Basketball
Christos Marmarinos told EOK WebRadio incredible stories from his time in the Kosovo national team
What does a Greek do in Pristina? Christos Marmarinos gave the answers on EEC’s WebRadio and told some incredible stories from his time in the Kosovo national team.
What is it like for a professional coach to coach the Kosovo national team? What did Christos Marmarinos experience there and how did this experience “flow”? The current Sacramento Kings scout spoke to EEC WebRadio’s “Basketball Immigrants” show and shared incredible stories about the craziest challenge of his career in the sport.
How he ended up in Kosovo: “Through one of my old players I was approached by the president of the association and asked if I was interested. We then conducted two interviews and decided to work together. It was like entering a time machine, going back 50 years and seeing how things were before the development of basketball in Greece. This time was something very special.
The reason why he decided to go there: “I thought about it and considered it carefully. When you go to work in a country like this, you basically have to have a certain missionary mentality. You go to a place that is very backward in terms of sports, there is not that good infrastructure, the mindset and culture they have for basketball is also very backward and you say that you will go to one on the condition that you help You will go to such a place. Promote the development of the sport and give the people there a chance if they see something different. If you look at it purely professionally, I don’t think it’s worth it. I had a piece of… romance that made me want to engage in this process.”
On the question of whether the Kosovars had doubts about him, also because of the relations between Greece and Serbia: “They had a lot of doubts, second and third thoughts, they were very suspicious of me.” It took a lot of effort and communication to convince them of the difference, and it took a lot of contacts at the diplomatic level, which I helped to establish . Now there is contact and communication between the two countries.
Before my presence there were few cases of communication between Kosovo and Greece. My assistants also told me that they had changed their view of the Greeks. I really enjoyed helping change that. To understand it: During last year’s broadcast of the Euroleague Final 4 for Kosovo television, one of the commentators was my partner on the national team and he was wearing an Olympiacos jersey with his name on it that I had given him and broadcast with it . This was something that no one in Kosovo would have expected a few years ago.”
On what he found in Kosovo: “I had two Montenegrins who were of Montenegrin origin but grew up in Kosovo and didn’t speak Albanian, only Serbian. There were some Serbs in the Serbian part of Kosovo that we could invite some of, but the Serbs in their community would have more difficulty accepting them than the Albanians. So we had children of Montenegrin origin. For those who understood, we conducted the training in English.
The conditions were…third world, the course had incredible holes. There were two stadiums together, one of which was completely burned down, it was a “corpse” and was put in a parking lot, and right next to it was the arena where we played. It was incredibly cold, it was very difficult inside the stadium, they tried to bring some air heaters for heating but to no avail. The players didn’t even know the basics of training, the coach came once and stayed away the rest of the time, the assistants didn’t know how to make videos, and according to a statistical analysis, they didn’t even know the basics.
We are talking about things that have been happening in Greece since the 70s. In fact, there was a player who a colleague told about Michael Jordan and he replied, “The only Michael I know is Michael Jackson.” They only knew the teams and players that were in the area. With only 3-4 names and they had played abroad, I was able to somehow communicate and we were able to establish contact with the others.”
On the question of whether this “destroyed” stereotypes in Kosovo: “The country is behind, I didn’t think it could be so behind. I didn’t think there could be so many armed people, I didn’t think they could be so comfortable with brute force incidents that would shock us. The stereotypes I “destroyed” concerned the way they saw the Greeks. I have made great efforts with the Kosovo Relations Office here to strengthen the dialogue between the two countries at the diplomatic and political levels as much as possible.
The “opening” I did was to show what our own basketball looks like, our own way of thinking and pass it on to them so that a “seed” for the future is planted here. However, I knew that no matter how hard I put in, I would find a wall. Many people said to me: “How is it possible that we cannot win Lithuania, a state with a population as large as ours?”
For their mentality: “They are fans of victory, like all Balkan countries. It’s unthinkable. We got the first away win in their history against Luxembourg and I think even Olympiacos fans weren’t so happy when they won the Euroleague. They were…drunk for three days. They gave their teams a day off, it was a national holiday, and they beat Luxembourg. Then we might have lost to Denmark and there was a risk of disaster. The whole situation was really very strange. For example, it was much better to beat Gibraltar than to draw with Iceland.
On the question of whether sport is a way out in Kosovo: “When they were recognized by FIBA in 2015, they still talk about it today. It’s huge for her. They have an Olympic champion in judo, where dynamic sports suit them very well in terms of temperament and body type. Their national football team has a very large budget, with 19 of 21 players being foreign-born. They’re trying to do a pan-European 3×3, a pan-European U16-3. Category organizing, things that will put them on the “map” and Europe will hear that there is also a state called Kosovo.”
Regarding what he kept quiet about his presence there: “The only thing I didn’t win was money. What I retain are relationships with some people in an effort to somehow unite under basketball as a common language of communication. I also keep the experiences I have seen of how much these people want help and don’t even know how to accept that help. It’s impressive, it’s really like a time machine. It’s been many years. Although there is money, most of the population is incredibly underdeveloped when it comes to basketball and sports culture. It takes a lot of time, a lot of education and training to be able to pass this on to the grassroots.”
For the story he left behind: “It’s a story that I usually tell my friends, especially abroad, to show the level of preparation of this team, especially on a mental level.” We play practically all year round against Slovakia, who have players worth hundreds of thousands of euros . Whoever won went to the next stage. Behind closed doors, Covid, “bubble” in Pristina. It was a week of preparation, we gave scouting videos and scouting reports, we had morning training sessions, everything that could have been done. I knew it would be impossible for the children to digest the information.
For many of the national team’s children aged 25 to 27, it was their first time getting on a plane. I ask the whole team: “Do you think we are ready?” and they say: “Yes, coach, we have done the best preparation”, which is what everyone always says. So I asked our team’s main playmaker, who is a teacher and educated, which player he was marking. One guard of Slovakia was named Abraham and the other was named Krajicovic.
When I asked the young playmaker this, he was immediately enthusiastic. So the experienced ones from behind tried to tell him in a whisper, one saying one thing, another saying another. He couldn’t hear the boy well, so after waiting a few seconds and trying to understand what was being said to him as best he could, he said “Abramovic,” meaning both names. It was amazing.”
To purchase a potato picker player: “We ‘bought’ a player from his father who was 2.15 years old and had never caught a ball in his life. When he first came on the court, we gave him the ball, told him to put it in the basket, and he hit it because he didn’t know how else to put it. So we go to his father and tell him to come and train his son and he says, ‘No, who will help me get the potatoes out?’ My son is the only worker.”
So we asked him how much he wanted a worker, and in the end the association gave him 100 euros a month to get a worker and train his son. After two years, his son decided he liked the court better than basketball and left.
Source: sport 24
I am a sports writer and journalist who has written for various online publications including Sportish. I’m originally from the UK but currently live in Toronto, Canada. I’m also an author on Sportish and have written several articles on a variety of sports-related topics.
Basketball
Euroleague: Len’s failure, Maccabi’s defeat, Olympiacos’ hard-fought victory
Three matches were played as part of the 18th round of the Euroleague on December 26.
Partizan hosted Maccabi Tel Aviv and suffered a heavy defeat.
The home team, which started the match better, was separated from the opponent by 11 points (28:17) in the first quarter, and at the end of the first 10 minutes, they missed the 3:13 attack and reduced the difference with the opponent team to 1 point (31:30). In the second quarter, Maccabi seized the initiative and after a 14:0 move, they fell behind by 15 points, 56:41. This part of the game was decisive, since then the away team increased their advantage and achieved +33 points – 92:58 at the end of the third quarter, after which they relaxed a little and allowed the opponent to reduce the gap to the last 25 points – 87:112.
This was Maccabi’s fifth consecutive win in the Euroleague, which moved them up to 14th in the standings.
While the most productive player of the match was Walker, who scored 20 points, overall five of Maccabi’s players scored 10+ points.
Monaco had a tough home win against Real Madrid.
The Monegasques were ahead almost the entire game against Los Blancos, but they could not gain a comfortable distance. At the beginning of the third quarter, the home team had a 14-point lead, but then they missed a move at 4:14 and allowed their opponent to return to the game, and at the end of 10 minutes, Real equalized the score: 70:70. The decisive factor in the fourth quarter was Monaco’s 12:0 breakthrough towards the middle of the 10-minute period, which gave them a 12-point advantage: 87:75. After this, although the guest team reduced the gap, they did not fully return to the game. As a result, Monaco won with a score of 100:95.
Real Madrid’s Ukrainian headquarters Alexey Len He spent 6 minutes on the field and made 1 incorrect two-point shot and 1 foul during this time.
The two visiting players immediately recorded double-doubles. Tavares had 21 points and 11 rebounds, while Campazzo had 28 points and 10 assists. Okobo scored 22 points for the winners, but Monaco showed more team play; 6 home players scored 10+ points.
Virtus Bologna hosted Olympiacos and almost staged a surprising comeback in the fourth quarter.
The home team won the first quarter with a score of 25:23, but then the game went sideways and at the big break the Greeks had a 9-point advantage – 50:41, and before the last minute of the third quarter the away team was ahead +20 – 77:57. The fate of the match seemed certain, but then Virtus got back into the game with a move at 18:3. There was an even game further down the field, where the home team tried to equalize the score, but Fournier’s three-pointer with a score of 92:93 and successful free throws helped the Greeks preserve the victory, but Virtus made a three-point shot for equal score at the last second through Alston’s efforts.
Dorsey scored 23 points and Fournier scored 21 points for Olympiacos.
Europa League. Regular season. 18th round, 26 December
Partizan – Maccabi Tel Aviv – 87:112 (31:30, 12:28, 16:34, 28:20)
Partisan: Payne (15 points + 3 rebounds + 6 assists), Brown (12+2+4), Bonga (10+4+1), Jones (10+6+2), Marinkovich (9+2+1), Washington (8+1 assists), Osetkovski (8+1+3), Fernando (6+4+1), Lakic (6+1+1), Calathes (3+2+2).
maccabi: Walker (20+2+5), Sorkin (17+6+3), Leaf (14+6+1), Brissett (11+3 rebounds), Santos (10+2+2), Gord (9+4+2), Ryman (8+4 rebounds), Clark (7+3+6), Blatt (6+4+7), DiBartolomeo (5+3+1), Lundberg (3+2+2), Levy (2+1 selection).
Monaco – Reality – 100:95 (21:20, 26:23, 23:27, 30:25)
Monaco: Okobo (22+2+2), James (15+4+5), Nedovich (12+3 rebounds), Strazel (12+4 rebounds), Diallo (11+7+2), Mirotic (10+1+2), Theis (8+7+1), Blossomgame (6+4 rebounds), Hayes (4+7+1).
Real: Campazzo (28+5+10), Tavares (21+11 rebounds), Okeke (12+2 rebounds), Dec (9+4+2), Abalde (7+2 assists), Hezonja (6+5+2), Maledon (5+1+2), Procida (3), Garuba (2+2 rebounds), Kramer (2+1 rebounds).
Virtus Bologna – Olympiacos – 94:97 (25:23, 16:27, 19:27, 34:20)
virtus: Wildosa (17+2+4), Morgan (15+5 assists), Edwards (14+1+2), Diouf (12+4+1), Smailagic (9), Alston (8+2 rebounds), Niang (7+4+1), Hackett (6+3+4), Payola (4+1+4), Akele (2+1 rebounds).
OlympiacosDorsey (23+4+3), Fournier (21+1 rebounds), Vezenkov (16+5 rebounds), Milutinov (13+9+5), Peters (13+6+1), Papanikolaou (5+4+2), Walkup (2+2 assists), Ntilikina (2+1+2), Hall (2+2 assists), Morris (3 rebounds + 2 assists).
tournament table
Source: Sport UA
Ralph Bean is a writer for Sportish. Ralph has written about sports news for the last two years, and is currently an author on the site. He enjoys writing about sports, and hopes to cover more stories in the future.
Basketball
OFFICIALLY. Ukraine national team player will play for the Adriatic League club
Croatian “Zadar” reported on its official website the transfer of a basketball player from the Ukrainian national team Ivan Tkachenko.
After a short trial period during which the Ukrainian player met the requirements of the coaching staff, a contract was signed with him at the end of the season.
The club has already announced that Tkachenko will participate in the Adriatic League and the Croatian Championship, so the Ukrainian can make his debut for the new team in the local championship match against Kvarner on December 27.
Tkachenko did not sign a contract with any club at the beginning of the 2025/26 season and played in only two official matches after the start of the season – as part of the Ukrainian national team, against Georgia and Denmark in November as part of the 2027 World Cup qualifiers.
Last season Ivan played for Mitteldeutscher, where he won the German Cup. The forward, who played in 32 matches in the 2024/25 Bundesliga, averaged 4.9 points and 3.8 rebounds in 17.3 minutes.
During his club career, Tkachenko played for Ukrainians Cherkasy Mavpy and Prometheus, as well as Finland’s Helsinki Seagals.
Zadar is in sixth place in the Adriatic League Group B with 4 wins in 10 matches, and is in second place in the Croatian Championship with a score of 10-1.
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Source: Sport UA
Ralph Bean is a writer for Sportish. Ralph has written about sports news for the last two years, and is currently an author on the site. He enjoys writing about sports, and hopes to cover more stories in the future.
Basketball
“Start with me.” Doncic talked about what needs to change in the Lakers
Star player of Los Angeles Lakers Luka Doncic Against the background of the embarrassing defeat of Houston Rockets (96:119), he explained what the team had to change to improve the results:
“I don’t know exactly what needs to change, but something definitely needs to change. We need to figure it out, that’s what we need to do. Everyone should discuss it.”
I know JJ Redick said it would be disturbing. And that’s the way it should be.
As I said, we need to discuss this. It may be uncomfortable, but everyone needs to try harder, starting with me.
We just have to challenge each other. Everyone should challenge themselves and their teammates. “There’s no way to play the way we play, so we’ve got to be better than that.”
Source: Sport UA
Ralph Bean is a writer for Sportish. Ralph has written about sports news for the last two years, and is currently an author on the site. He enjoys writing about sports, and hopes to cover more stories in the future.
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