FIBA Korać Cup
Sport | Basketball |
---|---|
Founded | 1971 |
Ceased | 2002 |
Continent | FIBA Europe (Europe) |
Last champion(s) | SLUC Nancy (1st title) |
Most titles | Cantù (4 titles) |
Level on pyramid | 3rd Tier |
Official website | FIBA Europe 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 last Korać Cup season was held during the 2001–02 season.
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 (71–83 / 94–73) |
OKK Beograd |
Standard Liège |
Olympique Antibes | ||
1973 Details |
Birra Forst Cantù |
191–169 (106–75 / 85–94) |
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 |
– | 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 |
– | FC Barcelona | 2 | 1 | 1986–87, 1998–99 |
7. | Split | 2 | 1975–76, 1976–77 | |
– | Joventut Badalona | 2 | 1980–81, 1989–90 | |
9. | Cibona | 1 | 2 | 1972 |
10. | AMG Sebastiani | 1 | 1 | 1979–80 |
– | Real Madrid | 1 | 1 | 1987–88 |
– | Málaga | 1 | 1 | 2000–01 |
13. | Pau-Lacq-Orthez
|
1 | 1983–84 | |
– | PAOK
|
1 | 1993–94 | |
– | Alba Berlin | 1 | 1994–95 | |
– | Efes Pilsen
|
1 | 1995–96 | |
– | Aris | 1 | 1996–97 | |
– | Scaligera Verona | 1 | 1997–98 | |
– | SLUC Nancy | 1 | 2001–02 | |
20. | Šibenka | 2 | ||
– | Crvena zvezda | 2 | ||
– | Victoria Libertas | 2 | ||
23. | OKK Beograd | 1 | ||
– | Racing Mechelen | 1 | ||
– | Auxilium Torino | 1 | ||
– | Fortitudo Bologna
|
1 | ||
– | Bosna
|
1 | ||
– | Reyer Venezia | 1 | ||
– | Varese | 1 | ||
– | JuveCaserta | 1 | ||
– | Trieste | 1 | ||
– | Tofaş | 1 | ||
– | Estudiantes | 1 | ||
– | Vršac | 1 | ||
– | 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. | 1 | ||
8. | Belgium | 1 | |
9. | Russia | 1 |
Winning rosters
- 1972 Lokomotiva
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)
- 1973 Birra Forst Cantù
- 1973–74 Birra Forst Cantù
- 1974–75 Birra Forst Cantù
- 1975–76 Jugoplastika
- 1976–77 Jugoplastika
- 1977–78 Partizan
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)
- 1978–79 Partizan
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)
- 1979–80 Arrigoni Rieti
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)
- 1980–81 Joventut Freixenet
- 1981–82 Limoges CSP
- 1982–83 Limoges CSP
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
- 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)
- 1986–87 FC Barcelona
- 1987–88 Real Madrid
- 1988–89 Partizan
- 1989–90 Ram Joventut
Jordi Villacampa, Lemone Lampley, Reggie Johnson, Juan Antonio Morales, Jose Antonio Montero, Rafael Jofresa, Tomás Jofresa, Carlos Ruf, Josep Maria Margall, Dani Pérez, Antonio Medianero, Pere Remon, Ferran Lopez, Robert Bellavista (Head Coach: Herb Brown / Pedro Martínez)
- 1990–91 Shampoo Clear Cantù
- 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)
- 1993–94 PAOK Bravo
- 1994–95 Alba Berlin
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)
- 1995–96 Efes Pilsen
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)
- 1996–97 Aris
- 1997–98 Mash Jeans Verona
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)
- 1998–99 FC Barcelona
- 1999–00 Limoges CSP
- 2000–01 Unicaja
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)
- 2001–02 SLUC Nancy
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 |
Season | Top Scorer | Club | Points Scored |
---|---|---|---|
Nikola Plećaš | Lokomotiva
|
34.5 (2 games)
| |
Bob Lienhard | Birra Forst Cantù | 27.0 (2 games)
| |
Dražen Dalipagić*** | Partizan | 23.5 (2 games)
| |
Jesús Iradier | FC Barcelona | 22.0 (2 games)
| |
John Laing | Chinamartini Torino
|
33.0 (2 games)
| |
Željko Jerkov | Jugoplastika
|
34
| |
Dražen Dalipagić*** (2) | Partizan | 48
| |
Dragan Kićanović** | Partizan | 41
| |
Lee Johnson | Arrigoni Rieti
|
28
| |
Spencer Haywood | Carrera Venezia | 30
| |
Ed Murphy | Limoges CSP | 35
| |
Ed Murphy (2) | Limoges CSP | 34
| |
John McCullough | Orthez
|
29
| |
Russ Schoene | Simac Milano
|
33
| |
Leo Rautins | Banco di Roma
|
21
| |
Wallace Bryant | FC Barcelona | 16.5 (2 games)
| |
Dražen Petrović*** | Cibona | 34.0 (2 games)
| |
Vlade Divac | Partizan | 29.0 (2 games)
| |
Darwin Cook & Darren Daye | Scavolini Pesaro
|
26.5 (2 games)
| |
Pace Mannion | Shampoo Clear Cantù | 34.0 (2 games)
| |
Darren Daye (2) | Scavolini Pesaro
|
28.5 (2 games)
| |
Sasha Djordjević |
Philips Milano
|
33.5 (2 games)
| |
Walter Berry | PAOK Bravo
|
24.5 (2 games)
| |
Teoman Alibegović | Alba Berlin | 27.5 (2 games)
| |
Petar Naumoski | Efes Pilsen
|
28.5 (2 games)
| |
José "Piculín" Ortiz | Aris | 22.0 (2 games)
| |
Mike Iuzzolino | Mash Jeans Verona | 22.5 (2 games)
| |
Sasha Djordjević (2) |
FC Barcelona | 19.0 (2 games)
| |
Marcus Brown | Limoges CSP | 24.0 (2 games)
| |
Danya Abrams | Unicaja
|
16.5 (2 games)
| |
James "Hollywood" Robinson | Lokomotiv Rostov
|
18.5 (2 games)
|
Top scoring performances in final games
- Bosna(in 1977–78 final)
- Dražen Petrović (Cibona) 47 points vs. Real Madrid (in second leg of 1987–88 final)
- Arrigoni Rieti(in 1978–79 final)
- Lokomotiva) 40 points vs. OKK Beograd(in second leg of 1971–72 final)
- Virtus Roma(in second leg of 1992–93 final)
- Wiwa Vismara Cantù) 36 points vs. Partizan(in second leg of 1988–89 final)
- Pace Mannion (Shampoo Clear Cantù) 35 points vs. Real Madrid (in second leg of 1990–91 final)
- Ed Murphy (Limoges CSP) 35 points vs. Šibenka (in 1981–82 final)
- Ed Murphy (Limoges CSP) 34 points vs. Šibenka (in 1982–83 final)
- Alco Bologna(in 1976–77 final)
- Scavolini Pesaro(in first leg of 1991–92 final)
- Stefanel Milano(in first leg of 1994–95 final)
- Stefanel Milano(in second leg of 1994–95 final)
Notes
- Coach Efes Pilsen, respectively).
See also
References
- ^ “Žućkova levica” ponovo u Srbiji;B92, 18 February 2012