1989–90 FIBA European Cup Winner's Cup

1989-90 FIBA European Cup Winner's Cup
League FIBA European Cup Winner's Cup
Sport Basketball
Finals
Champions Italy Knorr Bologna
  Runners-up Spain Real Madrid

The 1989–90 FIBA European Cup Winner's Cup was the twenty-fourth edition of FIBA's competition for European basketball national cup champions, running from 26 September 1989 to 13 March 1990. It was contested by 21 teams, the same number of teams as the previous edition.[1]

Knorr Bologna defeated Real Madrid in a final held in Florence, winning its first European title. It had previously lost the 1977-78 final against Gabetti Cantù.

First round

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Uudenkaupungin Urheilijat Finland 177–176 England Manchester United 100–93 77–83
Sunair Oostende Belgium 145–137 Netherlands Nashua Den Bosch 75–69 70–68
Scholl Wels Austria 154–224 Portugal Ovarense 91–113 63–111
Ungmennafélag Njarðvíkur Iceland 155–216 West Germany Bayer Leverkusen 81–112 74–104
Honvéd Hungary 151–198 Turkey Çukurova Üniversitesi 70-93 81–105

Second round

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Uudenkaupungin Urheilijat Finland 186–188 Israel Maccabi Ramat Gan 96–93 90–95
Södertälje Sweden 140–146 Belgium Sunair Oostende 78–72 62–74
Ovarense Portugal 150–218 Greece PAOK 83–101 67–117
Bayer Leverkusen West Germany 174–184 France Mulhouse 97–88 77–96
Çukurova Üniversitesi Turkey 136–179 Italy Knorr Bologna 72-71 64–108
CSKA Sofia Bulgaria 179–204 Spain Real Madrid 92-109 87–95
Apollon Limassol Cyprus 139–182 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Partizan 71-100 68–82
T71 Dudelange Luxembourg 149–240 Soviet Union Žalgiris 80-112 69–128

Quarter finals

Key to colors
     Top two places in each group advance to semifinals

Group A

Team Pld Pts W L PF PA PD
1. Italy Knorr Bologna 6 11 5 1 540 485 +55
2. Soviet Union Žalgiris 6 9 3 3 522 544 -22
3. Belgium Sunair Oostende 6 8 2 4 546 556 -10
4. Israel Maccabi Ramat Gan 6 8 2 4 543 566 -23

Group B

Team Pld Pts W L PF PA PD
1. Spain Real Madrid 6 11 5 1 566 477 +89
2. Greece PAOK 6 10 4 2 497 502 -5
3. Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Partizan 6 8 2 4 502 541 -39
4. France Mulhouse 6 7 1 5 482 527 -45

Semi finals

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Knorr Bologna Italy 171–157 Greece PAOK 77–57 94–100
Real Madrid Spain 170–169 Soviet Union Žalgiris 93–80 77–89

Final

March 13, PalaGiglio, Florence

Team 1  Score  Team 2
Knorr Bologna Italy 79–74 Spain Real Madrid
1989–90 FIBA European Cup Winner's Cup Champions
Italy
Knorr Bologna
1st title

References

  1. "Saporta Cup (C2)". linguasport.com. Retrieved 2014-07-19.