2000 FIBA EuroLeague Final Four

2000 FIBA EuroLeague Final Four
Season 1999–2000 FIBA EuroLeague
Tournament details
Arena P.A.O.K. Sports Arena
Thessaloniki, Greece
Dates 18–20 April 2000
Final positions
Champions Greece Panathinaikos (2nd title)
Runners-up Israel Maccabi Elite
Third place Turkey Efes Pilsen
Fourth place Spain FC Barcelona
Awards and statistics
MVP Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Željko Rebrača

The 2000 FIBA EuroLeague Final Four was the FIBA EuroLeague Final Four tournament of the 1999–2000 season. It was the second to last edition of the FIBA EuroLeague Final Fours that were organized by FIBA Europe. For the next edition of the tournament, it would be replaced by the FIBA SuproLeague's 2001 FIBA SuproLeague Final Four, and the new Euroleague Basketball competition's 2001 Finals series, which was organized by the Euroleague Basketball Company.

Panathinaikos won its second title, after defeating Maccabi Elite in the final game.

Bracket

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
 
 
 
Spain FC Barcelona 51
 
 
 
Israel Maccabi Elite 65
 
Israel Maccabi Elite 67
 
 
 
Greece Panathinaikos 73
 
Greece Panathinaikos 81
 
 
Turkey Efes Pilsen71
 
Third place
 
 
 
 
 
Spain FC Barcelona 69
 
 
Turkey Efes Pilsen 75

Semifinals

FC Barcelona – Maccabi Elite

April 18
18:30
FC Barcelona Spain 5165 Israel Maccabi Elite
Scoring by half: 22–38, 29–27
Pts: Goldwire 13
Rebs: Dueñas 9
Asts: Alston, Goldwire 3
Pts: Huffman 24
Rebs: Henefeld 6
Asts: McDonald 4
P.A.O.K. Sports Arena, Thessaloniki
Attendance: 8,000
Referees: Romualdas Brazauskas (LTU), Carl Jungebrand (FIN)

Panathinaikos – Efes Pilsen

April 18
21:00
Panathinaikos Greece 8171 Turkey Efes Pilsen
Scoring by half: 41–33, 40–28
Pts: Bodiroga 22
Rebs: Rebrača 7
Asts: Bodiroga, Kattash 3
Pts: Türkoğlu 15
Rebs: Beşok, Türkoğlu 5
Asts: Mulaomerović 6
P.A.O.K. Sports Arena, Thessaloniki
Attendance: 8,000
Referees: Stefano Cazzaro (ITA), Iztok Rems (SLO)

Third Place Game

April 20
18:30
FC Barcelona Spain 6975 Turkey Efes Pilsen
Scoring by half: 34–41, 35–34
Pts: Rentzias 29
Rebs: Elson 11
Asts: Rodríguez 5
Pts: Beşok 22
Rebs: Beşok 10
Asts: three players 2
P.A.O.K. Sports Arena, Thessaloniki
Attendance: 8,000
Referees: Stefano Cazzaro (ITA), Carl Jungebrand (FIN)

Final

April 20
21:00
Maccabi Elite Israel 6773 Greece Panathinaikos
Scoring by half: 36–36, 31–37
Pts: Huffman 26
Rebs: Huffman 10
Asts: Comegys 3
Pts: Rebrača 20
Rebs: Rebrača 8
Asts: Bodiroga, Kattash 2
P.A.O.K. Sports Arena, Thessaloniki
Attendance: 8,500
Referees: Romualdas Brazauskas (LTU), Iztok Rems (SLO)
Maccabi Elite
Panathinaikos
Starters:PRA
PG
14
Slovenia Ariel McDonald1131
PG
6
Israel Derrick Sharp501
SF
4
Israel Nadav Henefeld010
PF
8
United States Dallas Comegys353
C
7
United States Nate Huffman26102
Reserves:PRA
SG
5
Israel Mark Brisker1330
SF
9
Israel Gur Shelef010
G
11
Israel Doron Sheffer622
G
12
Israel Doron Jamchy310
C
15
Israel Constantin Popa000
Head coach:
Israel Pini Gershon
1999–2000 FIBA EuroLeague
Champions
Greece
Panathinaikos
Second title
Starters:PRA
PG
9
Italy Nando Gentile321
SG
10
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Dejan Bodiroga942
SF
4
Greece Fragiskos Alvertis430
PF
7
Spain Johnny Rogers421
C
12
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Željko Rebrača2080
Reserves:PRA
SG
6
Germany Michael Koch000
PF
8
Greece Antonis Fotsis421
PG
11
Greece Nikos BoudourisDNP
C
13
Republic of Ireland Pat Burke730
PG
14
Israel Oded Kattash1712
Head coach:
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Željko Obradović

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.
Israel Oded KattashPanathinaikos[1]
Turkey Hedo TürkoğluEfes
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Dejan BodirogaPanathinaikos
United States Nate HuffmanMaccabi Tel Aviv
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Željko Rebrača (MVP)Panathinaikos

References

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