2. SKL
The Slovenian Second Basketball League (Slovene: 2. slovenska košarkarska liga), abbreviated as the 2. SKL, is the second-highest basketball league in Slovenia.
Sport | Basketball |
---|---|
Founded | 1994 |
Inaugural season | 1994–95 |
No. of teams | 12 |
Country | Slovenia |
Continent | Europe |
Most recent champion(s) | Podčetrtek (2018–19) |
Level on pyramid | 2 |
Promotion to | 1. SKL |
Relegation to | 3. SKL |
Official website | kzs.si (in Slovene) |
Format
Each team plays with each other team of the division twice, once at home and once at their opponent's arena.
- The winner of the regular season is promoted to the 1. SKL.
- The second and third placed teams play Promotion Playoffs with the two teams from 1. SKL.
- The two worst teams are relegated to the 3. SKL.
2020–21 Teams
- Branik
- Celje
- Gorica
- Ilirija
- Litija
- Ljubljana
- LTH Castings
- Medvode
- MP Sežana
- Portorož
- Postojna
- Troti
List of winners
Season | Champions |
---|---|
1994–95 | Krško |
1995–96 | Sežana |
1996–97 | Škofja Loka |
1997–98 | Triglav Kranj |
1998–99 | Zagorje |
1999–2000 | Šentjur |
2000–01 | Koper |
2001–02 | Jurij Plava Laguna |
2002–03 | Postojna |
2003–04 | Branik Maribor |
2004–05 | Škofja Loka |
2005–06 | Triglav Kranj |
2006–07 | Hopsi Polzela |
2007–08 | Postojna |
2008–09 | Parklji Ljubljana |
2009–10 | Maribor |
2010–11 | Rogaška |
2011–12 | Grosuplje |
2012–13 | Portorož |
2013–14 | Šenčur |
2014–15 | Škofja Loka |
2015–16 | Podčetrtek |
2016–17 | Ilirija |
2017–18 | Podčetrtek |
2018–19 | Podčetrtek |
2019–20 | N/A[lower-alpha 1] |
- Winners were not declared as the season was not completed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. KK Triglav Kranj, the highest-placed team, was promoted to the top division.[1]
Statistical leaders
Season | Top rating | PIR | Top scorer | PPG | Top rebounder | RPG | Top assistant | APG |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2007–08 | 23.62 | 20.78 | 11.54 | 5.75 | ||||
2008–09 | 20.96 | 21.20 | 9.00 | 3.61 | ||||
2009–10 | 23.17 | 19.32 | 10.92 | 4.13 | ||||
2010–11 | 20.27 | 19.78 | 9.95 | 5.92 | ||||
2011–12 | 22.74 | 20.50 | 9.67 | 5.74 | ||||
2012–13 | 23.37 | 20.32 | 10.08 | 5.27 | ||||
2013–14 | 25.79 | 21.00 | 11.93 | 5.34 | ||||
2014–15 | 22.14 | 21.05 | 10.00 | 4.91 | ||||
2015–16 | 23.45 | 18.59 | 10.50 | 5.52 | ||||
2016–17 | 23 | 19.08 | 11.53 | 7.09 | ||||
2017–18 | 20.95 | 18 | 11.07 | 7.48 | ||||
2018–19 | 27.82 | 19,27 | 12.68 | 7.43 | ||||
gollark: Apiaristic power generation is an entirely orthogonal idea though. I don't think you know how this works.
gollark: Internally we haven't seen the need since we just have one arbitrarily fast core.
gollark: Intel go to 28 * 8 and AMD to 128 * 2.
gollark: 364? Can you *get* 364 cores outside POWER and such?
gollark: As always, my phone's downloads folder (sorted by timestamp, filtered for images) is optimal.
References
- "Zgodovina" [History] (in Slovenian). Basketball Federation of Slovenia. Retrieved 9 August 2020.
External links
- Official website (in Slovene)
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