1998 FIBA EuroLeague Final Four
Tournament details | |
---|---|
Arena |
Palau Sant Jordi Barcelona, |
Dates | April 1998 |
Final positions | |
Champions |
|
Runners-up |
|
Third place |
|
Fourth place |
|
Awards and statistics | |
MVP |
|
The 1998 FIBA EuroLeague Final Four was the 1997–98 season's FIBA EuroLeague Final Four tournament, organized by FIBA Europe.
Kinder Bologna won its first title, after defeating AEK in the EuroLeague Finals, in the lowest scoring final ever.
Bracket
Semi-finals | Final | |||||
61 | ||||||
83 | ||||||
58 | ||||||
44 | ||||||
66 | ||||||
69 | ||||||
Third place | ||||||
89 | ||||||
96 |
Semifinals
Partizan – Kinder Bologna
Benetton Treviso – AEK
Third Place Game
April 23 18:15 |
Partizan |
89–96 | |
Scoring by half: 46–54, 43–42 | ||
Pts: Drobnjak 22 Rebs: Tomašević 12 Asts: Lukovski 3 |
Pts: Williams 24 Rebs: Sciarra 7 Asts: four players 2 |
Palau Sant Jordi, Barcelona Attendance: 11,900 Referees: Romualdas Brazauskas (LTU), Armand De Keyser (BEL) |
Final
April 23 20:30 |
Kinder Bologna |
58–44 | |
Scoring by half: 28–20, 30–24 | ||
Pts: Rigaudeau 14 Rebs: Nesterović 9 Asts: Abbio, Sconochini 2 |
Pts: Lasa 7 Rebs: Tsakalidis 6 Asts: Lasa, Prelević 3 |
Palau Sant Jordi, Barcelona Attendance: 11,900 Referees: Miguel Ángel Betancor (ESP), Iztok Rems (SLO) |
Kinder Bologna
|
AEK
|
|
|
|
Awards
FIBA EuroLeague Final Four MVP
FIBA EuroLeague Finals Top Scorer
FIBA EuroLeague All-Final Four Team
FIBA EuroLeague All-Final Four Team | |||
Player | Team | Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|
Virtus Bologna | [1] | ||
Virtus Bologna | |||
Treviso | |||
Partizan | |||
Virtus Bologna |
References
External links
This article is issued from
Wikipedia.
The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.