2000 NBA draft
2000 NBA draft | |
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Minneapolis, Minnesota ) | |
Network(s) | |
Overview | |
58 total selections in 2 rounds | |
League | NBA |
First selection | New Jersey Nets) |
→ |
The 2000 NBA draft was held on June 28, 2000, at the Target Center in Minneapolis. It was the last draft held at the home arena of an NBA team until 2011; the following and subsequent drafts (through 2010) all took place at The Theater at Madison Square Garden in New York City (though Madison Square Garden itself is the home of the New York Knicks, they do not play in the theater). As of 2023, it is also the last NBA draft where a college senior was the number-one overall selection.
The 2000 draft class is considered the worst in NBA history. Few of its draftees would enjoy extended careers in the league. Just three of them—top pick
Sports Illustrated named this entire draft class (as opposed to individual players) the sixth biggest bust of the modern era – making it the only draft class among the site's top 20 list.[1] Just before the 2009 draft, ESPN.com columnist David Schoenfield graded all of the drafts since the institution of the draft lottery in 1985, and the only draft to which he gave the lowest possible grade of 'F' was the 2000 draft.[2] Using the WARP (wins above replacement player) metric, the 2000 NBA draft class collectively produced at a rate of 17.3 wins worse than a group of "average replacement players", effectively making this draft class the only one in NBA history to leave the league's talent pool worse than it had been before.[3]
Eight of the players selected in this draft never played in an NBA game in their professional basketball careers. Both of the players drafted by the San Antonio Spurs (Chris Carrawell and Cory Hightower) are among this group.
Draft selections
G | Guard
|
PG | Point guard | SG | Shooting guard | F | Forward
|
SF | Small forward | PF | Power forward
|
C | Center |
* | Denotes player who has been selected for at least one All-Star Game and All-NBA Team |
+ | Denotes player who has been selected for at least one All-Star Game |
# | Denotes player who has never appeared in an NBA regular season or playoff game |
~ | Denotes player who has been selected as Rookie of the Year |
Notable undrafted players
These players were not selected in the 2000 NBA draft but have played at least one game in the NBA.
Player | Position | Nationality | School/club team |
---|---|---|---|
Malik Allen | PF | United States | Villanova (Sr.) |
Desmond Ferguson | G/F | United States | Detroit (Sr.)
|
Richie Frahm | SG | United States | Gonzaga (Sr.) |
Eddie Gill | PG | United States | Weber State (Sr.) |
Paul McPherson | G | United States | DePaul (Jr.) |
Terrance Roberson | SF | United States | Fresno State (Sr.) |
Pepe Sanchez | PG | Argentina | Temple (Sr.) |
Alex Scales | G | United States | Oregon (Sr.) |
Ime Udoka | SF | United States Nigeria |
Portland State (Sr.) |
Early entrants
College underclassmen
The following college basketball players successfully applied for early draft entrance.[4]
- Erick Barkley – G, St. John's (sophomore)
- Ernest Brown – C/F, Indian Hills CC (sophomore)
- Schea Cotton – G, Alabama (sophomore)
- Jamal Crawford – G, Michigan (freshman)
- Kaniel Dickens – F, Idaho (junior)
- Keyon Dooling – G, Missouri (sophomore)
- Connecticut(junior)
- Henderson State(junior)
- Marcus Fizer – F, Iowa State (junior)
- Donnell Harvey – F, Florida (freshman)
- Cory Hightower – G/F, Indian Hills CC (sophomore)
- Texas A&M–Corpus Christi(junior)
- Life(sophomore)
- DerMarr Johnson – F/G, Cincinnatii (freshman)
- Mark Karcher – F, Temple (junior)
- Andre Mahorn – F, Utah State (junior)
- Paul McPherson – G, DePaul (junior)
- Chris Mihm – C, Texas (junior)
- Mike Miller – F, Florida (sophomore)
- Jérôme Moïso – F, UCLA (sophomore)
- Joel Przybilla – C, Minnesota (sophomore)
- Michael Redd – G, Ohio State (junior)
- Quentin Richardson – G, DePaul (sophomore)
- JaRon Rush – F, UCLA (sophomore)
- Stromile Swift – F, LSU (sophomore)
- Derrick Worrell – F, Pittsburgh (junior)
High school players
The following high school players successfully applied for early draft entrance.[4]
International players
The following international players successfully applied for early draft entrance.[4]
- Aleksey Savrasenko – C, Olympiacos (Greece)
- Dalibor Bagarić – C, Benston Zagreb (Croatia)
- Slovenia)
- David Mushkudiani – F, Academic (Bulgaria)
- Stevan Nađfeji – F, Beobanka (FR Yugoslavia)
- Olumide Oyedeji – F, DJK Würzburg (Germany)
- Jake Tsakalidis – C, AEK (Greece)
- Hedo Türkoğlu – F, Efes Pilsen (Turkey)
See also
- List of first overall NBA draft picks
- NBA records
References
- ^ "SI.com – Photo Gallery – NBA Draft Busts". CNN. Archived from the original on April 18, 2007. Retrieved March 28, 2007.
- ^ Schoenfield, David (June 25, 2009). "The first lottery draft still rates the best". ESPN. Archived from the original on June 27, 2009. Retrieved June 26, 2009.
- ^ Pelton, Kevin (April 2, 2014). "Is 2013-14 worst rookie class ever?". ESPN.com. Retrieved April 2, 2014.
- ^ a b c "2000 Underclassmen". The Draft Review. August 4, 2007. Retrieved December 21, 2022.
External links
- "Official website". )
- 2000 NBA Draft at Basketball-reference.com