September 22, 2010 - 4:51pm
From Sart-Eustache, Belgium
Basketball in Greece has been a major sport for several years now but, like anywhere else, national media do not cover women basketball that much. And thats a shame because the Greek women basketball national team has been present in all major European competitions since 2001. No doubt that the 2004 Olympics in Athens have been a boost for the womens game and the Greek women basketball clubs have reached higher levels in FIBA-Europe clubs competitions in the last few years too. Major Greek league clubs have attracted excellent foreign players in the last few years: LaToya Davis, Sheryl Swoopes, Ruth Riley of the USA, Marina Kress of Belarus, Gabriela Marginean of Romania, Gintare Petronyte of Lithuania, etc.
While the Greeks had already qualified for the 2010 FIBA World Championship for Women as well as next year's European Championship in Poland by virtue of their fifth-place finish at the Eurobasket 2009, the selected NT players have had time and spent the whole summer for the preparation of the world tournament.
Before the summer, a rumor saying that Greece would likely be to have more firepower this summer was relayed by www.fiba.com in mid-June. The FIBA web site mentioned that Euroleague veteran Katie Douglas was in the process of getting Greek citizenship. The 31-year-old Douglas of the Indiana Fever, an American, is married to Vasilis Giapalakis (2005), a Greek, who is her agent. Played overseas two in Greece, as well as Lithuania, Spain, Russia and Turkey. Next season will be Douglas second stint with Spanish club Ros Casares (involved in the Euroleague) after previously playing for the club in 2007-08. Missas told media last April that he was close to getting Douglas a Greek passport.
Greece was already set to add US-born Stephanie Murphy to their squad. Murphy is a 1.92 m. power forward/center at Boston College in the Atlantic Coast Conference who averaged 27.4 minutes, 11.7 points and 6.4 rebounds and earned honorable mention all-ACC last season for the Eagles. Murphys mother is Greek.
The addition of these two players in order to have more offensive firepower finally did not occur and the team has been built around Greek guard Evanthia Maltsi. Despite being labelled as an underdog at the World Championship for Women, Greece remains a rival for each team despite probably being in Europe the smallest team. Average height is low indeed and this could be an advantage for Greeces opponents.