- Saporta Cup
-
Saporta Cup Sport Basketball Founded 1966 Country(ies) FIBA Europe members Continent Europe Ceased 2002 Last champion(s) Mens Sana Basket Siena
(1st title)Most titles Cantù
AEK Athens
Real Madrid
(4 titles each)
(2 titles)Official website FIBA Europe Saporta Cup Saporta Cup was the name of the second-tier level European professional club basketball competition, where the National Cup winners from all over Europe played against each other. The competition was organized by FIBA Europe. It was named after Raimundo Saporta, a Real Madrid director.
Contents
History
The competition was created in 1966, as the European Cup Winners' Cup, but it had several denominations until its eventual folding in 2002:
- 1966-67 to 1990-91 - European Cup Winners' Cup
- 1991-92 to 1995-96 - European Cup
- 1996-97 to 1997-98 - EuroCup
- 1998-99 to 2001-02 - Saporta Cup
The very last Saporta Cup season was held during the 2001–2002 season. After that, it was fused with the Korać Cup, into the newly formed ULEB Cup competition, now known as the Eurocup.
Champions
Season Final Champion Result Runner-Up 1966-67 Ignis Varese 77 - 67/67 - 68 Maccabi Tel Aviv 1967-68 AEK Athens 89 - 82 Slavia Praha 1968-69 Slavia Praha 80 - 74 Dinamo Tbilisi 1969-70 Fides Parténope Napoli 60 - 64/87 - 65 Jeanne d'Arc Vichy 1970-71 Simmenthal Milano 56 - 66/71 - 52 Spartak Leningrad 1971-72 Simmenthal Milano 74 - 70 KK Crvena zvezda 1972-73 Spartak Leningrad 77 - 62 Jugoplástika Split 1973-74 KK Crvena Zvezda 87 - 75 Spartak Brno 1974-75 Spartak Leningrad 63 - 62 KK Crvena zvezda 1975-76 Cinzano Milano 88 - 83 ASPO Tours 1976-77 Forst Cantù 87 - 86 Radnički Beograd 1977-78 Gabetti Cantù 84 - 82 Synudine Bologna 1978-79 Gabetti Cantù 83 - 73 EBBC Den Bosch 1979-80 Emerson Varese 90 - 88 Gabetti Cantù 1980-81 Squibb Cantù 86 - 82 FC Barcelona 1981-82 Cibona Zagreb 96 - 95 Real Madrid 1982-83 Scavolini Pesaro 111 - 99 ASVEL Lyon-Villeurbanne 1983-84 Real Madrid 82 - 81 Simac Milano 1984-85 FC Barcelona 77 - 73 Žalgiris Kaunas 1985-86 FC Barcelona 101 - 86 Scavolini Pesaro 1986-87 Cibona Zagreb 89 - 74 Scavolini Pesaro 1987-88 CSP Limoges 96 - 89 Joventut Badalona 1988-89 Real Madrid 117–113 Snaidero Caserta 1989-90 Knorr Bologna 79 - 74 Real Madrid 1990-91 PAOK Thessaloniki 76 - 72 CAI Zaragoza 1991-92 Real Madrid 65 - 63 PAOK Thessaloniki 1992-93 Aris Thessaloniki 50 - 48 Efes Pilsen 1993-94 Olimpija Ljubljana 91 - 81 Taugres Vitoria 1994-95 Benetton Treviso 94 - 86 Taugres Vitoria 1995-96 Taugres Vitoria 88 - 81 PAOK Thessaloniki 1996-97 Real Madrid 78 - 64 Mash Verona 1997-98 Žalgiris Kaunas 82 - 67 Stefanel Milano 1998-99 Benetton Treviso 64 - 60 Pamesa Valencia 1999-00 AEK Athens 83 - 76 Kinder Bologna 2000-01 Maroussi 74 - 72 Élan Chalon 2001-02 Mens Sana Basket Siena 81 - 71 Pamesa Valencia Winning rosters
Cup Winners' Cup:
1966-67 Ignis Varese (Italy):
Stan McKenzie, Sauro Bufalini, Dino Meneghin, Giambattista Cescutti, Ottorino Flaborea, Massimo Villetti, Paolo Vittori, Enrico Bovone, Pierangelo Gergati, R.Gergati (Head Coach: Vittorio Tracuzzi)
1967-68 AEK Athens (Greece):
Georgios Amerikanos, Georgios Trontzos, Christos Zoupas, Stelios Vasiliadis, Eas Larentzakis, Antonis Christeas, Lakis Tsavas, Petros Petrakis, Nikos Nesiadis, Andreas Dimitriadis, Georgios Tronazos (Head Coach: Nikos Milas)
1968-69 Slavia Prague (Czechoslovakia):
Jiří Zídek Sr., Jiri Ruzicka, Robert Mifka, Jiri Ammer, Bohumil Tomasek, Karel Baroch, Jaroslav Krivy, Jiri Konopasek (Head Coach: Jaroslav Sip)
1969-70 Fides Partenope Napoli (Italy):
Miles Aiken, Jim Williams, Sauro Bufalini, Carlos d'Aquila, Remo Maggetti, Giovanni Gavagnin, Francesco Ovi, Antonio Errico, Vincenzo Errico, Manfredo Fucile, Renato Abbate, Leonardo Coen (Head Coach: Antonio Zorzi)
1970-71 Olimpia Simmenthal Milano (Italy):
Art Kenney, Massimo Masini, Renzo Bariviera, Giulio Iellini, Giorgio Giomo, Giuseppe Brumatti, Paolo Bianchi, Giorgio Papetti, Mauro Cerioni, Roberto Paleari, Gaggiotti (Head Coach: Cesare Rubini)
1971-72 Olimpia Simmenthal Milano (Italy):
Art Kenney, Massimo Masini, Renzo Bariviera, Giulio Iellini, Giuseppe Brumatti, Mauro Cerioni, Paolo Bianchi, Giorgio Giomo, Doriano Iacuzzo, Sergio Borlenghi, Ferrari (Head Coach: Cesare Rubini)
1972-73 Spartak Leningrad (USSR):
Alexander Belov, Yuri Pavlov, Alexander Bolshakov, Yuri Shtukin, Andrei Makeev, Vladimir Yakovlev, Sergei Kuznetsov, Leonid Ivanov, Valeri Fjodorov, Dvornij, Volkov, Rozhin (Head Coach: Vladimir Kondrashin)
1973-74 Crvena zvezda Belgrade (Yugoslavia):
Zoran Slavnić, Ljubodrag Simonović, Dragan Kapičić, Dragiša Vučinić, Radivoje Živković, Ivan Sarjanović, Zoran Lazarević, Dragoje Jovašević, Goran Rakočević, Ljubomir Žugić (Head Coach: Nemanja Đurić)
1974-75 Spartak Leningrad (USSR):
Alexander Belov, Yuri Pavlov, Alexander Bolshakov, Vladimir Arzamaskov, Yuri Shtukin, Andrei Makeev, Vladimir Yakovlev, Sergei Kuznetsov, Mikhail Silantev, Leonid Ivanov, Valeri Fjodorov (Head Coach: Vladimir Kondrashin)
1975-76 Olimpia Cinzano Milano (Italy):
Mike Sylvester, Austin "Red" Robbins, Giuseppe Brumatti, Paolo Bianchi, Antonio Francescatto, Sergio Borlenghi, Vittorio Ferracini, Franco Boselli, Maurizio Borghese, Maurizio Benatti, Dino Boselli, Paolo Friz (Head Coach: Filippo Faina)
1976-77 Forst Cantù (Italy):
Bob Lienhard, Hart Wingo, Pierluigi Marzorati, Carlo Recalcati, Fabrizio Della Fiori, Renzo Tombolato, Franco Meneghel, Giorgio Cattini, Roberto Natalini, Umberto Cappelletti, Non Prezzati, Bruno Carapacchi, Giampiero Cortinovis (Head Coach: Arnaldo Taurisano)
1977-78 Gabetti Cantù (Italy):
Bob Lienhard, Hart Wingo, Pierluigi Marzorati, Carlo Recalcati, Fabrizio Della Fiori, Fausto Bargna, Renzo Tombolato, Franco Meneghel, Giuseppe Gergati, Denis Innocentin, Umberto Cappelletti, Davide Bertazzini, Fabio Brambilla (Head Coach: Arnaldo Taurisano)
1978-79 Gabetti Cantù (Italy):
Johnny Neumann, Dave Batton, Pierluigi Marzorati, Carlo Recalcati, Fabrizio Della Fiori, Renzo Bariviera, Renzo Tombolato, Denis Innocentin, Umberto Cappelletti, Antonello Riva, Non Porro, Giorgio Panzini (Head Coach: Arnaldo Taurisano)
1979-80 Emerson Varese (Italy):
Bob Morse, Dino Meneghin, Bruce Seals, Aldo Ossola, Alberto Mottini, Maurizio Gualco, Enzo Carraria, Fabio Colombo, Mauro Salvaneschi, Antonio Campiglio, Riccardo Caneva, Marco Bergonzoni (Head Coach: Edoardo Rusconi)
1980-81 Squibb Cantù (Italy):
Pierluigi Marzorati, Antonello Riva, Bruce Flowers, Tom Boswell, Renzo Bariviera, Renzo Tombolato, Denis Innocentin, Giorgio Cattini, Terry Stotts, Umberto Cappelletti, Eugenio Masolo, Antonio Sala, Valerio Fumagalli, Giuseppe Bosa (Head Coach: Valerio Bianchini)
1981-82 Cibona Zagreb (Yugoslavia):
Krešimir Ćosić, Aleksandar Petrović, Andro Knego, Zoran Čutura, Mihovil Nakić, Sven Ušić, Damir Pavličević, Adnan Bečić, Rajko Gospodnetić, Mlađan Cetinja, Toni Bevanda, Srđan Savović (Head Coach: Mirko Novosel)
1982-83 Scavolini Pesaro (Italy):
Dragan Kićanović, Željko Jerkov, Walter Magnifico, Mike Sylvester, Domenico Zampolini, Giuseppe Ponzoni, Amos Benevelli, Alessandro Boni, Massimo Bini, Gianluca Del Monte, Fabio Mancini, Antonio Sassanelli (Head Coach: Petar Skansi)
1983-84 Real Madrid (Spain):
Juan Antonio Corbalán, Brian Jackson, Fernando Martín, Wayne Robinson, Rafael Rullan, Fernando Romay, Juan Manuel López Iturriaga, Antonio Martín, Francisco Jose Velasco, Juan Antonio Orenga, Wilson Simon (Head Coach: Lolo Sainz)
1984-85 FC Barcelona (Spain):
Juan Antonio San Epifanio, Chicho Sibilio, Ignacio Solozabal, Mike Davis, Otis Howard, Juan Domingo De la Cruz, Xavi Crespo, Pedro Ansa, Arturo Seara, Julian Ortiz, Angel Heredero (Head Coach: Antoni Serra / Manuel Flores)
1985-86 FC Barcelona (Spain):
Juan Antonio San Epifanio, Chicho Sibilio, Ignacio Solozabal, Greg Wiltjer, Mark Smith, Juan Domingo De la Cruz, Xavi Crespo, Arturo Seara, Julian Ortiz, Steve Trumbo, Ferran Martínez, Angel Heredero, Jordi Soler (Head Coach: Aíto García Reneses)
1986-87 Cibona Zagreb (Yugoslavia):
Dražen Petrović, Aleksandar Petrović, Danko Cvjetičanin, Andro Knego, Zoran Čutura, Mihovil Nakić, Franjo Arapović, Sven Ušić, Branko Vukićević, Adnan Bečić, Nebojša Razić (Head Coach: Janez Drvarič / Mirko Novosel)
1987-88 CSP Limoges (France):
Richard Dacoury, Clarence Kea, Stéphane Ostrowski, Greg Beugnot, Don Collins, Jacques Monclar, Hugues Occansey, Georges Vestris, Alain Forestier, Frederic Guinot, Jean-Luc Hribersek, Laurent Vinsou, Franck Maquaire (Head Coach: Michel Gomez)
1988-89 Real Madrid (Spain):
Dražen Petrović, Johnny Rogers, Fernando Martín, Jose Biriukov, Antonio Martín, Pep Cargol, Fernando Romay, José Luis Llorente, Enrique Villalobos, Javier Pérez, Miguel Angel Cabral, Carlos Garcia (Head Coach: Lolo Sainz)
1989-90 Virtus Knorr Bologna (Italy):
Micheal Ray Richardson, Roberto Brunamonti, Mike Sylvester, Clemon Johnson, Augusto Binelli, Lauro Bon, Claudio Coldebella, Vittorio Gallinari, Massimiliano Romboli, Clivo Massimo Righi, Tommaso Tasso, Davide Bonora, Andrea Cempini (Head Coach: Ettore Messina)
1990-91 PAOK Thessaloniki (Greece):
Branislav Prelević, Ken Barlow, John Korfas, Panagiotis Fasoulas, Nikos Boudouris, Nikos Stavropoulos, Georgios Makaras, Panagiotis Papachronis, Memos Ioannou, Achilleas Mamatsiolas, Lazaros Tsakiris, Georgios Valavanidis (Head Coach: Dragan Šakota)
European Cup:
1991-92 Real Madrid (Spain):
Rickey Brown, Mark Simpson, Jose Biriukov, Antonio Martín, Fernando Romay, José Miguel Antúnez, Pep Cargol, José Luis Llorente, Enrique Villalobos, Jonatan Angel Ojeda, José María Silva, Tomás González (Head Coach: Clifford Luyk)
1992-93 Aris Thessaloniki (Greece):
Roy Tarpley, Panagiotis Giannakis, Mitchell Anderson, Michail Misounof, Dinos Angelidis, Vagelis Vourtzoumis, Georgios Gasparis, Vasilis Lipiridis, Memos Ioannou, Igor Moraitov, Theodosios Paralikas (Head Coach: Zvi Sherf)
1993-94 Smelt Olimpija Ljubljana (Slovenia):
Dušan Hauptman, Roman Horvat, Boris Gorenc, Žarko Đurišić, Marko Tušek, Nebojša Razić, Marijan Kraljević, Jaka Daneu, Vitali Nosov, Klemen Zaletel (Head Coach: Zmago Sagadin)
1994-95 Benetton Treviso (Italy):
Petar Naumoski, Orlando Woolridge, Ken Barlow, Stefano Rusconi, Riccardo Pittis, Massimo Iacopini, Andrea Gracis, Denis Marconato, Alberto Vianini, Riccardo Esposito, Maurizio Ragazzi, Federico Peruzzo, Paolo Casonato (Head Coach: Mike D'Antoni)
1995-96 Taugres Vitoria (Spain):
Velimir Perasović, Kenny Green, Ramón Rivas, Marcelo Nicola, Jordi Millera, Miguel Angel Reyes, Ferran Lopez, Jorge Garbajosa, Juan Pedro Cazorla, Carlos Cazorla, Carlos Dicenta, Pedro Rodriguez, Juan Ignacio Gomez (Head Coach: Manel Comas)
EuroCup:
1996-97 Real Madrid (Spain):
Dejan Bodiroga, Joe Arlauckas, Alberto Herreros, Mike Smith, Juan Antonio Morales, Juan Antonio Orenga, Alberto Angulo, José Miguel Antúnez, Ismael Santos, Roberto Nunez, Pablo Laso, Lorenzo Sanz (Head Coach: Željko Obradović)
1997-98 Žalgiris Kaunas (Lithuania):
Saulius Štombergas, Ennis Whatley, Franjo Arapović, Dainius Adomaitis, Tomas Masiulis, Virginijus Praškevičius, Darius Maskoliūnas, Kęstutis Šeštokas, Mindaugas Žukauskas, Eurelijus Žukauskas, Darius Sirtautas, Tauras Stumbrys, Danya Abrams (Head Coach: Jonas Kazlauskas)
Saporta Cup:
1998-99 Benetton Treviso (Italy):
Henry Williams, Željko Rebrača, Marcelo Nicola, Glenn Sekunda, William Di Spalatro, Tomas Jofresa, Denis Marconato, Casey Schmidt, Davide Bonora, Riccardo Pittis, Oliver Narr, Stjepan Stazić, Matteo Maestrello (Head Coach: Željko Obradović)
1999-00 AEK Athens (Greece):
Anthony Bowie, Martin Müürsepp, Michalis Kakiouzis, Aggelos Koronios, Nikos Chatzis, Dimos Dikoudis, Iakovos "Jake" Tsakalidis, Dan O'Sullivan, Steve Hansell, Vassilis Kikilias, Nikos Papanikolopoulos, Miltos Moschou (Head Coach: Dusan Ivković)
2000-01 Maroussi Athens (Greece):
Ashraf Amaya, Jimmy Oliver, Vasco Evtimov, Georgios Maslarinos, Alexis Falekas, Sotirios Nikolaidis, Vagelis Vourtzoumis, Dimitris Marmarinos, Dimitris Karaplis, Vangelis Logothetis, Sotirios Manolopoulos, Charalampos Charalampidis, Kostas Anagnostou (Head Coach: Vangelis Alexandris)
2001-02 Mens Sana Basket Siena (Italy):
Petar Naumoski, Vrbica Stefanov, Brian Tolbert, Boris Gorenc, Milenko Topić, Roberto Chiacig, Mindaugas Žukauskas, Nikola Bulatović, Alpay Öztaş, Marco Rossetti, German Scarone, Andrea Pilotti (Head Coach: Ergin Ataman)
Top scoring performances in final games
Points Player Team Year Opponent 62 Dražen Petrović Real Madrid 1989 Snaidero Caserta 44 Oscar Schmidt Snaidero Caserta 1989 Real Madrid 36 Rimas Kurtinaitis Žalgiris Kaunas 1985 FC Barcelona 35 Saulius Štombergas Žalgiris Kaunas 1998 Stefanel Milano 34 Ferdinando Gentile Snaidero Caserta 1989 Real Madrid 34 Andro Knego Cibona Zagreb 1982 Real Madrid 34 Branislav Prelević PAOK Thessaloniki 1996 Taugres Vitoria 33 Roman Horvat Olimpija Ljubljana 1994 Taugres Vitoria 32 Ken Bannister Taugres Vitoria 1994 Olimpija Ljubljana 32 Zam Fredrick Scavolini Pesaro 1986 FC Barcelona External links
Saporta Cup Seasons 1966-67 · 1967-68 · 1968-69 · 1969-70 · 1970-71 · 1971-72 · 1972-73 · 1973-74 · 1974-75 · 1975-76 · 1976-77 · 1977-78 · 1978-79 · 1979-80 · 1980-81 · 1981-82 · 1982-83 · 1983-84 · 1984-85 · 1985-86 · 1986-87 · 1987-88 · 1988-89 · 1989-90 · 1990-91 · 1991-92 · 1992-93 · 1993-94 · 1994-95 · 1995-96 · 1996-97 · 1997-98 · 1998-99 · 1999-00 · 2000-01 · 2001-02Eurocup Basketball seasons Korać Cup · Saporta Cup · 2002-03 · 2003–04 · 2004–05 · 2005–06 · 2006–07 · 2007–08 · 2008–09 · 2009–10 · 2010–11 · 2011–12International men's basketball FIBA · Olympics · World Championship · World Rankings · U21 World Championship · U19 World Championship · U17 World Championship · Teams · All-Africa Games · Asian Games · Commonwealth Games · Mediterranean Games · Lusophony Games · Diamond Ball · Stanković Cup · Acropolis Tournament · World Cup (Turkey) · Marchand Cup · Pan Arab Games · Universiade · Adecco Ex-Yu Cup Africa Americas Asia Europe Oceania Note: The Under-21 Championship is no longer held. Men's Professional Basketball Leagues FIBA · National Basketball Association · List of NBA vs FIBA games · World Club Championship · Other Leagues Africa Continental Tournament(s)Americas Continental League(s)Subregional League(s)Subregional Tournament(s)Asia Continental Tournament(s)Subregional League(s)ASEAN Basketball LeagueSubregional Tournament(s)West Asian Champions CupEurope Albania · Austria · Belarus · Belgium · Bosnia and Herzegovina · Bulgaria · Croatia · Cyprus · Czech Republic · Estonia · Finland · France · Georgia · Germany · Greece · Hungary · Iceland · Israel · Italy · Latvia · Lithuania · Macedonia · Montenegro · Netherlands · Norway · Poland · Portugal · Romania · Russia · Serbia · Slovenia · Spain · Sweden · Switzerland · Turkey · Ukraine · United Kingdom - England - ScotlandContinental LeaguesIntercontinental TournamentsNBA Europe Live Tour · Euroleague American TourSubregional LeaguesOceania Subregional League(s)Categories:- Saporta Cup
- Defunct basketball cup competitions in Europe
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