Jump to content

J. J. Barea: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Kraikk (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
in sports there is puertorican nacionality
Line 12: Line 12:
| team = [[Dallas Mavericks]]
| team = [[Dallas Mavericks]]
| college = [[Northeastern University]], [[Boston, Massachusetts]]
| college = [[Northeastern University]], [[Boston, Massachusetts]]
| nationality = United States
| nationality = Puerto Rico
| draft = undrafted
| draft = undrafted
| draft_team =
| draft_team =
Line 20: Line 20:
}}
}}


'''José Juan Barea''' (born [[June 26]] [[1984]] in [[Mayagüez]]) is an [[American]] professional [[basketball]] player born in [[Puerto Rico]]. Barea is the seventh player from Puerto Rico to play in an NBA game. Barea has played in the [[NBA]], [[NBDL]], [[NCAA]] and the [[National Superior Basketball League of Puerto Rico]] (BSN) with [[Mayaguez Tainos]] and the [[Santurce Crabbers]]. He went undrafted in the [[2006 NBA Draft]], but was signed by the [[Dallas Mavericks]] and became the 7th Puerto Rican to play in the [[NBA]]. He was a member of the 2006 Puerto Rican National Team that won the Gold Medal in the 2006 [[Central American and Caribbean Games]].
'''José Juan Barea''' (born [[June 26]] [[1984]] in [[Mayagüez]]) is a [[Puerto Rico|Puerto Rican]] professional [[basketball]] player. Barea is the seventh player from Puerto Rico to play in an NBA game. Barea has played in the [[NBA]], [[NBDL]], [[NCAA]] and the [[National Superior Basketball League of Puerto Rico]] (BSN) with [[Mayaguez Tainos]] and the [[Santurce Crabbers]]. He went undrafted in the [[2006 NBA Draft]], but was signed by the [[Dallas Mavericks]] and became the 7th Puerto Rican to play in the [[NBA]]. He was a member of the 2006 Puerto Rican National Team that won the Gold Medal in the 2006 [[Central American and Caribbean Games]].


==Biography==
==Biography==

Revision as of 08:16, 15 April 2007

José Juan Barea
Dallas Mavericks
PositionPoint Guard
LeagueNBA
Personal information
BornJune 26, 1984
Mayagüez
NationalityPuerto Rico
Listed height6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Listed weight[undue weight? ]
Career information
CollegeNortheastern University, Boston, Massachusetts
Playing career2006–present
Stats Edit this at Wikidata at NBA.com
Stats Edit this at Wikidata at Basketball-Reference.com

José Juan Barea (born June 26 1984 in Mayagüez) is a Puerto Rican professional basketball player. Barea is the seventh player from Puerto Rico to play in an NBA game. Barea has played in the NBA, NBDL, NCAA and the National Superior Basketball League of Puerto Rico (BSN) with Mayaguez Tainos and the Santurce Crabbers. He went undrafted in the 2006 NBA Draft, but was signed by the Dallas Mavericks and became the 7th Puerto Rican to play in the NBA. He was a member of the 2006 Puerto Rican National Team that won the Gold Medal in the 2006 Central American and Caribbean Games.

Biography

College Years

Listed at 6 feet tall, Barea was a four-year letterman at Northeastern University from 2003-2006. In 2005 and 2006, as a junior and senior, he was named a finalist for the Bob Cousy Award, given to the nation's best point guard. Barea was a two-time All-America East First Team selection. Northeastern switched to the Colonial Athletic Association for his senior campaign and he earned All-CAA First Team honors. Barea finished his career as the school's second all-time leading scorer with 2,209 points behind Reggie Lewis. He also leaves Northeastern as its second all-time leader in assists with 721 and leader in three-point field goals made (255).

During his senior year (2005-06); Barea was named Honorable Mention All-America by The Associated Press. He was named Player of the Year in the CAA. NABC All-District 1 First Team selection. Named Mid-Major Player of the Year by CollegeInsider.com. Finished third in the country in assists (8.4 apg). He led Northeastern and finished 19th in the nation in scoring (21.0 ppg). Had 26 points and nine assists against California. Averaged 16.5 points and 7.0 assists in two games against eventual Final Four participant, George Mason. Scored a season-high 32 points, to go with 10 assists against Old Dominion.

During his junior year (2004-05); Barea ranked second in the America East and eighth in the country in scoring (22.2 ppg). Led the conference and was fifth in the nation in assists (7.3 apg). Named an Honorable Mention All-America by SI.com. Recognized as an All-District 1 Second Team selection for the second year in a row by the NABC. Placed third in assists (218), fourth in three-pointers (68) and sixth in points (665) on Northeastern's single-season charts. Tied the school record with a career-high 41 points against Stony Brook.

During his sophomore year (2003-04); Barea led the team and was second in the conference in scoring (20.7 ppg) and assists (5.8 apg). Became the first Husky since Reggie Lewis in 1986-87 to average at least 20 points. Recorded double-double with 19 points and 10 assists in a 91-84 win over West Virginia.

During his freshman year (2002-03); Barea led the team and was third in America East in scoring (17.0 ppg). Was named to the America East All-Rookie Team, All-Tournament Team and All-Conference Third Team. First Husky freshman to record 400 points and 100 assists in a season. Led NU with a team-high 25 double-figure scoring games.

Post-College

In April 2006 Barea made a stellar showing at the Portsmouth Invitational Tournament in Virginia, finishing with averages of 15 points, 13.6 assists and 5.6 rebounds per game while committing just five turnovers in three contests. Barea shattered the single-game and single-tournament assist records, dishing out 18 assists in a 118-100 victory, giving him 41 assists in three games. For his efforts, Barea was awarded the Allen Iverson Award for inspiration and effort in the competition.

International Player

In July 2006, Barea helped the Puerto Rican National Basketball Team win the gold medal in the 2006 Central American and Caribbean Games. Played the hero by making a 3 pointer with 14 seconds left in the Championship game against Panama winning the gold medal.

NBA

During the summer of 2006 Barea participated with the Golden State Warriors during the Vegas Summer League. He also participated with the Dallas Mavericks in the Rocky Mountain Revue where in three games, he averaged 12.0 points, 6.7 assists, 1.7 rebounds in 25.0 minutes.

On October 30, 2006 Barea was officially made part of the Dallas Mavericks. He enjoyed a successful preseason with the team, which prompted the Mavs to give him a guaranteed $400,000 contract for 1 year. He has been seeing a steady rise in playing time lately. He played in the 2nd quarter of the Dallas Mavericks vs. Phoenix Suns game (one of the biggest games of the season, showing that the organization is learning to trust him more).

Barea is a hero in his hometown of Puerto Rico, and is also well-known by NBA scouts and writers. He is considered a poor man's Jason Kidd due to his lack of size and thus limited court vision. However, he is an extremely gifted rebounder for his size, a good passer, and can score in multiple ways. He is currently working on his long range shooting. Barea made his first career three pointer against the Golden State Warriors on March 12, 2007. Barea also made his 1st career block two days later against the Phoenix Suns on Leandro Barbosa on March 14, 2007.

While Barea has played in the Puerto Rican national team, he is the process of obtaining Spanish citizenship, "because of family ties" according to Spain's Sport Press [1].

NBA Development League

On 17 January 2007, Barea was assigned to the Fort Worth Flyers of the NBA Development League (NBDL). Jose Barea of the Fort Worth Flyers is the D-League Performer of the Week for January 29, 2007.

Barea topped 40 points in two different games while leading the Flyers to a 3-1 record. Barea turned in the top scoring performance of the D-League season so far with 43 points on 18-of-24 shooting in a loss to Idaho on Thursday night. The Mavericks assignee reached 40 points for the second time with 41 on 16-of-23 shooting in Sunday's win over the Dakota Wizards. Barea recorded double-doubles in his other two games last week, scoring 17 points with 10 assists on Wednesday in a win over Idaho, and 25 points with 11 assists in Saturday's win over Dakota.

Barea's averages for the week are 31.5 points, 7.5 assists and 6.0 rebounds in four games. He shot .549 (45-of-82) from the field.

Barea is the first NBA-assigned player to be named D-League Performer of the Week. Since being assigned to Fort Worth by the Dallas Mavericks on January 17th, he has averaged 27.6 points, 7.7 assists, and 5.3 rebounds in seven games.

Career stats

  • Barea'sNBA stats in 19 games are 14 points 0.7 PPG, 8 assists with a 0.4 APG, 5 rebounds with a 0.3 RPG, 1 block 0.1 BPG, .238 field goal percentage, .500 free throw percentage, and .167 3-point percentage.
  • His NBDL stats in 7 games with 5 starts are 193 points with a 27.6 PPG, 54 assists with a 7.7 APG, 37 rebounds with a 5.3 RPG, 7 steals with a 1.0 SPG, .530 field goal percentage, .829 free throw percentage, and .425 3-point percentage.
  • His NCAA stats in 113 games are 2290 points with a 20.3 PPG, 721 assists with a 6.4 APG, 437 rebounds with a 3.9 RPG, 178 steals with a 1.6 SPG, .404 field goal percentage, .764 free-throw percentage, and .321 3-point percentage.

External links