Korie Hlede

Last updated
Korie Hlede
Personal information
Born (1975-03-29) 29 March 1975 (age 50)
Zagreb, SR Croatia, Yugoslavia
NationalityCroatian
Listed height1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
Listed weight68 kg (150 lb)
Career information
College Duquesne (1994–1998)
WNBA draft 1998: 1st round, 4th overall pick
Drafted by Detroit Shock
Playing career1993–2008
Position Shooting guard
Career history
1993–1994 Montmontaža Zagreb
1998–1999 Detroit Shock
1999–2001 Utah Starzz
2000–2001 Slamanca
2001–2002 Guarulhos
2002 New York Liberty
2002–2003 Eregli
2003 Rivas Ecópolis
2004 Perfumerias
2004–2005 Pecs 2010
2006–2007 Hondarribia-Irun
2007–2008 Extremadura
Career highlights
Stats at Basketball Reference   OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg
Medals
Women's basketball
Representing Flag of Croatia.svg  Croatia
Mediterranean Games
Gold medal icon (G initial).svg 2001 Tunis Team

Korie Hlede (born Koraljka Hlede on 29 March 1975) is a Croatian sports administrator. She is a co-founder and leader of basketball development at Flow Basketball Academy (FBA) in Chicago, Illinois. She played and coached professionally before starting her own training program KH Flow. In 2012, she teamed up with Margaret Stender (CEO of the Chicago Sky) to create Flow Basketball Academy.

Contents

College years

Hlede was a communications and psychology double major at Duquesne University, where she led the Atlantic 10 conference (A10) in scoring during all of her four years (1994–1998). In 1995, she was named A10 rookie of the year, and by her senior year, she had netted a total of 2,631 points, becoming the only Duquesne player (male or female) to score over 2,000 career points. [1] Hlede holds a number of other school records: steals (334), assists (570), three-pointers made (162), three-point percentage (.356), as well as most points scored in a single game (42 points against University of Dayton on 11 February 1998). Some of her collegiate awards are: ESPN Academic All-American (1996, 1997, 1998), [2] A10 Player of the year (1996, 1998), A10 first team All-Conference pick (1995–1998), Kodak District 2 All-American (1995–1998), and Kodak National honorable mention All-American (1995–1998). In 2003, she was inducted into the Duquesne University Sports Hall of Fame and was the first female athlete in university history to have her jersey (#25) retired.

Professional

International

From 2002 to 2008, Hlede competed in the European League, spending time in the First Divisions in Spain, Turkey, Hungary, Croatia, and Brazil. She also competed in three FIBA Cup championships, while reaching the final four of the Euro-league. Hlede led the Spanish and Turkish leagues in scoring during that span.

WNBA

In the 1998 WNBA draft Korie was acquired by the Detroit Shock (now Tulsa Shock), in the first round (fourth pick overall). [3] In her rookie year, she led her team in three-point field goal percentage and was named WNBA rookie of the year runner-up. In 1999 Korie was traded to the Utah Starzz, where she led the WNBA in three-point field goal percentage in 1999 and 2001. Over her five-year WNBA career, she has accumulated more than 1,000 points, 400 rebounds, 250 assists and 100 steals.

YearTeam
1998–1999 Detroit Shock
1999–2001 Utah Starzz
2002 New York Liberty

Coaching and training

In 2003 Korie retired from the WNBA and joined the coaching staff of the Detroit Shock (head coach: Bill Laimbeer), where she helped them clinch the Shock's first national championship. After two years of coaching in the WNBA, she spent one year as assistant coach at the University of Rhode Island. In 2010, she created her own basketball development program, KH Flow Training, which was based on her interests in sports psychology and the work of philosopher and psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi. In 2012, she teamed up with Margaret Stender to create Flow Basketball Academy.

Career statistics

WNBA career statistics

Legend
  GPGames played  GS Games started MPG Minutes per game RPG  Rebounds per game
 APG  Assists per game SPG  Steals per game BPG  Blocks per game PPG Points per game
 TO  Turnovers per game FG%  Field-goal percentage 3P%  3-point field-goal percentage FT%  Free-throw percentage
 Bold Career best°League leader

Regular season

YearTeamGPGSMPGFG%3P%FT%RPGAPGSPGBPGTOPPG
1998 Detroit 272733.839.139.280.65.22.70.80.03.314.1
1999 Detroit 211019.439.033.385.72.61.21.00.11.58.8
Utah 11125.246.344.890.92.72.50.70.12.011.9
2000 Utah 313128.045.443.172.93.03.01.20.12.510.1
2001 Utah 271016.939.034.886.81.51.60.90.01.65.6
2002 New York 1608.142.30.044.41.00.80.40.11.31.6
Career5 years, 3 teams1337922.941.439.780.52.82.10.90.12.18.9

Playoffs

YearTeamGPGSMPGFG%3P%FT%RPGAPGSPGBPGTOPPG
2001 Utah 208.540.00.00.01.50.50.50.01.52.0
2002 New York 206.00.00.075.01.50.50.50.01.01.5
Career2 years, 2 teams407.333.30.075.01.50.50.50.01.31.8

College

YearTeamGPGSMPGFG%3P%FT%RPGAPGSPGBPGTOPPG
1994–95 Duquesne 2647.735.474.88.05.84.20.324.2°
1995–96 Duquesne 2748.837.882.66.74.52.70.322.6°
1996–97 Duquesne 2847.327.381.07.04.72.50.222.6°
1997–98 Duquesne 2849.241.877.96.56.02.90.227.1°
Career10948.235.679.17.05.23.10.224.1

Notes