Latest news with #HannesSteinbach


USA Today
3 days ago
- Sport
- USA Today
Washington basketball big man Hannes Steinbach named No. 3 international recruit
247Sports has updated its international basketball recruiting rankings to Washington's benefit. Big man Hannes Steinbach is now the third-highest composite-rated international recruit in the incoming class of 2025, behind guards Dame Sarr (Duke) and Neoklis Avdalas (Virginia Tech). Steinbach is now also the No. 68 recruit in the class, which boosts Washington's composite rank to No. 15 in the country. Steinbach has exploded onto the American basketball radar since debuting for Wurzburg in the Bundesliga in September 2024. He averaged 7.2 points and 5.8 rebounds in 31 regular season appearances, but stepped up when the lights got brighter. His averages jumped to 14.8 points and 10.4 rebounds per game in 10 postseason appearances. This summer, Steinbach also led Germany to a silver medal in the U19 World Championships, averaging 17.2 points and 14 rebounds a game and making the All-Tournament team. Steinbach and the Germans lost to now-fellow Husky JJ Mandaquit and the United States in the gold medal contest. Washington is now in the top 15 of both the composite prep and transfer ranks, according to 247Sports. Their prep class of Steinbach, Mandaquit, Jasir Rencher, Courtland Muldrew, and Mady Traore (from junior college) is No. 15. The transfer class of Desmond Claude and Wesley Yates III (USC), Christian Nitu (Florida State), Bryson Tucker (Indiana), Jacob Ognacevic (Lipscomb), Quimari Peterson (East Tennessee State), and Lathan Somerville (Rutgers) is ranked No. 13 in the country. Steinbach is expected to compete with Ognacevic, the reigning ASUN Player of the Year, for a starting job in the frontcourt this season. It's much more likely that the German will be a part of a potentially electric bench unit that could also include returning sophomore guard Zoom Diallo. Washington opens the basketball season with an exhibition against UNLV on October 19 before beginning the season in earnest with a showdown against Arkansas Pine Bluff on November 3.


The Advertiser
05-07-2025
- Sport
- The Advertiser
Euro champions end Emus' World Cup medal dream
Australia's dream of ending a decades-long medal drought at the FIBA Under-19 World Cup is over after an 80-67 defeat to Germany in the quarter-finals. After a horror first half, the Emus faced a 23-point deficit early in the third quarter at Switzerland's Lausanne Arena on Friday night. They rallied and cut the margin to four points in the final period before Germany steadied through star duo Hannes Steinbach and Christian Anderson. Luke Fennell (18 points) and Roman Siulepa (17) led the scoring for Australia, with Jacob Furphy (13, eight rebounds) also influential. But their efforts weren't enough to steer the Emus to the semi-finals for the first time since an Andrew Bogut-led team won a historic gold medal in 2003. Steinbach (16 points, 16 rebounds) and Anderson (18, eight) led the way for Germany, who will take on Slovenia in the last four. "In the second half, especially the third quarter, they came back with some big threes, but we found our rhythm again and finished the game," Steinbach said. "It's a pretty big thing that we were able to show the character when we have a run against us. "We stuck together and found a way to win." Germany, who have never won a medal at the Under-19 World Cup, reached the semi-finals for the first time since 1987, when they finished fourth. "That's pretty amazing," NBA prospect Steinbach said. "This group here is pretty good and we can achieve even more." Slovenia, who were beaten 75-68 by Germany in the group stage, qualified for the last four for the first time with a dominant 79-55 win over Israel. New Zealand also made history, reaching the semi-finals for the first time with an 84-70 win over tournament hosts Switzerland. Hayden Jones had 23 points, nine rebounds, five assists and four blocks for the Junior Tall Blacks, with Oscar Goodman (13 points, 13 rebounds) also impressive. New Zealand next face a massive test against tournament favourites USA. "It means a lot. Basketball has been on the rise for the last five years," Goodman said. "It keeps getting bigger every day, and this just shows we can compete with the best teams in the world." USA remain on track for a record-extending ninth Under-19 World Cup title after outlasting Canada 108-102 in the best game of the tournament so far. Australia's dream of ending a decades-long medal drought at the FIBA Under-19 World Cup is over after an 80-67 defeat to Germany in the quarter-finals. After a horror first half, the Emus faced a 23-point deficit early in the third quarter at Switzerland's Lausanne Arena on Friday night. They rallied and cut the margin to four points in the final period before Germany steadied through star duo Hannes Steinbach and Christian Anderson. Luke Fennell (18 points) and Roman Siulepa (17) led the scoring for Australia, with Jacob Furphy (13, eight rebounds) also influential. But their efforts weren't enough to steer the Emus to the semi-finals for the first time since an Andrew Bogut-led team won a historic gold medal in 2003. Steinbach (16 points, 16 rebounds) and Anderson (18, eight) led the way for Germany, who will take on Slovenia in the last four. "In the second half, especially the third quarter, they came back with some big threes, but we found our rhythm again and finished the game," Steinbach said. "It's a pretty big thing that we were able to show the character when we have a run against us. "We stuck together and found a way to win." Germany, who have never won a medal at the Under-19 World Cup, reached the semi-finals for the first time since 1987, when they finished fourth. "That's pretty amazing," NBA prospect Steinbach said. "This group here is pretty good and we can achieve even more." Slovenia, who were beaten 75-68 by Germany in the group stage, qualified for the last four for the first time with a dominant 79-55 win over Israel. New Zealand also made history, reaching the semi-finals for the first time with an 84-70 win over tournament hosts Switzerland. Hayden Jones had 23 points, nine rebounds, five assists and four blocks for the Junior Tall Blacks, with Oscar Goodman (13 points, 13 rebounds) also impressive. New Zealand next face a massive test against tournament favourites USA. "It means a lot. Basketball has been on the rise for the last five years," Goodman said. "It keeps getting bigger every day, and this just shows we can compete with the best teams in the world." USA remain on track for a record-extending ninth Under-19 World Cup title after outlasting Canada 108-102 in the best game of the tournament so far. Australia's dream of ending a decades-long medal drought at the FIBA Under-19 World Cup is over after an 80-67 defeat to Germany in the quarter-finals. After a horror first half, the Emus faced a 23-point deficit early in the third quarter at Switzerland's Lausanne Arena on Friday night. They rallied and cut the margin to four points in the final period before Germany steadied through star duo Hannes Steinbach and Christian Anderson. Luke Fennell (18 points) and Roman Siulepa (17) led the scoring for Australia, with Jacob Furphy (13, eight rebounds) also influential. But their efforts weren't enough to steer the Emus to the semi-finals for the first time since an Andrew Bogut-led team won a historic gold medal in 2003. Steinbach (16 points, 16 rebounds) and Anderson (18, eight) led the way for Germany, who will take on Slovenia in the last four. "In the second half, especially the third quarter, they came back with some big threes, but we found our rhythm again and finished the game," Steinbach said. "It's a pretty big thing that we were able to show the character when we have a run against us. "We stuck together and found a way to win." Germany, who have never won a medal at the Under-19 World Cup, reached the semi-finals for the first time since 1987, when they finished fourth. "That's pretty amazing," NBA prospect Steinbach said. "This group here is pretty good and we can achieve even more." Slovenia, who were beaten 75-68 by Germany in the group stage, qualified for the last four for the first time with a dominant 79-55 win over Israel. New Zealand also made history, reaching the semi-finals for the first time with an 84-70 win over tournament hosts Switzerland. Hayden Jones had 23 points, nine rebounds, five assists and four blocks for the Junior Tall Blacks, with Oscar Goodman (13 points, 13 rebounds) also impressive. New Zealand next face a massive test against tournament favourites USA. "It means a lot. Basketball has been on the rise for the last five years," Goodman said. "It keeps getting bigger every day, and this just shows we can compete with the best teams in the world." USA remain on track for a record-extending ninth Under-19 World Cup title after outlasting Canada 108-102 in the best game of the tournament so far. Australia's dream of ending a decades-long medal drought at the FIBA Under-19 World Cup is over after an 80-67 defeat to Germany in the quarter-finals. After a horror first half, the Emus faced a 23-point deficit early in the third quarter at Switzerland's Lausanne Arena on Friday night. They rallied and cut the margin to four points in the final period before Germany steadied through star duo Hannes Steinbach and Christian Anderson. Luke Fennell (18 points) and Roman Siulepa (17) led the scoring for Australia, with Jacob Furphy (13, eight rebounds) also influential. But their efforts weren't enough to steer the Emus to the semi-finals for the first time since an Andrew Bogut-led team won a historic gold medal in 2003. Steinbach (16 points, 16 rebounds) and Anderson (18, eight) led the way for Germany, who will take on Slovenia in the last four. "In the second half, especially the third quarter, they came back with some big threes, but we found our rhythm again and finished the game," Steinbach said. "It's a pretty big thing that we were able to show the character when we have a run against us. "We stuck together and found a way to win." Germany, who have never won a medal at the Under-19 World Cup, reached the semi-finals for the first time since 1987, when they finished fourth. "That's pretty amazing," NBA prospect Steinbach said. "This group here is pretty good and we can achieve even more." Slovenia, who were beaten 75-68 by Germany in the group stage, qualified for the last four for the first time with a dominant 79-55 win over Israel. New Zealand also made history, reaching the semi-finals for the first time with an 84-70 win over tournament hosts Switzerland. Hayden Jones had 23 points, nine rebounds, five assists and four blocks for the Junior Tall Blacks, with Oscar Goodman (13 points, 13 rebounds) also impressive. New Zealand next face a massive test against tournament favourites USA. "It means a lot. Basketball has been on the rise for the last five years," Goodman said. "It keeps getting bigger every day, and this just shows we can compete with the best teams in the world." USA remain on track for a record-extending ninth Under-19 World Cup title after outlasting Canada 108-102 in the best game of the tournament so far.


The Advertiser
04-07-2025
- Sport
- The Advertiser
Euro champs end Emus' World Cup medal dream
Australia's dream of ending a decades-long medal drought at the FIBA Under-19 World Cup is over after an 80-67 defeat to Germany in the quarter-finals. After a horror start, the Emus faced a 23-point deficit early in the third quarter at Switzerland's Lausanne Arena on Friday night. They rallied and cut the margin to four points in the final period before Germany steadied through star duo Hannes Steinbach and Christian Anderson. Luke Fennell (18 points) and Roman Siulepa (17) led the scoring for Australia, with Jacob Furphy (13, eight rebounds) also influential. But their efforts weren't enough to steer the Emus to the semi-finals for the first time since an Andrew Bogut-led team won a historic gold medal in 2003. Steinbach (16 points, 16 rebounds) and Anderson (18, eight) led the way for Germany, who will take on Slovenia in the semi-finals. "In the second half, especially the third quarter, they came back with some big threes, but we found our rhythm again and finished the game," Steinbach said. "It's a pretty big thing that we were able to show the character when we have a run against us. "We stuck together and found a way to win." Germany have never won a medal at the Under-19 World Cup and have reached the semi-finals for the first time since 1987, when they finished fourth. "That's pretty amazing," NBA prospect Steinbach said. "This group here is pretty good and we can achieve even more." Slovenia, who were beaten 75-68 by Germany in the group stage, qualified for the last four with a dominant 79-55 win over Israel. In the other side of the draw, eight-time champions USA take on Canada and New Zealand face hosts Switzerland in their quarter-finals on Sunday morning (AEST). Australia's dream of ending a decades-long medal drought at the FIBA Under-19 World Cup is over after an 80-67 defeat to Germany in the quarter-finals. After a horror start, the Emus faced a 23-point deficit early in the third quarter at Switzerland's Lausanne Arena on Friday night. They rallied and cut the margin to four points in the final period before Germany steadied through star duo Hannes Steinbach and Christian Anderson. Luke Fennell (18 points) and Roman Siulepa (17) led the scoring for Australia, with Jacob Furphy (13, eight rebounds) also influential. But their efforts weren't enough to steer the Emus to the semi-finals for the first time since an Andrew Bogut-led team won a historic gold medal in 2003. Steinbach (16 points, 16 rebounds) and Anderson (18, eight) led the way for Germany, who will take on Slovenia in the semi-finals. "In the second half, especially the third quarter, they came back with some big threes, but we found our rhythm again and finished the game," Steinbach said. "It's a pretty big thing that we were able to show the character when we have a run against us. "We stuck together and found a way to win." Germany have never won a medal at the Under-19 World Cup and have reached the semi-finals for the first time since 1987, when they finished fourth. "That's pretty amazing," NBA prospect Steinbach said. "This group here is pretty good and we can achieve even more." Slovenia, who were beaten 75-68 by Germany in the group stage, qualified for the last four with a dominant 79-55 win over Israel. In the other side of the draw, eight-time champions USA take on Canada and New Zealand face hosts Switzerland in their quarter-finals on Sunday morning (AEST). Australia's dream of ending a decades-long medal drought at the FIBA Under-19 World Cup is over after an 80-67 defeat to Germany in the quarter-finals. After a horror start, the Emus faced a 23-point deficit early in the third quarter at Switzerland's Lausanne Arena on Friday night. They rallied and cut the margin to four points in the final period before Germany steadied through star duo Hannes Steinbach and Christian Anderson. Luke Fennell (18 points) and Roman Siulepa (17) led the scoring for Australia, with Jacob Furphy (13, eight rebounds) also influential. But their efforts weren't enough to steer the Emus to the semi-finals for the first time since an Andrew Bogut-led team won a historic gold medal in 2003. Steinbach (16 points, 16 rebounds) and Anderson (18, eight) led the way for Germany, who will take on Slovenia in the semi-finals. "In the second half, especially the third quarter, they came back with some big threes, but we found our rhythm again and finished the game," Steinbach said. "It's a pretty big thing that we were able to show the character when we have a run against us. "We stuck together and found a way to win." Germany have never won a medal at the Under-19 World Cup and have reached the semi-finals for the first time since 1987, when they finished fourth. "That's pretty amazing," NBA prospect Steinbach said. "This group here is pretty good and we can achieve even more." Slovenia, who were beaten 75-68 by Germany in the group stage, qualified for the last four with a dominant 79-55 win over Israel. In the other side of the draw, eight-time champions USA take on Canada and New Zealand face hosts Switzerland in their quarter-finals on Sunday morning (AEST). Australia's dream of ending a decades-long medal drought at the FIBA Under-19 World Cup is over after an 80-67 defeat to Germany in the quarter-finals. After a horror start, the Emus faced a 23-point deficit early in the third quarter at Switzerland's Lausanne Arena on Friday night. They rallied and cut the margin to four points in the final period before Germany steadied through star duo Hannes Steinbach and Christian Anderson. Luke Fennell (18 points) and Roman Siulepa (17) led the scoring for Australia, with Jacob Furphy (13, eight rebounds) also influential. But their efforts weren't enough to steer the Emus to the semi-finals for the first time since an Andrew Bogut-led team won a historic gold medal in 2003. Steinbach (16 points, 16 rebounds) and Anderson (18, eight) led the way for Germany, who will take on Slovenia in the semi-finals. "In the second half, especially the third quarter, they came back with some big threes, but we found our rhythm again and finished the game," Steinbach said. "It's a pretty big thing that we were able to show the character when we have a run against us. "We stuck together and found a way to win." Germany have never won a medal at the Under-19 World Cup and have reached the semi-finals for the first time since 1987, when they finished fourth. "That's pretty amazing," NBA prospect Steinbach said. "This group here is pretty good and we can achieve even more." Slovenia, who were beaten 75-68 by Germany in the group stage, qualified for the last four with a dominant 79-55 win over Israel. In the other side of the draw, eight-time champions USA take on Canada and New Zealand face hosts Switzerland in their quarter-finals on Sunday morning (AEST).
Yahoo
04-07-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
Euro champs end Emus' World Cup medal dream
Australia's dream of ending a decades-long medal drought at the FIBA Under-19 World Cup is over after an 80-67 defeat to Germany in the quarter-finals. After a horror start, the Emus faced a 23-point deficit early in the third quarter at Switzerland's Lausanne Arena on Friday night. They rallied and cut the margin to four points in the final period before Germany steadied through star duo Hannes Steinbach and Christian Anderson. Luke Fennell (18 points) and Roman Siulepa (17) led the scoring for Australia, with Jacob Furphy (13, eight rebounds) also influential. Comeback falls short for the Emus 🇦🇺Our FIBA U19 World Cup campaign has come to an end in the 67 - 80 GER#WeAreBasketball | #GoEmus | #FIBAU19 | @nextgenhoops — Basketball Australia (@BasketballAus) July 4, 2025 But their efforts weren't enough to steer the Emus to the semi-finals for the first time since an Andrew Bogut-led team won a historic gold medal in 2003. Steinbach (16 points, 16 rebounds) and Anderson (18, eight) led the way for Germany, who will take on Slovenia in the semi-finals. "In the second half, especially the third quarter, they came back with some big threes, but we found our rhythm again and finished the game," Steinbach said. "It's a pretty big thing that we were able to show the character when we have a run against us. "We stuck together and found a way to win." Germany have never won a medal at the Under-19 World Cup and have reached the semi-finals for the first time since 1987, when they finished fourth. "That's pretty amazing," NBA prospect Steinbach said. "This group here is pretty good and we can achieve even more." Slovenia, who were beaten 75-68 by Germany in the group stage, qualified for the last four with a dominant 79-55 win over Israel. In the other side of the draw, eight-time champions USA take on Canada and New Zealand face hosts Switzerland in their quarter-finals on Sunday morning (AEST).


Perth Now
04-07-2025
- Sport
- Perth Now
Euro champs end Emus' World Cup medal dream
Australia's dream of ending a decades-long medal drought at the FIBA Under-19 World Cup is over after an 80-67 defeat to Germany in the quarter-finals. After a horror start, the Emus faced a 23-point deficit early in the third quarter at Switzerland's Lausanne Arena on Friday night. They rallied and cut the margin to four points in the final period before Germany steadied through star duo Hannes Steinbach and Christian Anderson. Luke Fennell (18 points) and Roman Siulepa (17) led the scoring for Australia, with Jacob Furphy (13, eight rebounds) also influential. But their efforts weren't enough to steer the Emus to the semi-finals for the first time since an Andrew Bogut-led team won a historic gold medal in 2003. Steinbach (16 points, 16 rebounds) and Anderson (18, eight) led the way for Germany, who will take on Slovenia in the semi-finals. "In the second half, especially the third quarter, they came back with some big threes, but we found our rhythm again and finished the game," Steinbach said. "It's a pretty big thing that we were able to show the character when we have a run against us. "We stuck together and found a way to win." Germany have never won a medal at the Under-19 World Cup and have reached the semi-finals for the first time since 1987, when they finished fourth. "That's pretty amazing," NBA prospect Steinbach said. "This group here is pretty good and we can achieve even more." Slovenia, who were beaten 75-68 by Germany in the group stage, qualified for the last four with a dominant 79-55 win over Israel. In the other side of the draw, eight-time champions USA take on Canada and New Zealand face hosts Switzerland in their quarter-finals on Sunday morning (AEST).