FIBA Korać Cup

The FIBA Korać Cup was an annual basketball club competition held by FIBA between the 1971–72 and 2001–02 seasons. It was the third-tier level club competition in European basketball, after the FIBA European Champions' Cup (later renamed the EuroLeague) and the FIBA Cup Winners' Cup (later renamed the FIBA Saporta Cup). The very last Korać Cup season was held during the 2001–02 season.

FIBA Korać Cup
Korać Cup Trophy
SportBasketball
Founded1971
Ceased2002
ContinentFIBA Europe (Europe)
Last
champion(s)
SLUC Nancy
(1st title)
Most titles Cantù
(4 titles)
Level on pyramid3rd Tier
Official websiteFIBA Europe Korać Cup

History

The Korać Cup was named after the legendary Yugoslav player Radivoj Korać, killed in 1969 in a car accident near Sarajevo. The Korać Cup is not to be confused with the Serbian national basketball cup competition, the Radivoj Korać Cup, which has been named after Radivoj Korać since the mid-2000s, the next year after the international Korać Cup competition was terminated. Following the 2011 agreement between FIBA Europe and the Basketball Federation of Serbia, the actual winners' trophy given out for 30 years in the Korać Cup (the so-called "Žućko's left") will, from 2012 onwards, be given to the winning team of the Serbian national cup competition.[1]

Finals

Year Final Semifinalists
Champion Score Second place
1972
Details

Lokomotiva
165–156
(83–71 / 94–73)

OKK Beograd

Standard Liège

Olympique Antibes
1973
Details

Birra Forst Cantù
165–156
(83–71 / 94–73)

Maes Pils

Filomatic Picadero

CF Barcelona
1973–74
Details

Birra Forst Cantù
174–154
(99–86 / 68–75)

Partizan

ASVEL

Jugoplastika
1974–75
Details

Birra Forst Cantù
181–154
(69–71 / 110–85)

CF Barcelona

Partizan

Brina Rieti
1975–76
Details

Jugoplastika
179–166
(97–84 / 82–82)

Chinamartini Torino

Sinudyne Bologna

Juventud Schweppes
1976–77
Details

Jugoplastika
87–84
Alco Bologna

IBP Stella Azzurra

Berck
1977–78
Details

Partizan
117–110
Bosna

Juventud Freixenet

Cinzano Milano
1978–79
Details

Partizan
108–98
Arrigoni Rieti

Jugoplastika

Cotonificio
1979–80
Details

Arrigoni Rieti
76–71
Cibona

Jugoplastika

Hapoel Tel Aviv
1980–81
Details

Joventut Freixenet
105–104
Carrera Venezia

Crvena zvezda

Dynamo Moscow
1981–82
Details

Limoges CSP
90–84
Šibenka

Zadar

Crvena zvezda
1982–83
Details

Limoges CSP
94–86
Šibenka

Dynamo Moscow

Zadar
1983–84
Details

Orthez
97–73
Crvena zvezda

Olympique Antibes

CAI Zaragoza
1984–85
Details

Simac Milano
91–78
Ciaocrem Varese

Crvena zvezda

Aris
1985–86
Details

Banco di Roma
157–150
(78–84 / 73–72)

Mobilgirgi Caserta

Olympique Antibes

Divarese Varese
1986–87
Details

FC Barcelona
203–171
(106–85 / 86–97)

Limoges CSP

Mobilgirgi Caserta

CAI Zaragoza
1987–88
Details

Real Madrid
195–183
(102–89 / 94–93)

Cibona

Crvena zvezda

Hapoel Tel Aviv
1988–89
Details

Partizan
177–171
(89–76 / 101–82)

Wiwa Vismara Cantù

Zadar

Philips Milano
1989–90
Details

Ram Joventut
195–184
(98–99 / 96–86)

Scavolini Pesaro

Bosna

CSKA Moscow
1990–91
Details

Shampoo Clear Cantù
168–164
(71–73 / 95–93)

Real Madrid Otaysa

FC Mulhouse

Montigalà Joventut
1991–92
Details

Il Messaggero Roma
193–180
(94–94 / 86–99)

Scavolini Pesaro

Fórum Filatélico Valladolid

Shampoo Clear Cantù
1992–93
Details

Philips Milano
201–181
(90–95 / 106–91)

Virtus Roma

Shampoo Clear Cantù

FC Barcelona Banca Catalana
1993–94
Details

PAOK Bravo
175–157
(75–66 / 91–100)

Stefanel Trieste

Chipita Panionios

Recoaro Milano
1994–95
Details

Alba Berlin
172–166
(87–87 / 85–79)

Stefanel Milano

Cáceres

Pau-Orthez
1995–96
Details

Efes Pilsen
146–145
(76–68 / 77–70)

Stefanel Milano

Teamsystem Bologna

ASVEL
1996–97
Details

Aris
154–147
(66–77 / 70–88)

Tofaş

Benetton Treviso

Mazowszanka
1997–98
Details

Mash Jeans Verona
141–138
(68–74 / 64–73)

Crvena zvezda

Calze Pompea Roma

Cholet
1998–99
Details

FC Barcelona
174–163
(93–77 / 97–70)

Adecco Estudiantes

Panionios Nutella

Sunair Oostende
1999–00
Details

Limoges CSP
131–118
(80–58 / 60–51)

Unicaja

Casademont Girona

Adecco Estudiantes
2000–01
Details

Unicaja
148–116
(77–47 / 69–71)

Hemofarm

Ricoh Astronauts

Athlon Ieper
2001–02
Details

SLUC Nancy
172–167
(98–72 / 95–74)

Lokomotiv Mineralnye Vody

Pivovarna Laško

Maroussi Telestet

Titles by club

Rank Club Titles Runner-up Champion Years
1. Cantù 4 1 1973, 1973–74, 1974–75, 1990–91
2. Partizan 3 1 1977–78, 1978–79, 1988–89
3. Limoges CSP 3 1 1981–82, 1982–83, 1999–00
4. Olimpia Milano 2 2 1984–85, 1992–93
5. Virtus Roma 2 1 1985–86, 1991–92
6. FC Barcelona 2 1 1986–87, 1998–99
7. Split 2 1975–76, 1976–77
8. Joventut Badalona 2 1980–81, 1989–90
9. Cibona 1 2 1972
10. AMG Sebastiani 1 1 1979–80
11. Real Madrid 1 1 1987–88
12. Málaga 1 1 2000–01
13. Pau-Lacq-Orthez 1 1983–84
14. PAOK 1 1993–94
15. Alba Berlin 1 1994–95
16. Efes Pilsen 1 1995–96
17. Aris 1 1996–97
18. Scaligera Verona 1 1997–98
19. SLUC Nancy 1 2001–02
20. Šibenka 2
21. Crvena zvezda 2
22. Victoria Libertas 2
23. OKK Beograd 1
24. Racing Mechelen 1
25. Auxilium Torino 1
26. Fortitudo Bologna 1
27. Bosna 1
28. Reyer Venezia 1
29. Varese 1
30. JuveCaserta 1
31. Trieste 1
32. Tofaş 1
33. Estudiantes 1
34. Vršac 1
35. Lokomotiv Rostov 1

Titles by nation

Rank Country Titles Runners-up
1. Italy 10 13
2. Yugoslavia 6 10
3. Spain 6 4
4. France 5 1
5. Greece 2
6. Turkey 1 1
7. Germany 1
8. Belgium 1
9. Russia 1

Winning rosters

Nikola Plećaš, Damir Rukavina, Vječeslav Kavedžija, Rajko Gospodnetić, Milivoj Omašić, Eduard Bočkaj, Ivica Valek, Dragan Kovačić, Petar Jelić, Ante Ercegović, Zdenko Grgić, Srećko Šute, Zvonko Avberšek (Head Coach: Marijan Catinelli)

Pierlo Marzorati, Bob Lienhard, Carlo Recalcati, Antonio Farina, Mario Beretta, Fabrizio Della Fiori, Luciano Vendemini, Franco Meneghel, Renzo Tombolato, Giorgio Cattini, Danilo Zonta (Head Coach: Arnaldo Taurisano)

Pierlo Marzorati, Bob Lienhard, Carlo Recalcati, Fabrizio Della Fiori, Antonio Farina, Franco Meneghel, Mario Beretta, Renzo Tombolato, Giorgio Cattini, Luciano Vendemini, Danilo Zonta (Head Coach: Arnaldo Taurisano)

Bob Lienhard, Pierlo Marzorati, Fabrizio Della Fiori, Carlo Recalcati, Antonio Farina, Franco Meneghel, Mario Beretta, Renzo Tombolato, Giorgio Cattini, Silvano Cancian (Head Coach: Arnaldo Taurisano)

Željko Jerkov, Rato Tvrdić, Duje Krstulović, Mirko Grgin, Mlađan Tudor, Branko Macura, Ivo Bilanović, Ivica Skaric, Damir Šolman, Branislav Stamenković, Ivica Dukan, Mihajlo Manović, Drago Peterka, Slobodan Bjelajac (Head Coach: Petar Skansi)

Željko Jerkov, Rato Tvrdić, Damir Šolman, Duje Krstulović, Mlađan Tudor, Mirko Grgin, Mihajlo Manović, Ivo Bilanović, Branko Macura, Ivica Dukan, Slobodan Bjelajac, Predrag Kruščić (Head Coach: Petar Skansi)

Dragan Kićanović, Dražen Dalipagić, Miodrag Marić, Jadran Vujačić, Boban Petrović, Dragan Todorić, Dušan Kerkez, Boris Beravs, Milenko Babić, Milan Medić, Arsenije Pešić, Zoran Krečković, Dragan Đukić (Head Coach: Ranko Žeravica)

Dragan Kićanović, Miodrag Marić, Boban Petrović, Arsenije Pešić, Dragan Todorić, Jadran Vujačić, Dušan Kerkez, Boris Beravs, Goran Knežević, Milenko Savović, Milenko Babić, Milan Medić, Predrag Bojić, Miroslav Milojević (Head Coach: Dušan Ivković)

Roberto Brunamonti, Lee Johnson, Willie Sojourner, Giuseppe Danzi, Alberto Scodavolpe, Gianfranco Sanesi, Antonio Olivieri, Luca Blasetti, Mauro Antonelli, Stefano Colantoni, Paolo di Fazi, Antonio Coppola (Head Coach: Elio Pentassuglia)

Al Skinner, Luis Miguel Santillana, Josep Maria Margall, Gonzalo Sagi-Vela, Joe Galvin, Ernesto Delgado, German Gonzalez, Jordi Villacampa, Francisco Sole, Roberto Mora, Antonio Pruna (Head Coach: Manel Comas)

Ed Murphy, Richard Dacoury, Jean-Michel Sénégal, Irv Kiffin, Apollo Faye, Jean-Luc Deganis, Yves-Marie Verove, Didier Rose, Richard Billet, Philippe Koundrioukoff, Eric Narbonne, Benoit Tremouille (Head Coach: André Buffière)

Ed Murphy, Richard Dacoury, Jean-Michel Sénégal, Glenn Mosley, Apollo Faye, Jean-Luc Deganis, Hugues Occansey, Didier Dobbels, Didier Rose, Eric Narbonne, Mathieu Faye, Olivier Garry (Head Coach: André Buffière)

  • 1983–84 Orthez

Paul Henderson, John McCullough, Bengaly Kaba, Mathieu Bisseni, Freddy Hufnagel, Christian Ortega, Philippe Laperche, Pascal Laperche, Didier Gadou, Alain Gadou (Head Coach: George Fisher)

  • 1984–85 Simac Milano

Mike D'Antoni, Dino Meneghin, Russ Schoene, Roberto Premier, Joe Barry Carroll, Renzo Bariviera, Franco Boselli, Mario Pettorossi, Vittorio Gallinari, Tullio De Piccoli, Marco Lamperti, Mario Governa, Marco Baldi (Head Coach: Dan Peterson)

  • 1985–86 Banco di Roma

Leo Rautins, Bruce Flowers, Enrico Gilardi, Marco Solfrini, Stefano Sbarra, Fulvio Polesello, Franco Rossi, Phil Melillo, Fabrizio Valente, Claudio Brunetti, Gianluca Duri, Franco Picozzi (Head Coach: Mario de Sisti)

Juan Antonio San Epifanio, Chicho Sibilio, Wallace Bryant, Ignacio Solozabal, Andrés Jiménez, Steve Trumbo, Juan Domingo De la Cruz, Quim Costa, Jordi Soler, Julian Ortiz, Ferran Martínez, Kenny Simpson (Head Coach: Aíto García Reneses)

Wendell Alexis, Fernando Martín, Brad Branson, Fernando Romay, Juan Antonio Corbalán, Jose Biriukov, José Luis Llorente, Juan Manuel López Iturriaga, Pep Cargol, Antonio Martín, Alfonso Del Corral (Head Coach: Lolo Sainz)

Vlade Divac, Aleksandar Đorđević, Predrag Danilović, Žarko Paspalj, Ivo Nakić, Željko Obradović, Oliver Popović, Milenko Savović, Jadran Vujačić, Miladin Mutavdžić, Boris Orcev, Predrag Prlinčević, Dejan Lakićević, Vladimir Bosanac (Head Coach: Dušan Vujošević)

Jordi Villacampa, Lemone Lampley, Reggie Johnson, Juan Antonio Morales, Jose Antonio Montero, Rafael Jofresa, Tomas Jofresa, Carlos Ruf, Josep Maria Margall, Dani Perez, Antonio Medianero, Pere Remon, Ferran Lopez, Robert Bellavista (Head Coach: Herb Brown / Pedro Martínez)

Pace Mannion, Pierlo Marzorati, Davide Pessina, Giuseppe Bosa, Roosevelt Bouie, Alberto Rossini, Angelo Gilardi, Andrea Gianolla, Silvano Dal Seno, Omar Tagliabue, Alessandro Zorzolo, Fabio Gatti (Head Coach: Fabrizio Frates)

  • 1991–92 Il Messaggero Roma

Dino Rađa, Rick Mahorn, Roberto Premier, Andrea Niccolai, Alessandro Fantozzi, Donato Avenia, Stefano Attruia, Fausto Bargna, Davide Croce, Gianluca Lulli (Head Coach: Paolo di Fonzo)

  • 1992–93 Philips Milano

Aleksandar Đorđević, Antonello Riva, Antonio Davis, Riccardo Pittis, Flavio Portaluppi, Davide Pessina, Fabrizio Ambrassa, Paolo Alberti, Marco Baldi, Marco Sambugaro, Massimo Re (Head Coach: Mike D'Antoni)

Walter Berry, Zoran Savić, Branislav Prelević, John Korfas, Nasos Galakteros, Nikos Boudouris, Achilleas Mamatziolas, George Ballogiannis, Christos Tsekos, Efthimis Rentzias, Georgios Valavanidis (Head Coach: Soulis Markopoulos)

Teoman Alibegović, Saša Obradović, Gunther Behnke, Henrik Rödl, Ingo Freyer, Ademola Okulaja, Stephan Baeck, Teoman Öztürk, Sebastian Machowski, Patrick Falk, Oliver Braun (Head Coach: Svetislav Pešić)

Petar Naumoski, Conrad McRae, Ufuk Sarıca, Mirsad Türkcan, Volkan Aydın, Tamer Oyguç, Murat Evliyaoğlu, Hüseyin Beşok, Bora Sancar, Mustafa Kemal Bitim, Alpay Öztaş, Erdal Bibo (Head Coach: Aydın Örs)

José "Piculín" Ortiz, Charles Shackleford, Mario Boni, Panagiotis Liadelis, Dinos Angelidis, Mike Nahar, Alan Tomidy, Tzanis Stavrakopoulos, Giannis Sioutis, Georgios Floros, Alexis Papadatos, Aris Holopoulos (Head Coach: Slobodan-Lefteris Subotić)

Mike Iuzzolino, Hansi Gnad, Randolph Keys, Myron Brown, Roberto Dalla Vecchia, Roberto Bullara, Joachim Jerichow, Alessandro Boni, Matteo Nobile, Giampiero Savio, Damiano Dalfini, Davide Tisato, Matteo Sacchetti, Mario Soave, Massimo Spezie (Head Coach: Andrea Mazzon)

Aleksandar Đorđević, Derrick Alston, Milan Gurović, Efthimis Rentzias, Roger Esteller, Rodrigo De la Fuente, Roberto Dueñas, Xavi Fernandez, Ignacio Rodríguez, Alfons Alzamora, Oriol Junyent, Juan Carlos Navarro, Chema Marcos (Head Coach: Aíto García Reneses)

Marcus Brown, Yann Bonato, Harper Williams, Frédéric Weis, Bruno Hamm, Thierry Rupert, Stéphane Dumas, David Frigout, Stjepan Stazic, Jean-Philippe Methelie, Carl Thomas, Frederic Adjiwanou (Head Coach: Duško Ivanović)

Danya Abrams, Veljko Mršić, Moustapha Sonko, Richard Petruška, Jean-Marc Jaumin, Paco Vazquez, Berni Rodríguez, Frédéric Weis, Darren Phillip, Carlos Cabezas, Kenny Miller, Germán Gabriel, Francis Perujo (Head Coach: Božidar Maljković)

Stevin Smith, Cyril Julian, Ross Land, Fabien Dubos, Goran Bošković, Joseph Gomis, Vincent Masingue, Maxime Zianveni, Mouhamadou Mbodji, Danilo Cmiljanić, Gary Phaeton, Loic Toilier (Head Coach: Sylvain Lautie)

Korać Cup Finals Top Scorers

From the 1972 to 2001–02 seasons, the Top Scorer of the Korać Cup finals was noted, regardless of whether he played on the winning or losing team.

* Member of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame
** Member of the FIBA Hall of Fame
*** Member of both the Naismith and FIBA Halls of Fame
SeasonTop ScorerClubPoints Scored
1972
Nikola Plećaš Lokomotiva
34.5 (2 games)
1973
Bob Lienhard Birra Forst Cantù
27.0 (2 games)
1973–74
Dražen Dalipagić*** Partizan
23.5 (2 games)
1974–75
Jesús Iradier FC Barcelona
22.0 (2 games)
1975–76
John Laing Chinamartini Torino
33.0 (2 games)
1976–77
Željko Jerkov Jugoplastika
34
1977–78
Dražen Dalipagić*** (2) Partizan
48
1978–79
Dragan Kićanović** Partizan
41
1979–80
Lee Johnson Arrigoni Rieti
28
1980–81
Spencer Haywood Carrera Venezia
30
1981–82
Ed Murphy Limoges CSP
35
1982–83
Ed Murphy (2) Limoges CSP
34
1983–84
John McCullough Orthez
29
1984–85
Russ Schoene Simac Milano
33
1985–86
Leo Rautins Banco di Roma
21
1986–87
Wallace Bryant FC Barcelona
16.5 (2 games)
1987–88
Dražen Petrović*** Cibona
34.0 (2 games)
1988–89
Vlade Divac Partizan
29.0 (2 games)
1989–90
Darwin Cook & Darren Daye Scavolini Pesaro
26.5 (2 games)
1990–91
Pace Mannion Shampoo Clear Cantù
34.0 (2 games)
1991–92
Darren Daye (2) Scavolini Pesaro
28.5 (2 games)
1992–93
Sasha Djordjević Philips Milano
33.5 (2 games)
1993–94
Walter Berry PAOK Bravo
24.5 (2 games)
1994–95
Teoman Alibegović Alba Berlin
27.5 (2 games)
1995–96
Petar Naumoski Efes Pilsen
28.5 (2 games)
1996–97
José "Piculín" Ortiz Aris
22.0 (2 games)
1997–98
Mike Iuzzolino Mash Jeans Verona
22.5 (2 games)
1998–99
Sasha Djordjević (2) FC Barcelona
19.0 (2 games)
1990–00
Marcus Brown Limoges CSP
24.0 (2 games)
2000–01
Danya Abrams Unicaja
16.5 (2 games)
2001–02
James "Hollywood" Robinson Lokomotiv Rostov
18.5 (2 games)

Top scoring performances in final games

  1. Dražen Dalipagić (Partizan) 48 points vs. Bosna (in 1977–78 final)
  2. Dražen Petrović (Cibona) 47 points vs. Real Madrid (in second leg of 1987–88 final)
  3. Dragan Kićanović (Partizan) 41 points vs. Arrigoni Rieti (in 1978–79 final)
  4. Nikola Plećaš (Lokomotiva) 40 points vs. OKK Beograd (in second leg of 1971–72 final)
  5. Sasha Djordjević (Philips Milano) 38 points vs. Virtus Roma (in second leg of 1992–93 final)
  6. Antonello Riva (Wiwa Vismara Cantù) 36 points vs. Partizan (in second leg of 1988–89 final)
  7. Pace Mannion (Shampoo Clear Cantù) 35 points vs. Real Madrid (in second leg of 1990–91 final)
  8. Ed Murphy (Limoges CSP) 35 points vs. Šibenka (in 1981–82 final)
  9. Ed Murphy (Limoges CSP) 34 points vs. Šibenka (in 1982–83 final)
  10. Željko Jerkov (Jugoplastika) 34 points vs. Alco Bologna (in 1976–77 final)
  11. Dino Rađa (Il Messaggero Roma) 34 points vs. Scavolini Pesaro (in first leg of 1991–92 final)
  12. Saša Obradović (Alba Berlin) 34 points vs. Stefanel Milano (in first leg of 1994–95 final)
  13. Teoman Alibegović (Alba Berlin) 34 points vs. Stefanel Milano (in second leg of 1994–95 final)

Notes

  • Coach Bogdan Tanjević made it to 5 Korać Cup finals with four different clubs, and lost all of them. In 1978 his Bosna team lost to Partizan 110–117 in overtime. Then in 1986 he made it to the very end again with Mobilgirgi Caserta, only to lose to Banco di Roma in a two legged final. Finally, in the '90s, Tanjević made 3 more finals, this time consecutively: with Stefanel Trieste in 1994 (lost to PAOK Bravo), and with Stefanel Milano in 1995 and 1996 (lost to Alba Berlin and Efes Pilsen, respectively).

References

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