2003 National Basketball Development League draft

2003 NBDL draft
General information
Date(s) November 6, 2003
First selection Ken Johnson
 2002
NBDL
2004 

The 2003 NBDL Draft was the third annual draft by the National Basketball Development League. It was held on November 6, 2003.[1]

Draft

Key

Pos.GFC
PositionGuardForwardCenter

Round 1

Ken Johnson was the first overall pick in the 2003 NBDL Draft.[2] He was also drafted by the Miami Heat with the 48th pick in the 2001 NBA Draft.
TeamPlayer
Huntsville Ken Johnson
Columbus Terence Morris
Asheville Lavor Postell
Roanoke Josh Asselin
Charleston Rolan Roberts
Fayetteville Jason Collier

Round 2

TeamPlayer
Huntsville Ronald DuPree
Columbus Courtney James
Asheville Antonio Meeking
Roanoke Chris Christoffersen
Charleston Carl English
Fayetteville Sam Clancy

Round 3

TeamPlayer
Huntsville Erick Barkley
Columbus Kevin Lyde
Asheville Desmond Penigar
Roanoke DeMario Jones
Charleston Hiram Fuller
Fayetteville Ronald Blackshear

Round 4

TeamPlayer
Huntsville Phil Ricci
Columbus Matt Laur
Asheville Kareem Reid
Roanoke Marque Perry
Charleston James Smith
Fayetteville Darrell Johns

Round 5

TeamPlayer
Huntsville Rick Apodaca
Columbus Germaine Chase
Asheville Lavoris Jerry
Roanoke Gilson DeJesus
Charleston Charles Manga
Fayetteville Kueth Duany

Round 6

TeamPlayer
Huntsville Mateen Cleaves
Columbus Patrick Doctor
Asheville Jai Pradia
Roanoke Mike Mackell
Charleston Jarrod Gee
Fayetteville Kent Williams

Round 7

TeamPlayer
Huntsville Uche Okafor
Columbus Derrick Zimmerman
Asheville Jaquay Walls
Roanoke Mike King
Charleston Victor Williams
Fayetteville Chudney Gray

Round 8

TeamPlayer
Huntsville Jamario Moon
Columbus Erron Maxey
Asheville Tobe Carberry
Roanoke Kevin Owens
Charleston Muhammed Lasege
Fayetteville Nick Neumann

Round 9

TeamPlayer
Huntsville Rashid Hardwick
Columbus Tahric Gosley
Asheville John Martin
Roanoke Andre Matthews
Charleston Tony Rutland
Fayetteville Donnell Knight

Round 10

TeamPlayer
Huntsville Duke Freeman-McKamey
Columbus Tai Crutchfield
Asheville David Webber
Roanoke Jonathan Jones
Charleston Moses Malone, Jr.
Fayetteville Larry Reid[3]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.