Supercopa de España de Baloncesto

The Supercopa de España de Baloncesto (English: Spanish Supercup of Basketball) is a Spanish annual men's professional basketball competition. The competition is a super cup tournament.

Supercopa Endesa
Founded2004
First season2004
CountrySpain
ConfederationFIBA Europe
Number of teams4
Current championsReal Madrid
(5th title)
Most championshipsBarça
Real Madrid
(5 titles)
TV partnersMovistar+
Websiteacb.com
2020 Supercopa de España de Baloncesto

History

The Supercopa was created in 1984 by the recently established Asociación de Clubs de Baloncesto (ACB) in which the league winner faces the cup winner in a single-game final. During its first four editions (1984–1987), the Supercup was also known as Federation Cup, as the tournament was jointly organized by the Spanish Basketball Federation (FEB), and it was held in the middle of the regular season. In 1988–89 season, the Supercup was not played for lack of competitive interest, and finally it was officially cancelled at the beginning of the 1989–90 season.[1]

In 2004, almost two decades after its demise, ACB restored this classic tournament and renamed it Supercopa ACB (since 2011 known as Supercopa Endesa for sponsoring reasons). In order to achieve a higher competitive status, it was moved to the ACB pre-season and turned into a typical Final Four stage, including both the League and Cup winners from the previous season, the host team and the best qualified Spanish club in European competitions.[1]

Format

Since 2004, four teams join the competition, played with a Final Four format the week before the start of the ACB season. During the Supercopa, a three-point shootout is also played between ACB players and, sometimes, players of the Spanish women's league or amateur players.

Selection criteria

Teams that take part in this competition are:[2]

  1. Host team
  2. Liga ACB champion
  3. Copa del Rey champion
  4. Supercopa de España champion
  5. If vacancies exist, they will be awarded in the following order:
    1. Liga ACB runner-up
    2. Liga ACB third-placed team
  6. If a vacant continues existing, the best qualified at Liga ACB will get the spot.

Predecessors of Supercopa ACB

Season Host Arena Champion Runner-up Score
1984–85 L'Alcora Polideportivo Municipal Real Madrid CAI Zaragoza 101–61
1985–86 Valladolid Polideportivo Pisuerga Ron Negrita Joventut Real Madrid 104–91
1986–87 A Coruña Riazor Ron Negrita Joventut (2) Real Madrid 74–67
1987–88 Vigo Polideportivo Municipal FC Barcelona RAM Joventut 91–88

Finals by year

Year Host Arena Champion Runner-up Score MVP
2004 Málaga Martín Carpena FC Barcelona Real Madrid 76–75 Dejan Bodiroga
2005 Granada Palacio de Deportes TAU Cerámica CB Granada 61–55 Luis Scola
2006 Málaga Martín Carpena TAU Cerámica (2) Unicaja 83–78 Tiago Splitter
2007 Bilbao Bizkaia Arena TAU Cerámica (3) iurbentia Bilbao Basket 85–73 Tiago Splitter (2)
2008 Zaragoza Pabellón Príncipe Felipe TAU Cerámica (4) CAI Zaragoza 86–85 Pablo Prigioni
2009 Las Palmas Centro Insular de Deportes Regal FC Barcelona (2) Real Madrid 86–82 Juan Carlos Navarro
2010 Vitoria-Gasteiz Fernando Buesa Arena Regal FC Barcelona (3) Power Electronics Valencia 83–63 Juan Carlos Navarro (2)
2011 Bilbao Bilbao Arena FC Barcelona Regal (4) Caja Laboral 82–73 Juan Carlos Navarro (3)
2012 Zaragoza Pabellón Príncipe Felipe Real Madrid FC Barcelona Regal 95–84 Rudy Fernández
2013 Vitoria-Gasteiz Fernando Buesa Arena Real Madrid (2) FC Barcelona 83–79 Sergio Rodríguez
2014 Vitoria-Gasteiz Fernando Buesa Arena Real Madrid (3) FC Barcelona 99–78 Sergio Llull
2015 Málaga Martín Carpena FC Barcelona Lassa (5) Unicaja 80–62 Pau Ribas
2016 Vitoria-Gasteiz Fernando Buesa Herbalife Gran Canaria FC Barcelona Lassa 79–59 Kyle Kuric
2017 Las Palmas Gran Canaria Arena Valencia Basket Herbalife Gran Canaria 69–63 Erick Green
2018 Santiago de Compostela Fontes do Sar Real Madrid (4) Kirolbet Baskonia 80–73 Sergio Llull (2)
2019 Madrid WiZink Center Real Madrid (5) Barça 89–79 Facundo Campazzo

Titles by team in Supercopa ACB

Team Winner Runner-up Semifinalist Years won Years runner-up Years semifinalist
Barcelona 5 5 4 2004, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2015 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2019 2006, 2007, 2008, 2018
Real Madrid 5 2 7 2012, 2013, 2014, 2018, 2019 2004, 2009 2005, 2007, 2010, 2011, 2015, 2016, 2017
Baskonia 4 2 6 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 2011, 2018 2004, 2009, 2010, 2013, 2014, 2016
Valencia 1 1 3 2017 2010 2012, 2014, 2019
Gran Canaria 1 1 2 2016 2017 2009, 2015
Málaga 2 3 2006, 2015 2004, 2005, 2017
Bilbao 1 2 2007 2011, 2013
Basket Zaragoza 1 1 2008 2012
Granada 1 2005
Joventut 2 2006, 2008
Obradoiro 1 2018
Fuenlabrada 1 2019

Titles by team in predecessors of Supercopa ACB

Team Winner Runner-up Seasons won Seasons runner-up
Joventut 2 1 1985–86, 1986–87 1987–88
Barcelona 1 1987–88
Real Madrid 1 2 1984–85 1985–86, 1986–87
CB Zaragoza 1 1984–85
gollark: They probably only have one copy and want to see if anyone is insane enough to buy it, or something. Or it's been bid up by the weird autopricing algorithms in use.
gollark: Hmm, yes, true. And you won't have to deal with ARM.
gollark: Yes, and the use case is learning clustering, they aren't great for compute-heavy uses otherwise.
gollark: Oh, so *now* an orbital bee strike has been initiated?
gollark: Oh, so *now* you suddenly stop comparing them?

References

  1. "Linguasport - Spanish Super Cup (B)". www.linguasport.com (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 7 April 2019. Retrieved 9 June 2018.
  2. "ACB.COM". www.acb.com (in Spanish). 19 September 2019. Retrieved 23 September 2019.

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