결과

Date R Home vs Away -
04/14 16:00 1 [1] 페네르바체 SK vs ESB 빌뇌브 [3] 106-73
04/14 13:00 50 [2] 추쿠로바 바스켓볼 vs USK 프라하 [1] 67-95
04/12 16:00 2 [1] 페네르바체 SK vs 추쿠로바 바스켓볼 [2] 89-80
04/12 13:00 2 [3] ESB 빌뇌브 vs USK 프라하 [1] 84-78
03/06 18:00 3 [1] USK 프라하 vs 스키오 [4] 74-54
03/06 17:00 3 [2] 미슈콜츠 vs ESB 빌뇌브 [3] 58-73
03/06 16:30 3 [2] 추쿠로바 바스켓볼 vs Zaragoza Women [3] 86-63
02/28 19:30 3 [4] 페르푸머리아스 아베니다 vs 페네르바체 SK [1] 67-73
02/28 19:00 3 [3] Zaragoza Women vs 추쿠로바 바스켓볼 [2] 57-56
02/28 19:00 3 [4] 스키오 vs USK 프라하 [1] 73-61
02/28 19:00 3 [3] ESB 빌뇌브 vs 미슈콜츠 [2] 63-59
02/21 18:00 3 [1] USK 프라하 vs 스키오 [4] 78-60

Wikipedia - EuroLeague Women

The EuroLeague Women (officially known as the FIBA EuroLeague Women) is the pre-eminent basketball league in Europe for women's basketball clubs.

Unlike the EuroLeague Men, the competition is entirely organized by FIBA Europe.

History

EuroLeague Women is the main women's club basketball competition in Europe.

First established by FIBA in September 1958, the inaugural European women's club competition consisted of 10 teams and came about following the success of an equivalent tournament for men's clubs earlier in the same year. The men's tournament consisted of 46 games, with over 100,000 spectators turning out to watch.

At the initial tournament Slavia Sofia of Bulgaria were crowned champions, beating Soviet Dynamo Moscow 64–40 at home and then 44–34 on the Muscovites court. The two-game home-and-away format for the final remained until 1976, before changing to a single-game format the following year.

During its formative years, the tournament was dominated by Daugava Riga from Latvia (then Soviet Union) who appeared in 16 finals between 1960 and 1977, winning all 16 of them. The Latvian club maintains two records that are difficult to see being bettered, with 18 overall titles, as well as the record for winning 12 consecutive championships.

In the nineties, the competition underwent two key changes. The first was the introduction of the Final Four in 1992; and the second was the rebranding of the competition in 1996, when it went from being known as European Cup for Women's Champion Clubs to what it is known as today: EuroLeague Women.

The Final Four format was given its farewell in Ekaterinburg in 2011, when Halcón Avenida defeated Spartak Moscow Region 68–59; before the 2011/2012 season heralded in a new direction for EuroLeague Women with the Final Four replaced by a Final Eight tournament.

Istanbul were granted the honour of hosting the first Final Eight tournament where Spanish club Ros Casares Valencia prevailed victorious, defeating Rivas Ecópolis 65–52 in the final. In its second year, the EuroLeague Women Final Eight moved to Ekaterinburg, where tournament hosts UMMC Ekaterinburg prevailed 82–56 over Fenerbahçe in the final.

In 2014, Ekaterinburg was once again the host of what would ultimately be the final edition of the Final Eight, with the tournament destined to return to a Final Four format for this season. After shocking the home-town favourites UMMC Ekaterinburg in the semi-finals, Galatasaray then went on to become the first Turkish club to lift the title, defeating cross-city rival Fenerbahçe 69–58 in the gold medal game.

In February 2022, the Russian teams and officials were expelled from the tournament by FIBA for the playoffs due to the country's invasion of Ukraine. EuroLeague Women suspended Russian clubs UMMC Ekaterinburg, Dynamo Kursk, and MBA Moscow.

Names of the competition

  • FIBA Women's European Champions Cup: (1958–1996)
  • EuroLeague Women: (1996–present)
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