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Golden State Warriors jersey history - No. 12 - Andrew Bogut (2012-16)
Golden State Warriors jersey history - No. 12 - Andrew Bogut (2012-16)

USA Today

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • USA Today

Golden State Warriors jersey history - No. 12 - Andrew Bogut (2012-16)

Golden State Warriors jersey history - No. 12 - Andrew Bogut (2012-16) The Golden State Warriors have had over 600 players don the more than 60 jersey numbers used by their players over the more than 75 years of existence the team has enjoyed in its rich and storied history. Founded in 1946 during the Basketball Association of America (BAA -- a precursor league of the NBA) era, the team has called home the cities of Philadelphia, San Francisco, Oakland, and even San Diego. To commemorate the players who wore those numbers, Warriors Wire is covering the entire history of jersey numbers and the players who sported them since the founding of the team. For this article, we begin with the 23rd of 28 players who wore the No. 12 jersey for the Warriors. That player would be Golden State big man alum Andrew Bogut. After ending his college career at Utah, Bogut was picked up with the first overall selection of the 2005 NBA draft by the Milwaukee Bucks. The Melbourne, Australia native would play the first seven seasons of his pro career with the Bucks, ending when he was dealt to the Dubs in 2012. His stay with the team would span five seasons, coming to an end when he was traded to the Dallas Mavericks in 2016. During his time suiting up for the Warriors, Bogut wore only jersey No. 12 and put up 6.1 points, 2.1 rebounds, and 1.7 blocks per game. All stats and data courtesy of Basketball Reference.

NBA Hall of Famer Andrew Bogut courts $8m for ‘Copper House'
NBA Hall of Famer Andrew Bogut courts $8m for ‘Copper House'

Courier-Mail

time21-05-2025

  • Business
  • Courier-Mail

NBA Hall of Famer Andrew Bogut courts $8m for ‘Copper House'

Aussie basketball great Andrew Bogut is courting $7.95m for his striking oceanview mansion known as the Copper House. The former NBA player and part-owner of the Sydney Kings has listed the architecturally designed Currumbin home, which had been rented at $5,000 a week after Bogut and wife Jessica purchased an acreage property elsewhere on the Gold Coast. Bogut this week became the ninth Australian inducted into the FIBA Hall of Fame, following a celebrated career spanning 14 seasons in the US with the NBA, notably winning a championship with Golden State Warriors in 2015. He also captained Australia's national team the Boomers, starting in three Olympic Games, and played with the Sydney Kings where he will coach the 2026 season. Bogut paid $4.45m for the distinctive three-level beach house designed by Paul Uhlmann in 2019. The seven-bedroom, four-bathroom home on an elevated 774 sqm lot at 4 Duringan Street is marketed by Michael Kollosche. It has a curved copper-clad facade with features including an internal glass lift, sleek kitchen fitted with high-end European appliances, formal dining room with wine collector's cabinet, multiple outdoor entertaining areas plus six-person spa and pool. Interiors draw on raw materials of timber, stone and stainless steel, softened by blackbutt floors and ceiling linings. Picture windows and open-plan zones invite in natural light, leafy outlooks and sea breezes. 'Function and flow have been thoughtfully considered, with communal living spaces occupying the upper level to maximise the panoramic outlook captured from a vast covered terrace,' the listing states. The home has a flexible floor plan ideal for multi-generational living, with master bedrooms on two levels and five other bedrooms upstairs. MORE NEWS Castle, beachfront mansion sold in twin mega deals Qld house named Australian Home of the Year Auction drama marks jaw-dropping $14m sale Bogut was first pick in the 2005 NBA Draft by the Milwaukee Bucks and also played for the Golden State, Dallas Mavericks, Cleveland Cavaliers, and Los Angeles Lakers up to 2019. The 213cm player has remained in the headlines since retirement for his controversial political views and criticism of the sport's governance. Accepting the Hall of Fame induction in Bahrain, Bogut made a dig at his misguided sledging of the FBA in 2019. Property records show Bogut retains a 6675sqm Mudgeeraba property purchased for $6.45m last year. In 2021, he sold a a site in Beaumaris, Victoria, which had been earmarked for a luxury home build that was stymied by council. It was priced at $11m-$12m and sold within 48 hours. PropTrack data shows house prices in Currumbin were up 12.7 per cent over the past 12 months to a median of $1.69m.

Bogut pokes fun during FIBA Hall of Fame induction
Bogut pokes fun during FIBA Hall of Fame induction

The Advertiser

time19-05-2025

  • Sport
  • The Advertiser

Bogut pokes fun during FIBA Hall of Fame induction

Australian basketball great Andrew Bogut has poked fun at his past allegations of FIBA corruption upon his induction into international basketball's Hall of Fame. Bogut became the ninth Australian inducted after a stellar career that spanned 14 NBA seasons and three Olympic Games campaigns with the Boomers. The 40-year-old also featured at two FIBA World Cups, and famously slammed the sport's global governing body after Australia's loss to Spain in a 2019 semi-final. At the time, Bogut was reported as saying: "We all know where FIBA's headquarters is. It's a f***ing disgrace. Cheating ass motherf***ers… Google where headquarters of f***ing FIBA is... f***ing disgrace". Bogut was later issued with an "official warning" and a $12,000 fine for the outburst. Formally accepting his Hall of Fame induction in Bahrain, Bogut couldn't help but make light of what was then a tense situation. "I now realise that FIBA HQ is actually in Switzerland and not Spain," Bogut said. "Give me some credit though - they both start with an 'S'." Bogut was the first Australian selected with the No.1 NBA draft pick (2005) and played 682 games in the league, winning a championship with Golden State in 2015. The 207cm centre/forward was also a key figure for the Boomers over a 15-year period that saw the team emerge as a genuine threat on the international stage. "When I first got involved with the national team, for us to just make it to the second round of a tournament was like a championship back then," Bogut said. "The bar wasn't set high and mediocrity was sort of accepted. "It was just that the talent pool wasn't at the level that we have now. "Being a part of that changing mindset and being a part of lifting the national team to be consistently in the top four or a chance to medal at every tournament, it's something that I really hold dear to my heart." Bogut declared Australia beating the USA in Melbourne during the build-up to the 2019 World Cup was his career highlight. "It was a big deal for us, even though it was a friendly game," Bogut said. "From never beating the US to doing it on home soil in my home city, in front of a record crowd ... it was sensational." Bogut joins fellow Australians Penny Taylor, Robyn Maher, Tom Maher, Michele Timms, Jan Stirling, Andrew Gaze, Lindsay Gaze and Al Ramsay in FIBA's Hall of Fame. The Sydney Kings part-owner will serve as an assistant coach to former Boomers mentor Brian Goorjian at the NBL club next season. Australian basketball great Andrew Bogut has poked fun at his past allegations of FIBA corruption upon his induction into international basketball's Hall of Fame. Bogut became the ninth Australian inducted after a stellar career that spanned 14 NBA seasons and three Olympic Games campaigns with the Boomers. The 40-year-old also featured at two FIBA World Cups, and famously slammed the sport's global governing body after Australia's loss to Spain in a 2019 semi-final. At the time, Bogut was reported as saying: "We all know where FIBA's headquarters is. It's a f***ing disgrace. Cheating ass motherf***ers… Google where headquarters of f***ing FIBA is... f***ing disgrace". Bogut was later issued with an "official warning" and a $12,000 fine for the outburst. Formally accepting his Hall of Fame induction in Bahrain, Bogut couldn't help but make light of what was then a tense situation. "I now realise that FIBA HQ is actually in Switzerland and not Spain," Bogut said. "Give me some credit though - they both start with an 'S'." Bogut was the first Australian selected with the No.1 NBA draft pick (2005) and played 682 games in the league, winning a championship with Golden State in 2015. The 207cm centre/forward was also a key figure for the Boomers over a 15-year period that saw the team emerge as a genuine threat on the international stage. "When I first got involved with the national team, for us to just make it to the second round of a tournament was like a championship back then," Bogut said. "The bar wasn't set high and mediocrity was sort of accepted. "It was just that the talent pool wasn't at the level that we have now. "Being a part of that changing mindset and being a part of lifting the national team to be consistently in the top four or a chance to medal at every tournament, it's something that I really hold dear to my heart." Bogut declared Australia beating the USA in Melbourne during the build-up to the 2019 World Cup was his career highlight. "It was a big deal for us, even though it was a friendly game," Bogut said. "From never beating the US to doing it on home soil in my home city, in front of a record crowd ... it was sensational." Bogut joins fellow Australians Penny Taylor, Robyn Maher, Tom Maher, Michele Timms, Jan Stirling, Andrew Gaze, Lindsay Gaze and Al Ramsay in FIBA's Hall of Fame. The Sydney Kings part-owner will serve as an assistant coach to former Boomers mentor Brian Goorjian at the NBL club next season. Australian basketball great Andrew Bogut has poked fun at his past allegations of FIBA corruption upon his induction into international basketball's Hall of Fame. Bogut became the ninth Australian inducted after a stellar career that spanned 14 NBA seasons and three Olympic Games campaigns with the Boomers. The 40-year-old also featured at two FIBA World Cups, and famously slammed the sport's global governing body after Australia's loss to Spain in a 2019 semi-final. At the time, Bogut was reported as saying: "We all know where FIBA's headquarters is. It's a f***ing disgrace. Cheating ass motherf***ers… Google where headquarters of f***ing FIBA is... f***ing disgrace". Bogut was later issued with an "official warning" and a $12,000 fine for the outburst. Formally accepting his Hall of Fame induction in Bahrain, Bogut couldn't help but make light of what was then a tense situation. "I now realise that FIBA HQ is actually in Switzerland and not Spain," Bogut said. "Give me some credit though - they both start with an 'S'." Bogut was the first Australian selected with the No.1 NBA draft pick (2005) and played 682 games in the league, winning a championship with Golden State in 2015. The 207cm centre/forward was also a key figure for the Boomers over a 15-year period that saw the team emerge as a genuine threat on the international stage. "When I first got involved with the national team, for us to just make it to the second round of a tournament was like a championship back then," Bogut said. "The bar wasn't set high and mediocrity was sort of accepted. "It was just that the talent pool wasn't at the level that we have now. "Being a part of that changing mindset and being a part of lifting the national team to be consistently in the top four or a chance to medal at every tournament, it's something that I really hold dear to my heart." Bogut declared Australia beating the USA in Melbourne during the build-up to the 2019 World Cup was his career highlight. "It was a big deal for us, even though it was a friendly game," Bogut said. "From never beating the US to doing it on home soil in my home city, in front of a record crowd ... it was sensational." Bogut joins fellow Australians Penny Taylor, Robyn Maher, Tom Maher, Michele Timms, Jan Stirling, Andrew Gaze, Lindsay Gaze and Al Ramsay in FIBA's Hall of Fame. The Sydney Kings part-owner will serve as an assistant coach to former Boomers mentor Brian Goorjian at the NBL club next season. Australian basketball great Andrew Bogut has poked fun at his past allegations of FIBA corruption upon his induction into international basketball's Hall of Fame. Bogut became the ninth Australian inducted after a stellar career that spanned 14 NBA seasons and three Olympic Games campaigns with the Boomers. The 40-year-old also featured at two FIBA World Cups, and famously slammed the sport's global governing body after Australia's loss to Spain in a 2019 semi-final. At the time, Bogut was reported as saying: "We all know where FIBA's headquarters is. It's a f***ing disgrace. Cheating ass motherf***ers… Google where headquarters of f***ing FIBA is... f***ing disgrace". Bogut was later issued with an "official warning" and a $12,000 fine for the outburst. Formally accepting his Hall of Fame induction in Bahrain, Bogut couldn't help but make light of what was then a tense situation. "I now realise that FIBA HQ is actually in Switzerland and not Spain," Bogut said. "Give me some credit though - they both start with an 'S'." Bogut was the first Australian selected with the No.1 NBA draft pick (2005) and played 682 games in the league, winning a championship with Golden State in 2015. The 207cm centre/forward was also a key figure for the Boomers over a 15-year period that saw the team emerge as a genuine threat on the international stage. "When I first got involved with the national team, for us to just make it to the second round of a tournament was like a championship back then," Bogut said. "The bar wasn't set high and mediocrity was sort of accepted. "It was just that the talent pool wasn't at the level that we have now. "Being a part of that changing mindset and being a part of lifting the national team to be consistently in the top four or a chance to medal at every tournament, it's something that I really hold dear to my heart." Bogut declared Australia beating the USA in Melbourne during the build-up to the 2019 World Cup was his career highlight. "It was a big deal for us, even though it was a friendly game," Bogut said. "From never beating the US to doing it on home soil in my home city, in front of a record crowd ... it was sensational." Bogut joins fellow Australians Penny Taylor, Robyn Maher, Tom Maher, Michele Timms, Jan Stirling, Andrew Gaze, Lindsay Gaze and Al Ramsay in FIBA's Hall of Fame. The Sydney Kings part-owner will serve as an assistant coach to former Boomers mentor Brian Goorjian at the NBL club next season.

Bogut pokes fun during FIBA Hall of Fame induction
Bogut pokes fun during FIBA Hall of Fame induction

West Australian

time19-05-2025

  • Sport
  • West Australian

Bogut pokes fun during FIBA Hall of Fame induction

Australian basketball great Andrew Bogut has poked fun at his past allegations of FIBA corruption upon his induction into international basketball's Hall of Fame. Bogut became the ninth Australian inducted after a stellar career that spanned 14 NBA seasons and three Olympic Games campaigns with the Boomers. The 40-year-old also featured at two FIBA World Cups, and famously slammed the sport's global governing body after Australia's loss to Spain in a 2019 semi-final. At the time, Bogut was reported as saying: "We all know where FIBA's headquarters is. It's a f***ing disgrace. Cheating ass motherf***ers… Google where headquarters of f***ing FIBA is... f***ing disgrace". Bogut was later issued with an "official warning" and a $12,000 fine for the outburst. Formally accepting his Hall of Fame induction in Bahrain, Bogut couldn't help but make light of what was then a tense situation. "I now realise that FIBA HQ is actually in Switzerland and not Spain," Bogut said. "Give me some credit though - they both start with an 'S'." Bogut was the first Australian selected with the No.1 NBA draft pick (2005) and played 682 games in the league, winning a championship with Golden State in 2015. The 207cm centre/forward was also a key figure for the Boomers over a 15-year period that saw the team emerge as a genuine threat on the international stage. "When I first got involved with the national team, for us to just make it to the second round of a tournament was like a championship back then," Bogut said. "The bar wasn't set high and mediocrity was sort of accepted. "It was just that the talent pool wasn't at the level that we have now. "Being a part of that changing mindset and being a part of lifting the national team to be consistently in the top four or a chance to medal at every tournament, it's something that I really hold dear to my heart." Bogut declared Australia beating the USA in Melbourne during the build-up to the 2019 World Cup was his career highlight. "It was a big deal for us, even though it was a friendly game," Bogut said. "From never beating the US to doing it on home soil in my home city, in front of a record crowd ... it was sensational." Bogut joins fellow Australians Penny Taylor, Robyn Maher, Tom Maher, Michele Timms, Jan Stirling, Andrew Gaze, Lindsay Gaze and Al Ramsay in FIBA's Hall of Fame. The Sydney Kings part-owner will serve as an assistant coach to former Boomers mentor Brian Goorjian at the NBL club next season.

Bogut pokes fun during FIBA Hall of Fame induction
Bogut pokes fun during FIBA Hall of Fame induction

Perth Now

time19-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Perth Now

Bogut pokes fun during FIBA Hall of Fame induction

Australian basketball great Andrew Bogut has poked fun at his past allegations of FIBA corruption upon his induction into international basketball's Hall of Fame. Bogut became the ninth Australian inducted after a stellar career that spanned 14 NBA seasons and three Olympic Games campaigns with the Boomers. The 40-year-old also featured at two FIBA World Cups, and famously slammed the sport's global governing body after Australia's loss to Spain in a 2019 semi-final. At the time, Bogut was reported as saying: "We all know where FIBA's headquarters is. It's a f***ing disgrace. Cheating ass motherf***ers… Google where headquarters of f***ing FIBA is... f***ing disgrace". Bogut was later issued with an "official warning" and a $12,000 fine for the outburst. Formally accepting his Hall of Fame induction in Bahrain, Bogut couldn't help but make light of what was then a tense situation. "I now realise that FIBA HQ is actually in Switzerland and not Spain," Bogut said. "Give me some credit though - they both start with an 'S'." Bogut was the first Australian selected with the No.1 NBA draft pick (2005) and played 682 games in the league, winning a championship with Golden State in 2015. The 207cm centre/forward was also a key figure for the Boomers over a 15-year period that saw the team emerge as a genuine threat on the international stage. "When I first got involved with the national team, for us to just make it to the second round of a tournament was like a championship back then," Bogut said. "The bar wasn't set high and mediocrity was sort of accepted. "It was just that the talent pool wasn't at the level that we have now. "Being a part of that changing mindset and being a part of lifting the national team to be consistently in the top four or a chance to medal at every tournament, it's something that I really hold dear to my heart." Bogut declared Australia beating the USA in Melbourne during the build-up to the 2019 World Cup was his career highlight. "It was a big deal for us, even though it was a friendly game," Bogut said. "From never beating the US to doing it on home soil in my home city, in front of a record crowd ... it was sensational." Bogut joins fellow Australians Penny Taylor, Robyn Maher, Tom Maher, Michele Timms, Jan Stirling, Andrew Gaze, Lindsay Gaze and Al Ramsay in FIBA's Hall of Fame. The Sydney Kings part-owner will serve as an assistant coach to former Boomers mentor Brian Goorjian at the NBL club next season.

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