Jump to content

Su I-chieh: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
Line 21: Line 21:
}}
}}


'''Su I-chieh''' (born 28 January 1987 in [[Keelung]]) is a [[Taiwanese people|Taiwanese]] professional [[basketball]] player for the [[Taoyuan Leopards]] of the [[T1 League]]. Su also plays for the [[Chinese Taipei national basketball team]] and made his national team debut at the [[FIBA Asia Championship 2009]].<ref>[http://china2009.fiba.com/pages/eng/fe/09/fascm/player/p/pid/79155/sid/7038/tid/370/profile.html Player Profile] at FIBA.com</ref>
'''Su I-Chieh''' (born 28 January 1987 in [[Keelung]]) is a [[Taiwanese people|Taiwanese]] professional [[basketball]] player for the [[Taoyuan Leopards]] of the [[T1 League]]. Su also plays for the [[Chinese Taipei national basketball team]] and made his national team debut at the [[FIBA Asia Championship 2009]].<ref>[http://china2009.fiba.com/pages/eng/fe/09/fascm/player/p/pid/79155/sid/7038/tid/370/profile.html Player Profile] at FIBA.com</ref>


Born in [[Taipei]], the 22-year-old Su played primarily off the bench for the Chinese Taipei team at the 2009 Asian Championship. In his most extensive action of the tournament, he had game highs in assists in Chinese Taipei's preliminary round victories over [[Kuwait national basketball team|Kuwait]] and [[Uzbekistan national basketball team|Uzbekistan]].
Born in [[Taipei]], the 22-year-old Su played primarily off the bench for the Chinese Taipei team at the 2009 Asian Championship. In his most extensive action of the tournament, he had game highs in assists in Chinese Taipei's preliminary round victories over [[Kuwait national basketball team|Kuwait]] and [[Uzbekistan national basketball team|Uzbekistan]].

Revision as of 13:39, 27 December 2022

Su I-Chieh
No. 2 – Taoyuan Leopards
PositionPoint Guard
LeagueT1 League
Personal information
Born (1987-01-28) January 28, 1987 (age 37)
Keelung, Taiwan
NationalityTaiwanese
Listed height5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)

Su I-Chieh (born 28 January 1987 in Keelung) is a Taiwanese professional basketball player for the Taoyuan Leopards of the T1 League. Su also plays for the Chinese Taipei national basketball team and made his national team debut at the FIBA Asia Championship 2009.[1]

Born in Taipei, the 22-year-old Su played primarily off the bench for the Chinese Taipei team at the 2009 Asian Championship. In his most extensive action of the tournament, he had game highs in assists in Chinese Taipei's preliminary round victories over Kuwait and Uzbekistan.

On October 28, 2022, the Taoyuan Leopards of the T1 League announced Su's return as an active player.[2] During the season, he was also general manager of and head coach of the team,[3] serving in his former role until his resignation on December 19, 2022.[4] Su made his T1 League debut on 24 December 2022, and reunited with head coach Liu Chia-fa, who last coached Su with the Dacin Tigers of the Super Basketball League.[5]

References

  1. ^ Player Profile at FIBA.com
  2. ^ "爆炸性消息! 雲豹總經理蘇翊傑宣布復出". Liberty Times Net. October 28, 2022. Retrieved October 28, 2022.
  3. ^ "Taoyuan Leopards General Manager Brett Su takes over as head coach". Central News Agency. 11 April 2022. Retrieved 27 December 2022.
  4. ^ Huang, Chiao-wen; Lo, James (19 December 2022). "P. LEAGUE+ & T1 LEAGUE/Leopards GM resigns over Dwight Howard's absence in Sunday's loss". Central News Agency. Retrieved 27 December 2022.
  5. ^ Chao, Yen-hsiang (25 December 2022). "P. LEAGUE+ & T1 LEAGUE/GM's got game!: Ex-Leopards GM springs back as player in Saturday's loss". Central News Agency. Retrieved 27 December 2022. Su, who will turn 36 on Jan. 28, proved he still has much gas in the tank by scoring 17 points and dishing six assists as starting point guard in his nearly 34-minute stretch on the floor in the Leopards' 96-105 loss to the Tainan TSG GhostHawks, which was also his first professional game in more than three years...Leopards' head coach Bobo Liu (劉嘉發), also Su's coach 15 years ago at the Dacin Tigers in Taiwan's Super Basketball League (SBL), minced no words in praising Su for facilitating the team's offense.