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Ranko Žeravica Sports Hall

Coordinates: 44°49′39.41″N 20°24′23.03″E / 44.8276139°N 20.4063972°E / 44.8276139; 20.4063972
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Ranko Žeravica Sports Hall
Ranko Žeravica Sports Hall exterior in September 2012.
Ranko Žeravica Sports Hall is located in Belgrade
Ranko Žeravica Sports Hall
Ranko Žeravica Sports Hall
Location within Belgrade
Former namesHala sportova Novi Beograd (1968–2016)
AddressUlica Pariske komune 20
LocationNew Belgrade, Belgrade
Coordinates44°49′39.41″N 20°24′23.03″E / 44.8276139°N 20.4063972°E / 44.8276139; 20.4063972
OwnerCity of Belgrade
OperatorJ.P. Sportski centar Novi Beograd
Capacity5,000 (sporting events)
7,000 (musical events)
Construction
Opened1968
Renovated2011
Tenants
KK Mega Bemax (2019–present)
KK Dynamic (2017–present)
ŽKK Partizan (2011–present)
KK Superfund (2002–2011)
KK Novi Beograd (1972–2006)
KK Beobanka (1995–2000)
KK Partizan (1969–1991)
KK Crvena zvezda (1968–1973)

The Ranko Žeravica Sports Hall (Serbian: Хала спортова Ранко Жеравица, romanizedHala sportova Ranko Žeravica) is a multi-purpose sports arena located in the Belgrade municipality of New Belgrade.

Ranko Žeravica Sports Hall, renamed in 2016 in honor of Serbian basketball coach Ranko Žeravica, is widely known by its informal title Hala. It was built in 1968 and opened in December 1968.[1] Since 1979 it functions as part of a state-owned enterprise JP Sportski centar Novi Beograd. Nearby Sports and Recreation Center 11. April (Sportsko-rekreativni centar 11. april) is also included under its group.

Hala seats up to 5,000 people for sporting events and up to 7,000 for musical events.

In November 2010, the renovation of Hala was announced for 2011.[2] The new-look renovated venue was presented in late of August 2011.[3]

Sports

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Hala sportova served as home floor for many Belgrade-based sports teams.

KK Partizan

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The most prominent of them all was Partizan basketball club, which played its home games here from 1970 until 1990. During this time, famous Partizan players like Dragan Kićanović, Dražen Dalipagić, Vlade Divac, Aleksandar Sasha Đorđević, Predrag Danilović and Žarko Paspalj graced Hala's floor. Popular commercial radio jingle promoting Partizan at the time was:

Pođimo u Halu na Novi Beograd
da bodrimo Partizan svima nam je drag,
navijačke pesme zapevajmo svi
volimo Partizan jer je najbolji
.

Their finest Hala hour occurred on 22 March 1989 in the second leg of the 1988-89 Korać Cup final. Taking on the Italian club Pallacanestro Cantù (Wiwa Vismara), Partizan came back from the first leg with a 13-point deficit. However, a heroic performance on Hala floor saw them overturn the Italians' lead and win the Cup in high style with a splendid 19-point victory 101-82 behind Divac's 30 points with Paspalj adding 22 and Đorđević 21.[4]

Other teams

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Hala has also been home to basketball's Novi Beograd, known throughout its history of sponsorships as IMT, Infos-RTM, Beopetrol, and Atlas. Another resident was Lavovi.

Other former basketball occupants included now defunct Beobanka (during the 1990s) and occasionally even nomadic BKK Radnički, which at one time or another played its home games in just about every spot within Belgrade city limits that has two hoops and a roof.

In addition to basketball, various handball, boxing, karate, aikido, and judo teams trained and hosted matches and events in Hala.

Concerts

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Along with sports, Hala has played host to many shows by a variety of musical acts. They include:

List of Concerts and Other Entertainment Events
2010s
2000s
1990s
1980s
1970s

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Bogdan Trbojević (15 February 1969). "Чија је Палата спортова у Новом Београду" [To whom belongs the Palata Sportova in New Belgrade]. Politika (reprinted on 15 February 2019, page 24) (in Serbian).
  2. ^ Novi izgled „Hale sportova“ u 2011.; B92, 26 November 2010
  3. ^ Hala sportova ponovo sija nekadašnjim sjajem Archived 2011-08-07 at the Wayback Machine;Blic, 4 August 2011
  4. ^ Partizan-Pallacanestro Cantù (Wiwa Vismara) 101:82
  5. ^ Stranlgers@Belgrade Archived 2008-12-12 at the Wayback Machine