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Giedrė Labuckienė

Lithuanian basketball player (born 1990) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Giedrė Labuckienė
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Giedrė Paugaitė–Labuckienė (born 15 July 1990) is a Lithuanian basketball player who competes in the position of heavy winger. She has played in the top leagues in Lithuania, France, Belarus, Latvia, Poland, and Spain.[1][2]

Quick facts Kibirkstis Vilnius, Position ...

She married fellow basketball player Arnas Labuckas.[1]

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Achievements

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As of 3 December 2020, based on[3][4] unless otherwise noted.

Team
  • Champion:
    • Baltic League (2010, 2011, 2015)
    • Lithuania (2010, 2011)
    • Latvia (2017)
    • Belarus (2015)
      • Latvian-Estonian league (2017)
  • Runner-up:
    • Lithuania (2009)
    • Belarus (2016)[5]
  • Winner of the Lithuanian Cup (2011)
  • Cup finalist:
  • Winner of the 2nd Memorial of Franciszka Cegielska and Małgorzata Dydek - Gdynia Super Team (2017)[8]
Individual
  • MVP:
    • Belarusian league finals (2015)[6]
    • Belarusian League All-Star Match (2016)[citation needed]
  • The best (according to eurobasket.com[full citation needed]):
    • middle of the Lithuanian league (2011)[9]
    • winger of the Belarusian league (2015)[citation needed]
  • Participant of the Belarusian league all-star game (2015, 2016)[6][5]
  • Credited to (by eurobasket.com[full citation needed]):
    • 1st Belarusian League squad (2015)[citation needed]
    • 2nd league squad:
      • Lithuanian (2011)[9]
      • Belarusian (2016)[5]
      • Latvian (2017)[10]
    • Honorable Mention Lithuanian League squad (2010)[11]
  • Leader of the French league in blocks (2012)
Representation
  • European U-18 Champions (2008)
  • Bronze medalist of the European U-16 Championship (2006)
  • Championship participant:
    • European Women's Basketball Championship:
      • 2009 – 11th place, 2011 – 7th place, 2013 – 13th place
      • U-20 (2010 – 6th place)
      • U-18 (2006 – 5th place, 2007 – 10th place, 2008)
      • U-16 (2005 – 9th, 2006)
    • U-19 World Championship (2007 – 12th place, 2009 – 8th place)
  • Championship leader:
    • world U-19 in blocks (2009)[12]
    • Europe:
      • in collections:
        • U–20 (11.4 – 2010)[13]
        • U–18 (2008)
      • in U-20 blocks (2010)
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References

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