Date | League | Transaction |
---|---|---|
27th September, 2007 | NBA | Signed an unguaranteed one year minimum salary contract with Chicago. |
8th October, 2007 | NBA | Waived by Chicago. |
1st November, 2007 | D-League | Designated as an allocated player by Fort Wayne Mad Ants. |
23rd November, 2007 | D-League | Waived by Fort Wayne Mad Ants. |
5th December, 2007 | D-League | Acquired by Colorado 14ers. |
13th August, 2008 | Belgium | Signed a one year contract with Belgacom Liege. |
10th July, 2009 | Belgium | Signed a one year contract with Mons-Hainaut. |
31st July, 2010 | Belgium | Re-signed by Mons-Hainaut to a one year contract. |
30th June, 2011 | Belgium | Signed a two year extension with Mons-Hainaut. |
22nd May, 2013 | Belgium | Signed a two year extension with Mons-Hainaut. |
12th July, 2015 | Belgium | Signed a two year extension with Mons-Hainaut. |
3rd June, 2017 | Belgium | Signed a one year extension with Mons-Hainaut. |
2003 - 2007 | Xavier (NCAA) |
September 2007 - October 2007 | Chicago Bulls (NBA) |
November 2007 | Fort Wayne Mad Ants (D-League) |
December 2007 - June 2008 | Colorado 14ers (D-League) |
August 2008 - June 2009 | Belgacom Liege (Belgium) |
July 2009 - present | Mons-Hainaut (Belgium) |
January 14, 2010
- Justin Cage
Cage is with Dexia Mons-Hainaut, a Belgian team not keen to admit that they're actually Belgian. The team has a 10 man rotation, and yet employs only one German; youth player Alexandre Libert. (Former Idaho State forward Jim Potter is into his fifteenth season in Belgium, so I guess he counts too.) Dexia recently lost their American head coach - Chris Finch - to the Rio Grande Valley Vipers of the D-League, and replaced him with an Israeli head coach and a Dutch assistant. It's a very international affair, just as long as that nation is not Belgium.
On the year, Cage is averaging 7.6 points and 3.8 rebounds per game in the Belgian league, alongside 7.3 points and 2.5 rebounds in the Eurochallenge. He also totalled 10 points in his only Eurocup game of the year, but I watched that game, and he kind of sucked a bit. (Although his accidentally-banked-in three was kind of cool.) Indeed, the whole Dexia Mons-Hainaut team sucked in that game; after beating Valencia in the first leg by 15 points, all Dexia had to do was either win again, or lose by no more than 14 points. This should have been easy, even on the road, and Dexia actually led by double digits at one point. But then they threw it all away in the second half, lost by 18, and were knocked out of the competition.