Fotios Katsikaris

Fotios Katsikaris
Φώτιος Κατσικάρης
Greece national basketball team
Position Head Coach
Personal information
Born (1967-05-16) May 16, 1967
Korydallos, Piraeus, Greece
Nationality Greek
Listed height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Career information
Playing career 1982–1998
Position Point guard
Coaching career 1998–present
Career history
As player:
1982–1988 Ionikos Nikaias
1988–1990 Sporting Athens
1990–1996 AEK Athens
1996–1998 Irakleio Crete
As coach:
1998–2003 AEK Athens (assistant)
2003–2005 AEK Athens
2005–2006 Dynamo St. Petersburg
2006–2008 Valencia Basket
2009–2010 Aris Thessaloniki
2010–2013 Bilbao Basket
2012–2013 Russia
2014–2016 Greece
2015–2016 Murcia
2016 Lokomotiv Kuban
Career highlights and awards

As head coach:

Fotios Katsikaris (alternate spelling: Fotis) (Greek: Φώτιος Κατσικάρης, born 16 May 1967) is a Greek professional basketball coach and a former player. He started coaching at the age of 31, following a career as player, and he has worked in Greece, Russia, and Spain. He has also co-operated with the scouting team of the Boston Celtics.

Playing career

Katsikaris began playing basketball in the youth system of Ionikos Nikaias, and was promoted to the senior men's team at the age of 15, setting a record for the youngest player ever in the Greek top division. After some years with Ionikos and Sporting, he made the big step to AEK Athens in 1990. A sophisticated pass-first point guard, Katsikaris played for AEK for six seasons, but he didn't manage to win any trophies. In 1996, he joined Irakleio, where he stayed for two years before retiring. Throughout his career, he played in a total of 197 games in the top Greek League, scoring 707 points (3.6 points per game).

Recollecting his playing years, he's mentioned Panagiotis Giannakis as his role model, Rolando Blackman as his best ever teammate, and Nikos Galis as the most difficult player for him to guard. He's also said that his former coach, Krešimir Ćosić, was the man who changed his life; when Ćosić signed him for AEK, Katsikaris had actually been about to quit basketball (at the age of 23), and go to the United States for studies.[1]

Club coaching career

AEK

In 1998, Katsikaris joined the coaching staff of AEK Athens. Between 1999 and 2003, he worked as an assistant coach to Dušan Ivković and Dragan Šakota, that period being the most successful for AEK in the recent decades (1 Greek League championship, 2 Greek Cups, and 1 Saporta Cup).

In 2003, he was named head coach as part of a board's project to rebuild the squad with young players, after the glorious and expensive 1999-2003 period. Despite his (and his players') lack of experience, he did quite well, reaching the Greek League playoffs' final, and the Euroleague Last 16, during the 2004-05 season. Youngsters who evolved into protagonists during his tenure, included future 2005 FIBA EuroBasket champions and Euroleague stars, such as Nikos Zisis and Ioannis Bourousis.

Dynamo St. Petersburg

In 2005, he moved to Dynamo Saint Petersburg, achieving the 2nd place of the Russian Super League regular season, and finally finishing 3rd after the playoffs. Although the club was then described as "the rising power in Russian basketball", they went bankrupt at the start of the following season, and Katsikaris left Russia.

Valencia

Right afterwards, in October 2006, he was hired by the Spanish League club Valencia Basket to replace Ricard Casas. The plan was to build a team that could gradually move from mid-table obscurity to a higher level, but the goal wasn't achieved. Two seasons saw Valencia (then called Pamesa after their main sponsor) not proceeding further than the quarterfinals of the Spanish national league, and Katsikaris was fired after a poor start in the Spanish League 2008–09 season.

After leaving Valencia, Katsikaris was rumored by the Greek media as a major candidate for the vacant head coaching job with the Greek national team; a job that was eventually given to Jonas Kazlauskas.

Aris

In October 2009, Katsikaris took over Aris Thessaloniki, replacing Andrea Mazzon. The momentum was very difficult for both the club and the coach: Aris had just failed to qualify for the Euroleague through the preliminary round, and Katsikaris had only a few days' time until the start of the Greek League to re-organize the team.

His tenure lasted exactly 100 days. As the team was obviously underachieving during the first round of the season, including a nightmare defeat at the hands of "eternal enemy" PAOK, he decided to resign in January 2010, saying that he had joined Aris at the wrong time, and couldn't find a way to inspire the players.[2]

Bilbao

A few days later, Katsikaris returned to the Spanish League to coach Bilbao Basket (or Bizkaia for sponsorship reasons), at the time the second worst team of the 2009-10 Spanish League season, with a record of 4 wins in 17 games. Katsikaris made an instant impact; not only did the team avoid relegation, but they missed the playoffs by just one win, and also reached the Eurocup 2009-10 Final Four.

The next season was to be even more successful: Bilbao made it to the Spanish League playoffs and reached the finals, defeating Valencia Basket and Real Madrid in the early rounds. Although they eventually lost the title series to Barcelona Basquet, 2nd place in the post-season was the best position ever for Bilbao, plus it gave them an automatic 2011–12 Euroleague season ticket. In the meantime, Katsikaris signed an extension to his contract until 2014.

Katsikaris was named the 2nd tier Eurocup's Coach of the Year in 2013.[3]

In July 2015 it was reported that Katsikaris would become the head coach of Murcia after EuroBasket 2015, in which Greece takes part.[4]

National team coaching career

Russia

Katsikaris became the head coach of the senior men's Russian national basketball team in 2012.[5] He resigned from coaching Russia in 2013, before coaching the team in any tournaments.[6]

Greece

Katsikaris became the head coach of the senior men's Greek national basketball team in June 2014.[7][8]

Season by season results as head coach

Abbreviations:
QF; quarter-finals.
DNQ; did not qualify.
HNQ; had not qualified.
System of European eligibility is mainly based on the previous year's performance in domestic competitions.

Club League Season Domestic Competitions European Competitions
Championship Cup Competition Position
AEK Athens Greek League 2003–04 4th QF Euroleague Last 24
2004–05 2nd QF Euroleague Top 16
Dynamo St. Petersburg Russian Super League 2005–06 3rd EuroChallenge 4th
2006–07 Released due to club's bankruptcy.
Valencia Spanish ACB League QF DNQ HNQ
2007–08 QF QF Eurocup QF
2008–09 Fired after the first games.
Aris Thessaloniki Greek League 2009–10 Resigned in January; team already in Eurocup Last 16.
Bilbao Spanish ACB League 9th QF Eurocup 3rd
2010–11 2nd QF HNQ
2011–12 QF DNQ Euroleague QF
2012–13 QF QF Eurocup 2nd

References

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