FIBA European Champion Clubs' Cup 1968/69
FIBA European Champion Clubs' Cup 1968/69 | |||
Duration | November 21, 1968 - April 24, 1969 | ||
Order of execution | 12th season | ||
organizer | FIBA | ||
Number of teams | 16 (25 with qualifying rounds) | ||
Play-offs | |||
master | CSKA Moscow | ||
Runner-up | real Madrid | ||
Finals - MVP | Vladimir Andreyev (CSKA Moscow) | ||
The 1968/69 season was the 12th season of the European Cup of National Champions , held by FIBA Europe and now known as the Euroleague .
CSKA Moscow from the Soviet Union won the title for the third time .
mode
The 16 champions of each national league took part in the final round, including defending champion Real Madrid. First a qualification was played. The winners of the pairings were determined in the first and second leg. The decisive factor was the overall basket ratio in both games. The winners of the pairings in the round of 16, in the top 8 group stage and in the semifinals were also determined in the first and second leg. The final was played in one game at a neutral location.
1st round (qualification)
* Occupied with Angolan players who represented Portugal.
Participants in the final round
Attendees | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
country | number | Teams | |||
Albania | 1 | KS Partizani Tirana | |||
Belgium | 1 | Standard Liege BC | |||
Bulgaria | 1 | Akademik Sofia | |||
BR Germany | 1 | MTV casting | |||
GDR | 1 | Forward Leipzig | |||
France | 1 | ASVEL Lyon | |||
Greece | 1 | AEK Athens | |||
Israel | 1 | Maccabi Tel Aviv | |||
Yugoslavia | 1 | KK Zadar | |||
Italy | 1 | Oransoda Pallacanestro Cantù | |||
Romania | 1 | Dinamo Bucharest | |||
Soviet Union | 1 | CSKA Moscow | |||
Spain | 1 | real Madrid | |||
Czechoslovakia | 1 | TJ Spartak ZJŠ Brno | |||
Turkey | 1 | Istanbul Technical University | |||
Hungary | 1 | Honvéd Budapest |
Round of 16
Group stage (Top 8)
The winners of the pairings in the group stage were determined in the first and second leg. The overall result of both games was decisive. Whoever decided this was awarded the victory.
If two or three teams were tied, it was not the basket ratio that decided, but a direct comparison between them.
Group A
team | Sp | S. | N | P + | P- |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. Real Madrid | 3 | 3 | 0 | 488 | 460 |
2. CSKA Moscow | 3 | 2 | 1 | 471 | 416 |
3. KK Zadar | 3 | 1 | 2 | 465 | 465 |
4. Sofia Academy | 3 | 0 | 3 | 455 | 538 |
Madrid | Moscow | Zadar | Sofia | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Madrid | * | 67: 69 | 80 : 68 | 92 : 80 |
Moscow | 78: 89 | * | 83 : 75 | 85 : 57 |
Zadar | 70 : 60 | 74 : 73 | * | 89 : 84 |
Sofia | 95: 100 | 54: 83 | 85: 89 | * |
Group B
team | Sp | S. | N | P + | P- |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. TJ Spartak ZJŠ Brno | 3 | 3 | 0 | 502 | 457 |
2. Standard Liege BC | 3 | 2 | 1 | 488 | 508 |
3. Oransoda Pallacan. Cantù | 3 | 1 | 2 | 426 | 407 |
4. Maccabi Tel Aviv | 3 | 0 | 3 | 403 | 447 |
Brno | Liege | Cantù | Tel Aviv | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Brno | * | 105 : 81 | 82 : 68 a.d. | 75 : 61 |
Liege | 90: 102 | * | 91 : 76 | 80 : 67 |
Cantù | 69 : 60 | 76 : 69 | * | 70 : 54 |
Tel Aviv | 88 : 78 | 82 : 77 | 51: 67 | * |
Semifinals
total | First leg | Return leg | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
real Madrid | 193 : 153 | Standard Liege BC | 84 : 64 | 109 : 89 |
CSKA Moscow | 184 : 158 | TJ Spartak ZJŠ Brno | 101 : 66 | 83: 92 |
final
The final took place in Barcelona .
Result | ||
---|---|---|
CSKA Moscow | 103 : 99 a.d. | real Madrid |
Web links
- History of the European championship on fibaeurope.com
- Statistics for the 1968/69 season on linguasport.com
Individual evidence
- ↑ Champions Cup 1968-69 , on linguasport.com. Retrieved August 28, 2013