FC Barcelona Bàsquet
FC Barcelona Lassa | |||
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Leagues |
Liga ACB EuroLeague | ||
Founded | 24 August 1926 | ||
History |
F.C. Barcelona (1926–present) | ||
Arena | Palau Blaugrana | ||
Capacity | 7,585 | ||
Location | Barcelona, Spain | ||
Team colors |
Blue, Cardinal, Yellow | ||
President | Josep Maria Bartomeu | ||
Team manager | Rodrigo de la Fuente | ||
Head coach | Sito Alonso | ||
Ownership | FC Barcelona | ||
Championships |
1 Intercontinental Cup 2 EuroLeagues 2 Saporta Cups 2 Korać Cups 18 Spanish Championships 23 Spanish Cups 6 Spanish Supercups | ||
Retired numbers | 4 (4, 7, 12, 15) | ||
Website | fcbarcelona.com/basketball | ||
Uniforms | |||
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FC Barcelona Bàsquet (English: FC Barcelona Basketball), also currently known as FC Barcelona Lassa for sponsorship reasons, is a Spanish professional basketball club. It is a part of the FC Barcelona multi sports club, and was founded on 24 August 1926, which makes it the oldest club in the Liga ACB. The club competes domestically in the Liga ACB and the EuroLeague. It has won seven of the last thirteen ACB championships, and in 2003, completed a Liga ACB (Spanish League), Copa del Rey (Spanish King's Cup) and EuroLeague triple crown. FC Barcelona Bàsquet has played in seven EuroLeague Finals, with the last one being their 2010 win.
The team plays its home games at Palau Blaugrana, which was opened on 23 October 1971. They share the facilities with the roller hockey, futsal, and handball teams of the club.
Some of the well-known players that have played with the team over the years have included: Pau Gasol, Rony Seikaly, Marc Gasol, Anderson Varejão, Juan Carlos Navarro, Jaka Lakovič, Šarūnas Jasikevičius, Dejan Bodiroga, Gianluca Basile, Ricky Rubio, Juan Antonio San Epifanio "Epi", Sasha Djordjevic, and Tony Massenburg.
FC Barcelona Lassa also has a reserve team, called FC Barcelona Bàsquet B, that plays in the Spanish 2nd-tier level LEB Oro.
History
Early years
The club entered its first competition in 1927, playing in the Campionat de Catalunya de Basquetbol (Catalan Basketball Championship). During these early years basketball in Catalonia was dominated by other clubs such as CE Europa, Laietà BC, CB Atlètic Gràcia and Société Patrie and it was not until the 1940s that FC Barcelona became established as a basketball team. During this decade they won six Copas del Generalísimo and were runners-up once. In 1956 they were founding members of the Liga Española de Baloncesto and finished as runners-up. In 1959 they won Spanish basketball's first-ever league and cup double.[1]
Decline in the 1960s
The 1960s and 1970s saw the team in decline. In 1961 the club president Enric Llaudet dissolved the team in spite of its popularity. However, in 1962, the club was reformed after a campaign by the fans. In 1964 the league's Primera División was cut from fourteen teams to eight and the club found themselves in the Segunda División after not finishing between the two first qualified teams in the relegation playoffs.[2] However they quickly returned to the top division after being crowned Segunda champions in 1965. During the 1970s the club was persistently overshadowed by its rivals Real Madrid and Joventut.
Revival in the 1980s
In the 1980s club president Josep Lluís Núñez gave the team his full support with the aim of making the club the best in Spain and Europe. His support produced results and during the decade inspired by their coach Aíto García Reneses and players like Epi, Andrés Jiménez, Sibilio, Audie Norris and Solozábal, the club won six Spanish championships, five Spanish cups, two European Cup Winners Cups, the Korać Cup and the World Championship. However the European Cup remained elusive, ending as runners-up in 1984.[3]
Champions of Europe
The club built on this success during the 1990s, winning a further four Spanish championships and two Spanish cups. They were still unable to win the European Cup despite playing in a further four finals in 1990, 1991, 1996 and 1997. They also made a record six EuroLeague Final Four appearances. The star player during this era was Juan Antonio San Epifanio.
Their persistence eventually paid off and in 2003, inspired by Dejan Bodiroga, Gregor Fučka, Šarūnas Jasikevičius and Juan Carlos Navarro, they won the EuroLeague, beating Benetton Treviso 76–65 in front of a packed Palau Sant Jordi in Barcelona.[4] They repeated the feat in 2010, defeating Olympiacos by a wide 86–68 in Paris,[5] and that October, they made further history when they beat the two-time defending NBA champion Los Angeles Lakers - including Kobe Bryant and FCB Bàsquet alumnus and Barcelona native Pau Gasol - 92-88 at the Palau Sant Jordi as part of the 2010 NBA Europe Live Tour. The match was also notable for being both a match-up between the reigning NBA and EuroLeague champions and the first time a European team had won against a defending NBA champion. Two FCB Bàsquet players in that game - captain Navarro and point guard Ricky Rubio - either had or went on to play in the NBA.
Recent years
In the following years, Barcelona would stay on top of Spanish basketball, playing almost all league and cup finals against rival Real Madrid. From 2012 till 2014, Barcelona managed to reach the Euroleague Final Four. However, it could not reach further than the semifinals.
Sponsorship naming
From 2004 until 2007 the club was sponsored by the Winterthur Group, a Swiss insurance company with offices in Barcelona since 1910, which led to the team featuring the birthplace of Joan Gamper, the club's founder, on their shirts. In 2006 the Winterthur Group was taken over by AXA, leading to a change in the club name. In the 2008–09 season, the club's sponsorship changed to Spanish insurer Regal (a division of Liberty Seguros, the Spanish subsidiary of American insurer Liberty Mutual). This sponsorship finished in June 2013.
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Home arenas
- Sol de Baix Sports Complex (1926–40)
- Les Corts Court (1940–71), located next to Les Corts football stadium
- Palau Sant Jordi (1990–92), after 1992 occasionally used for home games
- Palau Blaugrana (1971–90, 1992–present)
- Nou Palau Blaugrana (starting with the 2019–20 season)
Players
Retired numbers
FC Barcelona retired numbers | ||||
N° | Nat. | Player | Position | Tenure |
---|---|---|---|---|
4 | Andrés Jiménez | PF | 1986–1998 | |
7 | Nacho Solozábal | PG | 1978–1994 | |
12 | Roberto Dueñas | C | 1996–2005 | |
15 | Epi | SF | 1979–1995 | |
Current roster
FC Barcelona Lassa roster | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Players | Coaches | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Updated: August 8, 2017 |
On loan
FC Barcelona players out on loan | |||||
Nat. | Player | Position | Team | On loan until | |
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Moussa Diagne | C | MoraBanc Andorra | June 2018 | ||
Depth chart
Pos. | Starting 5 | Bench 1 | Bench 2 | Bench 3 |
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C | Ante Tomić | Kevin Séraphin | Pierre Oriola | |
PF | Adrien Moerman | Aleksandar Vezenkov | ||
SF | Rakim Sanders | Víctor Claver | Rodions Kurucs | |
SG | Petteri Koponen | Juan Carlos Navarro | Marc García | Pau Ribas |
PG | Thomas Heurtel | Phil Pressey | Tyrese Rice | Stefan Peno |
Notable players
Note: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationality not displayed.
Criteria |
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To appear in this section a player must have either:
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- Álex Abrines
- Quique Andreu
- Pedro Ansa
- Jordi Bonareu
- Manel Bosch
- Nino Buscató
- Víctor Claver
- Joaquim Costa
- Xavi Crespo
- Joan Creus
- Juan Domingo de la Cruz
- Rodrigo de la Fuente
- Salva Díez
- Roberto Dueñas
- Roger Esteller
- Xavi Fernández
- Manolo Flores
- José Luís Galilea
- Aíto García Reneses
- Marc Gasol
- Pau Gasol
- Roger Grimau
- Andrés Jiménez
- Rafael Jofresa
- Eduard Kucharski
- Alfonso Martínez
- Ferran Martínez
- José Antonio Montero
- Juan Carlos Navarro
- Brad Oleson
- José Antonio Paraíso
- Pau Ribas
- Nacho Rodríguez
- Ricky Rubio
- Víctor Sada
- Juan Antonio San Epifanio
- Luis Miguel Santillana
- Chicho Sibilio
- Nacho Solozábal
- Jordi Trias
- Fran Vázquez
- Francisco Zapata
- Marcelo Nicola
- Pepe Sánchez
- David Andersen
- Joe Ingles
- Nathan Jawai
- Marcelinho Huertas
- Anderson Varejão
- Alexander Vezenkov
- Lars Hansen
- Greg Wiltjer
- Romain Sato
- Mario Hezonja
- Mario Kasun
- Ante Tomić
- Roko Ukić
- Andrija Žižić
- Luboš Bartoň
- Tomáš Satoranský
- Christian Drejer
- Petteri Koponen
- Alain Digbeu
- Patrick Femerling
- Ademola Okulaja
- Tibor Pleiß
- Ioannis Bourousis
- Nikos Ekonomou
- Michalis Kakiouzis
- Kostas Papanikolaou
- Stratos Perperoglou
- Efthimios Rentzias
- Gianluca Basile
- Gregor Fučka
- Denis Marconato
- Samardo Samuels
- Justin Doellman
- Šarūnas Jasikevičius
- Artūras Karnišovas
- Vlado Ilievski
- Francisco Elson
- Maciej Lampe
- Carlos Arroyo
- Héctor Blondet
- Piculín Ortiz
- Ramón Rivas
- Daniel Santiago
- Boniface N'Dong
- Andrei Fetisov
- Jaka Lakovič
- Erazem Lorbek
- Boštjan Nachbar
- Dejan Bodiroga
- Aleksandar Đorđević
- Milan Gurović
- Kosta Perović
- Zoran Savić
- Miloš Vujanić
- Ersan İlyasova
- Derrick Alston
- Alan Anderson
- Wallace Bryant
- Norman Carmichael
- Ben Coleman
- Mike Davis
- Joey Dorsey
- Dan Godfread
- Bob Guyette
- Otis Howard
- Mike Fritzthadus Jones
- Tony Massenburg
- Amal McCaskill
- Eugene McDowell
- Darryl Middleton
- Pete Mickeal
- Jerrod Mustaf
- Terence Morris
- Audie Norris
- Tyrese Rice
- Fred Roberts
- Jeff Ruland
- Rony Seikaly
- Kenny Simpson
- Marcelous Starks
- Steve Trumbo
- Granville Waiters
- Shammond Williams
- David Wood
Head coaches
Managers since 1974:
- Ranko Žeravica 1974–76
- Todor Lazić 1976–77
- Eduard Kucharski 1977–79
- Antoni Serra 1979–85
- Manolo Flores 1985, 2005
- Aíto García Reneses 1985–90, 1992–97, 1998–02
- Božidar Maljković 1990–92
- Manel Comas 1996-97
- José María Oleart 1997
- Svetislav Pešić 2002–04
- Joan Montes 2004–05
- Duško Ivanović 2005–08
- Xavi Pascual 2008–16
- Georgios Bartzokas 2016–17
- Sito Alonso 2017–
Honours
Domestic
- Winners (18): 1958–59, 1980–81, 1982–83, 1986–87, 1987–88, 1988–89, 1989–90, 1994–95, 1995–96, 1996–97, 1998–99, 2000–01, 2002–03, 2003–04, 2008–09, 2010–11, 2011–12, 2013–14
- Winners (23): 1943, 1945, 1946, 1947, 1949, 1950, 1959, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1987, 1988, 1991, 1994, 2001, 2003, 2007, 2010, 2011, 2013
- Winners (1): 1988
European
Worldwide
Unofficial
- Winners (1): 1986
- Winners (1): 2003
Regional
- Winners (9): 1942, 1943, 1945, 1946, 1947, 1948, 1950, 1951, 1955
- Winners (20): 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1990, 1994, 1996, 2001, 2002, 2005, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016
Individual awards
- Juan Carlos Navarro – 2006
- Xavi Fernández – 1996
- Roberto Dueñas – 1997
- Derrick Alston – 1999
- Pau Gasol – 2001
- Šarūnas Jasikevičius – 2003
- Dejan Bodiroga – 2004
- Juan Carlos Navarro – 2009, 2011, 2014
- Erazem Lorbek – 2012
- Pau Gasol – 2001
- Dejan Bodiroga – 2003
- Jordi Trias – 2007
- Fran Vázquez – 2010
- Alan Anderson – 2011
- Pete Mickeal - 2013
- Dejan Bodiroga – 2004
- Juan Carlos Navarro – 2009, 2010, 2011
- Francisco Elson – 2001
- Juan Carlos Navarro – 2009
- Dejan Bodiroga – 2003
- Juan Carlos Navarro – 2010
- Ricky Rubio – 2010
- Álex Abrines – 2016
- Dejan Bodiroga – 2003, 2004
- Juan Carlos Navarro – 2006, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2011
- Erazem Lorbek – 2011
- Ante Tomić – 2013, 2014
- Pau Gasol – 2001
- Erazem Lorbek – 2010
- Juan Carlos Navarro – 2012, 2013
- Ante Tomić – 2015
- Dejan Bodiroga – 2004
- Juan Carlos Navarro – 2006, 2007, 2009, 2010
- Fran Vázquez – 2009
- Erazem Lorbek – 2010, 2012
- Ricky Rubio – 2010
- Ante Tomić – 2013
- Tomáš Satoranský – 2016
- Ante Tomić – 2017
Records
- Most points scored in a game: FC Barcelona 147–106 Cajabilbao (1986 –87 season)
- Biggest point differential: 74 – FC Barcelona 128–54 Mataró (1972 –73)
- Biggest point differential (against): 60 – Real Madrid 125–65 FC Barcelona (1973) and Real Madrid 138–78 FC Barcelona (1977)
- Most games played with FC Barcelona: Juan Antonio San Epifanio "Epi" (421)
- Most minutes played with FC Barcelona: Juan Antonio San Epifanio "Epi" (11.758)
- Most career points scored with FC Barcelona: Juan Antonio San Epifanio "Epi" (7.028)
- Most assists: Juan Carlos Navarro (932)*[8]
- Most rebounds: Roberto Dueñas (2.113)
- Most blocked shots: Roberto Dueñas (266)
- Most three-point shots made: Juan Carlos Navarro (684)*[8]
- Most steals: Nacho Solozábal (611)
Note: Players with a * are still playing for Barcelona.
Season by season
Season | Tier | Division | Pos. | W–L | Copa del Rey | Other cups | European competitions | |||
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1923–56 | Copa del Rey | 6 times champion (42–43, 44–45, 45–46, 46–47, 48–49, 49–50), 2 times runner-up (41–42, 50–51) | ||||||||
1957 | 1 | 1ª División | 2nd | 7–3 | Fourth position | |||||
1958 | 1 | 1ª División | 8th | 4–14 | ||||||
1958–59 | 1 | 1ª División | 1st | 20–2 | Champion | |||||
1959–60 | 1 | 1ª División | 6th | 11–11 | Semifinalist | 1 Champions Cup | QF | 2–2 | ||
1960–61 | 1 | 1ª División | 3rd | 15–7 | Semifinalist | |||||
1961–62 | The club dissolved the section temporarily and they did not enter any competition | |||||||||
1962–63 | 1 | 1ª División | 6th | 2–10 | ||||||
1963–64 | 1 | 1ª División | 6th | 4–8 | ||||||
1964–65 | 2 | 2ª División | 1st | |||||||
1965–66 | 1 | 1ª División | 5th | 8–10 | Semifinalist | |||||
1966–67 | 1 | 1ª División | 7th | 9–11 | Quarterfinalist | |||||
1967–68 | 1 | 1ª División | 8th | 6–14 | Quarterfinalist | |||||
1968–69 | 1 | 1ª División | 7th | 8–1–13 | Quarterfinalist | |||||
1969–70 | 1 | 1ª División | 6th | 11–11 | Quarterfinalist | |||||
1970–71 | 1 | 1ª División | 6th | 11–11 | Quarterfinalist | |||||
1971–72 | 1 | 1ª División | 2nd | 19–3 | Semifinalist | |||||
1972–73 | 1 | 1ª División | 3rd | 22–2–6 | Quarterfinalist | 3 Korać Cup | R12 | 1–2 | ||
1973–74 | 1 | 1ª División | 2nd | 22–2–4 | Quarterfinalist | 3 Korać Cup | R12 | 5–1 | ||
1974–75 | 1 | 1ª División | 2nd | 19–3 | Semifinalist | 3 Korać Cup | RU | 8–3 | ||
1975–76 | 1 | 1ª División | 2nd | 23–9 | Semifinalist | 3 Korać Cup | R16 | 2–1 | ||
1976–77 | 1 | 1ª División | 2nd | 20–1–1 | Runner-up | |||||
1977–78 | 1 | 1ª División | 3rd | 19–3 | Champion | 2 Cup Winner's Cup | SF | 7–1–4 | ||
1978–79 | 1 | 1ª División | 2nd | 17–5 | Champion | 2 Cup Winner's Cup | SF | 8–2 | ||
1979–80 | 1 | 1ª División | 2nd | 19–3 | Champion | 2 Cup Winner's Cup | SF | 4–4 | ||
1980–81 | 1 | 1ª División | 1st | 23–3 | Champion | 2 Cup Winner's Cup | RU | 6–3 | ||
1981–82 | 1 | 1ª División | 2nd | 24–2 | Champion | 1 Champions Cup | SF | 10–6 | ||
1982–83 | 1 | 1ª División | 1st | 26–1 | Champion | 2 Cup Winner's Cup | QF | 3–3 | ||
1983–84 | 1 | Liga ACB | 2nd | 29–7 | Runner-up | 1 Champions Cup | RU | 11–4 | ||
1984–85 | 1 | Liga ACB | 3rd | 26–7 | Third position | 2 Cup Winner's Cup | C | 9–1 | ||
1985–86 | 1 | Liga ACB | 2nd | 27–8 | Third position | 2 Cup Winner's Cup | C | 7–2 | ||
1986–87 | 1 | Liga ACB | 1st | 31–7 | Runner-up | Copa Príncipe | QF | 3 Korać Cup | C | 7–3 |
1987–88 | 1 | Liga ACB | 1st | 31–9 | Runner-up | Supercopa | C | 1 Champions Cup | QF | 7–9 |
Copa Príncipe | C | |||||||||
1988–89 | 1 | Liga ACB | 1st | 35–9 | Runner-up | Copa Príncipe | RU | 1 Champions Cup | 4th | 13–5 |
1989–90 | 1 | Liga ACB | 1st | 38–8 | Quarterfinalist | 1 Champions Cup | RU | 15–3 | ||
1990–91 | 1 | Liga ACB | 2nd | 34–13 | Champion | Copa Príncipe | SF | 1 Champions Cup | RU | 14–4 |
1991–92 | 1 | Liga ACB | 6th | 26–12 | Fourth position | 1 European League | QF | 12–6 | ||
1992–93 | 1 | Liga ACB | 3rd | 29–11 | Quarterfinalist | 3 Korać Cup | SF | 11–3 | ||
1993–94 | 1 | Liga ACB | 2nd | 28–12 | Champion | 1 European League | 4th | 12–9 | ||
1994–95 | 1 | Liga ACB | 1st | 38–12 | Quarterfinalist | 1 European League | GS | 8–6 | ||
1995–96 | 1 | Liga ACB | 1st | 38–11 | Runner-up | 1 European League | RU | 13–5 | ||
1996–97 | 1 | Liga ACB | 1st | 36–12 | Semifinalist | 1 EuroLeague | RU | 13–10 | ||
1997–98 | 1 | Liga ACB | 4th | 24–17 | Quarterfinalist | 1 EuroLeague | R16 | 10–9 | ||
1998–99 | 1 | Liga ACB | 1st | 35–8 | Semifinalist | 3 Korać Cup | C | 13–3 | ||
1999–00 | 1 | Liga ACB | 2nd | 34–14 | Quarterfinalist | 1 EuroLeague | 4th | 16–8 | ||
2000–01 | 1 | Liga ACB | 1st | 38–5 | Champion | 1 Euroleague | T16 | 8–4 | ||
2001–02 | 1 | Liga ACB | 3rd | 31–11 | Runner-up | 1 Euroleague | T16 | 14–6 | ||
2002–03 | 1 | Liga ACB | 1st | 36–9 | Champion | 1 Euroleague | C | 18–4 | ||
2003–04 | 1 | Liga ACB | 1st | 32–14 | Quarterfinalist | 1 Euroleague | T16 | 14–6 | ||
2004–05 | 1 | Liga ACB | 5th | 25–13 | Quarterfinalist | Supercopa | C | 1 Euroleague | T16 | 11–9 |
2005–06 | 1 | Liga ACB | 3rd | 27–14 | Quarterfinalist | 1 Euroleague | 4th | 15–10 | ||
2006–07 | 1 | Liga ACB | 2nd | 30–17 | Champion | Supercopa | SF | 1 Euroleague | QF | 14–9 |
2007–08 | 1 | Liga ACB | 2nd | 28–13 | Quarterfinalist | Supercopa | SF | 1 Euroleague | QF | 13–10 |
2008–09 | 1 | Liga ACB | 1st | 33–8 | Semifinalist | Supercopa | SF | 1 Euroleague | 3rd | 18–5 |
2009–10 | 1 | Liga ACB | 2nd | 36–6 | Champion | Supercopa | C | 1 Euroleague | C | 20–2 |
2010–11 | 1 | Liga ACB | 1st | 35–7 | Champion | Supercopa | C | 1 Euroleague | QF | 14–6 |
2011–12 | 1 | Liga ACB | 1st | 37–8 | Runner-up | Supercopa | C | 1 Euroleague | 3rd | 19–2 |
2012–13 | 1 | Liga ACB | 2nd | 30–15 | Champion | Supercopa | RU | 1 Euroleague | 4th | 25–6 |
2013–14 | 1 | Liga ACB | 1st | 35–10 | Runner-up | Supercopa | RU | 1 Euroleague | 3rd | 23–6 |
2014–15 | 1 | Liga ACB | 2nd | 30–14 | Runner-up | Supercopa | RU | 1 Euroleague | QF | 21–7 |
2015–16 | 1 | Liga ACB | 2nd | 35–9 | Quarterfinalist | Supercopa | C | 1 Euroleague | QF | 17–12 |
2016–17 | 1 | Liga ACB | 6th | 23–12 | Semifinalist | Supercopa | RU | 1 EuroLeague | 11th | 12–18 |
2017–18 | 1 | Liga ACB | 1 EuroLeague | |||||||
International record
Season | Achievement | Notes | |
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EuroLeague | |||
1959–60 | Quarter-finals | eliminated by Polonia Warsaw, 64-65 (L) in Barcelona and 41-49 (L) in Warsaw | |
1981–82 | Semi-final group stage | 4th place in a group with Maccabi Elite, Squibb Cantù, Partizan, Nashua Den Bosch and Panathinaikos | |
1983–84 | Final | lost to Banco di Roma Virtus, 73-79 in the final (Geneva) | |
1987–88 | Quarter-finals | 5th place in a group with Partizan, Aris, Tracer Milano, Maccabi Elite, Saturn Köln, Orthez and Nashua EBBC | |
1988–89 | Final Four | 4th place in Munich, lost to Jugoplastika 77–87 in the semi-final, lost to Aris 71–88 in the 3rd place game | |
1989–90 | Final | defeated Aris 104-83 in the semi-final, lost to Jugoplastika 67-72 in the final (Zaragoza) | |
1990–91 | Final | defeated Maccabi Elite 104-83 in the semi-final, lost to Pop 84 67-72 in the final (Paris) | |
1991–92 | Quarter-finals | eliminated 2–0 by Philips Milano, 79-80 (L) in Milan and 71-86 (L) in Barcelona | |
1993–94 | Final Four | 4th place in Tel Aviv, lost to 7up Joventut 65–79 in the semi-final, lost to Panathinaikos 83–100 in the 3rd place game | |
1995–96 | Final | defeated Real Madrid 76-66 in the semi-final, lost to Panathinaikos 66-67 in the final (Paris) | |
1996–97 | Final | defeated ASVEL 77-70 in the semi-final, lost to Olympiacos 58-73 in the final (Rome) | |
1999–00 | Final Four | 4th place in Thessaloniki, lost to Maccabi Elite 51–65 in the semi-final, lost to Efes Pilsen 69–75 in the 3rd place game | |
2002–03 | Champions | defeated CSKA Moscow 76-71 in the semi-final, defeated Benetton Treviso 76-65 in the final of the Final Four in Barcelona | |
2005–06 | Final Four | 4th place in Prague, lost to CSKA Moscow 75–84 in the semi-final, lost to Tau Cerámica 82–87 in the 3rd place game | |
2006–07 | Quarter-finals | eliminated 2–1 by Unicaja, 75-91 (L) in Málaga, 80-58 (W) in Barcelona and 64-67 (L) in Málaga | |
2007–08 | Quarter-finals | eliminated 2–1 by Maccabi Elite, 75-81 (L) in Tel Aviv, 83-74 (W) in Barcelona and 75-88 (L) in Tel Aviv | |
2008–09 | Final Four | 3rd place in Berlin, lost to CSKA Moscow 78–82 in the semi-final, defeated Olympiacos 95–79 in the 3rd place game | |
2009–10 | Champions | defeated CSKA Moscow 64-54 in the semi-final, defeated Olympiacos 86-68 in the final of the Final Four in Paris | |
2010–11 | Quarter-finals | eliminated 3–1 by Panathinaikos, 83-82 (W) & 71-75 (L) in Barcelona, 74-76 (L) & 67-78 (L) in Athens | |
2011–12 | Final Four | 3rd place in Istanbul, lost to Olympiacos 64–68 in the semi-final, defeated Panathinaikos 74–69 in the 3rd place game | |
2012–13 | Final Four | 4th place in London, lost to Real Madrid 67–74 in the semi-final, lost to CSKA Moscow 73–74 in the 3rd place game | |
2013–14 | Final Four | 3rd place in Milan, lost to Real Madrid 62–100 in the semi-final, defeated CSKA Moscow 93–78 in the 3rd place game | |
2014–15 | Quarter-finals | eliminated 3–1 by Olympiacos, 73-57 (W) & 63-76 (L) in Barcelona, 71-73 (L) & 68-71 (L) in Piraeus | |
2015–16 | Quarter-finals | eliminated 3–2 by Lokomotiv-Kuban, 66-61 (L) & 66-92(W) in Krasnodar, 82-70 (W) & 80-92 (L) in Barcelona, 67-81 (L) in Krasnodar | |
FIBA Saporta Cup | |||
1977–78 | Semi-finals | eliminated by Gabetti Cantù, 90-87 (W) in Barcelona and 77-97 (L) in Cantù | |
1978–79 | Semi-finals | eliminated by Gabetti Cantù, 89-84 (W) in Barcelona and 83-101 (L) in Cantù | |
1979–80 | Semi-finals | eliminated by Gabetti Cantù, 92-93 (L) in Barcelona and 74-78 (L) in Cantù | |
1980–81 | Final | lost to Squibb Cantù 82–86 in the final (Rome) | |
1982–83 | Quarter-finals | 3rd place in a group with Scavolini Pesaro, Nashua EBBC and Hapoel Ramat Gan | |
1984–85 | Champions | defeated Žalgiris 77-73 in the final of European Cup Winner's Cup in Grenoble | |
1985–86 | Champions | defeated Scavolini Pesaro 101-86 in the final of European Cup Winner's Cup in Caserta | |
FIBA Korać Cup | |||
1973 | Semi-finals | eliminated by Maes Pils, 87-99 (L) in Mechelen and 78-82 (L) in Barcelona | |
1974–75 | Final | lost to Forst Cantù, 69-71 (L) in Barcelona and 85–110 (L) in Cantù | |
1986–87 | Champions | defeated Limoges,106-85 (W) in Barcelona and 97-86 (W) in Limoges in the double finals of Korać Cup | |
1992–93 | Semi-finals | eliminated by Virtus Roma, 64-84 (L) in Barcelona and 79-85 (L) in Rome | |
1998–99 | Champions | defeated Adecco Estudiantes, 77-93 (L) in Madrid and 97-70 (W) in Barcelona in the double finals of Korać Cup | |
FIBA Intercontinental Cup | |||
1984 | 4th place | 4th place with a 2-2 record in a league tournament in São Paulo | |
1985 | Champions | defeated Monte Líbano 93-89 in the final of Intercontinental Cup in Barcelona | |
1987 | Final | lost to Tracer Milano 84-100 in the final (Milan) | |
McDonald's Championship | |||
1989 | 4th place | 4th place in Rome, lost to Denver Nuggets 103-137 in the semi-final, lost to Philips Milano 104-136 in the 3rd place game | |
1990 | 3rd place | 3rd place in Barcelona, lost to Pop 84 97-102 in the semi-final, defeated Scavolini Pesaro 106-105 in the 3rd place game | |
1997 | 6th place | 6th place in Paris, lost to PSG Racing 84-97 in the preliminary round, lost to Benetton Treviso 103-106 in the 5th place game |
Matches against NBA teams
See also
References
- ↑ HISTORY OF THE SECTION, fcbarcelona.com, accessed 29 December 2010.
- ↑ "Liga Española 1963-64" (in Spanish). Linguasport. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
- ↑ "Champions Cup 1983-84". Linguasport. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
- ↑ {{cite web|url=http://www.euroleague.net/main/results/showgame?gamecode=220&seasoncode=E2002#!report%7Cpublisher=EuroLeague.net%7Ctitle=FC Barcelona is the 2002-03 Euroleague champion!|accessdate=15 June 2017
- ↑ "Regal FC Barcelona is the 2010 Euroleague champion!". EuroLeague.net. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
- ↑ La UEFA autoriza la doble publicidad del Barcelona, MARCA.com, accessed 22 June 2011.
- ↑ "Lassa Tyres, nuevo patrocinador principal de las secciones del FC Barcelona" (in Spanish). ACB.com. 3 June 2015.
- 1 2 "Acb.Com". Acb.Com. Retrieved 2012-08-14.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to FC Barcelona Bàsquet. |
- Official website
- FC Barcelona at ACB.com (in Spanish)
- FC Barcelona at Euroleague.net