1970–71 FIBA European Champions Cup

The 1970–71 FIBA European Champions Cup was the 14th installment of the European top-tier level professional basketball club competition FIBA European Champions Cup (now called EuroLeague). The Final was held at the Arena Deurne, in Antwerp, Belgium, on April 8, 1971. It was won by CSKA Moscow, who defeated Ignis Varese, by a result of 67–53.

1970–71 FIBA European Champions Cup
LeagueFIBA European Champions Cup
SportBasketball
Final
Champions CSKA Moscow
  Runners-up Ignis Varese

Competition system

  • 27 teams (European national domestic league champions, plus the then current title holders), playing in a tournament system, played knock-out rounds on a home and away basis. The aggregate score of both games decided the winner.
  • The eight teams qualified for the Quarterfinals were divided into two groups of four. Every team played against the other three in its group in consecutive home-and-away matches, so that every two of these games counted as a single win or defeat (point difference being a decisive factor there). In case of a tie between two or more teams after the group stage, the following criteria is used: 1) one-to-one games between the teams; 2) basket average; 3) individual wins and defeats.
  • The group winners and the runners-up of the Quarterfinal Group Stage qualified for the Semifinals. The final was played at a predetermined venue.

First round

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Etzella 131–177 TuS 04 Leverkusen 72–99 59–78
Jeunesse Sportivo Alep 137–201 Academic 69–89 68–112
Dinamo București 195–157 Union Firestone Ehgartner 115–56 80–101
İTÜ -* Partizani Tirana
Virum 105–259 Slavia VŠ Praha 63–113 42–146
Alvik 132–217 Real Madrid 80–99 52–118
Tapion Honka 127–144 Śląsk Wrocław 66–66 61–78
Fiat Stars 0–4** AŠK Olimpija 0–2 0–2
ÍR 0–4** Olympique Antibes 0–2 0–2
FUS 124–179 AEK 80–84 44–95
Benfica 133–230 Honvéd 67–112 66–118

*FIBA cancelled this match and declared İTÜ winner as Partizani Tirana refused to play in Turkey due to an outbreak of cholera in this country.

**Fiat Stars and ÍR withdrew before the first leg, so AŠK Olimpija and Olympique Antibes received a forfeit (2–0) in both their games.

Second round

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Ignis Varese 162–119 TuS 04 Leverkusen 90–50 72–69
Standard Liège 169–160 Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv 107–86 62–74
Academic 176–146 Dinamo București 82–56 94–90
İTÜ 154–169 Slavia VŠ Praha 77–66 77–103
Al-Zamalek 127–174 Real Madrid 73–87 54–87
Śląsk Wrocław 154–163 AŠK Olimpija 60–74 94–89
Olympique Antibes 158–152 AEK 70–58 88–94
CSKA Moscow 195–139 Honvéd 102–72 93–67

Quarterfinals group stage

The quarterfinals were played with a round-robin system, in which every Two Game series (TGS) constituted as one game for the record.

Key to colors
     Top two places in each group advance to Semifinals

Group A

TeamPldPtsWLPFPAPD
1. Ignis Varese 3630515426+89
2. Slavia VŠ Praha 3521506508-2
3. AŠK Olimpija 3412451470-19
4. Olympique Antibes 3303461529-68

Group B

TeamPldPtsWLPFPAPD
1. CSKA Moscow 3630512417+95
2. Real Madrid 3521474433+41
3. Academic 3412509495+14
4. Standard Liège 3303442592-150

Semifinals

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Ignis Varese 148–133 Real Madrid 82–59 66–74
Slavia VŠ Praha 150–162 CSKA Moscow 83–68 67–94

Final

April 8, Arena Deurne, Antwerp

Team 1  Score  Team 2
CSKA Moscow 67–53 Ignis Varese


1970–71 FIBA European Champions Cup
Champions

CSKA Moscow
4th Title

Awards

FIBA European Champions Cup Finals Top Scorer

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.