EuroLeague

EuroLeague
Organising bodyEuroleague Basketball
FoundedFIBA era
14 December 1957 (1957-12-14)[1]
Euroleague Basketball era
10 October 2000 (2000-10-10)[2]
First seasonFIBA European Champions Cup
1958
FIBA European League
1991–92
FIBA EuroLeague
1996–97
FIBA SuproLeague
2000–01
Euroleague
2000–01
EuroLeague
2016–17
RegionEurope
Number of teams20
Level on pyramid1
Related competitionsEuroCup (2nd tier)
Current champions Fenerbahçe (2nd title)
(2024–25)
Most championships Real Madrid (11 titles)
CEOChus Bueno
PresidentDejan Bodiroga
TV partnerstv.euroleague.net
Websiteeuroleaguebasketball.net
2025–26 EuroLeague

The EuroLeague is a European men's professional basketball club competition. The league is widely recognised as the top-tier and the most prestigious men's basketball league in Europe.[3][4] The league consists of 20 teams, of which 16 are given long-term licences and wild cards,[5] making the league a semi-closed league.[6][7] The league was first organized by FIBA in 1958, subsequently by ULEB in 2000 and then solely by Euroleague Basketball.

The competition was introduced in 1958 as the FIBA European Champions Cup (renamed the FIBA EuroLeague in 1996), which operated under FIBA's umbrella until Euroleague Basketball was created for the 2000–01 season. The FIBA European Champions Cup and the EuroLeague are considered to be the same competition, with the change of name being simply a re-branding. From 2010 to 2025, it was sponsored by Turkish Airlines.

The EuroLeague is one of the most popular indoor sports leagues in the world, with an average attendance of 10,383 for league matches in the 2023–24 season. This was the fifth-highest of any professional indoor sports league in the world (the highest outside the United States), and the second-highest of any professional basketball league in the world, only behind the National Basketball Association (NBA).

The EuroLeague title has been won by 22 clubs, 15 of which have won it more than once. The most successful club in the competition is Real Madrid, with 11 titles while CSKA Moscow follow with 8 and Panathinaikos with 7. The latter is also the competition's most successful club during its modern era since 2000 with 6 trophies, while Virtus Bologna was the first ever winner in 2000–01.

Maccabi Tel Aviv was the competition's last ever champion during the FIBA period which was ended in 2001. Until then FIBA had organised 44 editions with Real Madrid also being the most decorated club during the FIBA era (1958–2001) with 8 titles.

History

FIBA era and the 2000 split

The FIBA European Champions Cup was originally established by FIBA and it operated from 1958 until the summer of 2001. Since the 1987–88 FIBA European Champions Cup and until 2001, the winner was decided by a final four.

The 1999–00 season was the last before the split of 2000 between FIBA and various top clubs backed by ULEB who launched its own top-tier competition. In the summer of 2000 the Euroleague Basketball was found.

FIBA had previously used the EuroLeague name for the competition since 1996, but it had never trademarked the name. As FIBA had no legal recourse on the usage of the name, ULEB grasped the opportunity and started a new league under the name of Euroleague', while FIBA renamed its top-tier competition the FIBA SuproLeague. Thus, the2000–2001 season started with two top European professional club basketball competitions: FIBA SuproLeague (renamed from FIBA EuroLeague) and EuroLeague by ULEB.

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 Teka, FC Barcelona, Paf Wennington Bologna, PAOK, Žalgiris Kaunas, Benetton Treviso, AEK and Tau Cerámica joined ULEB.[8][9] The first Euroleague champion of the new era in 2000-01 was decided by a best of three series.

ULEB era: 2001-2009

In May 2001, Europe had two continental champions, Maccabi of the FIBA SuproLeague and Kinder Bologna of the ULEB Euroleague. Both organizations realized the need to come up with a unified competition and Euroleague Basketball negotiated terms and dictated proceedings which FIBA agreed to their terms. As a result, European club competition was fully integrated under Euroleague Basketball's umbrella and teams that competed in the FIBA SuproLeague during the 2000–01 season joined it as well.

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 ULEB and Euroleague Basketball took over the major European club competition, establishing 3-year licences with top clubs - not based on sporting merit.

From that point on, FIBA's Korać Cup and Saporta Cup competitions lasted one more season and then Euroleague Basketball launched the ULEB Cup, now known as the EuroCup, following another major disagreement with FIBA who launched its own two competitions as an answer.

2009: Euroleague Basketball

In 2009, Euroleague Properties S.A. (EP) was created and the competition's company Euroleague Basketball under Jordi Bertomeu took full control, limiting ULEB's role. During all this period many top European clubs had permanent presence in the competition via licences and regardless of their domestic performances.

In October 2015, FIBA tried to take control back, tempting 8 top European clubs (Panathinaikos, Olympiakos, Real Madrid, Barcelona, Maccabi Tel Aviv, CSKA Moscow, Fenerbahce and Efes Pilsen) to sign long-term licenses with the Federation in a 16-team brand new European league called the FIBA Basketball Champions League in a round-robin format (the other 8 spots would be decided on domestic performances). The clubs rejected the proposal, but they came up with an almost identical plan a few weeks later.

League era: 2016- present

In November 2015, Euroleague Basketball and IMG agreed on a 10-year joint venture. Both Euroleague Basketball and IMG will manage the commercial operation, and the management of all global rights covering both media and marketing.[10] The deal was worth €630 million guaranteed over 10 years, with projected revenues reaching €900 million.[11] Along with the deal the league changed into a true league format, with 16 teams playing each other team in the regular season followed by the playoffs. The A-licensed clubs were assured of participation for the following ten years in the new format.

After the new format of the EuroLeague and FIBA implementing national team windows, a conflict between the two organizations emerged. EuroLeague has been criticised by FIBA as well as several national federations for creating a 'closed league' and ignoring the principle of meritocracy. In July 2019, EuroLeague announced that from the 2019–20 season there will be no direct access to the league through domestic leagues anymore, effectively making it a closed league.[12]

The EuroLeague saw increasing influence from the Middle East during the 2020s. The league had another milestone event in 2025, when it hosted the Final Four in Abu Dhabi, as the first final tournament to be held outside of Europe.[13] The league further expanded to 20 teams in the 2025–26 season.[14] As part of the expansion, Dubai Basketball was given a 5-year license, thus becoming the first team from outside of Europe (excluding Israeli teams) to play in the competition.[15]

Title sponsorship

In years 2010–2025, EuroLeague was sponsored by Turkish Airlines. In a five-year €15 million deal, starting in the 2010–11 season, the competition was named 'Turkish Airlines Euroleague Basketball'. The agreement included an option to extend it for another five years.[16][17] The option was activated in October 2013, extending the sponsorship deal until 2020.[18] On July 1, 2025, it has ended sponsor naming rights of Turkish Airlines. In September 2025, EuroLeague announced a four-year partnership with the Abu Dhabi Department of Culture and Tourism and Etihad Airways, designating them as Main Partners of the EuroLeague and EuroCup competitions and Final Four Presenting Partner. The agreement includes brand visibility for Experience Abu Dhabi and Etihad Airways across arenas, live broadcasts and team jerseys in all EuroLeague and EuroCup games.[19]

Names of the competition

  • FIBA era: (1958–2001)
    • FIBA European Champions Cup: (1958–1991)
    • FIBA European League: (1991–1996)
    • FIBA EuroLeague: (1996–2000)[20]
    • FIBA SuproLeague: (2000–2001)
  • Euroleague Basketball era: (2000–present)
    • ULEB Euroleague: (2000–2001)
    • Euroleague: (2001–2016)
    • EuroLeague: (2016–present)

*There were two competitions during the 2000–01 season. The SuproLeague, which was organized by FIBA, and the Euroleague, which was organized by ULEB and Euroleague Basketball.

Licences

The main difference between the competition run by FIBA Europe and the modern one since 2000 has been the licenses that guaranteed a club's participation in the Euroleague regardless of their performance in their national championship. The 3-year guaranteed participation was granted by an A-license. In 2009 the A-Licenses granted were 13, while in 2012 they became 14.

Until 2015, many major clubs would compete with a 3-year licence, while others would get a wild card or a B-License for one year. In 2015, 11 clubs signed long-term licenses with the Euroleague Basketball (until 2026) and they also became the company's shareholders leaving only 5 spots to other teams to participate. In 2021–22 season, ASVEL and Bayern Munich were added to the shareholders' group taking the number to 13. As of the 2025–26 season, the Euroleague Basketball offers 3-year licenses to clubs other than the 13 shareholders with the fee being 5 million euros in total (about 1.7 million euros per year).[21] The EuroLeague Board of Directors, composed of the 13 shareholders, is responsible to evaluate each individual request of a club for a 3-year license. In 2025, Euroleague Basketball granted 3-year licenses (until 2028) to the following clubs:

A-Licenses history

Club First License Second License Third License Fourth License Fifth License Shareholder
Olympiacos BC 2000–2003 2003–2006 2006–2009 2009–2012 2012–2015 2015–2026
Panathinaikos BC 2001–2003 - 2006–2009 2009–2012 2012–2015 2015–2026
Anadolu Efes S.K. 2001–2003 2003–2006 2006–2009 2009–2012 2012–2015 2015–2026
Maccabi Tel Aviv B.C. 2001–2003 2006–2009 2009–2012 2012–2015 2015–2026
Real Madrid Baloncesto 2000-2003[Note Real Madrid] - 2006–2009 2009–2012 2012–2015 2015–2026
Saski Baskonia - 2003–2006 2006–2009 2009–2012 2012–2015 2015–2026
FC Barcelona Bàsquet 2000–2003 2003–2006 2006–2009 2009–2012 2012–2015 2015–2026
Fenerbahçe S.K. - - 2006–2009 2009–2012 2012–2015 2015–2026
BC Žalgiris 2001–2003 2003–2006 2009–2012 2012–2015 2015–2026
PBC CSKA Moscow 2001–2003 2003–2006 2009–2012 2012–2015 2015–2026
KK Olimpija 2000–2003 2003–2006 2006–2009 2009–2012 - -
Lottomatica Roma - - - 2009-2011[Note Virtus Roma] 2012–2015 -
ASVEL Basket 2001–2003 2003–2006 - - - 2021–2026
Mens Sana Siena - 2003–2006 2006–2009 2009–2012 2012-2014[Note Siena] -
Unicaja Malaga - 2006–2009 2009–2012 2012–2015 -
Prokom Trefl Sopot - - - 2009–2012 2012-2015[Note Prokom] -
EA7 Milano - - - - 2012-2015[Note EA7 Milano] 2015–2026
Ülker G.S.K. 2001–2003 2003–2006 - - - -
KK Cibona 2000–2003 2003–2006 2006–2009 - - -
AEK BC - 2003–2006 - - - -
Élan Béarnais Pau-Orthez 2001–2003 2003–2006 - - - -
Le Mans Sarthe Basket - - 2006–2009 - - -
KK Zadar 2000–2002 - - - - -
KK Budućnost 2000–2003 - - - - -
Virtus Bologna 2000–2002 - - - - -
Fortitudo Bologna 2000–2003 2003–2006 - - - -
Benetton Treviso 2000–2003 2003–2006 - - - -
Opel Skyliners 2000–2002 - - - - -
London Towers 2000–2002 - - - - -
Alba Berlin 2001–2003 - - - - -
FC Bayern Munich - - - - - 2021–2026
  1. ^
    Real Madrid: The Spanish club lost its A-licence in 2003 due to poor results.
  2. ^
    A-licence revoked: Euroleague Basketball suspended the A-license of Virtus Roma after Roma finished in 9th position in the 2010–11 Lega Basket Serie A, awarding a wild card entry to EA7 Milano instead.
  3. ^
    EA7 Milano  : EA7 Milano had a two-year A license, awarded in June 2012.[22] Then the A-licence of EA7 Milano expired in June 2014, but Euroleague confirmed it as an A-licensed team.[23]
  4. ^
    Asseco Prokom  : Asseco Prokom lost its A license in 2013, as it was the last qualified in the A licensed team tanking. The license was converted into a wildcard.
  5. ^
    Siena: Montepaschi Siena did not play in the 2014-15 Euroleague, due to financial troubles.[24]

Wild cards history

Club Period
Saint Petersburg Lions 2000–2001
Śląsk Wrocław 2003–2004
Mens Sana Siena 2002–2003
Darüşşafaka Basketbol 2015–2017
FC Bayern Munich 2015–2016,
2019-2020
SIG Strasbourg 2015–2016
Lokomotiv Kuban 2015–2016
Alba Berlin 2021–2023,
2023–2025
BC Zenit Saint Petersburg 2019–2020,
2021-2022
KK Crvena zvezda 2021–2022,
2023–2024,
2025–2028
KK Partizan 2022–2023,
2024–2025,
2025–2028
Valencia Basket 2022–2023
Virtus Bologna 2023–2025,
2025–2028
ASVEL Basket 2020–2021
AS Monaco 2024–2026
Dubai BC 2025–2030

Competition systems

Tournament systems

The EuroLeague operated under a tournament system, from its inaugural 1958 season, through the 2015–16 season.

  • FIBA European Champions Cup (1958 to 1986–87): The champions of European national domestic leagues, and the then current European Champions Cup title holders (except for the 1986–87 season), competing against each other, played in a tournament system. The league culminated with either a single game final, or a 2-game aggregate score finals (3 games if needed to break a tie).
  • FIBA European Champions Cup (1987–88 to 1990–91): The champions of European national domestic leagues, competing against each other, played in a tournament system. The league culminated with a Final Four.
  • FIBA European League (1991–92 to 1995–96): The champions of the European national domestic leagues, the then current European League title holders, along with some of the other biggest teams from the most important national domestic leagues, played in a tournament system. The league culminated with a Final Four.
  • FIBA EuroLeague (1996–97 to 1999–00): The champions of the best European national domestic leagues, along with some of the other biggest teams from the most important national domestic leagues, played in a tournament system. The league culminated with a Final Four.
  • *Euroleague (2000–01): Some of the European national domestic league champions, and some of the runners-up from various national domestic leagues, played in a tournament system. The league culminated with a best of 5 playoff finals.
  • *FIBA SuproLeague (2000–01): Some of the European national domestic league champions, and some of the runners-up from various national domestic leagues, played in a tournament system. The league culminated with a Final Four.
  • Euroleague (2001–02 to 2015–16): The champions of the best European national domestic leagues, along with some of the other biggest teams from the most important national domestic leagues, played in a tournament system. The league culminated with a Final Four.

*There were two competitions during the 2000–01 season. The SuproLeague, which was organized by FIBA, and the Euroleague, which was organized by Euroleague Basketball.

League system

Starting with the 2016–17 season, the EuroLeague operates under a league format.

  • EuroLeague (2016–17 to present): The champions of the best European national domestic leagues, along with some of the other biggest teams from the most important national domestic leagues, playing in a true European-wide league system format. The league culminates with a Final Four.

Format

Starting with the 2016–17 season, the EuroLeague is made up of 20 teams, with each playing every other team twice (once at home and once away) in a double round robin league regular season, for a total of 34 games played by each team.[25]

The top eight placed teams at the end of the regular season advance to playoffs, each playing a five-game playoff series against a single opponent. The regular season standings are used to determine which teams play each other, and in each pairing the higher placed team has home-court advantage in the series, playing three of the five games at home. The winners of each of the four playoff series advance to the Final Four, held at a predetermined site. The Final Four features two semi-finals, a third place game, and the championship game, all on the same weekend.

Each team plays a maximum 41 games per season: 34 in the regular season, a maximum of 5 during the playoffs, and 2 in the Final Four.

Qualification

Currently (and since the suspension of Russian teams because of the Russian invasion of Ukraine[26]), 12 out of the 18 EuroLeague places are held by licensed clubs that have long-term licenses with Euroleague Basketball, and are members of the Shareholders Executive Board. These twelve licensed clubs are:

       

The remaining six EuroLeague places are held by associated clubs that have annual licences, of which one has a two-year wild card, three have one-year wild-cards and two are the finalists of the previous season's 2nd-tier European competition, the EuroCup. From the 2020–21 season, however, if the better of the two teams from the EuroCup makes it to the playoffs, it keeps the place for the following year.[27]

European professional basketball club rankings

Current clubs

These are the teams that participate in the 2025–26 EuroLeague season:

Tel Aviv
Tel Aviv teams
Maccabi
Hapoel
Location of teams from the Middle East in 2025–26 EuroLeague
Team Home city Arena Capacity Last season
Anadolu Efes Istanbul Turkcell Basketball Development Center 10,000[28] 6th
AS Monaco Monaco Salle Gaston Médecin 5,000[29][30][31][32]
Barcelona Barcelona Palau Blaugrana 7,585[33] 5th
Bayern Munich Munich SAP Garden 11,500[34] 9th
Crvena zvezda Meridianbet Belgrade Belgrade Arena 21,000[35] 10th
Dubai Basketball Dubai Coca-Cola Arena 13,221[36]
Juan Antonio Samaranch Olympic Hall 12,000[37]
EA7 Emporio Armani Milan Milan Unipol Forum 11,200[38] 11th
Allianz Cloud Arena 5,420[39]
Fenerbahçe Beko Istanbul Ülker Sports and Event Hall 13,000[40]
Hapoel IBI Tel Aviv Tel Aviv
Menora Mivtachim Arena 10,383[41] (EuroCup)
Arena 8888 Sofia 12,373[42][43]
Arena Botevgrad 4,500[42][44]
Kosner Baskonia Vitoria-Gasteiz Vitoria-Gasteiz Buesa Arena 15,431[45] 14th
LDLC ASVEL Villeurbanne LDLC Arena 12,523[46] 15th
Astroballe 5,556[47]
Maccabi Rapyd Tel Aviv Tel Aviv Menora Mivtachim Arena 10,383[48] 16th
Aleksandar Nikolić Hall 8,000[42][49]
Olympiacos Piraeus Peace and Friendship Stadium 12,930[50]
Panathinaikos AKTOR Athens Telekom Center Athens 19,200[51] 4th
Paris Basketball Paris Adidas Arena 8,000[52] 8th
Accor Arena 15,705[53]
Partizan Mozzart Bet Belgrade Belgrade Arena 21,000[54] 12th
Real Madrid Madrid Movistar Arena 15,000[55] 7th
Valencia Basket Valencia Roig Arena 15,600[56] (EuroCup)
Virtus Bologna Bologna Virtus Arena 10,500[57] 17th
PalaDozza 5,570[58]
Žalgiris Kaunas Žalgirio Arena 15,415[59] 13th

Results

  1. 1958–2001: FIBA European Champions Cup, FIBA European League, FIBA Euroleague, FIBA Suproleague
  2. 2001–present: ULEB Euroleague, EuroLeague

FIBA era (1958–2001)

# Year Finalists Semi-finalists
Champion Score Runner-up Third place Fourth place
1 1958
Details

Rīgas ASK
170–152
(86–81 / 71–84)

Academic Sofia
Real Madrid BC and Budapesti Honvéd
2 1958–59
Details

Rīgas ASK
148–125
(79–58 / 67–69)

Academic Sofia
KKS Lech Poznań OKK Beograd
3 1959–60
Details

Rīgas ASK
130–113
(61–51 / 69–62)

BC Dinamo Tbilisi
Slovan Praha BK and KKS Polonia Warszawa
4 1960–61
Details

CSKA Moscow
148–128
(87–62 / 66–61)

Rīgas ASK
Steaua București and Real Madrid BC
5 1961–62
Details

BC Dinamo Tbilisi
90–83
Real Madrid BC
CSKA Moscow and KK Olimpija Ljubljana
6 1962–63
Details

CSKA Moscow
259–240
(86–69 / 91–74 / 99–80)

Real Madrid BC
BC Dinamo Tbilisi and BC Brno
7 1963–64
Details

Real Madrid BC
183–174
(110–99 / 84–64)

BC Brno
Olimpia Milano and OKK Beograd
8 1964–65
Details

Real Madrid BC
157–150
(88–81 / 76–62)

CSKA Moscow
OKK Beograd and Pallacanestro Varese
9 1965–66
Details

Olimpia Milano
77–72
Slavia VŠ Praha

CSKA Moscow

AEK BC
10 1966–67
Details

Real Madrid BC
91–83
Olimpia Milano

Slavia VŠ Praha

KK Olimpija Ljubljana
11 1967–68
Details

Real Madrid BC
98–95
BC Brno
KK Zadar and Olimpia Milano
12 1968–69
Details

CSKA Moscow
103–99 (2 OT's)
Real Madrid BC
BC Brno and Standard Liège
13 1969–70
Details

Pallacanestro Varese
79–74
CSKA Moscow
Real Madrid BC and Slavia VŠ Praha
14 1970–71
Details

CSKA Moscow
67–53
Pallacanestro Varese
Slavia VŠ Praha and Real Madrid BC
15 1971–72
Details

Pallacanestro Varese
70–69
KK Split
Panathinaikos BC and Real Madrid BC
16 1972–73
Details

Pallacanestro Varese
71–66
CSKA Moscow
Olimpia Milano and Crvena zvezda
17 1973–74
Details

Real Madrid BC
84–82
Pallacanestro Varese
Berck BC and Radnički Belgrade
18 1974–75
Details

Pallacanestro Varese
79–66
Real Madrid
Berck BC and KK Zadar
19 1975–76
Details

Pallacanestro Varese
81–74
Real Madrid BC
Pallacanestro Cantù and ASVEL Villeurbanne
20 1976–77
Details

Maccabi Tel Aviv
78–77
Pallacanestro Varese

CSKA Moscow

Real Madrid BC
21 1977–78
Details

Real Madrid BC
75–67
Pallacanestro Varese

ASVEL Villeurbanne

Maccabi Tel Aviv
22 1978–79
Details

KK Bosna Sarajevo
96–93
Pallacanestro Varese

Maccabi Tel Aviv

Real Madrid BC
23 1979–80
Details

Real Madrid BC
89–85
Maccabi Tel Aviv

KK Bosna Sarajevo

Virtus Bologna
24 1980–81
Details

Maccabi Tel Aviv
80–79
Virtus Bologna

Heroes Den Bosch

KK Bosna Sarajevo
25 1981–82
Details

Pallacanestro Cantù
86–80
Maccabi Tel Aviv

Partizan Belgrade

FC Barcelona Bàsquet
26 1982–83
Details

Pallacanestro Cantù
69–68
Olimpia Milano

Real Madrid BC

CSKA Moscow
27 1983–84
Details

Virtus Roma
79–73
FC Barcelona Bàsquet

Pallacanestro Cantù

KK Bosna Sarajevo
28 1984–85
Details

Cibona Zagreb
87–78
Real Madrid

Maccabi Tel Aviv

CSKA Moscow
29 1985–86
Details

Cibona Zagreb
94–82
BC Žalgiris Kaunas

Olimpia Milano

Real Madrid BC
30 1986–87
Details

Olimpia Milano
71–69
Maccabi Tel Aviv

Pau Orthez

KK Zadar
31 1987–88
Details

Olimpia Milano
90–84
Maccabi Tel Aviv

Partizan Belgrade

Aris Thessaloniki BC
32 1988–89
Details

KK Split
75–69
Maccabi Tel Aviv

Aris Thessaloniki BC

FC Barcelona Bàsquet
33 1989–90
Details

KK Split
72–67
FC Barcelona Bàsquet

Limoges CSP

Aris Thessaloniki BC
34 1990–91
Details

KK Split
70–65
FC Barcelona Bàsquet

Maccabi Tel Aviv

Victoria Libertas Pesaro
35 1991–92
Details

Partizan Belgrade
71–70
Joventut Badalona

Olimpia Milano

CB Estudiantes
36 1992–93
Details

Limoges CSP
59–55
Pallacanestro Treviso

PAOK BC

Real Madrid BC
37 1993–94
Details

Joventut Badalona
59–57
Olympiacos BC

Panathinaikos BC

FC Barcelona Bàsquet
38 1994–95
Details

Real Madrid BC
73–61
Olympiacos BC

Panathinaikos BC

Limoges CSP
39 1995–96
Details

Panathinaikos BC
67–66
FC Barcelona Bàsquet

CSKA Moscow

Real Madrid BC
40 1996–97
Details

Olympiacos BC
73–58
FC Barcelona Bàsquet

KK Olimpija Ljubljana

ASVEL Villeurbanne
41 1997–98
Details

Virtus Bologna
58–44
AEK BC

Pallacanestro Treviso

Partizan Belgrade
42 1998–99
Details

BC Žalgiris Kaunas
82–74
Virtus Bologna

Olympiacos BC

Fortitudo Bologna
43 1999–00
Details

Panathinaikos BC
73–67
Maccabi Tel Aviv

Anadolu Efes SK

FC Barcelona Bàsquet
44 2000–01
Details

Maccabi Tel Aviv
81–67
Panathinaikos BC

Anadolu Efes SK

CSKA Moscow

ULEB and ECA era (2000–present)

# Year Finalists Semi-finalists
Champion Score Runner-up Third place Fourth place
1
(45)
2000–01
Details

Virtus Bologna
3–2
play-off

Saski Baskonia
Fortitudo Bologna and AEK BC
2
(46)
2001–02
Details

Panathinaikos BC
89–83
Virtus Bologna
Maccabi Tel Aviv and Pallacanestro Treviso
3
(47)
2002–03
Details

FC Barcelona Bàsquet
76–65
Pallacanestro Treviso

Mens Sana Siena

CSKA Moscow
4
(48)
2003–04
Details

Maccabi Tel Aviv
118–74
Fortitudo Bologna

CSKA Moscow

Mens Sana Siena
5
(49)
2004–05
Details

Maccabi Tel Aviv
90–78
Saski Baskonia

Panathinaikos BC

CSKA Moscow
6
(50)
2005–06
Details

CSKA Moscow
73–69
Maccabi Tel Aviv

Saski Baskonia

FC Barcelona Bàsquet
7
(51)
2006–07
Details

Panathinaikos BC
93–91
CSKA Moscow

BC Málaga

Saski Baskonia
8
(52)
2007–08
Details

CSKA Moscow
91–77
Maccabi Tel Aviv

Mens Sana Siena

Saski Baskonia
9
(53)
2008–09
Details

Panathinaikos BC
73–71
CSKA Moscow

FC Barcelona Bàsquet

Olympiacos BC
10
(54)
2009–10
Details

FC Barcelona Bàsquet
86–68
Olympiacos BC

CSKA Moscow

Partizan Belgrade
11
(55)
2010–11
Details

Panathinaikos BC
78–70
Maccabi Tel Aviv

Mens Sana Siena

Real Madrid BC
12
(56)
2011–12
Details

Olympiacos BC
62–61
CSKA Moscow

FC Barcelona Bàsquet

Panathinaikos BC
13
(57)
2012–13
Details

Olympiacos BC
100–88
Real Madrid BC

CSKA Moscow

FC Barcelona Bàsquet
14
(58)
2013–14
Details

Maccabi Tel Aviv
98–86 (OT)
Real Madrid BC

FC Barcelona Bàsquet

CSKA Moscow
15
(59)
2014–15
Details

Real Madrid BC
78–59
Olympiacos BC

CSKA Moscow

Fenerbahçe SK
16
(60)
2015–16
Details

CSKA Moscow
101–96 (OT)
Fenerbahçe SK

Lokomotiv Kuban

Saski Baskonia
17
(61)
2016–17
Details

Fenerbahçe SK
80–64
Olympiacos BC

CSKA Moscow

Real Madrid BC
18
(62)
2017–18
Details

Real Madrid BC
85–80
Fenerbahçe SK

BC Žalgiris Kaunas

CSKA Moscow
19
(63)
2018–19
Details

CSKA Moscow
91–83
Anadolu Efes SK

Real Madrid BC

Fenerbahçe SK
20
(64)
2019–20
Details
Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
21
(65)
2020–21
Details

Anadolu Efes SK
86–81
FC Barcelona Bàsquet

Olimpia Milano

CSKA Moscow
22
(66)
2021–22
Details

Anadolu Efes SK
58–57
Real Madrid BC

FC Barcelona Bàsquet

Olympiacos BC
23
(67)
2022–23
Details

Real Madrid BC
79–78
Olympiacos BC

AS Monaco

FC Barcelona Bàsquet
24
(68)
2023–24
Details

Panathinaikos BC
95–80
Real Madrid BC

Olympiacos BC

Fenerbahçe SK
25
(69)
2024–25
Details

Fenerbahçe SK
81–70
AS Monaco

Olympiacos BC

Panathinaikos BC
26
(70)
2025–26
Details

Team statistics

Titles by club

Rank Club Titles Runner-up Champion years
1 Real Madrid 11 10 1963–64, 1964–65, 1966–67, 1967–68, 1973–74, 1977–78, 1979–80, 1994–95, 2014–15, 2017–18, 2022–23
2 CSKA Moscow 8 6 1960–61, 1962–63, 1968–69, 1970–71, 2005–06, 2007–08, 2015–16, 2018–19
3 Panathinaikos 7 1 1995–96, 1999–00, 2001–02, 2006–07, 2008–09, 2010–11, 2023–24
4 Maccabi Tel Aviv 6 9 1976–77, 1980–81, 2000–01, 2003–04, 2004–05, 2013–14
5 Varese 5 5 1969–70, 1971–72, 1972–73, 1974–75, 1975–76
6 Olympiacos 3 6 1996–97, 2011–12, 2012–13
7 Olimpia Milano 3 2 1965–66, 1986–87, 1987–88
8 Rīgas ASK 3 1 1958, 1958–59, 1959–60
9 Split 3 1 1988–89, 1989–90, 1990–91
10 Barcelona 2 6 2002–03, 2009–10
11 Virtus Bologna 2 3 1997–98, 2000–01
12 Fenerbahçe 2 2 2016–17, 2024–25
13 Anadolu Efes 2 1 2020–21, 2021–22
14 Cantù 2 1981–82, 1982–83
Cibona 2 1984–85, 1985–86
16 Dinamo Tbilisi 1 1 1961–62
Joventut Badalona 1 1 1993–94
Žalgiris 1 1 1998–99
19 Bosna 1 1978–79
Virtus Roma 1 1983–84
Partizan 1 1991–92
Limoges CSP 1 1992–93
23 Academic 2
Brno 2
Treviso 2
Baskonia 2
27 USK Praha 1
AEK 1
Fortitudo Bologna 1
Monaco 1

Titles by nation

Rank Country Club Titles Runners-up
1. Spain Real Madrid 11 10
FC Barcelona 2 6
Joventut Badalona 1 1
Baskonia 2
4 clubs 14 19
2. Italy
Varese 5 5
Olimpia Milano 3 2
Virtus Bologna 2 3
Cantù 2
Virtus Roma 1
Treviso 2
Fortitudo Bologna 1
7 clubs 13 13
3. Greece Panathinaikos 7 1
Olympiacos 3 6
AEK 1
3 clubs 10 8
4. Soviet Union* CSKA Moscow 4 3
Rīgas ASK 3 1
Dinamo Tbilisi 1 1
Žalgiris - 1
4 clubs 8 6
5. Yugoslavia* Split 3 1
Cibona 2
Bosna 1
Partizan 1
4 clubs 7 1
6. Israel Maccabi Tel Aviv 6 9
7. Russia CSKA Moscow 4 3
Turkey Fenerbahçe 2 2
Anadolu Efes 2 1
2 clubs 4 3
9. France Limoges CSP 1
Monaco 1
2 clubs 1 1
10. Lithuania Žalgiris 1
11. Czechoslovakia* Brno 2
USK Praha 1
2 clubs 0 3
12. Bulgaria Academic 2
  • Countries marked with an asterisk no longer exist.

Records

FIBA era

Modern era (2000-present)

EuroLeague awards

Season statistical leaders

All-time leaders

Since the beginning of the 2000–01 season (Euroleague Basketball era):

Average Accumulated
Games Played - Sergio Llull 464
Games Started - Kostas Papanikolaou 343
Minutes Played Anthony Parker 35:00 Kostas Sloukas 10185:23
Points Alphonso Ford 22.22 Mike James 5596
Rebounds Joseph Blair 10.05 Edy Tavares 2016
Assists Codi Miller-McIntyre 6.1 Nick Calathes 2174
Steals Manu Ginóbili 2.73 Nick Calathes 469
Blocks Grigorij Khizhnyak 3.19 Edy Tavares 511
Index Rating Anthony Parker 21.41 Mike James 5787
Assist-Turnover ratio Jerian Grant 3.2 -
Free Τhrows Panagiotis Liadelis 6.74 Mike James 1247
Free Τhrows % Kendrick Nunn 95.9% -
Free Τhrows Attempted Panagiotis Liadelis 7.71 Mike James 1552
2-Pointers Kaspars Kambala 6.55 Jan Veselý 1624
2-Pointers % Donta Hall 74.1% -
2-Pointers Attempted Alphonso Ford 12.02 Jan Veselý 2637
3-Pointers Justin Dentmon 2.88 Sergio Llull 692
3-Pointers % Fran Pilepić 50.45% -
3-Pointers Attempted Alexey Shved 7.07 Sergio Llull 2104
Field Goals Alphonso Ford 8.11 Mike James 1752
Field Goals % Edy Tavares 72.98% -
Field Goals Attempted Alphonso Ford 16.09 Mike James 4428
True Shooting % Donta Hall 74.3% -
Double doubles - Mirsad Türkcan 50
Triple doubles - Nikola Vujčić 2
Fouls Drawn Dragan Lukovski 6.04 Vassilis Spanoulis 1583
Fouls Committed Shaun Stonerook 3.73 Jan Veselý 1118
Blocks Against Kaspars Kambala 0.81 Vassilis Spanoulis 231
Turnovers Will Solomon 3.13 Vassilis Spanoulis 1087

Individual performances

Attendances

Season averages

All averages include playoffs and Final Four games.

Season Total gate Games Average Change High avg. Team Low avg. Team
2008–09 1,263,578 188 6,721 11,770 Panathinaikos 2,460 Panionios On Telecoms
2009–10 1,182,046 186 6,355 –5.4% 11,188 Maccabi Tel Aviv 1,440 Fenerbahçe Ülker
2010–11 1,383,449 185 7,478 +17.7% 13,926 Fenerbahçe Ülker 3,180 Khimki
2011–12 1,305,215 178 7,333 –1.9% 13,107 Žalgiris 3,283 Asseco Prokom
2012–13 1,867,145 253 7,366 +0.5% 13,425 Žalgiris 3,110 Asseco Prokom
2013–14 2,063,600 248 8,130 +10.4% 12,578 Partizan NIS 3,960 Budivelnyk
2014–15 2,013,305 251 8,184 +0.1% 14,483 Crvena Zvezda Telekom 1,949 PGE Turów
2015–16 1,832,920 250 7,332 –10.4% 11,060 Maccabi Playtika Tel Aviv 2,809 Khimki
2016–17 2,194,238 259 8,472 +5.4% 11,633 Baskonia 3,734 UNICS
2017–18 2,282,297 260 8,780 +3.6% 13,560 Žalgiris 3,900 Anadolu Efes
2018–19 2,153,445 260 8,282 –6.0% 14,808 Žalgiris 2,691 Darüşşafaka Tekfen
2019–20 2,138,504 222[a] 8,588 +3.7% 14,221 Žalgiris 4,299 Zenit
  1. ^ Season was curtailed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Four games, for different reasons, were played under closed doors and are not included in this table.

Historic average attendances

This list shows the averages attendances of each team since the 16-team regular season was established in 2016. All averages include playoffs games.

Season ALB EFS ASV BAM BAR BKN BAY BUD CZV CSK DSK FNB GAL GCA KHI MTA MGA MON MIL OLY PAO PAR RMA UNK VAL VIR ZAL ZEN
2016–17 5,320 6,415 4,931 11,633 9,818 8,293 4,677 11,219 4,806 10,888 9,483 9,360 11,172 10,312 3,734 11,418
2017–18 3,900 6,188 5,679 11,351 6,277 8,211 11,566 6,022 10,731 7,272 7,472 8,913 13,005 10,030 6,753 13,560
2018–19 8,247 5,793 11,138 4,349 4,792 7,198 2,691 10,737 4,823 5,502 10,522 8,493 8,203 12,530 9,792 14,808
2019–20 9,930 13,113 5,326 5,977 10,661 4,688 11,744 7,050 9,862 5,189 10,038 8,491 7,287 9,858 9,649 7,433 14,221 4,299
2020–21 Season played under closed doors or limited attendance.
2021–22 3,825 11,876 4,237 5,174 6,885 2,673 6,042 5,545 8,429 3,536 4,893 7,037 3,883 5,943 7,630
2022–23 8,820 13,126 5,301 6,353 8,898 5,549 7,085 10,465 10,400 4,392 9,270 10,449 6,173 17,938 8,128 6,064 6,169 14,839
2023–24 9,406 12,471 7,565 6,444 9,970 6,218 17,842 10,065 * 4,052 10,051 11,535 15,299 19,916 8,914 6,369 8,033 14,773

Individual game highest attendance

Rank Home team Score Away team Attendance Arena Date Ref
1 Partizan 63–56 Panathinaikos 22,567 Belgrade Arena 5 March 2009 [1] Archived 22 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine
2 Partizan 76–67 Maccabi Tel Aviv 21,367 Belgrade Arena 1 April 2010 [2] Archived 5 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine
3 Partizan 56–67 CSKA Moscow 21,352 Belgrade Arena 31 March 2009 [3] Archived 31 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine

Note: Match between Panathinaikos and Barcelona on 18 April 2013, at OAKA Sports Center, was supposedly watched by about 30,000 spectators.[67] However, it is not included in the table as the official data is 18,300.[68]

As of 4/4/2023 Partizan holds 10 games in top 10 most attended games.

Media coverage

The EuroLeague season is broadcast on television, and can be seen in up to 201 countries and territories.[69] It can be seen by up to 245 million (800 million via satellite) households weekly in China.[70]

EuroLeague basketball has been televised in the United States through the ESPN family of networks since 2023, starting with the playoffs of the 2022–2023 season.[71] It was also televised in the United States and Canada on NBA TV and available online through ESPN3 (in English) and ESPN Deportes (in Spanish) until the 2017–2018 season. Starting with the 2017-2018 Final Four playoffs, and continuing into the 2018-2019 and 2019–2020 seasons, the coverage moved to FloSports,[72] before returning later to the ESPN networks.

The EuroLeague Final Four is broadcast on television in up to 213 countries and territories.[73] The EuroLeague also has its own internet pay TV service, called EuroLeague TV.

Broadcasters

This is a partial list of television broadcasters that provide coverage of the EuroLeague.

Country/Region Broadcaster Language Free/Pay TV
International EuroLeague TV (online internet broadcast)[74][75] English Pay/Free
Arena Sport[74][75] Bosnian
Croatian
Montenegrin
Macedonian
Serbian
Slovenian
Pay
Go3 Sport[74][75] Estonian
Latvian
Lithuanian
Pay
TV3[75]
Spain Movistar Plus+, Deportes por Movistar Plus+[75] Spanish Pay
United States FanDuel TV[76] English Pay
France SKWEEK TV[74] French Pay
Monaco
Germany Telekom Sport, also known as MagentaSport[74][77] German Pay
Greece Novasports[74] Greek Pay
Italy Sky Sport Arena[75] Italian Pay
DAZN[75]
Israel Sport 5[74][75] Hebrew Pay
Turkey S Sport Plus[74] Turkish Pay
Philippines One Sports Pilipinas Live (live streaming) English Pay

Sponsors

Source:[78]

See also

Men's competitions

Women's competitions

IWBF Basketball

References

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