Greg Koubek | |
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College | Duke |
Conference | ACC |
Sport | Basketball |
Position | Forward |
Jersey # | 22 |
Height | 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) |
Weight | 205 lb (93 kg) |
Nationality | American |
Born |
Clifton Park, New York |
March 15, 1969
High school |
Shenendehowa Clifton Park, New York |
Honors | |
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Championships | |
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Tournaments | |
Greg Koubek (born March 15, 1969 in Clifton Park, New York) is a retired American basketball player best known for his collegiate career at Duke University between 1988 and 1991. He also played professionally overseas after college for several years.
A native of the greater Albany area, Koubek attended Shenendehowa High School from 1985 to 1987. He led the basketball team to a state championship as a senior in 1987 and later became the first athlete in school history to have his jersey number retired. Following the 1987 season he was named a McDonald's All-American, and he was the co-honoree of the Mr. New York Basketball award, given to the state's best high school boys' basketball player. Koubek finished his high school career having scored 1,972 points and grabbed 682 rebounds, both being the most in school history.
Koubek's career playing for the Duke Blue Devils was an overall inauspicious one in terms of personal statistics. Through his first two seasons, he only started in one total game, but he did play in all 71 contests. Between his freshman and sophomore seasons he scored 312 points. Duke won the ACC Tournament in 1988, his freshman year, and also made it all the way to the NCAA Tournament Final Four – the first of four straight Final Four appearances. As a junior in 1990, Duke made it to the 1990 National Championship but lost to UNLV, 103–73, which is still the worst margin of defeat in NCAA Championship Game history. Koubek played in all 38 games and started 12 of them.
As a senior in 1990–91, Koubek made NCAA men's basketball history. He started in 13 games and played in all 38 of them, including Duke's fourth consecutive Final Four. Consequently, he became the first player to ever play in four NCAA Final Fours. He also became one of very few players to appear in 145 or more career games (Koubek's 146 career games is second only to Christian Laettner's 147 in Duke history.) That season, Duke won the ACC regular season title and went on to win the first of back-to-back NCAA championships. Koubek was a team captain as a senior as well.