Russian Basketball Cup

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Russian Basketball Cup
Current season, competition or edition:
Current sports event 2014–15 Russian Basketball Cup
Sport Basketball
Founded 2000
Country Russia Russia
Most recent champion(s) Novosibirsk
(1st title)
Most titles CSKA Moscow
(4 titles)
Related competitions VTB United League
Official website basket.ru

The Russian Basketball Cup is the primary professional national domestic basketball cup competition of Russia.

History

The first cup tournament took place in the year 2000. Since the year 2003, the competition has been held annually.

In the 2010–11 season, 4 teams of the PBL did not participate in the Cup: CSKA Moscow, Dynamo Moscow, Khimki, and UNICS.[1]

In the 2011–12 season, 5 teams of the PBL did not participate in the Cup: CSKA Moscow, Enisey, Khimki, Lokomotiv-Kuban and UNICS.

Title holders

Performance by club

Russian Basketball Cup 2012–2013
Club Winners Runners-up Winning Years Runner-up years
600px blu e rosso con stella.png CSKA Moscow 4 3 2004–05, 2005–06, 2006–07, 2009–10 2002–03, 2003–04, 2007–08
20px UNICS 3 3 2002–03, 2008–09, 2013–14 2004–05, 2006–07, 2009–10
20px Krasnye Krylia 2 2011–12, 2012–13
20px Spartak Saint Petersburg 1 2 2010–11 1999–00, 2012–13
20px Khimki 1 1 2007–08 2005–06
600px Rosso e Verde.png Lokomotiv Kuban 1 1 1999–00 2013–14
600px Arancione con banda Bianca e Blu.png Ural Great 1 2003–04
Blu e Bianco.png Novosibirsk 1 2014–15
Bianco e Nero.svg Parma Basket 1 2015–16
600px Azzurro scuro bordato con D azzurro.png Dynamo Moscow 2 2008-09, 2014–15
Bianco e Nero.svg Nizhny Novgorod 1 2010–11
Bianco e Rosso.svg Spartak Primorye 1 2011–12
20px Zenit Saint Petersburg 1 2015–16

Final Fours

Season Winner Runner-up Semifinalists Host City MVP
1999–2000 Lokomotiv Mineralnye Vody Spartak Saint Petersburg Ural Great (3rd) Dinamo-Avtodor Volgograd (4th) Sochi N/A
2002–03 UNICS CSKA Moscow Ural Great Khimki Ekaterinburg N/A
2003–04 Ural Great CSKA Moscow UNICS (3rd) Khimki (4th) Perm N/A
2004–05 CSKA Moscow UNICS Dynamo Moscow (3rd) Khimki (4th) Moscow N/A
2005–06 CSKA Moscow Khimki UNICS (3rd) Triumph Lyubertsy (4th) Khimki Greece Theo Papaloukas
2006–07 CSKA Moscow UNICS Dynamo Moscow Triumph Lyubertsy Kazan Russia Alexey Savrasenko
2007–08 Khimki CSKA Moscow UNICS Dynamo Moscow Vidnoye Poland Maciej Lampe
2008–09 UNICS Dynamo Moscow CSKA Moscow (3rd) Triumph Lyubertsy (4th) Lyubertsy Croatia Krešimir Lončar
2009–10 CSKA Moscow UNICS Spartak Saint Petersburg (3rd) Khimki (4th) Moscow Russia Victor Khryapa
2010–11 Spartak Saint Petersburg Nizhny Novgorod Enisey Krasnoyarsk (3rd) Lokomotiv Kuban (4th) Krasnoyarsk Republic of Macedonia Pero Antić
2011–12 Krasnye Krylia Spartak Primorye Spartak Saint Petersburg (3rd) Ural Ekaterinburg (4th) Samara United States Brion Rush
2012–13 Krasnye Krylia Spartak Saint Petersburg Spartak Primorye (3rd) Enisey Krasnoyarsk (4th) Vladivostok United States Aaron Miles
2013–14 UNICS Lokomotiv Kuban Khimki Krasny Oktyabr Kazan, Krasnodar United States Andrew Goudelock
2014–15 a Novosibirsk Dynamo Moscow Krasnye Krylia Spartak Primorye Novosibirsk N/A
2015–16 a Parma Basket Zenit Saint Petersburg CSK VVS Samara Temp SUMZ Moscow N/A
^a – In the 2014–15 competition and in 2015-16 competition, teams were only allowed to play with Russian players; which led to the withdrawals of most of the top tier Russian teams.[2]

See also

References

External links


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