South American Women's Basketball League

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
South American Women's Basketball League
ConfederationFIBA Americas
Number of teams8
Current championsColombia Indeportes Antioquia
(2023)
WebsiteOfficial website

The South American Women's Basketball League (Spanish: Liga Sudamericana de Baloncesto Femenino; Portuguese: Liga Sul-Americana de Basquetebol Feminino) is a South American competition of women's basketball clubs organized by FIBA Americas, which in 2009 took over and recreated the competition. It is the successor to the "South American Women's Club Championship" and the "South American Women's Club League".

The championship began in 1981 and stopped being played in 1999, then an attempt was made to reissue it in 2002 without success, and it was played again from 2009 to 2015. [1] The tournament was later relaunched in 2019.

There is a hegemony of the Brazilian teams, who dominated the competition, winning seventeen of the contests played.[2]

Winners[edit]

South American Women's Club Championship[edit]

Year Finals host city Champion Runner-up
1981 Lima Higienópolis/Catanduva Bancoper
1983 Presidente Prudente Prudentina Higienópolis/Catanduva
1984 Sorocaba Prudentina Minercal
1986 Buenos Aires Unimep/Piracicaba Platense
1987 Quito Unimep/Piracicaba Club Universidad
1989 Piracicaba ADN BCN/Piracicaba Provincia
1990 Guayaquil Perdigão Divino/Jundiaí ADN BCN/Piracicaba
1991 Guarujá ADN BCN/Piracicaba Van Melle/Divino
1992 Santiago Unimed/Araçatuba Sorocaba
1993 Campos do Jordão Sorocaba Unimed/Araçatuba
1996 Jacareí Sorocaba Vélez Sársfield
1998 Curitiba Paraná UTE Quito
1999 Santo André Arcor/Santo André Paraná

South American Women's Club League[edit]

Year Finals host city Champion Result Runner-up
2002 Puerto Montt Vasco da Gama Final Four Deportivo Maullín

FIBA Americas Women's South American Club Championship[edit]

Year Finals host city Champion Result Runner-up
2009 Quito Ourinhos 102 – 77 UTE Quito
2012 Quito Americana 82 – 67 Ourinhos
2014 Quito Sport Recife 85 – 84 La Estancia de Popayán

South American Women's Club League[edit]

Year Finals host city Champion Result Runner-up
2015 Puente Alto ADCF Unimed/Americana 70 – 60 UTE Quito
2019 Santiago del Estero Copacabana de Antioquia Final Four Quimsa
2021 The tournament was left unfinished due to COVID-19 pandemic.

South American Women's Basketball League[edit]

Year Finals host city Champion Result Runner-up
2022 Paysandú Félix Pérez Cardozo 69 - 51[3] Defensor Sporting
2023 Santiago del Estero Indeportes Antioquia 82 - 69 Aguada
2024 Luque

Performances by club[edit]

Club Country Champion Runner-up Winner year
Sorocaba  Brazil 2 1 1993, 1996
ADN BCN/Piracicaba  Brazil 2 1 1989, 1991
Unimep/Piracicaba  Brazil 2 1986, 1987
Prudentina  Brazil 2 1983, 1984
Unimed/Araçatuba  Brazil 1 1 1992
Ourinhos  Brazil 1 1 2009
Félix Pérez Cardozo  Paraguay 1 1 2022
Paraná  Brazil 1 1 1998
Higienópolis/Catanduva  Brazil 1 1 1981
Perdigão Divino/Jundiaí  Brazil 1 1 1990
Arcor/Santo André  Brazil 1 1999
Vasco da Gama  Brazil 1 2002
Americana  Brazil 1 2012
Sport Recife  Brazil 1 2014
ADCF Unimed/Americana  Brazil 1 2015
Copacabana de Antioquía  Colombia 1 2019
Indeportes Antioquia  Colombia 1 2023
UTE Quito  Ecuador 3
Bancoper  Peru 1
Minercal  Brazil 1
Platense  Argentina 1
Club Universidad  Colombia 1
Provincia  Argentina 1
Vélez Sarsfield  Argentina 1
La Estáncia de Popayán  Colombia 1
Quimsa  Argentina 1
Deportivo Maullín  Chile 1
Aguada  Uruguay 1

Performances by nation[edit]

Country Champion Runner-up
Brazil 18 8
Colombia 2 2
Paraguay 1 1
Argentina 0 4
Ecuador 0 3
Peru 0 1
Chile 0 1
Uruguay 0 1

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ que.es. "Con seis equipos arranca XVI Campeonato Sudamericano de Baloncesto Femenino".
  2. ^ elcomercio.com. "Sport Recife es el nuevo campeón del baloncesto femenino sudamericano". Los equipos cariocas han dominado todas las 17 ediciones anteriores del torneo, desde 1981.
  3. ^ "Félix Pérez celebró el título de la Liga Sudamericana Femenina". FIBA.

External links[edit]