Vassil Evtimov
Vassil Evtimov during EuroBasket 2009
Chernomorets
PositionHead coach
LeagueNational Basketball League
Personal information
Born (1977-05-30) 30 May 1977
Sofia, Bulgaria
NationalityBulgarian
French (since 1996)
Listed height2.08 m (6 ft 10 in)
Listed weight120 kg (265 lb)
Career information
High schoolLong Island Lutheran
(Brookville, New York)
CollegeNorth Carolina (1996–1999)
NBA draft2000: undrafted
Playing career1997–2015
PositionPower forward / center
Career history
As player:
1997–1998Élan Béarnais Pau-Orthez
1999–2000Dafni Athens
2000–2001Maroussi
2001–2002Fortitudo Bologna
2002PBC Ural Great Perm
2002–2003ASVEL Basket
2003–2005Caja San Fernando
2005Virtus Roma
2005Union Olimpija
2006Orlandina Basket
2006–2007Fortitudo Bologna
2007–2008CB Valladolid
2008Levski Sofia
2008–2009Pallacanestro Reggiana
2009BC Khimik
2009–2010Panionios
2010AEL Limassol
2010–2011Mitteldeutscher BC
2011Paris-Levallois
2011–2012Levski Sofia
2012–2013Limoges CSP
2013–2014BC Orchies
2015Levski Sofia
As coach:
2020-presentBC Chernomorets
Career highlights and awards

Vassil Iliev "Vasco" Evtimov (Bulgarian: Васил Илиев "Васко" Евтимов) (born 30 May 1977) is a French-Bulgarian former professional basketball player and head coach of BC Chernomorets in National Basketball League. A 2.08 m power forward, he played professionally in ten different countries throughout his career.

He is the son of Ilia Evtimov and Rosalina Evtimov; his father was also a professional basketball player who relocated the family to France during his career. Vasco's younger brother Ilian is also a professional basketball player.

Player profile

After being selected as a 1996 McDonald's All American, Evtimov played NCAA Division I college basketball with the University of North Carolina. Although he saw limited action off the bench, he participated in two Final Fours with the Tar Heels.[1]

Evtimov was recruited by the legendary coach Dean Smith and was then caught in the transition to coach Bill Guthridge. Despite this, his sophomore year Evtimov led his Tar Heel team in rebounds and points preseason until the NCAA deemed him to have had an unfair advantage by playing overseas for a professional team. He was given an 18-game suspension and returned to the team with 14 games left. Because of these circumstances, he decided to turn professional. He has played for teams in France, Greece, Italy, Spain, Slovenia, Russia, Ukraine and Cyprus over his ten-year professional career.[2]

Vasco Evtimov was a key player for Maroussi BC when they won the Saporta cup in 2001, averaging 13.6 points and 12.6 rebounds during that tournament. Other clubs he has played for are Pau Orthez, Dafni BC, Maroussi BC, Skipper Bologna, PBC Ural Great, ASVEL Basket, CB Sevilla, Lottomatica Roma, KK Union Olimpija, Upea Capo d'Orlando, Climamio Bologna, CB Valladolid, Reggio Emilia, BC Khimik, Panionios BC, AEL Cyprus, Mitteldeutscher BC and Paris-Levallois Basket.[3][4]

In February 2015, he signed with Levski Sofia.[5] Evtimov announced his retirement in October 2016.[6]

In 2019, 20 years after leaving the University of North Carolina early to turn professional, he fulfilled a promise to himself and finished his Communications degree at UNC, dedicating it to legendary basketball coach Dean Smith.[7]

Coaching career

On September 16, 2020, Evtimov was hired by the BC Chernomorets as a head coach.[8] In his first season, his team finished fourth in the regular season, eliminated in the quarterfinals in the playoffs and eliminated in the first round of the Cup. In 21-22, he had similar results, fourth in the regular season, eliminated in the quarterfinals in the playoffs and eliminated in the first round of the Cup.

National team career

Evtimov played for the France national team at the EuroBasket 2001. He is also a member of the Bulgaria national team. Apart from players who acquired new nationalities due to political changes resulting from the fall of communism in Europe, he is the only player to ever compete at EuroBasket for two countries. He was selected to compete for the Bulgarians at EuroBasket 2009, where he was the team's leading rebounder.[9]

Personal life

Evtimov has been married to Mary-Martha Evtimov since September 1999 and has three children, Nicholas (2000) and Maria-Grace (2003) and Liliana-Rose (2011).

References

  1. Vassil Evtimov at Basketpedya.com
  2. Basketpedya.com Career
  3. Vassil Evtimov at Eurobasket.com
  4. KEINE VERTRAGSVERLÄNGERUNG FÜR VASSIL EVTIMOV Archived 2013-06-22 at the Wayback Machine (in German)
  5. Levski signed with Videnov, Evtimov and Hunt
  6. "Vasco Evtimov annonce sa retraite". BeBasket. Archived from the original on 2016-10-24. Retrieved 2016-10-24.
  7. Vasco Evtimov Graduates From UNC
  8. "Официално: Васил Евтимов е новият старши треньор на Черноморец". sportal.bg. September 16, 2020. Retrieved December 30, 2022.
  9. Bulgaria Team Stats at Eurobasket2009.org
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