Alpe Adria Cup
Current season, competition or edition: 2016–17 Alpe Adria Cup | |
Sport | Basketball |
---|---|
Founded | 2015 |
Inaugural season | 2015–16 |
CEO | Gerald Martens |
No. of teams | 8 |
Countries |
Austria Slovenia Croatia Slovakia |
Continent | FIBA Europe (Europe) |
Most recent champion(s) |
Helios Suns Domžale (1st title) |
Most titles |
Helios Suns Domžale (1 title) |
Official website | alpeadriacup.com (English) |
Alpe Adria Cup (AAC) is a basketball competition in the Alpe-Adria region and will organise clubs from four countries, namely Austria, Slovenia, Croatia and Slovakia. The competition goal is to provide international competitive experience to smaller clubs so they can improve their performance. It is played under the rules of FIBA.
2015–16 season
36 games were played between September 29, 2015 and the beginning of March 2016.[1] The clubs will be split in two groups (A and B). Teams from the same country were separated in different groups. All teams qualified for the play off, where top teams from each group will face bottom teams from the other group (A1 faced B4, A2-B3, B1-A4 and B2-A3) in a double-log playoff in order to qualify for the Final Four. The Final Four to determine the winner of the competition was held in Domžale, Slovenia.
2015–16 teams
Team | Established | Town | Town population | Group |
---|---|---|---|---|
BK Klosterneuburg Dukes | 1952 | Klosterneuburg | 26,000 | B |
Arkadia Traiskirchen Lions | 1966 | Traiskirchen | 17,600 | A |
KK Helios Suns Domžale | 1946 | Domžale | 12,500 | A |
KK Zlatorog Laško | 1969 | Laško | 3,600 | B |
KK Kvarner 2010 | 2009 | Rijeka | 213,600 | A |
KK Zagreb | 1970 | Zagreb | 790,000 | B |
BC Prievidza | 1947 | Prievidza | 49,300 | B |
BC Levicki Patrioti | 1941 | Levicki | 39,000 | A |
Finals
Year | Final | Semifinalists | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Champion | Score | Second place | Third place | Score | Fourth place | |||
2015–16 Details |
Helios Suns Domžale |
66–63 | Zlatorog Laško |
Zagreb |
94–73 | Prievidza | ||
2016–17 Details |
References
- ↑ "About Alpe Adria Cup". alpeadriacup.com. Retrieved 27 September 2015.