Jaak Salumets

Last updated
Jaak Salumets
Personal information
Born (1949-01-30) January 30, 1949 (age 74)
Paide, Estonia
Listed height6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
Career information
Playing career1967–1979
Position Combo forward
Career history
As player:
19681979 Kalev
As coach:
19851991 Kalev
19911993 Namika Lahti
19931994 Žalgiris Kaunas
19941997Kalev
19971998 Nybit
19931997 Estonia
Career highlights and awards
  • Estonian SSR Champion (1968, 1971)
  • Estonian Champion (1995, 1996)
  • USSR Champion (1991)
  • Lithuanian Champion (1994)
Medals
Men's Basketball
Representing Flag of the Soviet Union.svg  Soviet Union
EuroBasket
Bronze medal icon (B initial).svg Spain 1973 USSR

Jaak Salumets (born 30 January 1949 in Paide) is a retired Estonian professional basketball player and coach who played mostly at the forward position. Salumets is also a former Estonian Reform Party politician who was a member of the Riigikogu (Estonian parliament) from 2007 to 2011.

Contents

Early life and career

Jaak Salumets was born in Paide and started his basketball career in his hometown. Soon he was discovered by basketball coaches in TPI (present day TTÜ) and made his way through to the Soviet youth team and Tallinn Kalev. In 1968 he won the European Junior Championships with the national team, scoring 33 points in the final against Yugoslavia and deserved the attention of senior team coaches. Two years later he was invited to the senior team by Alexander Gomelsky, but then 19-year-old Jaak refused, explaining the decision as "I was too young and wanted to concentrate on studies". Gomelsky understood this as a personal insult and Salumets did not receive any opportunities to play under Gomelsky's led Soviet Union national basketball team anymore. In 1970, Estonian SSR managed to take a historical win over Team USA. Jaak Salumets scored 25 points against latter NBA star Julius Erving. The Estonian considers this as his best game he ever played. [1]

National team and Tallinna Kalev

Even though he did not have a chance to play under Alexander Gomelsky anymore, he made the breakthrough when Vladimir Kondrashin was appointed as the head coach of the national team, the once rejected Estonian was given an opportunity. He was in the shortlist for the 1972 Olympic team, but was replaced with Gennadi Volnov. Salumets finally won his first and last prize, bronze medal in EuroBasket 1973. After the only major tournament he got in conflict with the new head coach as well and was ruled out of the national team permanently.

Final years and coaching

Jaak Salumets did not win anything spectacular, besides playing in the top flight of the Soviet basketball. In 1979 Salumets concluded his career as a player and took a break from professional basketball. 6 years later, in 1985 he became the head coach of Tallinn Kalev, his former team, which struggled to show decent results in both Soviet and Estonian SSR championships. With the new coach Kalev improved his game and won surprisingly the last Soviet basketball championships held, in 1991. The team consisted of players like Olympic champion Tiit Sokk, latter Panathinaikos B.C. shooter Aivar Kuusmaa, Gert Kullamäe, and George Jackson, the first and also last American player in the Soviet Union basketball league. Shortly after the great triumph he was offered to become the mentor of Soviet Union national basketball team and BC Avtodor Saratov. [2]

The years following dissolution of the Soviet Union Salumets moved abroad to coach Finnish BC NMKY Lahti, but he also became the coach of the Estonia national basketball team, who reached 6th place at the EuroBasket 1993. After successful summer with the national team he was contracted by Lithuanian giant BC Žalgiris and achieved first place for newly recognized Lithuanian Basketball League. However, it was a one-year spell with the 'Grunwald' and Salumets moved back to Estonia to his last stint with Kalev. He managed to contract the biggest prospect of Estonia, Martin Müürsepp, who had been in contract with European powerhouse Maccabi Tel Aviv, for the 1995–96 season. This is believed to be last big success for Jaak Salumets as a coach, as Kalev won the prestigious Haarlem Basketball Week tournament. In the way to the win, Estonian champions defeated Australia national basketball team in final-four, who reached the semi-final at the 1996 Summer Olympics following year and PBC CSKA Moscow in the grand final. [3] The same season Martin Müürsepp was drafted by Utah Jazz to the NBA and went on to represent teams such as Miami Heat (traded from Jazz), Dallas Mavericks and CSKA Moscow.

Achievements with club

Kalev Tallinn

Žalgiris Kaunas

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">BC Žalgiris</span> Basketball team in Lithuania

Basketball Club Žalgiris is a professional basketball team that is based in Kaunas, Lithuania. It competes domestically in the Lietuvos krepšinio lyga. Founded in 1944, it is one of the oldest teams in the EuroLeague. Žalgiris is one of 11 European clubs that holds long-term licenses with the EuroLeague, which provides a guaranteed place in the regular-season phase of the league. Since the 2011–12 season, Žalgiris plays its home games in Žalgiris Arena, which was built just before EuroBasket 2011. The club's name commemorates the victorious Battle of Žalgiris. Both Žalgiris and Grunwald translate to "green wood".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Martin Müürsepp</span> Estonian basketball player

Martin Müürsepp is an Estonian professional basketball coach and former player, who is the assistant coach of Pärnu Sadam of the Estonian-Latvian Basketball League and the Korvpalli Meistriliiga (KML). Widely regarded as one of Estonia's greatest basketball players of all time, he is the only Estonian to have played in the National Basketball Association (NBA).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alexander Gomelsky</span> Russian basketball player and coach

Alexander Yakovlevich Gomelsky was a Russian professional basketball player and coach. The Father of Soviet and Russian basketball, he was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1995 and the FIBA Hall of Fame in 2007.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Estonia men's national basketball team</span> Mens national basketball team representing Estonia

The Estonia men's national basketball team represents Estonia in international basketball matches. They are controlled by the Estonian Basketball Association. The team competed in their first international tournament at the 1936 Olympic Games. Estonia has also qualified for the EuroBasket six times overall, with their best results coming in 1937 and 1939. However, after 1939, Estonia halted national team activities due to the occupation of the Baltic states during World War II. Estonia would later rejoin FIBA in 1991, after regaining independence from the Soviet Union.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Soviet Union men's national basketball team</span> National sports team

The Soviet Union men's national basketball team was the national basketball team that represented the Soviet Union in international competitions. After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, the successor countries all set up their own national teams.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joann Lõssov</span> Estonian basketball player

Joann Lõssov, also known as Ioann Fyodorovich Lysov, was a Soviet and Estonian basketball player. Lõssov trained at VSS Kalev, in Tallinn. He was named MVP of the 1947 EuroBasket. Member of the Soviet Union basketball team in 1947–52, from 1949, the captain and points guard. After his career as a player, worked as the head coach of the Soviet Union women’s team in 1953–58 and helped to organise special trainings of the Soviet Union team. Elected to the Hall of fame of Estonian basketball in 2010.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">University of Tartu men's basketball team</span> Estonian basketball club

Tartu Ülikooli korvpallimeeskond, also known as Tartu Ülikool Maks & Moorits for sponsorship reasons, is a professional basketball team based in Tartu, Estonia. They are a part of the University of Tartu Academic Sports Club. The team plays in the Estonian-Latvian Basketball League and the Korvpalli Meistriliiga (KML). Their home arena is the University of Tartu Sports Hall.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tiit Sokk</span> Estonian basketball player and coach

Tiit Sokk is a retired Estonian professional basketball player and current coach. Often cited as one of the very best European point guards of his generation, he is widely recognized as the greatest Estonian basketball player in history. Elected to the Hall of fame of Estonian basketball in 2010.

Gert Kullamäe is an Estonian basketball coach and a former professional basketball player who currently coaches Estonian team BC Pärnu Sadam. Kullamäe mostly played at the shooting guard position and was a great 3-point shooter. As a player he is a seven-time Estonian Champion and also a Soviet Union, Lithuanian, Belgian and Dutch champion.

Jaak Lipso was an Estonian professional basketball player who competed for the Soviet Union. He is the only Estonian basketball player who has won two medals at the Olympic Games. Lipso also won two medals at the FIBA World Championship and was a three-time Eurobasket champion with the Soviet Union national basketball team. He was a member of the Soviet Union national team from 1961 to 1970. After his active career Lipso became a basketball coach, and was elected to the Estonian Basketball Hall of Fame in 2010.


Aivar Kuusmaa is an Estonian basketball coach and former professional basketball player who played mostly at the shooting guard position.

Heino Enden is a retired Estonian professional basketball player who played mostly at the shooting guard position.

Andres Sõber is a former Estonian professional basketball player and basketball coach.

Martin Dorbek is an Estonian professional basketball player. He is currently playing for BC Kalev/Cramo. He comes from basketball family: father Allan Dorbek is a basketball coach, brothers Erik Dorbek and Karl-Peeter Dorbek are both Estonian champions. Another basketball player Gert Dorbek is Allan's uncle's descendant.

Rauno Pehka is a retired Estonian professional basketball player who played mostly at the point guard position.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Margus Metstak</span> Estonian basketball player

Margus Metstak is a retired Estonian professional basketball player who played mostly at the center position.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">BC Tarvas</span> Estonian basketball club

BC Tarvas is a professional basketball club based in Rakvere, Estonia. The club competes in the Estonian-Latvian Basketball League. Their home arena is the Rakvere Sports Hall.

All-KML Team is an award for the top-tier professional basketball league in Estonia, the Korvpalli Meistriliiga (KML). It is the yearly selection of the league's top five basketball players, by position.

Basketball is the most popular sport in Lithuania. Lithuanian American basketball coaches and players in the 1930s helped the Lithuania men's national basketball team win the last EuroBasket tournaments prior to World War II, in 1937 and 1939, causing a massive impact in Lithuanian society and a basketball popularity spike. Since then, despite Lithuania's small size, with a population of just almost 2.9 million, the country's devotion to basketball has made them a traditional force of the sport in Europe.

Kalev was a professional basketball club from Tallinn, Estonia what was back then part of Soviet Union. The team played in the Estonian Basketball League and in the Soviet Union Basketball League. Their home arena was Kalev Sports Hall.

References

  1. Pahv, Peep. "Jaak Salumets - Hall of Fame Archived 2012-03-16 at the Wayback Machine . Postimees. 1 June 2010. Accessed 1 April 2012. (in Estonian)
  2. Arike, Ville. "Jaak Salumets:'Ma armastan ennast liiga palju, et uuesti treeneriks hakata'". Õhtuleht. 12 November 2007. Accessed 1 April 2012. (in Estonian)
  3. "Kalevi 10 parimat eurovõitu". Õhtuleht. 12 November 2007. Accessed 1 April 2012. (in Estonian)

Further reading