Stepas Butautas

Stepas Butautas
Personal information
Born August 25, 1925
Kaunas, Lithuania
Died March 22, 2001(2001-03-22) (aged 75)
Kaunas, Lithuania

Stepas Butautas (August 25, 1925 – March 22, 2001 in Kaunas) was a Lithuanian basketball player who competed for the Soviet Union in the 1952 Summer Olympics. He trained at VSS Žalgiris in Kaunas.[1]

He was a member of the Soviet team, which won the silver medal. He played all eight matches.

His son Ramūnas Butautas was a head coach of Lithuania national basketball team. He was named one of FIBA's 50 Greatest Players in 1991.

Soviet Union and Cuba national teams

In a 1990s interview, Stepas Butautas shared his memories about the Soviet Union squad rivalry with the USA national team by telling: "We offered to play the first game very slowly, to cherish the ball. In short – to let the Americans control the ball as fewer as possible. The American squad had tall players (2.10 m., 2.13 m). The smallest was like ours the highest. So, I remember, when we offered to play like that slowly, our supervisor told: “That’s not the Soviet school”. We lost with the Soviet school by almost 30 points. At the second game we offered that game-play again and the completely different roster. <…> The Americans were so frightened that at the second quarter 5th minute, when they overbalanced the result, they didn’t attacked by themselves. They were holding the ball. <…> The Americans wrote that the Russians were using the refrigeration tactics, when you play until the true shot, and that they were so close near the victory. So close that the Americans never before were in a such situation".[2]

Possibly the most memorable moment for him during his tenure with the Cuba national basketball team, when he was the head coach of it, was: "Two blacks were going in front of me: the Cuban and the Puerto Rican. It was in Panama. The Central American championship was taking place there. They were chatting together. Puerto Rican asked: Who is your coach? Russian? Cuban replied: Oh, no. He is Lithuanian. Puerto Rican: What's the difference between the Russian and the Lithuanian? Cuban began explaining: Lithuanians have a completely different alphabet, they are learning their own language. <…> By the way, he also told where Lithuania is located – near the Baltic Sea. I think it was one of my biggest achievements".[3]

References

  1. Boris Khavin (1979). All about Olympic Games. (in Russian) (2nd ed.). Moscow: Fizkultura i sport. p. 306.
  2. Telecast "Mūsų krepšinis" (Season: 1; Episode: 1; Quotation begins at 13:30)
  3. Telecast "Mūsų krepšinis" (Season: 1; Episode: 1; Quotation begins at 17:50)


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