1965–66 FIBA European Champions Cup
1965–66 FIBA European Champions Cup | |
---|---|
League | FIBA European Champions Cup |
Sport | Basketball |
Final Four | |
Champions | Simmenthal Milano |
Runners-up | Slavia Prague |
The 1965–66 1965–66 FIBA European Champions Cup was the ninth season of the FIBA European Champions Cup. It was won by Simmenthal Milano, for the first time in its history, the first of the club's three Euroleague championships.
Simmenthal defeated Slavia Prague, by a score of 77–72, in the final of the first ever Final Four held in the Euroleague competition, with two venues used: a venue in Milan, and the Palazzo dello sport arena in Bologna, Italy.[1] The Italian team, featuring future Hall of famer Bill Bradley, defeated the favorites and former champs, CSKA Moscow, in the semifinal, by a score of 57–68.
Contents
First round
Team 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
---|---|---|---|---|
Fenerbahçe | 143–146 | Dinamo Bucureşti | 85–71 | 58–75 |
Wiener | 139–161 | Vorwärts Leipzig | 75–82 | 64–79 |
Gladsaxe Efterslægten | 96–171 | Slavia Prague | 57–84 | 39–87 |
Gießen 46ers | 150–191 | Simmenthal Milano | 77–88 | 73–103 |
Etzella Ettelbruck | 98–162 | CSKA Sofia | 51–72 | 47–90 |
Collegians | 84–152 | Denain-Voltaire | 51–78 | 33–74 |
KR | 109–149 | Alvik | 48–60 | 61–89 |
AEK | 153–150 | Wisła Kraków | 72–71 | 81–79 |
Wydad Casablanca | 130–130* | Benfica | 53–54 | 77–76 |
Aldershot Warriors | 144–213 | Racing Mechelen | 83–113 | 61–100 |
*After a 130 aggregate drew, a third decisive game was held in which Wydad won 63–61.
Round of 16
Team 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
---|---|---|---|---|
Racing Mechelen | 210–150 | Helsingin Kisa-Toverit | 116–79 | 99–74 |
Honvéd | 143–182 | Slavia Prague | 62–100 | 81–82 |
Vorwärts Leipzig | 123–175 | CSKA Moscow | 66–87 | 57–88 |
Wydad Casablanca | 172–238 | AEK | 96–113 | 76–125 |
Alvik | 149–201 | 23x15px Real Madrid | 88–113 | 61–91 |
Denain-Voltaire | 126–139 | CSKA Sofia | 61–53 | 65–86 |
Hapoel Tel Aviv | 118–187 | Simmenthal Milano | 65–80 | 53–87 |
Dinamo Bucureşti | 148–148* | Zadar | 92–78 | 56–70 |
* After a 148 aggregate drew, a third decisive game was held in which Zadar won 65–59.
Quarterfinals group stage
For the first time in the competition history, the quarterfinals were played with a round-robin system, in which every Two Game series (TGS) constituted as one game for the record.
Top two places in each group advance to Semifinals |
Group A
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Group B
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Final Four
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Semifinals
March 29, Milan
Team 1 | Score | Team 2 |
---|---|---|
Slavia Prague | 103–73 | AEK |
March 29, Palazzo dello sport, Bologna
Team 1 | Score | Team 2 |
---|---|---|
CSKA Moscow | 57–68 | Simmenthal Milano |
3rd place game
April 1, Milan
Team 1 | Score | Team 2 |
---|---|---|
AEK | 62–85 | CSKA Moscow |
Final
April 1, Palazzo dello sport, Bologna
Team 1 | Score | Team 2 |
---|---|---|
Simmenthal Milano | 77–72 | Slavia Prague |
1965–66 FIBA European Champions Cup Champions |
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Simmenthal Milano 1st Title |
Final standings
Team | |
---|---|
Simmenthal Milano | |
Slavia Prague | |
CSKA Moscow | |
AEK |
References
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