KK Partizan 1988–89 season: Korać Cup & Yugoslav Cup winners, losing the Yugoslav league finals In the summer of 1988, Danilović's two-year ban finally expired and the player was free to suit up for Partizan. Already familiar with the players he had been practicing with for more than a year, the 18-year-old joined a roster laden with talent at all positions – 21-year-old point guard
Saša Đorđević, 22-year-old forward
Žarko Paspalj who could play both the three and four positions, 22-year-old small forward
Ivo Nakić, versatile 20-year-old center
Vlade Divac, and his 21-year-old backup
Miroslav Pecarski as well as a pair of experienced 28-year-olds: backup point guard
Željko Obradović and backup center
Milenko Savović. Starting small forward
Goran Grbović (who often also played the shooting guard position) left the club for
Oximesa that summer, opening up space for the incoming Danilović. Coming off a season in which they made the
EuroLeague Final Four (eliminated by Maccabi in the semi-final) and lost to emerging
Jugoplastika in the
Yugoslav League playoff final series, the young Partizan team was looking to reclaim the domestic league title. Young Danilović immediately got big minutes at shooting guard, registering a promising debut campaign, especially excelling at defense while contributing a modest 5.6 points per game on offense (123 points over 21 league appearances). Partizan finished the
regular season in first place with a 16–6 record, the same as
Jugoplastika, but with a better point differential, meaning the Belgrade club would have home-court advantage in the playoffs. Winning both cup competitions that season – the
FIBA Korać Cup and the
Yugoslav Cup — came as a great confidence boost for the young squad. The two trophies came in quick succession during mid-March 1989 – on Thursday, March 16, Partizan went to
Cantù for the first leg of the Korać Cup final away versus
Wiwa Vismara, losing by 13 points with Danilović getting the starting assignment and registering 10 points, followed up immediately by a trip to
Maribor to play Jugoplastika in the Yugoslav Cup final on Sunday, March 19, winning 87–74, before returning home for the return leg of the Korać Cup final at home in
Hala sportova on Wednesday, March 22, and winning by 19 to undo their first-leg deficit and take the trophy. Danilović, this time coming off the bench, again contributed with 10 key points in the return leg, and head coach Vujošević left for Spanish club
Oximesa from
Granada, taking veteran center Savović with him.
Reba Ćorković, who had previously coached the club for two stint - during the mid-1970s and then in the early 1980s —winning two domestic league titles, in
1975–76 and
1980–81 seasons - returned as head coach. Playing with a depleted roster, the
season turned out to be a write-off as it quickly became clear this Partizan squad was no match for tougher Yugoslav clubs. Their deficiencies were especially evident at center as Pecarski, who in the absence of Divac was forced into playing big minutes, was often outplayed by the opposition's big man. Partizan finished the season in 8th place with a 9–13 record, missing the playoffs – the club's worst league finish in nineteen years. They didn't fare much better in the Yugoslav Cup or
FIBA European Cup Winners' Cup, finishing both competitions at the quarterfinal stage. It wasn't much better for Danilović individually, either: after steadily improving performances started the season off strongly, he suffered a season-ending broken leg after only 11 games, Danilović led the team to the top of the standings in the
regular season with a 24–6 record, ahead of former teammate
Saša Đorđević's
Philips Milano and reigning league champions
Benetton Treviso, led by
Toni Kukoč, before sweeping through the playoffs without a single loss, overcoming
Olimpia Pistoia,
Clear Cantù, and finally Kukoč's Treviso in the playoff final series to win the
Italian League title in impressive style. Dueling with his old Yugoslav League nemesis, Danilović got the better of Kukoč this time. Establishing himself as Virtus's undisputed leader, Danilović averaged a combined 23.7 points per game over the course of the regular season and playoffs. but eventually decided to stay put with Bologna, at least for the time being. The new season, 1993–94, mostly mirrored the previous one as it quickly became clear that no club was a match for Virtus in the Italian League. Jumping to the top of the standings with five straight wins to open the season, they never relinquished the top spot until the end, finishing the regular season with an identical 24–6 record from the previous campaign. Well settled in Italy—and nicknamed
lo Zar (the Tzar) and
Zar Freddo (the Cold Tzar) by the Italian sports media for his prowess and cool demeanour under pressure on the court as well as his catlike inscrutability off it—Danilović continued to lead the team. In December 1993, approximately midway through the season, Virtus moved into their newly built 8,650-seat arena
PalaMalaguti (which now seats 11,000), located outside of the city centre in
Casalecchio di Reno.
Miami Heat Despite being selected by the
Golden State Warriors with the 43rd pick overall in the
1992 NBA draft, Danilović continued playing in Europe for three more seasons before debuting in the
National Basketball Association (NBA). In the meantime, in November 1994, his rights were traded to the
Miami Heat as part of a deal that sent 25-year-old
Billy Owens to the Heat while the Warriors got 29-year-old center
Rony Seikaly. In mid-June 1995, Danilović signed a four-year contract with Miami worth just over US$8 million. To accommodate signing Danilović, the Heat decided to trade
Harold Miner to Cleveland in exchange for second-round draft picks and future considerations, thus freeing up space under NBA's
salary cap. helping his team beat the
Cleveland Cavaliers 85–71 before getting ejected towards the end of the game for an altercation with Cleveland's
Chris Mills. The incident that saw both players thrown out of the game started in fourth quarter with 5:42 left to play, when Mills hit Danilović with a flying elbow to the chin as Danilović was cutting across the baseline, to which Danilović responded by allowing Mills to catch up on the next play and elbowing him in the side of his head, to which Mills then immediately reacted with a right hook to Danilović's jaw, leaving him with a cut lip that required nine stitches outside his mouth and three more inside. After the game, Danilović said he was just getting back at Mills after being hit, while Mills claimed Danilović had been playing dirty all game long. the Heat opened the season with an 11–3 record playing a starting five of Coles, Danilović, Owens, Willis, and Mourning. Just as Danilović began hitting his shooting stride in December 1995, averaging 20 points per game in the four contests between December 6–12, 1995, including a season-high 30 points away at
Phoenix, his season was disrupted by injury. On December 14, 1995, two days after appearing in the away loss at
Golden State during which he scored 15 points he fell and aggravated an injury first sustained during his time in Italy. He was consequently placed on the team's injured list with right wrist issues that looked to be minor initially. As an injury he had played through for three years, Danilović was confident it would be overcome by treatment methods he was well-accustomed to at this point. Danilović's frustration at being on the sidelines with an injury that showed no signs of improving became evident on December 23, 1995. During halftime of an away game at Charlotte that he watched in street clothes from the bench, he was signing autographs near the tunnel leading to the locker rooms when an abusive fan began verbally haranguing him; Danilović reacted by confronting the fan physically and had to be restrained by Heat executive
Randy Pfund. At South Miami Hospital on January 2, 1996, hand specialist Dr. Ann Ouelette performed surgery on Danilović's right hand to repair a non-union of the
scaphoid bone. During Danilović's layoff, the Heat completely overhauled their roster including their early-season starting lineup. On February 23, 1996, the team made three trades on the same day, bringing in
Tim Hardaway and
Chris Gatling from Golden State for Bimbo Coles and Kevin Willis, then getting
Walt Williams and
Tyrone Corbin from Sacramento for Billy Owens and Kevin Gamble, and finally acquiring
Tony Smith from Phoenix for
Terrence Rencher. The projections of Danilović' return from injury at the beginning of April 1996 proved overly optimistic as he came bacķ a bit later - on April 21, 1996, at home versus Atlanta, the Heat's last game of the
regular season. Very rusty after four months on the sidelines during which he missed 62 games, Danilović, who had in the meantime also lost his starting spot to
Rex Chapman, put up a modest 8 points during 25 minutes of action off the bench on 3 for 9 shooting from the field that included
airballing his first shot back after the injury layoff and coming up well short on his first 3-point shot as Miami lost 92–104. Two days later, game two of the series brought a much improved performance by Danilović who scored a team-high 15 points off the bench in 23 minutes; however, the Heat suffered an even worse blowout, this time by 31 points. The series then shifted to Miami, and the rampant Bulls converted on their first opportunity to end the series, beating the Heat easily for the third time in a row, 112–91, as Danilović, playing reduced minutes, scored 7 points.
Return to Virtus In early June 1997, after getting offered a US$6 million net income three-year contract from his old club Virtus, Danilović decided to end his time in the NBA, two years short of completing his 4-year contract, thus forfeiting $4.9 million in NBA salary. On April 23, 1998, Danilović won his second
EuroLeague, defeating
AEK in Barcelona. While on May 31, Virtus took its 14th national title in five games against
Teamsystem Bologna. With 20 seconds to go anad Fortitudo leading by 4, Danilović made a three-point shot while being fouled by
Dominique Wilkins, completing a four point play. Than Virtus went on to win the game in overtime. The 1998 final between Virtus and Fortitudo is widely considered the greatest in the history of Italian basketball, with two of the teams on the continent playing in the same city. The following season, Virtus won its 7th Italian Cup but lost in the EuroLeague final against
Žalgiris of
Tyus Edney and was eliminated in the semi-finals for the national championship. Under Cazzola's presidency and thanks to the leadership of Danilović and coach Messina, the 1990s were considered Virtus' "
Golden Age" with four national titles, two Italian Cups, a Cup Winners' Cup and a EuroLeague, making them one of the most high-profile and successful teams in Europe. At the end of the following season, in October 2000, Danilović surprised many by announcing his retirement from professional basketball. ==Career statistics==