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Miki Berkovich

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Nationality
  
Israeli

Positions
  
Pro career
  
1971–1995

Role
  
Basketball Player

NBA draft
  
1976 / Undrafted

Name
  
Miki Berkovich

Listed height
  
6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)

1988–1993
  

Miki Berkovich httpsiytimgcomvi6dTSpRsKS38hqdefaultjpg

Born
  
February 17, 1954 (age 70) Botosani, Romania (
1954-02-17
)

Children
  
Niv Berkovich, Roi Berkovich

Similar People
  
Motti Aroesti, Tal Brody, Doron Jamchi, Aulcie Perry, Ralph Klein

1971–19751976–1988
  

Miki berkovich


Moshe "Miki" Berkovich, or Mickey Berkowitz (Hebrew: משה "מיקי" ברקוביץ'‎‎; born 17 February 1954), is a retired Israeli professional basketball player. A 6'4" shooting guard, he is considered by many of his fellow Israelis to be the greatest Israeli basketball player of all time.

Contents

Miki Berkovich Miki Berkovich Wikipedia

Berkovich was named one of FIBA's 50 Greatest Players in 1991, as well as one of the 50 Greatest EuroLeague Contributors, by a select panel in February 2008. He was also honored at the EuroLeague Final Four in Madrid. He was elected to the FIBA Hall of Fame in 2017.

Miki Berkovich Miki Berkovich YouTube

Early years

Miki Berkovich Israel Jewish Athlete Miki Berkovich scan0073 Miki Berkovi

Born in Kfar Saba, Israel, Berkowitz began his long and distinguished career with Maccabi Tel Aviv at the age of 11 when he joined the youth club. At the age of 15, he was playing for the junior squad. In 1971, at the age of 17, he made his debut with the senior team in Israel's top professional league.

College playing career

Miki Berkovich Miki Berkovich First Israeli to be entered into FIBA Hall of Fame

In 1975, he played college basketball for UNLV in the United States. During the 1975–76 season, he played in 11 games and averaged 2.5 points per game as the Runnin' Rebels finished 28–1 and were the No. 1 seed in the Western Region of the NCAA tournament. They defeated Boise State, 103–78, in the first round, although Berkowitz registered no points and only one rebound. UNLV then lost to Arizona, 114–105, in the second round; Berkowitz did not play in the game. He returned to Maccabi after just one year.

Club playing career

Berkowitz returned to Israel following the 1975–76 season and played a considerable role in Maccabi Tel Aviv's fortunes during the late 1970s and early 1980s.

In 1977, Berkovich helped Maccabi Tel Aviv to win its first European Championship, defeating Mobilgirgi Varese 78:77 in the final held in Pionir Hall, Belgrade and CSKA Moscow 91:79 in semifinal group game held in Virton, Belgium, an achievement that produced Tal Brody's famous sentence "We are on the map, not only in basketball".

In 1981, the second European Championship for Maccabi, against another Italian team, Sinudyne Bologna. Berkovich scored the winning basket from Moti Aroesti's assist, setting the score to 80:77. There were no three point shots back then so the Italian could only score a two-point basket and Maccabi won 80:79.

Berkovich's career in Maccabi came to the end in 1988, when he and Aroesti joined Maccabi Rishon LeZion. Later he played for Hapoel Jerusalem and Hapoel Tel Aviv.

During his playing years with Maccabi, he won 19 national championship titles and 17 national cups.

Israeli national team

In 1972, he took the Israeli under-18 national team to a fourth-place finish at the 1972 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship, and he was the leading scorer of the tournament. The same year, Berkowitz also won a gold medal at the 1974 Asian Games, in Tehran.

In 1979, Berkovich was a part of the senior Israeli national team that finished second (behind the Soviet national team) at the EuroBasket 1979 in Turin. Berkovich was named the tournament MVP.

At his retirement, he was second all-time in appearances (165), and points scored (2,842), among members of the senior men's Israeli national basketball team.

NBA offers

After the EuroBasket 1979, Berkowitz had offers from the New Jersey Nets and the Atlanta Hawks, from the NBA, but a contract with Maccabi Tel Aviv stood in the way (Maccabi management insisted that he stay in the team, so they had to settle the case in civil court).

Post playing career

Berkovich retired from basketball in 1995, after which he wrote an autobiography called Born to Win. He went on to become the owner of the Ramat HaSharon basketball team. Both of his sons, Roi and Niv Berkovich, played for the team at the time. He later became the Director of Basketball Operations of Ironi Naharia, but left the team after just one year.

References

Miki Berkovich Wikipedia