Lee Kyu-sup

Lee Kyu-sup (born November 13, 1977) is a South Korean basketball coach and retired player. He spent his entire playing career with the Korean Basketball League team Seoul Samsung Thunders and played for the South Korean national team at the 2009 FIBA Asia Championship.[1]

Lee Kyu-sup
Personal information
Born (1977-11-13) November 13, 1977
South Korea
NationalitySouth Korean
Listed height6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)
Career information
CollegeKorea University
Playing career2000–2013
PositionCenter
Coaching career2013–present
Career history
As player:
2000-2013Seoul Samsung Thunders
2002-2004Sangmu (loan)
As coach:
2014-presentSeoul Samsung Thunders (assistant coach)
Career highlights and awards
  • KBL Championship (2001, 2006)
  • KBL regular season (2001)
  • KBL Rookie of the Year (2001)
Medals
Representing  South Korea
Men's Basketball
Asian Games
Gold medal – first place 2002 Busan Team
Lee Kyu-sup
Hangul
이규섭
Hanja
李圭燮
Revised RomanizationI Gyu-seop
McCune–ReischauerI Kyusŏp

Career

Early years

Lee caught the attention of scouts when he led Daekyeong Commercial High School to the regional high school basketball championships, the first time Daekyeong has ever won a basketball championship.[2] He played for Korea University.

Professional

Lee was the first overall pick of the 2000 KBL draft and was picked by Suwon Samsung Thunders, which moved to Seoul and became Seoul Samsung Thunders a year later.[3] He won the KBL Rookie of the Year Award in his first season as a professional. During the team's successful run to the 2005-06 championship, he was a core member of a formidable squad that included Kang Hyuk, Lee Jung-suk and Seo Jang-hoon. Due to his and Seo's height, the team's quick and physical offensive style was nicknamed "high altitude basketball" by the press.[4]

He retired at the end of the 2012-13 season.[5][6]

Coaching

After his retirement, Lee decided to go into coaching and was sent to the United States for training. He spent a year at the Golden State Warrior's G League affiliate Santa Cruz Warriors[7] He returned to Seoul Samsung Thunder where he worked under head coach Lee Sang-min, his former national teammate.

He took over as acting head coach after Lee Sang-min resigned in January 2022, in the middle of the season.[8]

National team

Previously, he competed for the Korean junior national team at the 1995 World Championship for Junior Men and 1997 U-22 World Championship. At the FIBA Asia Championship, Lee helped the Koreans to a seventh-place finish while averaging 5.5 points per game, including a game-high 28 in Korea's 122-54 preliminary round win over Sri Lanka.[9] Despite his efforts, Korea failed to qualify for the semifinals of the tournament for the first time in their 25 tournament appearances.

Personal life

Lee married flight attendant Park Gye-ri in 2006.[10] They have two sons.[11]

His older brother Lee Heung-seop is also a former basketball player but went into sports management after a brief playing career.[12] He is the general secretary of KBL team Wonju DB Promy.[13]

References

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