Najera during a Texas Legends game in Nov. 2012. | |
Dallas Mavericks | |
---|---|
Position: | Scout |
Personal information | |
Date of birth: | July 11, 1976 |
Place of birth | Ciudad Meoqui, Chihuahua Mexico |
Mexican | |
Height: 6 ft 8 in | Weight: 235 lbs |
National Basketball Association debut | |
Debut: 2000 for the Dallas Mavericks Last game: 2012 for the Charlotte Bobcats | |
Playing career | |
No. 41, 21 | |
Position: | Small forward/Power forward |
High school: | Cornerstone Christian (TX) |
College: | Oklahoma |
NBA Draft: | 2000 / Rnd: 2 / Pck: 38th |
Coaching career | |
Record | 67-83 |
Titles: | none |
Career: | 2012-2015 |
Career history | |
| |
Career highlights and awards | |
| |
External links | |
NBA.com Profile at NBA.com | |
https://www.basketball-reference.com/players/w/willizi01.html Career Stats] at Basketball-Reference.com |
Eduardo Alonso Nájera Pérez (born July 11, 1976) is a Mexican retired professional basketball player, former head coach, and current scout for the Dallas Mavericks. Najera formerly served as head coach of the Mavs NBA G League affiliate Texas Legends from 2012-2015. He was known for his rebounding and his tenacity on defense. He attended Cornerstone Christian Academy High School in San Antonio, Texas.[1]
Personal Information[]
Nájera is the second NBA player that is Mexican-born. He is a son of Servando Nájera and Rosa Irene Perez. [2]
Currently, he and Jennifer, his wife, have a daughter and a son. [3]
Basketball career[]
Najera playing for the Mavs.
Nájera played college basketball at the University of Oklahoma, in Norman, Oklahoma, from 1997-2000, becoming a major star there. He helped the team to four consecutive NCAA tournament appearances during his college career, as well as finishing in the school's all-time top ten in nine statistical categories. Before being drafted into the NBA in 2000, Najera received rave reviews from scouts, who boasted on Najera's quick first step and extraordinary rebounding ability. He is only the second Mexican-born player to join the NBA.[4] He was the second Mexican player to be drafted into the NBA (Horacio Llamas being the first).[1]
Nájera played for the Mexican team in the 1997 World University Games and helped them achieve a fourth place finish in the 1999 World University Games.[1]
He saw significant action as a member of the Dallas Mavericks in 2000-01 and 2001-02, but recurrent knee injuries limited his action in his last two years in Dallas.
He played at the first-ever Basketball Without Borders Americas tournament in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, during the 2004 NBA Summer of Goodwill. [5]
He was then traded to the Golden State Warriors, where he put in modest minutes and was a solid contributor.
He was then sent to the Nuggets, where he played great despite injuries.
Also in 2006, an exhibition match was played in Monterrey, Mexico, between the Golden State Warriors and the Denver Nuggets.
On April 27, 2006, Nájera started his first playoff game for the Nuggets in Game 3 of their first round series facing the Los Angeles Clippers. He replaced Kenyon Martin who was suspended indefinitely for "conduct detrimental to the team".
He was partly involved in the December 2006 Knicks-Nuggets brawl. While not involved in the actual fighting, he did try to separate the players. He was ejected from the game.
On July 11, he signed a contract with the New Jersey Nets for 4 years $12 million.Cite error: Invalid <ref>
tag; invalid names, e.g. too many As the oldest player currently on the team's roster, he is considered one of the team's leaders. And he stated that he would make it a point to turn the Nets' young forwards Yi Jianlian and Ryan Anderson and center Brook Lopez into stronger, tougher players. Najera turned down more money and a chance to return to his college state, Oklahoma City Thunder. He also turned down an offer from a championship contender in the New Orleans Hornets in order to take a chance to lead a young and talented New Jersey team.
See also[]
- Photo Gallery - Photos featuring Eduardo Nájera
i
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Cite error: Invalid
<ref>
tag; no text was provided for refs namedMeet
- ↑ Player Profiles by Interbasket, Eduardo Najera
- ↑ NBA.com, Eduardo Najera, Bio Page
- ↑ NBA.com: Eduardo Najera Bio Page
- ↑ NBA.com, Eduardo Najera, Bio page