strong>of</strong> Rebraca’s<br />

successes in Europe. The trophies he won in Istanbul,<br />

Zaragoza and Thessaloniki, the gold medals at the<br />

1995 and 1997 EuroBaskets, the Olympic silver in Atlanta<br />

1996, the World Cup gold in 1998. But I also saw<br />

his disappointments in Sydney 2000 and, especially,<br />

the Belgrade EuroBasket in 2005. Obradovic was back<br />

to the bench <strong>of</strong> the national team after five years away,<br />

just like Rebraca. It was to be the perfect goodbye at<br />

home to Bodiroga, Tomasevic and Rebraca. But in one<br />

<strong>of</strong> the biggest upsets in EuroBasket history, Yugoslavia<br />

was eliminated in the Play-Off stage by the Tony Parker-led<br />

France 74-71.<br />

He now lives in Apatin, his childhood town, away<br />

from basketball. He loves the Danube River and family<br />

life. He has three kids, two girls and a boy, and many<br />

nice memories from his career.<br />

<strong>101</strong> greats <strong>of</strong> european basketball<br />

Zeljko Rebraca<br />

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