From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
2000–01 FIBA SuproLeague
Sports season
Sports season
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| prevseason | [1999–2000](1999-2000-fiba-euroleague) |
| nextseason | [2000–01 Euroleague](2000-01-euroleague) |
| [2001–02 Euroleague](2001-02-euroleague) | |
| title | 2000–01 FIBA SuproLeague |
| image | FIBA SuproLeague Official Logo.jpg |
| season | 2000–01 |
| champions | ISR **Maccabi Tel Aviv** (3rd title) |
| runners_up | GRE Panathinaikos |
| third_place | TUR Efes Pilsen |
| fourth_place | RUS CSKA Moscow |
| teams | 20 |
| duration | 18 October 2000 – 13 May 2001 |
| award4 | Player of the Year |
| award4_winner | Nate Huffman |
| award4_link | FIBA SuproLeague awards |
| award4_n | USA |
| award5 | Final Four MVP |
| award5_winner | Ariel McDonald |
| award5_link | FIBA SuproLeague Final Four MVP |
| award5_n | SVN |
| top_scorer | Miroslav Berić |
| ppg | 23.3 |
| ppg_n | FRY |
| rebounds_leader | Roberto Chiacig |
| rpg | 9.4 |
| rpg_n | ITA |
| assists_leader | Raimonds Miglinieks |
| apg | 7.0 |
| apg_n | LVA |
2001–02 Euroleague The 2000–01 FIBA SuproLeague was FIBA Europe's professional club basketball tournament for the 2000–01 season. Up until that season, there was one cup, the FIBA European Champions' Cup (which is now called the EuroLeague), though in this season of 2000–01, the leading European teams split into two competitions: the FIBA SuproLeague and Euroleague Basketball Company's Euroleague 2000–01.
The season started on 18 October 2000, and ended on 13 May 2001. The competition's Final Four took place at Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy, in Paris, France. The 2000–01 SuproLeague was the last European top tier club competition organised by FIBA.
European Champions' Cup teams divided
Main article: FIBA European Champions Cup and EuroLeague history
The European Champions' Cup was originally established by FIBA and it operated under its umbrella from 1958 until the summer of 2000, concluding with the 1999–2000 season. Euroleague Basketball was created on 1 July 2000.
FIBA had never trademarked the "EuroLeague" name and had no legal recourse on the usage of that name. Therefore, FIBA had to find a new name for their league and chose "SuproLeague". The 2000–01 season started with two top European professional club basketball competitions: the FIBA SuproLeague (renamed from the FIBA EuroLeague) and the brand new Euroleague.
Top clubs were split between the two leagues: Panathinaikos, Maccabi Tel Aviv, CSKA Moscow, and Efes Pilsen stayed with FIBA, while Olympiacos, Kinder Bologna, Real Madrid, FC Barcelona, Tau Cerámica, and Benetton Treviso joined Euroleague Basketball.
Competition system and format
- 20 teams (national domestic league champions, and runners-up from various national domestic leagues), playing in a tournament system.
The first phase was a regular season, in which the twenty competing teams were drawn into two groups, each containing ten teams. Each team played every other team in its group at home and away, resulting in 18 games for each team. The top 8 teams in each group advanced to the Round of 16, and the winners of this round advanced to the Quarterfinals. Both of the rounds were played in a Best-of-three playoff system. The winning teams of the Quarterfinals qualified to the SuproLeague Final Four, which was held in the Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy, in Paris, on 10–13 May 2001.
Teams
| Regular season |
|---|
| FRA ASVEL (2nd) |
| FRA Pau-Orthez (3rd) |
| DEU Alba Berlin (1st) |
| DEU Bayer 04 Leverkusen (2nd) |
| GRE Panathinaikos (1st) |
Qualification round
If one or more clubs were level on won-lost record, tiebreakers were applied in the following order:
- Head-to-head record in matches between the tied clubs
- Overall point difference in games between the tied clubs
- Overall point difference in all group matches (first tiebreaker if tied clubs were not in the same group)
- Points scored in all group matches
- Sum of quotients of points scored and points allowed in each group match
Group A
Standings
Results
Group B
Standings
Results
Playoffs
Bracket
Teams in bold advanced to the next round. The numbers to the left of each team indicate the team's seeding, the numbers to the right indicate the result of games including result in bold of the team that won in that game, and the numbers furthest to the right indicate the number of games the team won in that round.
| RD1-seed1 = A1 | RD1-team1 = GRE Panathinaikos | RD1-score1-1 = 82 | RD1-score1-2 = 86 | RD1-score1-3 = | RD1-seed2 = B8 | RD1-team2 = SVN Krka | RD1-score2-1 = 65 | RD1-score2-2 = 79 | RD1-score2-3 =
| RD1-seed3 = B4 | RD1-team3 = GRE Iraklis | RD1-score3-1 = 78 | RD1-score3-2 = 77 | RD1-score3-3 = 75 | RD1-seed4 = A5 | RD1-team4 = GER Alba Berlin | RD1-score4-1 = 67 | RD1-score4-2 = 88 | RD1-score4-3 = 86
| RD1-seed5 = B2 | RD1-team5 = TUR Efes Pilsen | RD1-score5-1 = 89 | RD1-score5-2 = 69 | RD1-score5-3 = 86 | RD1-seed6 = A7 | RD1-team6 = LTU Lietuvos rytas | RD1-score6-1 = 78 | RD1-score6-2 = 73 | RD1-score6-3 = 67
| RD1-seed7 = A3 | RD1-team7 = CRO Split CO | RD1-score7-1 = 79 | RD1-score7-2 = 85 | RD1-score7-3 = | RD1-seed8 = B6 | RD1-team8 = FRA Pau-Orthez | RD1-score8-1 = 78 | RD1-score8-2 = 83 | RD1-score8-3 =
| RD1-seed9 = B1 | RD1-team9 = ISR Maccabi Tel Aviv | RD1-score9-1 = 81 | RD1-score9-2 = 85 | RD1-score9-3 = | RD1-seed10 = A8 | RD1-team10 = POL Śląsk Wrocław | RD1-score10-1 = 75 | RD1-score10-2 = 62 | RD1-score10-3 =
| RD1-seed11 = A4 | RD1-team11 = TUR Ülker | RD1-score11-1 = 91 | RD1-score11-2 = 83 | RD1-score11-3 = 85 | RD1-seed12 = B5 | RD1-team12 = ITA Scavolini Pesaro | RD1-score12-1 = 81 | RD1-score12-2 = 96 | RD1-score12-3 = 88
| RD1-seed13 = A2 | RD1-team13 = RUS CSKA Moscow | RD1-score13-1 = 94 | RD1-score13-2 = 77 | RD1-score13-3 = | RD1-seed14 = B7 | RD1-team14 = BEL Telindus Oostende | RD1-score14-1 = 76 | RD1-score14-2 = 70 | RD1-score14-3 =
| RD1-seed15 = B3 | RD1-team15 = FRY Partizan ICN | RD1-score15-1 = 80 | RD1-score15-2 = 76 | RD1-score15-3 = 62 | RD1-seed16 = A6 | RD1-team16 = FRA ASVEL | RD1-score16-1 = 73 | RD1-score16-2 = 94 | RD1-score16-3 = 73
| RD2-seed1 = | RD2-team1 = GRE Panathinaikos | RD2-score1-1 = 87 | RD2-score1-2 = 71 | RD2-score1-3 = | RD2-seed2 = | RD2-team2 = GER Alba Berlin | RD2-score2-1 = 77 | RD2-score2-2 = 69 | RD2-score2-3 =
| RD2-seed3 = | RD2-team3 = TUR Efes Pilsen | RD2-score3-1 = 95 | RD2-score3-2 = 64 | RD2-score3-3 = 82 | RD2-seed4 = | RD2-team4 = CRO Split CO | RD2-score4-1 = 69 | RD2-score4-2 = 72 | RD2-score4-3 = 59
| RD2-seed5 = | RD2-team5 = ISR Maccabi Tel Aviv | RD2-score5-1 = 80 | RD2-score5-2 = 84 | RD2-score5-3 = | RD2-seed6 = | RD2-team6 = ITA Scavolini Pesaro | RD2-score6-1 = 69 | RD2-score6-2 = 77 | RD2-score6-3 =
| RD2-seed7 = | RD2-team7 = RUS CSKA Moscow | RD2-score7-1 = 78 | RD2-score7-2 = 82 | RD2-score7-3 = | RD2-seed8 = | RD2-team8 = FRA ASVEL | RD2-score8-1 = 63 | RD2-score8-2 = 76 | RD2-score8-3 =
| RD3-seed1 = | RD3-team1 = GRE Panathinaikos | RD3-score1-1 = 74 | RD3-seed2 = | RD3-team2 = TUR Efes Pilsen | RD3-score2-1 = 66
| RD3-seed3 = | RD3-team3 = ISR Maccabi Tel Aviv | RD3-score3-1 = 86 | RD3-seed4 = | RD3-team4 = RUS CSKA Moscow | RD3-score4-1 = 80
| RD4-seed1 = | RD4-team1 = GRE Panathinaikos | RD4-score1-1 = 67 | RD4-seed2 = | RD4-team2 = ISR Maccabi Tel Aviv | RD4-score2-1 = 81
| 3rd-seed1 = | 3rd-team1 = TUR Efes Pilsen | 3rd-score1-1 = 91 | 3rd-seed2 = | 3rd-team2 = RUS CSKA Moscow | 3rd-score2-1 = 85
Eight-Finals
|}
Quarter-Finals
|}
Final four
Main article: 2001 FIBA SuproLeague Final Four
Semifinals
11 May, Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy, Paris |}
3rd place game
13 May, Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy, Paris |}
Final
13 May, Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy, Paris |}
| 2000–01 FIBA SuproLeague champions |
|---|
| ISR |
| **Maccabi Tel Aviv** |
| **3rd title** |
Final standings
| Pos | Team | |
|---|---|---|
| [[File:Gold medal icon.svg | 15px]] | ISR Maccabi Tel Aviv |
| [[File:Silver medal icon.svg | 15px]] | GRC Panathinaikos |
| [[File:Bronze medal icon.svg | 15px]] | TUR Efes Pilsen |
| 4 | RUS CSKA Moscow |
Awards
Main article: FIBA SuproLeague awards
All official awards of the 2000–01 FIBA SuproLeague:
- FIBA SuproLeague Player of the Year — USA Nate Huffman (ISR Maccabi Tel Aviv)
- FIBA SuproLeague Final Four MVP – SVN Ariel McDonald (ISR Maccabi Tel Aviv)
- FIBA SuproLeague Top Scorer – FRY Miroslav Berić (FRY Partizan)
- FIBA SuproLeague Finals Top Scorer – FRY Dejan Bodiroga (GRE Panathinaikos)
FIBA SuproLeague All-Final Four Team
| FIBA SuproLeague All-Final Four Team |
|---|
| SVN Ariel McDonald (MVP) |
| USA Anthony Parker |
| FRY Dejan Bodiroga |
| RUS Andrei Kirilenko |
| USA Nate Huffman |
Statistics
Individual statistics
Points
| Rank | Name | Team | Games | Points | PPG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | FRY **Miroslav Berić** | FRY Partizan | 20 | 465 | 23.3 |
| 2. | USA Charles Thomas | SWE Plannja | 13 | 291 | 22.4 |
| 3. | USA John Best | GER Bayer 04 Leverkusen | 17 | 378 | 22.2 |
Source: FIBA Europe
Rebounds
| Rank | Name | Team | Games | Rebounds | RPG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | ITA **Roberto Chiacig** | ITA Montepaschi Siena | 18 | 169 | 9.4 |
| 2. | RUS Andrei Kirilenko | RUS CSKA Moscow | 22 | 203 | 9.2 |
| 3. | USA Nate Huffman | ISR Maccabi Tel Aviv | 24 | 216 | 9.0 |
Source: FIBA Europe
Assists
| Rank | Name | Team | Games | Assists | APG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | LAT **Raimonds Miglinieks** | POL Śląsk Wrocław | 20 | 139 | 7.0 |
| 2. | FRA Laurent Sciarra | FRA ASVEL | 23 | 142 | 6.2 |
| 3. | USA Chuck Evans | GER Bayer 04 Leverkusen | 18 | 97 | 5.4 |
Source: FIBA Europe
Blocks
| Rank | Name | Team | Games | Blocks | BPG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | RUS **Andrei Kirilenko** | RUS CSKA Moscow | 22 | 47 | 2.1 |
| 2. | RUS Andrei Fetisov | RUS CSKA Moscow | 24 | 38 | 1.6 |
| 3. | FRY Dejan Koturović | GER Alba Berlin | 23 | 35 | 1.5 |
Source: FIBA Europe
Other statistics
| Category | Player | Team | Games | Average | Steals | Turnovers | Minutes | FT % | 2-Point % | 3-Point % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| USA Ralph Biggs | BEL Telindus Oostende | 20 | 2.1 | |||||||
| LTU Andrius Giedraitis | LTU Lietuvos rytas | 15 | 3.7 | |||||||
| USA Charles Thomas | SWE Plannja | 13 | 38.5 | |||||||
| CRO Damir Mulaomerović | TUR Efes Pilsen | 26 | 89.2% | |||||||
| RUS Andrei Kirilenko | RUS CSKA Moscow | 22 | 63.9% | |||||||
| FRA Laurent Pluvy | FRA ASVEL | 23 | 54.2% |
Individual game highs
| Category | Player | Team | Statistic | Opponent | Points | Rebounds | Assists | Blocks | Steals |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FRY Miroslav Berić | FRY Partizan | 38 | BEL Telindus Oostende (Dec 7, 2000) | ||||||
| GRE Lazaros Papadopoulos | GRE Iraklis Thessaloniki | 21 | GER Alba Berlin (Apr 5, 2001) | ||||||
| TUR Hüseyin Beşok | TUR Efes Pilsen | SWE Plannja (Jan 4, 2001) | |||||||
| LAT Raimonds Miglinieks | POL Śląsk Wrocław | 15 | ITA Montepaschi Siena (Nov 15, 2000) | ||||||
| TUR Hüseyin Beşok | TUR Efes Pilsen | 7 | SWE Plannja (Jan 4, 2001) | ||||||
| FRY Veselin Petrović | FRY Partizan | 9 | SWE Plannja (Feb 15, 2001) |
Team statistics
| Category | Team | Average | Points | Rebounds | Assists | Blocks | Steals | Turnovers | FT % | 2-Point % | 3-Point % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ISR Maccabi Tel Aviv | 88.0 | ||||||||||
| GRE Iraklis Thessaloniki | 33.8 | ||||||||||
| FRA ASVEL | 18.0 | ||||||||||
| RUS CSKA Moscow | 4.3 | ||||||||||
| ITA Montepaschi Siena | 10.1 | ||||||||||
| SWE Plannja | 14.8 | ||||||||||
| ITA Scavolini Pesaro | 79.4% | ||||||||||
| GRE Panathinaikos | 56.4% | ||||||||||
| ITA Scavolini Pesaro | 40.4% |
Two continental champions
In May 2001, Europe had two continental champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv of the FIBA SuproLeague and Kinder Bologna of Euroleague Basketball Company's EuroLeague. The leaders of both organizations realized the need to come up with a new single competition. Negotiating from the position of strength, Euroleague Basketball Company dictated proceedings and FIBA essentially had no choice but to agree to their terms. As a result, the EuroLeague was fully integrated under Euroleague Basketball Company's umbrella, and teams that competed in the FIBA SuproLeague during the 2000–01 season joined it as well. It is today officially admitted that European basketball had two champions that year, Maccabi of the FIBA SuproLeague and Kinder Bologna of the Euroleague Basketball Company's EuroLeague.
Formation of the Euroleague
A year later, Euroleague Basketball Company and FIBA decided that Euroleague Basketball's EuroLeague competition would be the main basketball tournament on the continent, to be played between the top-level teams of Europe. FIBA Europe from 2002 would also organize a European league for third-tier level teams, known as the FIBA Europe League competition, while Euroleague Basketball would also organize its own second-tier level league, combining FIBA's long-time FIBA Saporta Cup and FIBA Korać Cup competitions into one new competition, the EuroCup. In 2005, Euroleague Basketball and FIBA decided to cooperate with each other and did so until 2016.
In essence, the authority in European professional basketball was divided over club-country lines. FIBA stayed in charge of national team competitions (like the FIBA EuroBasket, the FIBA World Cup, and the Summer Olympics), while Euroleague Basketball took over the European professional club competitions. From that point on, FIBA Saporta Cup and FIBA Korać Cup competitions lasted only one more season before folding, which was when Euroleague Basketball launched the EuroCup.
References
References
- {{usurped
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about 2000–01 FIBA SuproLeague — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report