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{{Infobox sports season
{{Infobox sports season
| title =Euroleague 2009–10
| title =2009–10 Euroleague
| league =[[Euroleague]]
| league =[[Euroleague]]
| sport =[[Basketball]]
| sport =[[Basketball]]

Revision as of 19:29, 18 October 2011

2009–10 Euroleague
LeagueEuroleague
SportBasketball
DurationSeptember 29, 2009 – May 9, 2010
Regular Season
Season MVPSerbia Miloš Teodosić (Olympiacos)
Top scorerLithuania Linas Kleiza (Olympiacos)
Final Four
Final
ChampionsSpain FC Barcelona
  Runners-upGreece Olympiacos
Finals MVPSpain Juan Carlos Navarro (FC Barcelona)
Euroleague seasons

The Euroleague 2009–10 season was the tenth international basketball club competition for elite clubs throughout Europe under the ULEB umbrella. The season featured 30 teams from 15 different countries, beginning with the first qualifying round starting on September 29, 2009[1] and culminating at the 2009–10 Euroleague Final Four at the Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy arena in Paris, France, with semifinals on May 7 and the third-place game and final on May 9, 2010.[2]

Changes have been made to the format, adding 6 teams to go from 24 teams to 30 teams, including the preliminary stage. 8 teams competed in qualification rounds, of which 2 teams were selected to join the regular season stage. 22 teams qualifyd directly to the regular season stage with an additional 2 teams qualifying through the preliminary rounds. The regular season phase consisted of 24 teams.[3][4]

A maximum of three teams can qualify from any one country through their league position. However, 14 clubs hold ULEB "A Licenses", giving them automatic spots in the Euroleague Regular Season through 2011–12 regardless of their domestic league finish. These licenses are granted via a formula that considers each team's performance in its domestic league and the Euroleague; the television revenues ULEB collects from its home country; and the team's home attendance. The clubs holding A Licenses are:

Teams of the 2009–2010 Euroleague[5]

Country (League) Teams Team (rankings in '08/'09 national leagues) Arena (Capacity)
Spain Spain (Liga ACB) 4
Regal FC Barcelona (1) Palau Blaugrana (8,250)
Caja Laboral Vitoria (2) Fernando Buesa Arena (9,900)
Unicaja Málaga (3) Jose Maria Martin Carpena Arena (10,500)
Real Madrid (4)[a] Palacio Vistalegre (15,000)
Greece Greece (ESAKE A1) 4
Panathinaikos Athens (1) Olympic Indoor Hall (19,250)
Olympiacos Piraeus (2) Peace and Friendship Stadium (14,905)
Maroussi Athens (3) [Q] Olympic Indoor Hall (19,250)
Aris Thessaloniki (4)[wc] [Q] Alexandreio Melathron (5,500)
Italy Italy (Lega A) 4
Montepaschi Siena (1) Palasport Mens Sana (7,025)
Armani Jeans Milano (2) Mediolanum Forum (12,000)
Benetton Treviso (3)[Q] Palaverde (5,134)
Lottomatica Roma (5)[b] PalaLottomatica (11,200)
France France (LNB Pro A) 3
ASVEL Villeurbanne (1) L'Astroballe (5,800)
Entente Orléans Loiret (2)[Q] Zénith d'Orléans (6,900)
Le Mans (3)[wc] [Q] Antarès (6,003)
Russia Russia
(Superleague A)
2
CSKA Moscow (1) CSKA Universal Sports Hall (5,500)
Khimki Moscow Region (2)[c] Basketball Center of Moscow Region (6,000)
Turkey Turkey (TBL) 2
Efes Pilsen Istanbul (1) Abdi İpekçi Arena (12,500)
Fenerbahçe Ülker Istanbul (2)
Lithuania Lithuania (LKL) 2
Lietuvos Rytas (1)[c] Siemens Arena (11,000)
Žalgiris Kaunas (2) Kaunas Sports Hall (5,000)
Germany Germany (BBL) 2
EWE Baskets Oldenburg (1) Weser-Ems-Halle (5,118)
ALBA Berlin (3)[wc] [Q] O2 World (16,000)
Serbia Serbia (KLS) 1
Partizan Belgrade (1) Pionir Hall (8,150)
Croatia Croatia (A1 Liga) 1
Cibona Zagreb (1) Dražen Petrović Basketball Hall (5,400)
Israel Israel (BSL) 1
Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv (1) Nokia Arena (11,700)
Slovenia Slovenia (SKL) 1
Union Olimpija Ljubljana (1) Dvorana Tivoli (6,000)
Poland Poland (PLK) 1
Asseco Prokom Gdynia (1) Gdynia Sports Arena (5,000)
Belgium Belgium (Ligue Ethias) 1
Spirou Charleroi (1) [Q] Spiroudome (7,560)
Latvia Latvia (LBL) 1
BK Ventspils (1) [Q] Arena Riga (12,500)
  • Q The team has competed in the qualifying rounds
  • wc ALBA Berlin, Le Mans and Aris Salonica were granted "wild card" berths by ULEB. Aris' selection gave A1 Ethniki a fourth berth to go along with its normal allocation of three places.
  • a Liga ACB is entitled to three Euroleague places by the standard formula. However, because four ACB clubs hold A Licences, the league has a minimum of four berths. (The top four places in the 2008–09 ACB season were all occupied by A Licence holders.)
  • b Lega A is also entitled to three places by the standard formula. However, the 2008–09 season saw only one of the counry's two A Licence holders finish in the top three, namely champions Montepaschi Siena. As a result, Lottomatica Roma earned an extra place for Lega A by virtue of its A Licence.
  • c Lietuvos Rytas was the ULEB Eurocup 2008-09 champion, which carries with it a one-year "C Licence" into the Euroleague Regular Season. However, the club also earned a one-season "B Licence" for the Euroleague by winning its domestic championship, and the league's ranking was sufficiently high to give Rytas direct entry into the Regular Season. As a result, the Eurocup champion's C Licence went to Khimki Moscow Region of the Russian Basketball Super League as the ULEB Eurocup 2008–09 finalist.

First preliminary round

Games were played on September 29 and October 2. Winners advanced to the second preliminary round, while losers parachuted into the Eurocup.

Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st leg 2nd leg
Spirou Charleroi Belgium 111–134 France Entente Orléans Loiret 55–53 56–81
BK Ventspils Latvia 154–161 Italy Benetton Treviso 78–73 76–88
Le Mans Sarthe Basket France 123–137 Germany ALBA Berlin 61–60 62–77
Aris Salonica Greece 129–156 Greece Maroussi Athens 69–67 60–89

Second preliminary round

Game 1 of each match was played on October 6. Game 2 of the Benetton-Orléans match was played on October 9, and Game 2 of Maroussi-ALBA was played on October 11. The winners of each match advanced to the Regular Season, with the losers parachuting into the Eurocup.

Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st leg 2nd leg
Benetton Treviso Italy 155–162 France Entente Orléans Loiret 73–82 82–80
Maroussi Athens Greece 149–145 Germany ALBA Berlin 79–70 70–75

Regular season

The Regular Season began on October 15, 2009 and concluded on January 14, 2010.

If teams are level on record at the end of the Regular Season, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:[6]

  1. Head-to-head record.
  2. Head-to-head point differential.
  3. Point differential during the Regular Season.
  4. Points scored during the regular season.
  5. Sum of quotients of points scored and points allowed in each Regular Season match.
Key to colors
     Top four places in each group advance to Top 16
     Eliminated

Group A

Team Pld W L PF PA Diff Tie-break
1. Spain Regal FC Barcelona 10 10 0 833 625 +208
2. Italy Montepaschi Siena 10 8 2 830 689 +141
3. Lithuania Žalgiris Kaunas 10 3 7 673 739 −66 3–3, +6
4. Croatia Cibona Zagreb 10 3 7 637 742 −105 3–3, +2
5. France ASVEL Villeurbanne 10 3 7 680 749 −69 3–3, −3
6. Turkey Fenerbahçe Ülker 10 3 7 690 799 −109 3–3, −5

Group B

Team Pld W L PF PA Diff Tie-break
1. Greece Olympiacos Piraeus 10 8 2 884 787 +97
2. Spain Unicaja Málaga 10 7 3 784 775 +9
3. Serbia Partizan Belgrade 10 5 5 745 757 −12
4. Turkey Efes Pilsen Istanbul 10 4 6 808 793 +15 1–1, +8
5. Lithuania Lietuvos Rytas Vilnius 10 4 6 741 784 −43 1–1, −8
6. France Entente Orléans Loiret 10 2 8 722 788 −66

Group C

Team Pld W L PF PA Diff Tie-break
1. Russia CSKA Moscow 10 8 2 730 700 +30
2. Spain Caja Laboral Baskonia 10 7 3 779 735 +46
3. Israel Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv 10 6 4 794 737 +57
4. Greece Maroussi Athens 10 4 6 744 764 −20 1–1, +1
5. Italy Lottomatica Roma 10 4 6 713 737 −24 1–1, −1
6. Slovenia Union Olimpija Ljubljana 10 1 9 677 764 −87

Group D

Team Pld W L PF PA Diff Tie-break
1. Spain Real Madrid 10 8 2 811 690 +121 2–0
2. Greece Panathinaikos Athens 10 8 2 792 697 +95 0–2
3. Russia Khimki Moscow Region 10 6 4 740 733 +7
4. Poland Asseco Prokom Gdynia 10 4 6 747 810 −63
5. Italy Armani Jeans Milano 10 3 7 724 741 −17
6. Germany EWE Baskets Oldenburg 10 1 9 657 800 −143

Top 16

The survivors from the Regular Season advanced to the Top 16, where they were drawn into four groups of four teams each, playing home-and-home from January 27 through March 11. The draw was held at Euroleague headquarters in Barcelona, starting at 13:00 CET on January 18, and was streamed live on the official Euroleague site.[6]

Key to colors
     Top two places in each group advance to quarterfinals
     Eliminated

Group E

Team Pld W L PF PA Diff Tie-break
1. Spain Regal FC Barcelona 6 5 1 465 396 +69
2. Serbia Partizan Belgrade 6 3 3 389 422 −33
3. Greece Panathinaikos Athens 6 2 4 439 442 −3 1–1, +1
4. Greece Maroussi Athens 6 2 4 419 452 −33 1–1, −1

Group F

Team Pld W L PF PA Diff Tie-break
1. Israel Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv 6 4 2 444 423 +21
2. Spain Real Madrid 6 3 3 447 444 +3 1–1, +1
3. Italy Montepaschi Siena 6 3 3 481 497 −16 1–1, −1
4. Turkey Efes Pilsen Istanbul 6 2 4 437 445 −8

Group G

Team Pld W L PF PA Diff Tie-break
1. Russia CSKA Moscow 6 5 1 494 448 +46
2. Poland Asseco Prokom Gdynia 6 3 3 471 455 +16
3. Spain Unicaja Málaga 6 2 4 450 452 −2 1–1, +13
4. Lithuania Žalgiris Kaunas 6 2 4 454 514 −60 1–1, −13

Group H

Team Pld W L PF PA Diff Tie-break
1. Greece Olympiacos Piraeus 6 5 1 536 504 +32
2. Spain Caja Laboral Baskonia 6 3 3 515 521 −6 1–1, 0, −6 overall
3. Russia Khimki Moscow Region 6 3 3 476 487 −11 1–1, 0, −11 overall
4. Croatia Cibona Zagreb 6 1 5 486 501 −15

Quarterfinals

Team #1 Agg. Team #2 Game 1 Game 2 Game 3 Game 4 Game 5
1. Regal FC Barcelona Spain 3 – 1 Spain Real Madrid 68 – 61 63 – 70 84 – 73 84 – 78
2. Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv Israel 1 – 3 Serbia Partizan Belgrade 77 – 85 98 – 78 73 – 81 67 – 76
3. CSKA Moscow Russia 3 – 1 Spain Caja Laboral Baskonia 86 – 63 83 – 63 53 – 66 74 – 70
4. Olympiacos Piraeus Greece 3 – 1 Poland Asseco Prokom Gdynia 83 – 79 90 – 73 78 – 81 86 – 70

Final four

Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy, Paris, France

 
Semifinals
May 7
Final
May 9
 
      
 
 
 
 
Spain Regal FC Barcelona 64
 
 
 
Russia CSKA Moscow 54
 
Spain Regal FC Barcelona 86
 
 
 
Greece Olympiacos Piraeus 68
 
Serbia Partizan Belgrade 80
 
 
Greece Olympiacos Piraeus83 after overtime
 
Third place
 
 
 
 
 
Russia CSKA Moscow 90
 
 
Serbia Partizan Belgrade 88 after overtime

Semifinals

All times are in Central European Summer Time.

Semifinal 1

7 May 2010
18:00
Regal FC Barcelona Spain 64–54 Russia CSKA Moscow
Scoring by quarter: 12–11, 17–10, 18–20, 17–13
Pts: Vázquez 11
Rebs: Lorbek 9
Asts: Rubio 8
Pts: Šiškauskas 19
Rebs: Kaun 10
Asts: Šiškauskas 5
Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy, Paris
Attendance: 14768
Referees: Romualdas Brazauskas (LTU), Christos Christodoulou (GRE), David Chambon (FRA), Olegs Latisevs (LAT)

Semifinal 2

7 May 2010
21:00
Partizan Belgrade Serbia 80–83 (OT) Greece Olympiacos Piraeus
Scoring by quarter: 17–15, 11–18, 24–19, 15-15, Overtime: 13–16
Pts: McCalebb 21
Rebs: Veselý 10
Asts: Roberts 5
Pts: Kleiza 19
Rebs: Kleiza 11
Asts: Papaloukas 5
Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy, Paris
Attendance: 14768
Referees: Shmuel Bachar (ISR), Fabio Facchini (ITA), Dani Hierrezuelo (ESP), Matej Boltauzer (SLO)

Third-place playoff

9 May 2010
18:00
CSKA Moscow Russia 90–88 (OT) Serbia Partizan Belgrade
Scoring by quarter: 25–20, 22–24, 14–18, 17–16, Overtime: 12–10
Pts: Langdon 32
Rebs: Khryapa 6
Asts: Holden, Šiškauskas 4
Pts: Roberts 16
Rebs: Roberts 8
Asts: McCalebb 4
Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy, Paris
Attendance: 14768
Referees: Fabio Facchini (ITA), Dani Hierrezuelo (ESP), Olegs Latisevs (LAT), Christos Christodoulou (GRE)

Final

9 May 2010
21:00
Regal FC Barcelona Spain 86–68 Greece Olympiacos Piraeus
Scoring by quarter: 28–19, 19–17, 17–14, 22–18
Pts: Navarro 21
Rebs: Navarro, Mickeal 5
Asts: Navarro, Sada 3
Pts: Childress 15
Rebs: Childress 6
Asts: Papaloukas, Teodosić 3
Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy, Paris
Attendance: 14768
Referees: Romualdas Brazauskas (LTU), Shmuel Bachar (ISR), David Chambon (FRA), Matej Boltauzer (SLO)


Euroleague 2010 Champions
Spain
FC Barcelona
Second title

Individual Statistics

Points

Rank Name Team Games Points PPG
1. Lithuania Linas Kleiza Greece Olympiacos Piraeus 20 345 17.25
2. United States Qyntel Woods Poland Asseco Prokom Gdynia 20 337 16.85
3. Croatia Marko Tomas Croatia Cibona Zagreb 16 263 16.44
4. United States Keith Langford Russia Khimki Moscow Region 15 233 15.53
5. Poland David Logan Poland Asseco Prokom Gdynia 20 306 15.30

Rebounds

Rank Name Team Games Rebounds RPG
1. Australia Aleks Marić Serbia Partizan Belgrade 16 137 8.56
2. United States Lawrence Roberts Serbia Partizan Belgrade 19 140 7.37
3. Lithuania Linas Kleiza Greece Olympiacos Piraeus 20 128 6.40
4. Lithuania Robertas Javtokas Russia Khimki Moscow Region 16 102 6.38
5. Russia Viktor Khryapa Russia CSKA Moscow 20 127 6.35

Assists

Rank Name Team Games Assists APG
1. United States Omar Cook Spain Unicaja Málaga 16 95 5.94
2. Serbia Miloš Teodosić Greece Olympiacos Piraeus 20 104 5.20
3. Greece Theodoros Papaloukas Greece Olympiacos Piraeus 17 88 5.18
4. United States Terrell McIntyre Italy Montepaschi Siena 16 82 5.13
5. Argentina Pablo Prigioni Spain Real Madrid 20 89 4.45

Awards

Euroleague 2009-10 MVP

Euroleague 2009-10 Final Four MVP

All-Euroleague First Team

All-Euroleague Second Team

Rising Star

Best Defender

Top Scorer (Alphonso Ford Award)

Coach of the Year (Alexander Gomelsky Award)

Club Executive of the Year

  • Poland Przemyslaw Seczkowski (Prokom)


MVP of Month
MVP Weekly
Regular Season
Top 16
Quarterfinals

References

  1. ^ Euroleague.net 2009–10 Draw Results.
  2. ^ Euroleague.net 2010 Final Four host is Paris!
  3. ^ Euroleague.net Euroleague restructuring outlined in the 2009–12 strategic plan.
  4. ^ Euroleague.net 2009–12 New Competition System Podcast.
  5. ^ Euroleague.net Euroleague 2009–10, Regular Season and Qualifying Rounds.
  6. ^ a b "Top 16 Draw". Euroleague. 2010-01-11. Retrieved 2010-01-14.

External links