Travis Diener

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Travis Diener
Position Point guard
Height ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Weight 175 lb (79 kg)
League NBA
Team Indiana Pacers
Jersey #12
Born March 1, 1982 (1982-03-01) (age 26)
Fond du Lac, Wisconsin
Nationality USA
College Marquette
Draft 2nd round, 38th overall, 2005
Pro career 2005–present
Former teams Orlando Magic (2005-2007)
Official profile Info Page

Travis Lyle Diener (born March 1, 1982 in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin) is an American professional basketball player for the NBA's Indiana Pacers.

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[edit] Biography

Diener played collegiately at Marquette University, and was a member of the great Golden Eagles team that reached the NCAA Tournament Final Four in 2003. That Golden Eagles team had three future NBA players, including Diener, Dwyane Wade and Steve Novak.

Following his college career at Marquette, he was a second-round draft choice (38th overall) of the Orlando Magic in the 2005 NBA Draft. His selection by the Magic mystified some critics, who argued that the team was overloading on point guards, already having Steve Francis and Jameer Nelson on their roster.

Diener made his NBA debut on December 2, 2005, playing 22 minutes and scoring twenty-three points in a loss to the Memphis Grizzlies.

He is currently starting at the point guard position in place of the Jamaal Tinsley.

According to salary information obtained by the Dallas Morning News, Diener was paid $3,398,762 in his rookie season and $6,664,207 in the 2006-2007 season.

On June 19, 2007, the Indiana Pacers signed Diener (who was a free agent) to a three-year deal reportedly worth $4.86 million.[1]

[edit] Family

Diener's family has a storied basketball history, with many of his relatives coaching or playing at prominent universities. Consider:

In high school, Travis Diener was a USA Today Player of the Year: 2000 All-America High School Baseball as a pitcher and a shortstop.

Both Travis and Drake Diener engendered unwarranted criticism in the 1990s when their families decided to redshirt them; both boys were pulled from the Fond du Lac public schools after 8th grade, homeschooled for the year and reentered as high school freshmen, not sophomores. Critics alleged they were held back in order to give an age advantage in high school sports. However this advantage would have happened if they hadn't reshirted.[2]

[edit] Notes

[edit] External links

http://basketboltr.net/2008/05/07/travis-diener-to-surgery/

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