Ousmane Dieng

  • Nationality: FRA
  • Date of Birth: 21/05/03
  • Place of Birth: Lot-et-Garonne (France)
  • Position: G/F
  • Height (CM): 208
  • Weight (KG): 98
  • Junior Assoc: None
  • College: None
  • NBL DEBUT: 4/12/21
  • AGE AT DEBUT: 18
  • LAST NBL GAME: 12/04/22
  • AGE AT LAST GAME: 18
  • NBL History: New Zealand 2022
  • Championships: 0
  • None

BIO: Ousmane Dieng was born in France and grew up in Lot-et-Garonne, where his father, Ababacar, played basketball. As a junior, he played for Villeneuve Basket Club and JSA Bordeaux.

Dieng is considered a excellent passer and a defender with the potential to guard those multiple positions in the NBA. He told ESPN that fellow countryman Nic Batum of the LA Clippers and Toronto Raptors rookie of the year candidate Scottie Barnes are among the players whose film he watches and learns from.

NBL EXPERIENCE

Ousmane Dieng made his NBL debut with the New Zealand Breakers at 18 years of age. He scored three points in his first game.

After a season where the Breakers played 29 of 36 games in Australia, things only continued to get worse for the Breakers, with the team unable to play any home games during NBL22 and finishing dead last during the regular season.

After playing the previous season with a trio of Corey Webster, Tai Webster, and William McDowell-White at point guard, the team decided they would build around the younger of the three and move Corey to the bench. The Breakers then allowed him to exit his contract with him choosing to play in Europe instead. Not long after, as a result of the NBL requiring players to be vaccinated for COVID-19, Tai Webster chose to exit his contract as well and play overseas.

While losing the Webster brothers, the team gained the signatures of Kiwi Yanni Wetzell (via South East Melbourne) and import players Peyton Siva, Hugo Besson and Jeremiah Martin. Additionally, the team signed French prodigy Dieng under the league’s Next Star program.

The team immediately faced adversity, losing Siva and Thomas Abercrombie to injury and having to absorb a COVID outbreak on the eve of the season. The team signed Chasson Randle (7.8 points, 1.3 rebounds, and 0.9 assists) as a replacement player for Siva, and the team began the season with a 0–6 start.

Dieng also started the season off with a disappointing start to his first season in a top-level professional league. During his first nine games, Dieng struggled to score, averaging 16.7 minutes, 3.1 points, 2.0 rebounds, and 0.9 assists while shooting a abysmal 20 percent from the floor and just 13 from beyond the 3-point arc (4 from 31 attempts).

Dieng’s year with the breaks was one full of challenges which included Covid outbreaks, team shutdowns and playing a entire season on the road. While ESPN had Dieng as high as 11 on their draft board when he signed with the Breakers his early play saw the 2.06m perimeter player’s stock dip to 26 – just one place ahead of fellow Frenchman and Breakers teammate Hugo Besson.

New Zealand received a boost when Siva was able to return to the team shortly after, a move which then saw Jeremiah Martin (12.3 points, 2.6 rebounds, 3.2 assists, and 1.2 steals) and the Breakers agree to a mutual release. The move came as a result of high-level play from Randle, who they chose to retain instead of Martin once Peyton Siva (11.8 points, 2.5 rebounds, 4.6 assists, and 2 steals) returned from injury.

Although the team had planned to play their home games at the back end of the season, COVID-19 restrictions made that impossible and forced the team to base themselves in Tasmania for the majority of the season.

During the second hal of the season, Dieng started to flash his upside while getting more opportunities to initiate as a point-forward and averaging 1.01 points per possession — a increase from 0.57 points per possession in the first half of the season.

In March 2022, he strung together a number of impressive games over the course of a seven-day period where he dropped 17 points, 9 rebounds, and 3 assists against the JackJumpers, Tasmania, 17 points and 3 rebounds against Brisbane and then 13 points, 4 rebounds on Adelaide to finish the week. Dieng shrugged off his shooting woes and across the team’s final 12 games, averaged 13.3 points while shooting 48% from the field and 36% from 3-point range.

Dieng became the first European star to make the leap to Australia as part of the NBL’s Next Stars program and was rewarded with being selected by the New York Knicks in the 2022 NBA Draft a few months later.

The Breakers were led by the all-around play of Yanni Wetzell (17.7 points, 8.4 rebounds, 1.3 assists, 1.6 steals, and 1.1 blocks) who left the team to play in Europe once New Zealand had no chance to make the playoffs. Despite leaving the team with a month of the Breakers season still remaining Wetzell was named club MVP. Hugo Besson (13.9 points, 4 rebounds, and 2.3 assists) and Finn Delany (10 points, 5.5 rebounds, and 2 assists) would raise their games during that final month of the season but by mid-February had fallen to 4–10.

Besson would average 13.9 points, 4 rebounds, and 2.3 assists as New Zealand finished with a 5–23 record, the Breakers worst season in their 19-year history.

Ousmane Dieng played one season in the NBL. He averaged 8.8 points, 3.1 rebounds, and 1 assists in 23 NBL games.

HIGHLIGHTS:

NBL TOTAL STATISTICS

SEASONAGETEAMTEAM RECORDGPMINSPTSREBASTORDRSTLBLKTOPFFGMFGAFG%3PM3PA3P%FTMFTAFT%TS%EFG%HS
2021-2219New Zealand5-23 (10)23478.22047325126114733348020140%269627%182767%48%46%22
Totals234782047325126114733348020139.8%269627.1%182766.7%48%46%22

NBL PER GAME STATISTICS

SEASONAGETEAMTEAM RECORDGPMINSPTSREBASTORDRSTLBLKTOPFFGMFGAFG%3PM3PA3P%FTMFTAFT%TS%EFG%HS
2021-2219New Zealand5-23 (10)2320.88.93.21.10.52.70.60.31.41.53.58.740%1.14.227%0.81.267%48%46%22
Total2320.88.93.21.10.52.70.60.31.41.53.58.739.8%0.00.027.1%1.14.266.7%48%46%22

CAREER HIGHS

POINTS REBOUNDS ASSISTS STEALS BLOCKS TURNOVERS TRIPLE DOUBLES
22964240

FIBA EXPERIENCE

Dieng represented France at the 2019 FIBA U16 European Championship in Italy. He averaged 8.9 points, 3.6 assists and 2.7 rebounds per game, helping his team win the silver medal

NBA EXPERIENCE

Ousmane Dieng was drafted by the New York Knicks with pick #11 in the 2022 NBA Draft.

Dieng played 139 games in the NBA. He averaged 5.7 points, 2.7 rebounds, and 1.6 assists per game over his NBA career.

NBA TRANSACTIONS:

- June 23, 2022: Drafted by the New York Knicks in the 1st round (11th pick) of the 2022 NBA Draft.
- June 23, 2022: Traded by the New York Knicks to the Oklahoma City Thunder for a 2023 1st round draft pick (was later selected), a 2023 1st round draft pick (was later selected) and a 2023 1st round draft pick (Nick Smith Jr. was later selected). 2023 conditional 1st-rd pick was DEN own 2023 conditional 1st-rd pick was DET own, did not convey 2023 conditional 1st-rd pick was WAS own, did not convey.
- July 5, 2022: Signed a multi-year contract with the Oklahoma City Thunder.

Season Team PTS AST STL BLK FGM FGA FG% 3PM 3PA 3P%
1 0 63% 59% 64% 72%
2 0 22 6 4 2
Total 80 201 39.8% 26 96 27.1%

NBA TOTAL STATISTICS

YEARAGETEAMPOSGPGSMINSPTSTRBASTORBDRBSTLBLKTOVPFFGFGAFG%3P3PA3P%FTFTAFT%TS%EFG%
2025-2622MilwaukeeC3020804331138108211172310675613030742%4513633%263967%51%50%
2024-2521Oklahoma CityC3714051428131186317718335412543%237132%111669%54%52%
2023-2420Oklahoma CityPF330365133513710418519224911642%217030%141688%54%51%
2022-2319Oklahoma CitySF39156919310546198614726427618142%269827%152365%50%49%
Total13922214379937522268307622913015330972942%11537531%669470%

NBA PER GAME STATISTICS

YEARAGETEAMPOSGPGSMINSPTSTRBASTORBDRBSTLBLKTOVPFFGFGAFG%3P3PA3P%FTFTAFT%TS%EFG%
2025-2622MilwaukeeC302026.811.04.63.60.73.90.80.32.21.94.310.242%1.54.533%0.91.367%51%50%
2024-2521Oklahoma CityC37110.93.82.20.80.51.70.50.20.50.91.53.443%0.61.932%0.30.469%54%52%
2023-2420Oklahoma CityPF33011.14.01.51.10.31.20.20.20.60.71.53.542%0.62.130%0.40.588%54%51%
2022-2319Oklahoma CitySF39114.64.92.71.20.52.20.40.20.71.11.94.642%0.72.527%0.40.665%50%49%
Total1392215.45.72.71.60.52.20.40.20.91.12.25.242%0.82.731%0.50.770%

INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE

  • France - Centre Fédéral (2020–2021)

Ousmane Dieng joined Centre Fédéral for the 2020–21 Nationale Masculine 1 season, playing his first season in France as part of the INSEP Academy program in Paris.

In the 2020–21 campaign, Dieng averaged 12.6 points, 5.8 rebounds, and 2.9 assists per game in France’s NM1 competition, and season listings also credit him with 1.5 steals per game, a figure that is sometimes repeated in summaries as 1.5 assists.

Dieng made 25 NM1 appearances for Centre Fédéral, the French Basketball Federation’s development side, and he played alongside other INSEP prospects from that season’s roster including Rayan Rupert, Melvin Ajinca, Brice Dessert, Adama-Alpha Bal, Alexandre Bouzidi, and Ismael Kamagate.

Centre Fédéral functions as the competitive team for the INSEP Academy, a French training centre that has developed players including Tony Parker and Boris Diaw.

COLLEGE

Despite being recruited by Duke, Arizona, Gonzaga, Memphis and Cincinnati, along with the G League Ignite, Dieng became the first European player to join the NBL’s Next Stars program in hopes of developing into a NBA draft prospect.

Related

HAVE MORE INFORMATION ON THIS PLAYER?

Whilst we try to source as much information as we can for every player who has ever played in the NBL some information on a player profile may be missing. If you have additional information on a player you'd like us to add to a profile, please send it to us using the enquiry form below.

    Submissions are then sent to info@aussiehoopla.com

    • John Rillie on roster changes for NBL27, pressures from fans and media and Bryce Cotton/Trevor Gleeson narratives

      Perth Wildcats head coach John Rillie joins the podcast to discuss the pressure that comes with coaching one of the NBL’s most successful clubs, the challenge of moving forward after Bryce Cotton’s departure, and what Perth needs to build its next championship contender. Visit dunk.com.au for your next set of basketball uniforms. Host Dan Boyce chats with Rillie about taking over the Wildcats after the club missed the finals for the first time since 1986, the expectations of the Red Army, and how Perth’s three…

      READ MORE
    • Rolan Roberts on Kings Titles, Dunk Contest Injury and Playing for Brian Goorjian and Trevor Gleeson

      Former Sydney Kings and Townsville Crocodiles big man Rolan Roberts joins the podcast to reflect on his time in Australia, including joining the Kings mid-season and helping them complete their historic 2005 NBL three-peat. Visit dunk.com.au for your next set of basketball uniforms. Host Dan Boyce chats with Roberts about playing under Brian Goorjian, becoming a key interior presence for Sydney, and being part of the Kings team that became the first in NBL history to win three straight championships. The episode also dives into…

      READ MORE
    • Boomers: we’re not taking Patty and Bryce

      At some point over the next 12 months, the Boomers are going to have to make a decision that Australian basketball has managed to avoid for almost two decades. Who exactly is this team built around now? Since 2010, that answer was simple. It was Patty Mills’ team. Mills has been the primary scorer for the Boomers for nearly two decades and few Australian victories have been recorded without a major scoring performance from Patty. But as the Boomers move toward the 2027 FIBA World…

      READ MORE
    • NBL players who have played in the NBA

      A player arriving in the NBL with NBA experience always creates interest. Fans get excited when their team signs a former NBA player, commentators mention it during broadcasts, and every article about that player usually links their NBL performance back to their NBA résumé. Sometimes, we see a big-time college prospect use the NBL as a springboard to the NBA and never return. Other times, established NBA veterans come to Australia looking for a fresh opportunity. And in many cases, local talent develops in the…

      READ MORE
    • Who are the greatest NBA Players to play in the NBL

      Over the years, Aussie Hoopla has taken a deep dive into the full list of players who have competed in both the NBL and the NBA. You can see the full list of NBL players who have played in the NBA here: Names from every decade since the 1980s have featured, including NBL legends like Andrew Gaze, Shane Heal, Lanard Copeland and Rob Rose, alongside a long list of imports who used the NBL as a stepping stone to the world’s biggest stage. But with…

      READ MORE
    • Julius Hodge on Stepping on Brett Maher, NBL Pay Issues and NBA Stories

      Former Adelaide 36ers star Julius Hodge joins the podcast to reflect on one of the most dominant short stints in NBL history, his journey from the NBA to Australia, and the impact he made during the 2007/08 season. Visit dunk.com.au for your next set of basketball uniforms. Host Dan Boyce chats with Hodge about his incredible all-around performances, triple-doubles, and what it was like adjusting to the Australian game mid-season. The episode also dives into his time playing in the NBA and overseas, his perspective…

      READ MORE
    • NBL Free Agent Tracker

      Below is an up-to-date roster for each NBL team and a list of rumours and potential signings derived from discussions with NBL staff and media. Players listed as contracted come from information supplied by the National Basketball League. * = Denotes import player ** = Naturalised Australian DP = a member of the team's development roster SRP = the previously named Asian player exception denoting an Asian player who qualifies as a local in the NBL. MP = Marquee players listed as known Click here…

      READ MORE
    • Mick Downer on NBL Talent in Japan, NBL vs B.League, and Offensive Rebounding

      Current head coach of the Akita Northern Happinets, Mick Downer joins the podcast to discuss the differences between coaching in Japan and the NBL, his stints with Perth, Cairns, Brisbane and Adelaide over the past 25 years, and his time with the Australian Boomers program. Visit dunk.com.au for your next set of basketball uniforms. Host Dan Boyce chats with Downer about what he learnt stepping into the head coaching role in a non-English speaking country, as well as providing updates on NBL talent in Japan…

      READ MORE

    SEKOLAHTOTO

    slot deposit 5000

    sekolahtoto

    toto togel

    SEKOLAHTOTO

    SEKOLAHTOTO

    sekolahtoto

    sekolahtoto

    sekolahtoto

    sekolahtoto

    sekolahtoto

    sekolahtoto