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Deanna Nolan

American-Russian basketball player (born 1979)


Summary

American-Russian basketball player (born 1979)

FieldValue
nameDeanna Nolan
imageDeanna Nolan.jpg
width150px
positionShooting guard / point guard
height_ft5height_in = 10
weight_lbs155
nationalityUSA American
Russia Russian
birth_date
birth_placeFlint, Michigan, U.S.
high_schoolFlint Northern (Flint, Michigan)
collegeGeorgia (1997–2001)
draft_leagueWNBA
draft_year2001
draft_round1
draft_pick6
draft_teamDetroit Shock
career_start2001
years1
team1Detroit Shock
years22007–2010;
2012–2013
team2UMMC Ekaterinburg
wnba_profiledeanna_nolan

Russia Russian 2012–2013

  • 3× WNBA champion (2003, 2006, 2008)
  • WNBA Finals MVP (2006)
  • 5× WNBA All-Star (20032007)
  • All-WNBA First Team (, )
  • All-WNBA Second Team ()
  • WNBA 20th Anniversary Team ()
  • First-team All-SEC (2000) Deanna Nicole "Tweety" Nolan (; born August 25, 1979) is a retired American-Russian professional basketball player for UMMC Ekaterinburg of the Russian Premier League as well as the Russia women's national basketball team. Her primary position is shooting guard, but occasionally plays the point guard position. Her original name was Deana, but was legally changed to Deanna in 2000. She went to Flint Northern High School where she graduated and took that school state to state champs. Nolan was inducted in October 2024 into the Michigan Sports Hall of Fame in Detroit.

Early life

Nolan attended Flint Northern High School where she led her team to back to back Michigan state championships in 1994 and 1995, and was crowned as Michigan's 1995 Miss Basketball.

College career

Nolan graduated in December 2001 with a degree in child and family development from the University of Georgia. Overall, she helped the Lady Bulldogs achieve an 86–12 record overall during her collegiate career.

As a senior, Nolan earned 2001 All-SEC Tournament Team honors.

WNBA career

In the 2001 WNBA draft, Nolan was selected by her home state team, Detroit Shock in the first round (sixth overall). She has been nicknamed "Tweety", and is well known by fans for her amazing vertical leap.

Nolan also helped the Detroit Shock win their first championship in 2003. In 2006, she won another championship with Detroit and was named MVP of the 2006 WNBA Finals.

In 2008, she helped the Shock win their third WNBA Championship. In 2007, 2008 and 2009, she was named the Detroit Shock Player of the Year in voting by members of the Detroit Sports Broadcasters Association.

International career

In the 2007–08, 2008–09, 2009–10 and 2012–13 WNBA off seasons, she played for the UMMC Ekaterinburg club in Russia.

In the seasons 2005–06, she played for the A.S. Ramat-Hasharon club in Israel.

She obtained a Russian passport in order to not count against the team's allowed number of foreign players. She stated during 2008 that she hoped to play for the Russian Olympic team, but was passed over in favor of Becky Hammon.

Career statistics

Denotes seasons in which Nolan won a WNBA championship

WNBA

Regular season

|- |27||0||20.2||33.0||28.8||81.1||2.0||1.1||0.6||0.2||1.3||7.1 |- |32||32||25.1||41.5||36.8||80.6||2.7||1.9||0.8||0.4||1.9||8.7 |- |32||32||29.8||43.6||42.1||79.2||3.3||2.6||1.3||0.4||2.2||12.4 |- |34||34||33.5||38.2||28.9||79.8||3.9||3.3||1.9||0.4||2.6||13.6 |- |33||33||36.8||39.8||31.1||80.0||4.7||3.7||1.7||0.4||3.0||15.9 |- |34||34||32.1||40.5||34.5||85.0||4.5||3.6||1.4||0.3||2.5||13.8 |- |34||34||34.6||46.0||39.3||82.3||4.4||3.9||1.4||0.4||2.4||16.3 |- |34||34||33.6||46.5||37.4||86.3||3.9||4.4||1.2||0.3||2.1||15.8 |- |33||33||33.7||40.8||32.5||78.4||4.3||3.5||1.3||0.3||2.2||16.9 |- class="sortbottom" |293||266||31.3||41.6||34.9||81.1||3.8||3.2||1.3||0.3||2.3||13.6 |- class="sortbottom" |4||1||21.7||35.2||40.9||85.7||4.0||2.8||1.0||0.0||1.8||13.3

Playoffs

|- |8||8||32.1||45.8||44.7||93.8||3.6||2.6||1.3||0.3||2.6||15.5 |- |3||3||39.7||40.0||30.8||93.3||4.7||2.3||1.7||0.0||1.7||18.0 |- |2||2||39.5||40.5||25.0||85.7||4.0||3.5||1.0||1.0||2.0||18.5 |- |10||10||35.7||48.6||42.9||83.3||4.1||3.9||1.6||0.2||1.9||17.8 |- |11||11||37.5||42.6||44.7||90.0||6.3||4.1||0.8||0.3||2.6||18.9 |- |9||9||38.8||35.9||34.1||93.9||4.6||2.9||2.1||0.3||2.7||17.6 |- |5||5||38.0||39.8||32.1||91.3||1.6||3.2||1.8||0.4||3.6||21.6 |- class="sortbottom" |48||48||36.7||42.2||39.2||90.3||4.4||3.4||1.5||0.3||2.5||18.1

College

|- |26||-||-||41.7||15.6||63.2||4.8||1.8||1.7||0.2||-||7.2 |- |36||-||-||54.8||37.0||78.7||4.6||3.5||1.6||0.8||-||12.1 |- |24||-||-||45.3||32.7||73.9||3.9||3.3||2.0||0.3||-||13.4 |- |86||-||-||48.5||28.9||73.0||4.5||2.9||1.7||0.5 ||-|| 11.0

Notes

References

  1. III, James L. Edwards. "How the 2006 Detroit Shock overcame Sacramento and a Mariah Carey concert to win the first Game 5 in WNBA Finals history". The New York Times.
  2. "Return to WNBA unlikely for Flint's Deanna Nolan after success in Russia". MLive.com.
  3. "WNBA.com: Offseason 2008-09: Overseas Roster".
  4. "Deanna Nolan WNBA Stats".
  5. "Deanna Nolan College Stats". [[Sports-Reference]].
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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