PBC CSKA Moscow: Difference between revisions
→Seasons: did not win Russian championships in 1952, 1963, or 1967 |
→Seasons: won soviet cups in 72,73,82 |
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| '''1970-71''' |
| '''1970-71''' |
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| bgcolor= gold| Champion |
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| bgcolor= gold| [[Euroleague]] <br>[[FIBA European Champions Cup 1970-71|Champion]] |
| bgcolor= gold| [[Euroleague]] <br>[[FIBA European Champions Cup 1970-71|Champion]] |
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| [[Alexander Gomelsky]] |
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| '''1971-72''' |
| '''1971-72''' |
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| bgcolor= gold| Champion |
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| [[Euroleague]] <br>[[FIBA European Champions Cup 1971-72|_]] |
| [[Euroleague]] <br>[[FIBA European Champions Cup 1971-72|_]] |
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| [[Alexander Gomelsky]] |
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| '''1972-73''' |
| '''1972-73''' |
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| bgcolor= gold| Champion |
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| bgcolor= silver| [[Euroleague]] <br>[[FIBA European Champions Cup 1972-73|Finalist]] |
| bgcolor= silver| [[Euroleague]] <br>[[FIBA European Champions Cup 1972-73|Finalist]] |
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| [[Alexander Gomelsky]] |
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| '''1973-74''' |
| '''1973-74''' |
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| [[Alexander Gomelsky]] |
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| '''1974-75''' |
| '''1974-75''' |
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| bgcolor= silver| Finalist |
| bgcolor= silver| Finalist |
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| [[Alexander Gomelsky]] |
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| '''1975-76''' |
| '''1975-76''' |
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| bgcolor= gold| Champion |
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| '''1976-77''' |
| '''1976-77''' |
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| bgcolor= gold| Champion |
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| [[Euroleague]] <br>[[FIBA European Champions Cup 1976-77|Last 4]] |
| [[Euroleague]] <br>[[FIBA European Champions Cup 1976-77|Last 4]] |
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| [[Alexander Gomelsky]] |
| [[Alexander Gomelsky]] |
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| '''1977-78''' |
| '''1977-78''' |
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| bgcolor= gold| Champion |
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| [[Alexander Gomelsky]] |
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| '''1978-79''' |
| '''1978-79''' |
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| '''1979-80''' |
| '''1979-80''' |
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| '''1980-81''' |
| '''1980-81''' |
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| bgcolor= gold| Champion |
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| [[Euroleague]] <br>[[FIBA European Champions Cup 1980-81|Last 4]] |
| [[Euroleague]] <br>[[FIBA European Champions Cup 1980-81|Last 4]] |
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| '''1981-82''' |
| '''1981-82''' |
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| bgcolor= gold| Champion |
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| [[Euroleague]] <br>[[FIBA European Champions Cup 1981-82|Last 8]] |
| [[Euroleague]] <br>[[FIBA European Champions Cup 1981-82|Last 8]] |
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| '''1982-83''' |
| '''1982-83''' |
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| bgcolor= gold| Champion |
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| [[Euroleague]] <br>[[FIBA European Champions Cup 1982-83|Last 4]] |
| [[Euroleague]] <br>[[FIBA European Champions Cup 1982-83|Last 4]] |
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Revision as of 06:13, 6 March 2010
CSKA Moscow | |||
---|---|---|---|
CSKA Moscow logo | |||
Nickname | Red Army Horses Red-Blue | ||
Leagues | Russian Super League Euroleague VTB United League | ||
Founded | 1924 | ||
History | 1924 - Present | ||
Arena | CSKA Universal Sports Hall (capacity: 5,500) | ||
Location | Moscow, Russia | ||
Team colors | Red and Blue | ||
President | Andrey Vatutin | ||
Head coach | Evgeniy Pashutin | ||
Championships | 6 Euroleague Championships 1 Triple Crown 24 Soviet Championships 16 Russian Championships 3 Russian Cups 3 Soviet Cups 1 North European Championship 2 United Championships | ||
Website | cskabasket.com | ||
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PBC CSKA Moscow is a Russian professional basketball team that is based in Moscow, Russia. The club is a member of the VTB United League. It is often referred to as "Red Army" for its past affiliation with the Soviet Army. CSKA has won two of the last four titles in Europe's principal club competition, the Euroleague, making the final in all four seasons. In 2006, they defeated two-time defending champions Maccabi Tel Aviv 73–69 in the final at Sazka Arena in Prague.
CSKA lost in the 2007 final 93–91 to Panathinaikos on the Greens' home floor, the Olympic Indoor Hall in Athens. In 2008, they won a rematch of the 2006 final against Maccabi 91-77 in Madrid. In 2009, they lost a rematch of the 2007 final against Panathinaikos 73-71 in Berlin. The club has competed in 7 consecutive Euroleague Final Fours, which is an all-time record.
Well-known players that have played with the club over the years include: Andrei Kirilenko, Darius Songaila, Gordan Giriček, Alexander Volkov, Sergei Belov, Vladimir Tkachenko, Marcus Brown, and Theo Papaloukas.
History
CSKA has had a long history of success. They won the European Cup in 1961, 1963, 1969 and 1971; won the Soviet Championship 24 times; and won the Russian League title every year from 1992 through 2000 and 2003 through 2009. CSKA also made the Final Four of the Euroleague in 1996, 2004, and 2005, before winning the Euroleague in 2006.
The team became the first in the history of the Euroleague to go through the regular-season phase undefeated during the Euroleague 2004-05 season, and before the final four it had only lost to one team: FC Barcelona. Though CSKA eventually lost in the semifinals on their home court to Spanish League club TAU Cerámica and to Panathinaikos of the Greek League in the 3rd-place game. That sent them to the 2nd grade teams in the Euroleague draw, although they finished the league with the best record. That same year they also lost a game in the finals series of the Russian League, but they eventually got the Russian League crown.
In 2006, CSKA qualified for the Euroleague 2005-06 Top 16 by finishing third in their group. They finished at the top of their Top 16 group, being denied a perfect record at TAU in their final match. CSKA entered the Final Four on a roll as the only club to sweep their best-of-three quarterfinal series defeating Turkish League power Efes Pilsen. They defeated Barça in the Euroleague semis before defeating the high-powered offense of Maccabi Tel-Aviv of the Israeli League in the final on April 30, even though the overall record of Maccabi's games with CSKA Moscow favors the Israeli club.
The following year, they nearly repeated as Euroleague champions, but wound up facing Panathinaikos in the final, on the Greek team's home floor, OAKA Indoor Hall, which had been designated more than a year earlier as the site for that year's Final Four. Panathinaikos won a closely-fought battle.
In 2008, their Euroleague win put them in sole possession of second place for overall European titles. Only Real Madrid, with eight titles (all in the European Champions Cup era), have won more than CSKA's six. On October 14, 2008, the team played a NBA preseason game with the Toronto Raptors at Air Canada Centre in Toronto.
Trophies and honors
- USSR Championships: 24
- 1945, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1988, 1990
- Russian Championships: 16
- 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009
- USSR Cups: 3
- 1972, 1973, 1982
- Russian Cups: 3
- 2005, 2006, 2007
- Euroleague Championships: 6
- 1961, 1963, 1969, 1971, 2006, 2008
- Euroleague Finals: 11
- 1961, 1963, 1965, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1973, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009
- Triple Crowns: 1
- 2006
- Euroleague Final Fours: 9
- 1996, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009
- North European Championships: 1
- 2000
- United Championships: 2
- 2008 (Promo-Cup), 2010