Copa Princesa de Asturias

The Copa Princesa de Asturias de Baloncesto (English: Princess of Asturias' Cup of Basketball) is an annual 2nd-tier level national cup competition for Spanish professional basketball teams, that is organized by Spain's 2nd-tier level professional league, the Liga Española de Baloncesto (LEB). It was first played in 1987.

Copa Princesa de Asturias
FormerlyCopa Príncipe de Asturias
(until 2015)
SportBasketball
Inaugural season1997
No. of teams2
Country Spain
Continent Europe
Most recent
champion(s)
Real Betis
(1st title)
Most titlesClub Melilla Baloncesto
(3 titles)
Related
competitions
LEB Oro

Since 2009, at the end of the first half of the season, the top two teams from the LEB Oro qualify. The Final is at champions venue.

In 2015, the cup changed its name from Copa Príncipe de Asturias to Copa Princesa de Asturias, as Leonor de Borbón became Princess of Asturias.[1]

Winners (ACB editions)

History with ACB Teams

Copa de la Asociación

Year Venue Winner Runner-Up Result
1985Villanueva de la SerenaSaski BaskoniaCB Zaragoza93–85

Copa Príncipe de Asturias

Year Venue Winner Runner-Up Result
1986AlcoraCB EstudiantesGranollers EB89–82
1987VigoJoventut BadalonaBàsquet Manresa99–80
1988PalmaFC BarcelonaReal Madrid92–90
1989FerrolJoventut BadalonaFC Barcelona84–80
1991A CoruñaJoventut BadalonaCB Valladolid72–52

History with LEB teams

Year Venue Winner Runner-Up Result MVP
1997TorrelavegaCantabria BaloncestoGijón Baloncesto71–68 Bob Harstad
1998Pineda de MarBaloncesto FuenlabradaBàsquet Inca91–75 Velimir Perasović
1999AlicanteClub Melilla BaloncestoMenorca Bàsquet93–85 José María Panadero
2000GranadaClub Ourense BaloncestoTenerife Baloncesto76–64 Jesús Fernández
2001MelillaClub Melilla BaloncestoBàsquet Manresa92–88 Alberto Alzamora
2002OurenseCB Lucentum AlicanteTenerife Baloncesto73–55 Larry Lewis
2003IncaTenerife BaloncestoBilbao Basket70–55 Iván Rodríguez
2004ZaragozaBasket ZaragozaCB Plasencia89–82 Matías Lescano
2005HuescaBaloncesto FuenlabradaMenorca Bàsquet75–74 Tom Wideman
2006PalmaCB MurciaBàsquet Inca78–60 Juanjo Triguero
2007MelillaBaloncesto LeónCantabria Baloncesto92–71 Paolo Quinteros
2008ZaragozaCB BreogánCB Lucentum Alicante94–91 Roberto Morentin
2009AlicanteCB Lucentum AlicanteClub Melilla Baloncesto95–60 Txemi Urtasun
2010MelillaClub Melilla BaloncestoMenorca Bàsquet79–72 Taylor Coppenrath
2011SantiagoObradoiro CABCB Murcia81–78 Alberto Corbacho
2012La LagunaCB 1939 CanariasCB Atapuerca93–85 Nacho Yáñez
2013BurgosCB AtapuercaBC Andorra73–67 Isaac López
2014Andorra la VellaBC AndorraPalencia Baloncesto77–61 Jordi Trias
2015PalenciaPalencia BaloncestoCB Breogán78–69 Xavi Forcada
2016PalenciaPalencia BaloncestoClub Melilla Baloncesto87–85 Dani Rodríguez
2017OviedoOviedo CBCB Miraflores80–77 Miquel Salvó
2018LugoCB BreogánBàsquet Manresa90–86 Guille Rubio
2019SevilleReal Betis BaloncestoBilbao Basket80–70 Thomas Bropleh
2020ValladolidGipuzkoa BasketCB Ciudad de Valladolid62–55 Johnny Dee

Champions

Team Winners Runners-Up Winning years
Club Melilla Baloncesto 3 2 1999, 2001, 2010
CB Lucentum Alicante 2 1 2002, 2009
Palencia Baloncesto 2 1 2015, 2016
CB Breogán 2 1 2008, 2018
Baloncesto Fuenlabrada 2 0 1998, 2005
Tenerife Baloncesto 1 2 2003
Cantabria Baloncesto 1 1 1997
CB Murcia 1 1 2006
CB Atapuerca 1 1 2013
BC Andorra 1 1 2014
Club Ourense Baloncesto 1 0 2000
Basket Zaragoza 1 0 2004
Baloncesto León 1 0 2007
Obradoiro CAB 1 0 2011
CB 1939 Canarias 1 0 2012
Oviedo CB 1 0 2017
Real Betis Baloncesto 1 0 2019
Gipuzkoa Basket 1 0 2020
Menorca Bàsquet 0 3
Bàsquet Inca 0 2
Bàsquet Manresa 0 2
Bilbao Basket 0 2
Gijón Baloncesto 0 1
CB Plasencia 0 1
CB Miraflores 0 1
CB Ciudad de Valladolid 0 1

LEB Final Four and Final Eight editions

1997

Semifinals Final
      
1 Gijón Baloncesto 70
4 CB Ciudad de Huelva 63
Gijón Baloncesto 68
Cantabria Baloncesto 71
3 Cantabria Baloncesto 94
2 CB Breogán 90

1998

Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
         
CB Breogán 75
CB Murcia 92
CB Murcia 75
Bàsquet Inca 79
UER Pineda de Mar 74
Bàsquet Inca 90
Bàsquet Inca 75
Fuenlabrada 91
Club Melilla Baloncesto 89
Fuenlabrada 101
Fuenlabrada 102
Askatuak SBT 89
Askatuak SBT 80
CD Juventud Córdoba 78

1999

Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
         
Club Melilla Baloncesto 83
Ourense Baloncesto 78
Club Melilla Baloncesto 89
Círculo Badajoz 58
Círculo Badajoz 97
Gijón Baloncesto 84
Club Melilla Baloncesto 93
Menorca Bàsquet 85
CB Lucentum Alicante 74
Tenerife Baloncesto 76
Tenerife Baloncesto 66
Menorca Bàsquet 76
CB Breogán 79
Menorca Bàsquet 93

2000

Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
         
Tenerife Baloncesto 76
CB Lucentum Alicante 62
Tenerife Baloncesto 76
Club Melilla Baloncesto 65
CE Lleida Bàsquet 64
Club Melilla Baloncesto 84
Tenerife Baloncesto 64
Ourense Baloncesto 76
Menorca Bàsquet 49
Bàsquet Inca 70
Bàsquet Inca 49
Ourense Baloncesto 61
CB Granada 71
Ourense Baloncesto 89

Since 2009, the Copa Príncipe de Asturias is only played with the two top teams at the first half of the LEB Oro season

References

  1. "16 equipos en LEB Oro y cambio de nombre en la Copa" (in Spanish). El Correo de Burgos. 31 May 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.