The 2000 NBA draft was held on June 28, 2000, at the Target Center in Minneapolis. It was the last draft held at the home arena of an NBA team until 2011; the following and subsequent drafts (through 2010) all took place at The Theater at Madison Square Garden in New York City (though Madison Square Garden itself is the home of the New York Knicks, they do not play in the theater). As of 2024, it is also the last NBA draft where a college senior was the number-one overall selection.

2000 NBA draft
General information
SportBasketball
Date(s)June 28, 2000
LocationTarget Center (Minneapolis, Minnesota)
Network(s)
Overview
58 total selections in 2 rounds
LeagueNBA
First selectionKenyon Martin
(New Jersey Nets)
← 1999
2001 →

The 2000 draft class is considered the worst in NBA history. Few of its draftees would enjoy extended careers in the league. Just three of them—top pick Kenyon Martin, first-round selection Jamaal Magloire (19th overall) and second-round pick Michael Redd (43rd overall) -- ever played in an NBA All-Star Game. Each of the three made their one and only All-Star appearance in 2004. Redd was the lone player from this draft to ever be chosen for an All-NBA Team (his sole appearance was on the third team in 2004). Only three players in this draft class won a major end-of-season award in their careers: Hedo Türkoğlu was named Most Improved Player in 2008, Mike Miller won the NBA Rookie of the Year and NBA Sixth Man of the Year awards in 2001 and 2006 respectively, and Jamal Crawford was awarded the NBA Sixth Man of the Year three times in 2010, 2014 and 2016.

Sports Illustrated named this entire draft class (as opposed to individual players) the sixth biggest bust of the modern era – making it the only draft class among the site's top 20 list.[1] Just before the 2009 draft, ESPN.com columnist David Schoenfield graded all of the drafts since the institution of the draft lottery in 1985, and the only draft to which he gave the lowest possible grade of 'F' was the 2000 draft.[2] Using the WARP (wins above replacement player) metric, the 2000 NBA draft class collectively produced at a rate of 17.3 wins worse than a group of "average replacement players", effectively making this draft class the only one in NBA history to leave the league's talent pool worse than it had been before.[3]

Eight of the players selected in this draft never played in an NBA game in their professional basketball careers. Both of the players drafted by the San Antonio Spurs (Chris Carrawell and Cory Hightower) are among this group.

Draft selections

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Kenyon Martin was selected 1st overall by the New Jersey Nets.
 
Mike Miller was selected 5th overall by the Orlando Magic.
 
Jamal Crawford was selected 8th overall by the Cleveland Cavaliers.
 
Hedo Türkoğlu was selected 16th overall by the Sacramento Kings.
 
Jamaal Magloire was selected 19th overall by the Charlotte Hornets.
 
Deshawn Stevenson was selected 23rd overall by the Utah Jazz.
 
Michael Redd was selected 43rd overall by the Milwaukee Bucks.
G Guard PG Point guard SG Shooting guard F Forward SF Small forward PF Power forward C Center
* Denotes player who has been selected for at least one All-Star Game and All-NBA Team
+ Denotes player who has been selected for at least one All-Star Game
# Denotes player who has never appeared in an NBA regular season or playoff game
~ Denotes player who has been selected as Rookie of the Year
Round Pick Player Position Nationality[n 1] Team School/club team
1 1 Kenyon Martin+ PF   United States New Jersey Nets Cincinnati (Sr.)
1 2 Stromile Swift PF/C   United States Vancouver Grizzlies LSU (So.)
1 3 Darius Miles SF/PF   United States Los Angeles Clippers East St. Louis HS (Illinois)
1 4 Marcus Fizer PF/SF   United States Chicago Bulls Iowa State (Jr.)
1 5 Mike Miller~ SF/SG   United States Orlando Magic (from Golden State) Florida (So.)
1 6 DerMarr Johnson SG/SF   United States Atlanta Hawks Cincinnati (Fr.)
1 7 Chris Mihm C/PF   United States Chicago Bulls (from Washington via Golden State; traded to Cleveland) Texas (Jr.)
1 8 Jamal Crawford SG   United States Cleveland Cavaliers (traded to Chicago) Michigan (Fr.)
1 9 Joel Przybilla C   United States Houston Rockets (traded to Milwaukee for Jason Collier and a future first-round pick) Minnesota (So.)
1 10 Keyon Dooling SG   United States Orlando Magic (from Denver, traded to L.A. Clippers with Corey Maggette, Derek Strong and cash for a future first-round pick) Missouri (So.)
1 11 Jérome Moïso PF   France Boston Celtics UCLA (So.)
1 12 Etan Thomas PF/C   United States Dallas Mavericks Syracuse (Sr.)
1 13 Courtney Alexander SG   United States Orlando Magic (traded to Dallas for a future first-round pick and cash) Fresno State (Sr.)
1 14 Mateen Cleaves PG   United States Detroit Pistons Michigan State (Sr.)
1 15 Jason Collier C   United States Milwaukee Bucks (traded with future first-round pick to Houston for Joel Przybilla) Georgia Tech (Sr.)
1 16 Hedo Türkoğlu SF/PF   Turkey Sacramento Kings Efes Pilsen (Turkey)
1 17 Desmond Mason SF/SG   United States Seattle SuperSonics Oklahoma State (Sr.)
1 18 Quentin Richardson SF/SG   United States Los Angeles Clippers (from Toronto via New York, Philadelphia and Atlanta) DePaul (So.)
1 19 Jamaal Magloire+ PF/C   Canada Charlotte Hornets Kentucky (Sr.)
1 20 Speedy Claxton PG   United States Philadelphia 76ers Hofstra (Sr.)
1 21 Morris Peterson SF/SG   United States Toronto Raptors (from Minnesota) Michigan State (Sr.)
1 22 Donnell Harvey SF   United States New York Knicks (traded with John Wallace to Dallas for Erick Strickland and Pete Mickeal) Florida (Fr.)
1 23 DeShawn Stevenson SG   United States Utah Jazz (from Miami) Washington Union HS (Fresno, California)
1 24 Dalibor Bagarić C   Croatia Chicago Bulls (from San Antonio) Benston Zagreb (Croatia)
1 25 Jake Tsakalidis C   Greece Phoenix Suns AEK (Greece)
1 26 Mamadou N'Diaye C   Senegal Denver Nuggets (from Utah) Auburn (Sr.)
1 27 Primož Brezec C   Slovenia Indiana Pacers Union Olimpija (Slovenia)
1 28 Erick Barkley PG   United States Portland Trail Blazers St. John's (So.)
1 29 Mark Madsen PF   United States Los Angeles Lakers Stanford (Sr.)
2 30 Marko Jarić G   Yugoslavia
  Greece
Los Angeles Clippers Paf Bologna (Italy)
2 31 Dan Langhi PF   United States Dallas Mavericks (from Chicago, traded to Houston for Eduardo Nájera and a future second-round draft pick) Vanderbilt (Sr.)
2 32 A.J. Guyton PG   United States Chicago Bulls (from Golden State) Indiana (Sr.)
2 33 Jake Voskuhl C   United States Chicago Bulls (from Vancouver via Houston) Connecticut (Sr.)
2 34 Khalid El-Amin PG   United States Chicago Bulls (from Atlanta) Connecticut (Jr.)
2 35 Mike Smith F   United States Washington Wizards Louisiana-Monroe (Jr.)
2 36 Soumaila Samake C   Mali New Jersey Nets Cincinnati Stuff (IBL)
2 37 Eddie House SG   United States Miami Heat (from Cleveland via Denver) Arizona State (Sr.)
2 38 Eduardo Nájera PF   Mexico Houston Rockets (traded to Dallas with future second-round pick for Dan Langhi) Oklahoma (Sr.)
2 39 Lavor Postell SG   United States New York Knicks (from Boston) St. John's (Sr.)
2 40 Hanno Möttölä SF/PF   Finland Atlanta Hawks (from Denver) Utah (Sr.)
2 41 Chris Carrawell# SG   United States San Antonio Spurs (from Orlando) Duke (Sr.)
2 42 Olumide Oyedeji PF   Nigeria Seattle SuperSonics Würzburg (Germany)
2 43 Michael Redd* SG   United States Milwaukee Bucks Ohio State (Jr.)
2 44 Brian Cardinal PF   United States Detroit Pistons Purdue (Sr.)
2 45 Jabari Smith C   United States Sacramento Kings LSU (Sr.)
2 46 DeeAndre Hulett# G   United States Toronto Raptors COS (So.)
2 47 Josip Sesar# G   Croatia Seattle SuperSonics (traded to Boston for two future second-round picks) Cibona Zagreb (Croatia)
2 48 Mark Karcher# PG   United States Philadelphia 76ers Temple (Jr.)
2 49 Jason Hart PG   United States Milwaukee Bucks (from Charlotte) Syracuse (Sr.)
2 50 Kaniel Dickens F   United States Utah Jazz (from New York) Idaho (Sr.)
2 51 Igor Rakočević G   Yugoslavia Minnesota Timberwolves Red Star Belgrade (Serbia)
2 52 Ernest Brown C   United States Miami Heat Indian Hills CC (Jr.)
2 53 Dan McClintock C   United States Denver Nuggets (from Phoenix) Northern Arizona (Sr.)
2 54 Cory Hightower# G   United States San Antonio Spurs (traded to L.A. Lakers for two future second-round picks) Indian Hills CC (So.)
2 55 Chris Porter F   United States Golden State Warriors (from Utah) Auburn (Sr.)
2 56 Jaquay Walls# G   United States Indiana Pacers Colorado (Sr.)
2 57 Scoonie Penn# G   United States Atlanta Hawks (from Portland via Detroit) Ohio State (Sr.)
2 58 Pete Mickeal# F   United States Dallas Mavericks (from L.A. Lakers, traded with Erick Strickland to New York for John Wallace and Donnell Harvey) Cincinnati (Sr.)
  1. ^ Nationality indicates the player's national team or representative nationality. If a player has not competed at the international level, then the nationality indicates the national team which the player is eligible to represent according to FIBA rules.

Notable undrafted players

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These players were not selected in the 2000 NBA draft but have played at least one game in the NBA.

Player Position Nationality School/club team
Malik Allen PF   United States Villanova (Sr.)
Desmond Ferguson G/F   United States Detroit (Sr.)
Richie Frahm SG   United States Gonzaga (Sr.)
Eddie Gill PG   United States Weber State (Sr.)
Paul McPherson G   United States DePaul (Jr.)
Terrance Roberson SF   United States Fresno State (Sr.)
Pepe Sanchez PG   Argentina Temple (Sr.)
Alex Scales G   United States Oregon (Sr.)
Ime Udoka SF   United States
  Nigeria
Portland State (Sr.)

Early entrants

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College underclassmen

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Following last year's slight dip of underclassmen, entering the new millennium, this draft saw a total of 55 underclassmen declare for the NBA draft initially. However, for collegiate players, seven of the nineteen total players that ultimately withdrew their names would be collegiate players (with Joshua Cross from Southern Illinois University, Jason Kapono from UCLA, Brian Merriweather from the University of Texas Pan-American, Jeryl Sasser from Southern Methodist University, Kenny Satterfield from the University of Cincinnati, Karim Shabazz from Providence College, and Joe White from Texas A&M University being the collegiate players that withdrew their names). Overall, including the high schools and international players with the 26 college underclassmen, there were 36 total players that would be considered underclassmen. That being said, the following college basketball players successfully applied for early draft entrance.[4]

High school players

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This would be the sixth straight year in a row where players coming directly from high school can declare entry into the NBA draft after previously only allowing it one time back in 1975. The following high school players successfully applied for early draft entrance.[4]

International players

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In addition to the players below, twelve total international players from all over the world had previously declared entry for this year's draft, but ultimately removed their names from the listing for one reason or another. This year saw the likes of Yugoslavian-Italian Sani Bečirovič of the KK Union Olimpija, the Yugoslavian born Goran Ćakić of the KK Beobanka, the Greek born Antonis Fotsis of the Panathinaikos B.C., the Yugoslavian born Vlado Ilievski of the KK Partizan Belgrade, the Qatari born Yaseen Mahmood of the Al-Rayyan SC, the Turkish born Mehmet Okur of the Tofaş Spor Kulübü, the Greek-Russian born Lazaros Papadopoulos of the Iraklis Thessaloniki, the Turkish born Kaya Peker of the Pınar Karşıyaka, the Finnish born Teemu Rannikko of the Piiloset Turku, the Yugoslavian born Mladen Šekularac of the FMP Železnik, the Greek born Kostas Tsartsaris of the Peristeri B.C., and the Turkish born Kerem Tunçeri of the Efes Pilsen all initially declare their entry into the 2000 NBA draft, only to later withdraw from it for one reason or another. The following international players below, however, did successfully apply for early draft entrance.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "SI.com – Photo Gallery – NBA Draft Busts". CNN. Archived from the original on April 18, 2007. Retrieved March 28, 2007.
  2. ^ Schoenfield, David (June 25, 2009). "The first lottery draft still rates the best". ESPN. Archived from the original on June 27, 2009. Retrieved June 26, 2009.
  3. ^ Pelton, Kevin (April 2, 2014). "Is 2013-14 worst rookie class ever?". ESPN.com. Retrieved April 2, 2014.
  4. ^ a b c "2000 Underclassmen". The Draft Review. August 4, 2007. Retrieved December 21, 2022.
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