Jeremy Veal

  • Nationality: USA
  • Date of Birth: 26/03/76
  • Place of Birth: Los Angeles, California (USA)
  • Position: GRD
  • Height (CM): 191
  • Weight (KG): 84
  • Junior Assoc: None
  • College: Arizona State (1994-98)
  • NBL DEBUT: 1/10/03
  • AGE AT DEBUT: 27
  • LAST NBL GAME: 21/01/04
  • AGE AT LAST GAME: 27
  • NBL History: Townsville 2004
  • Championships: 0
  • None

BIO: Jeremy Veal was born in Los Angeles, California (USA).

NBL EXPERIENCE

Jeremy Veal made his NBL debut with the Townsville Crocodiles at 27 years of age. He scored 20 points in his first game.

NBL TOTAL STATISTICS

SEASONAGETEAMTEAM RECORDGPMINSPTSREBASTORDRSTLBLKTOPFFGMFGAFG%3PM3PA3P%FTMFTAFT%TS%EFG%HS
2003-0428Townsville13-20 (9)21732.039088772266293724915631849%328040%465781%57%54%41
Totals2173239088772266293724915631849.1%328040.0%465780.7%57%54%41

NBL PER GAME STATISTICS

SEASONAGETEAMTEAM RECORDGPMINSPTSREBASTORDRSTLBLKTOPFFGMFGAFG%3PM3PA3P%FTMFTAFT%TS%EFG%HS
2003-0428Townsville13-20 (9)2134.918.64.23.71.03.11.40.13.42.37.415.149%1.53.840%2.22.781%57%54%41
Total2134.918.64.23.71.03.11.40.13.42.37.415.149.1%0.00.040.0%1.53.880.7%57%54%41

CAREER HIGHS

POINTS REBOUNDS ASSISTS STEALS BLOCKS TURNOVERS TRIPLE DOUBLES
418104180

Season Team PTS AST STL BLK FGM FGA FG% 3PM 3PA 3P%
1 0 91% 92% 92% 55%
2 0 41 10 4 1
Total 156 318 49.1% 32 80 40.0%

NBA TOTAL STATISTICS

YEARAGETEAMPOSGPGSMINSPTSTRBASTORBDRBSTLBLKTOVPFFGFGAFG%3P3PA3P%FTFTAFT%TS%EFG%
2003-0428Townsville13-20 (9)21732.039088772266293724915631849%328040%465781%57%54%41
Total000000000000000000

INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE

Name: Veal, Jeremy | college: Arizona State (1994-98) Graduated prior to: 2003| Additional Info: Veal suited up for Arizona State during the 1994-95 season, which the program’s year-by-year records list as a 24-9 campaign under head coach Bill Frieder, and he went on to compete for the Sun Devils through 1997-98, finishing his four-year career without missing a game across 122 appearances.

In 1994-95, Veal played in all 33 games and started four times while averaging 7.4 points and 1.3 rebounds per game, and he logged 245 total points on 84-for-205 shooting from the field (41.0%) while going 44-for-118 from three-point range (37.3%) and 33-of-40 at the free-throw line (82.5%).

That freshman season included Arizona State’s run to the NCAA Tournament Sweet Sixteen as the Sun Devils won 81-66 over Ball State and then beat Manhattan 64-54, a game in which Veal hit a late three-pointer that helped seal the win and send Arizona State to the round of 16, before the season ended with a 97-73 loss to Kentucky on March 23, 1995.

Across the 1995 NCAA Tournament, Veal averaged 10.3 points and went 9-for-19 on three-pointers (47.4%) in postseason play, and his first-half three against Kentucky was part of a stretch that cut the deficit to five before the halftime buzzer.

As a sophomore in 1995-96, Veal started all 27 games and became a primary scoring option, averaging 18.9 points per game while producing 511 total points on 184-for-419 shooting (43.9%), adding 77-of-94 free throws (81.9%), 76 total rebounds, and 103 assists.

In that 1995-96 season, he also made 66 three-pointers on 182 attempts (36.3%), posted 13 games of at least 20 points, and finished among the Pac-10’s top scorers while playing 34.2 minutes per game as Arizona State went 11-16 overall and 6-12 in conference play under Frieder.

In 1996-97, Veal started 28 of 30 games and averaged 18.7 points, 4.3 rebounds, and 4.7 assists per game while ranking fourth in the Pac-10 in scoring and tied for fifth in assists, and he shot 199-for-444 from the field (44.8%), hit 58-of-131 threes (44.3%), and made 106-of-137 free throws (77.4%).

That junior season included 562 total points, 142 assists, and 128 rebounds, and it featured multiple high-scoring conference performances including a 30-point game at Washington on January 30 and a 31-point outing against Washington on February 27, while Arizona State finished 10-20 overall and 2-16 in Pac-10 play.

Veal’s senior year came in 1997-98 with Don Newman taking over as head coach, and Veal started all 32 games while leading the Pac-10 in scoring at 20.8 points per game, totaling 666 points on 244-for-529 shooting (46.1%) with 122-of-155 free throws (78.7%) and 135 rebounds.

In 1997-98, he played heavy minutes throughout the season, averaged 37.5 minutes per game, played 40 minutes in 10 contests, and produced a seven-game streak of 20-point performances in January as he finished his career with 46 games of 20 or more points and five 30-point games.

Veal opened his senior season with a career-high 32 points in a 97-91 win over Cal State Northridge on November 16, 1997, and later scored 27 points at then fourth-ranked Stanford on January 31 while also delivering strong scoring nights against elite opponents, including 29 points versus Kansas and 25 points at Cincinnati during his final season.

Across his four seasons at Arizona State, Veal totaled 1,984 career points, 413 assists, and 383 rebounds, finished as a two-time All-Pac-10 selection, and ended his career with 224 made three-pointers on 564 attempts (39.7%) while shooting 338-of-426 at the foul line (79.3%).

Veal’s year-by-year three-point production included 44 makes as a freshman, 66 as a sophomore, 58 as a junior, and 56 as a senior, and his senior season concluded with a postseason all-star appearance when he played in the NABC All-Star Game on March 27 in San Antonio and recorded 10 points, five assists, and two rebounds in 21:23 while shooting 4-for-6 from the field and 2-for-3 on three-pointers.

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

    • Why Newcastle’s NBL Return Is Closer Than You Think

      The conversation around NBL expansion has intensified in recent years, with the league publicly confirming discussions with potential markets such as Canberra, the Gold Coast, and Darwin. However, one city that continues to quietly build momentum as a realistic candidate for a future franchise is Newcastle. While it may not always dominate the expansion headlines, the pieces required for an NBL return are slowly aligning, and according to former owner of the Illawarra Hawks, Dorry Kordahi, the push for a Newcastle team is very real.…

      READ MORE
    • Why Luke Paul Said No to a $3 Million College Bag to Get “Beaten Up” in the NBL

      Most 16-year-olds would take the bag. Luke Paul wants to take a beating. In an era where high school recruits are chasing six-figure Instagram followings and seven-figure NIL deals, Luke Paul just did the unthinkable. The 16-year-old Australian talent is a 6'6" point guard widely tipped as a future NBA lottery pick who reportedly turned down US college offers worth up to $3 million to stay home. He didn't do it for comfort. He didn't do it for safety. According to Paul, he did it…

      READ MORE
    • ‘We need to play good basketball’ – South East Melbourne eye fine-tuning ahead of finals

      With one game remaining in the regular season and finals seeding on the line, South East Melbourne moved a step closer to the top two with a 120–104 win over the Tasmania JackJumpers at John Cain Arena. The Phoenix overcame a career-high 36-point outing from Majok Deng, with Angus Glover leading the way with 21 points and seven three-pointers as the home side’s firepower proved too much. Despite the result, coach Josh King said his group still needs to produce a complete four-quarter performance, particularly…

      READ MORE
    • Inclusion Needs Outcomes, Not Pride Rounds

      In recent weeks, NBL Pride Round has been accompanied by a wave of opinion pieces — including Michael Randall’s “Pride Round: Why the NBL should be proud it won’t ever ‘shut up and dribble’” — praising the initiative while dismissing its critics. This has been something I’ve been thinking about and discussing with people since Indigenous Round.I think we all need a little perspective sometimes. https://t.co/2D65bvtS5K — Michael Randall (@MickRandallHS) February 3, 2026 But the argument that any criticism of the National Basketball League’s social-issue…

      READ MORE
    • Kings vs Hawks: Ep. 6 — LaMelo Ball, Spy-Gate and ‘The Hawks’ lose their Illawarra name

      We continue diving deeper into one of Aussie hoops’ fiercest rivalries — Sydney vs Illawarra — picking things up as LaMelo Ball and his Rookie of the Year season in 2019 propelled the Hawks into the global spotlight, setting NBL viewership and attendance records, while the Kings reloaded under Will Weaver and pushed for a championship in a season that ended in chaos. Host Dan Boyce breaks down LaMelo’s viral debut, his back-to-back triple-doubles, and the impact of Aaron Brooks’ season-ending injury on Illawarra’s playoff…

      READ MORE
    • Keanu Pinder’s Japanese Stint Could Result In Boomers Selection

      Keanu Pinder has hit a new gear in Japan. As Akita’s starting big, he is producing like a franchise option, and that level of form is putting him back in the Boomers conversation. Pinder is in the midst of a prime career stretch that has seen him exceed the 2 time NBL "Most Improved Player" form that first made him a star in Cairns.The primary storyline defining Pinder’s 2025-26 campaign is a shift in usage. In Perth, Pinder was often a secondary option behind heavy…

      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
    • Japan’s Emergence as a Major Destination for Australian Basketball Talent

      Five to ten years ago, if an Australian headed to Japan, it was typically because of not making NBL roster spots. Players like Venky Jois, Daniel Dillon and Rhys Vague fit this profile. Now Australian basketballers looking to play overseas rarely viewed Japan as a serious career destination. The traditional pathways pointed elsewhere, but that perception has shifted rapidly. Today, Japan’s B.League has emerged as a legitimate and increasingly attractive option for Australian players seeking strong contracts, defined roles, and long-term professional stability.Today, that narrative…

      READ MORE

    SEKOLAHTOTO

    slot deposit 5000

    sekolahtoto

    Di balik gemerlap dunia taruhan, SEKOLAHTOTO menghadirkan sensasi bermain di pusat keberuntungan Asia dengan nuansa eksklusi yang memikat.

    DAMRILAKU66

    sekolahtoto

    sekolahtoto

    sekolahtoto

    sekolahtoto

    toto togel