Antanas Sireika

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Antanas Sireika
2006 05 11Sireika8.JPG
BC Juventus
Position Head coach
League LKL
Personal information
Born (1956-05-11) May 11, 1956 (age 68)
Bazilionai, near Šiauliai, Lithuanian SSR, USSR
Nationality Lithuanian
Coaching career 1995–present
Career history
As coach:
1995–2002 BC Šiauliai
2001–2006 Lithuania national basketball team
2002–2006 BC Žalgiris
2006–2007 UNICS Kazan
2008 BC Lietuvos Rytas
2008–2012 BC Šiauliai
2012–2014 Link Tochigi Brex
2015–present BC Juventus
Career highlights and awards

Antanas Sireika (born May 11, 1956[1] in Bazilionai near Šiauliai) is a professional Lithuanian basketball coach.

Coaching career

Early career

The Lithuanian national basketball team traditionally replaces the head coach with his assistant, this happened when Vladas Garastas was replaced by his assistant coach Jonas Kazlauskas. The story was repeated in 2001, when the successor of Kazlauskas was his assistant coach Antanas Sireika. He was born in Šiauliai, and a big part of his basketball career was spent there. Sireika played for BC Šiauliai, later he became the playing head coach of the team, in 1994 he ended his career as a player, and started coaching full-time. Big results came fast, the underdog Šiauliai, became 3rd place winners in the LKL. In 1997 Kazlauskas became head-coach of the Lithuanian National Basketball Team, and invited Sireika to join the Lithuanian national squad as an assistant. In 2001, Kazlauskas retired from LTU national team, and gave his place to Sireika. With Antanas Sireika, The Lithuanian national basketball team won their first FIBA Europe gold medals after Lithuania's independence in 1991, (the first titles came in 1937 and 1939).

The same year, Sireika made an important decision: he left his home in Šiauliai, and moved to Kaunas, to coach BC Žalgiris. He won three LKL titles in a row in 2003, 2004 and 2005. At the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Sireika coached the Lithuanian team to 4th place with a memorable win against the United States.

Setbacks

Since 2003, BC Žalgiris started to fade away from all the Euroleague glory they had just a few years ago. Žalgiris' Euroleague results got worse every year. In the 2005-06 season Sireika was dealing with huge amount of criticism aimed at him, because of poor results in Euroleague and BC Lietuvos Rytas was at the top of the Lithuanian league standings. On March 28, 2006 in a LKL regular season rivalry game, Sireika's coached Žalgiris played against Lietuvos Rytas and Rytas won the match by 30 points. After the game Sireika left the team. In FIBA Europe 2005 in Belgrade, Lithuania was named as one of the contenders to win gold and defend their 2003 title, Lithuanian team finished first in the group and entered quarter finals, where they lost 47-63 to France led by Tony Parker. Lithuanian team took 5th place and even more criticism was aimed at Sireika. He had his last chance at an FIBA World Championship in 2006. Lithuania finished 3rd in the group entering 1/8 finals. in the quarterfinals they were defeated by Spain, and in fifth through eighth place games they lost to Turkey, Lithuania took 7th place, and Sireika resigned.

Unics

In 2006 summer, Unics Kazan introduced Sireika as their new head coach, the Lithuanian trio: Lavrinovič brothers and Saulius Štombergas led Unics into Uleb cup semifinals, but the team lost to Real Madrid and did not enter the final. In the Russian Basketball Super League Unics surprised the league by finishing 2nd. After the Euroleague champions CSKA Moscow, and overcoming teams like Dynamo Moscow, Khimki and Triumph. The 2007-08 season did not start out well, as Russia's basketball experts had expected[citation needed], Unics was 8th in the Russian Super League, Sireika was dismissed from the head coaching position and moved to assistant.

Lietuvos Rytas

In 2008 season Lietuvos Rytas haven't won anything, all domestic leagues were given away to BC Žalgiris, a few weeks after their loss in LKL finals, Lietuvos Rytas started to build a new team dismissing many former players, Aleksandar Trifunović (basketball) was dismissed as head coach, Rytas ended their foreign head coach era, and signed Sireika as the head coach. But just after 2 months, he resigned and became the head coach of Šiauliai.

References

  1. Antanas Sireika. FIBA.com
Sporting positions
Preceded by EuroBasket
Winning Coach

2003
Succeeded by
Greece Panagiotis Giannakis