Antonio Alexe

Antonio Alexe
Personal information
Born (1969-12-21)December 21, 1969
Constanța, Romania
Died January 21, 2005(2005-01-21) (aged 35)
Sinaia, Romania
Nationality Romanian
Listed height 1.92 m (6 ft 4 in)
Career information
Playing career 1988–2005
Position Guard
Career history
1988–1993 Oradea
1995–1998 Szolnoki Olaj
1999–2000 Soproni KC
2000–2002 West Petrom Arad
2002–2003 Falco KC Szombathely
2003–2005 CSU Asesoft Ploiesti

Antonio Alexe (21 December 1969 – 21 January 2005) was a Romanian professional basketball player.

He played for Oradea (1988-1993),[1] Szolnoki Olaj KK (Hungary, 1995-1998), Sopron (Hungary, 1999-2000), West Petrom Arad (2000-2002), Falco KC Szombathely (Hungary, 2002-2003) and CSU Asesoft Ploiesti (2003-2005).[2] He died in a car accident. Arena Antonio Alexe is named after him.

Personal life

He was born on 21 December 1969 in Constanţa. His daughter was born in 1995 on the 11 of December.[3]

He died on 21 January 2005 in a car accident at Sinaia[4] and over 1,500 people participated at his funeral.[5]

Career

Club career

He started playing basketball at 11 years old. In 1988 he transferred to Dinamo Oradea, where he was trained by Dan Berceanu. With him in the team, Oradea finished 3rd in the 1991/92 Romanian League, achieving the best performance in the club history. He was declared the MVP of the Romanian League (6 times) and the MVP of the Hungarian League (3 times).[6]

International career

He led the junior national team to the 4th place in 1990 European Championship and a year later, as a captain of the youth team he finished 5th at the World Championship.[7]

Antonio Alexe Memorial Tournament

Antonio Alexe Memorial Tournament is organized in his honour.

2008 edition

Macedonia-Austria 91-66
Romania – Swis Lion Vrsec 79-72
Austria – Romania 83-72
Macedonia-Swis Lion Vrsec 87-73
Swis Lions Vrsec – Austria 68-63
Macedonia – Romania 77-70

Standings:

1.Macedonia
2.Romania
3.Swis Lion Vrsec
4.Austria
[8]

2010 edition

CSU Atlassib Sibiu – Szolnok 71-64
CSM Oradea – BC Mureş Târgu Mureş 84-67
BC Mureş Târgu Mureş – Szolnok 66-61
CSM Oradea – CSU Atlassib Sibiu 72-83
BC Mureş Târgu Mureş – CSU Atalssib Sibiu 93-82
CSM Oradea – Szolnok 75-69[9]

Standings:

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