Saski Baskonia

Baskonia
2016–17 Saski Baskonia season
Leagues Liga ACB
EuroLeague
Founded 1959
History Club Deportivo Vasconia
(1959–1976)
Club Deportivo Basconia
(1976–1987)
Saski-Baskonia S.A.D.
(1988–present)
Arena Fernando Buesa Arena
Arena Capacity 15,504
Location Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain
Team colors Red, Blue, White, Green
                   
President José Antonio Querejeta
Head coach Sito Alonso
Team captain Ádám Hanga
Championships 3 Spanish Championships
6 Spanish Cups
4 Spanish Supercups
1 Saporta Cup
Website baskonia.com
Uniforms
Home
Away
"Baskonia" redirects here. For the football team, see CD Basconia.

Club Deportivo Saski-Baskonia, S.A.D.,[1] commonly known as Saski Baskonia (pronounced [s̺as̺ki bas̺konia]) or simply as Baskonia, is a professional basketball team that is based in Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain. The team plays in the Liga ACB and the EuroLeague. It plays their home games at Fernando Buesa Arena.

History

The club was founded in 1959[2] as the basketball section of Club Deportivo Vasconia. It first played at Spain's highest level in 1971, and emerged as a major force in Spanish basketball in the 1990s. Most recently, Baskonia advanced to the EuroLeague Final Four in 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, and 2016, losing to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the 2005 final, and 2006 semifinals, to Panathinaikos in the 2007 semifinals, and to CSKA Moscow in the 2008 semifinals.

Through outstanding scouting and shrewd management, Baskonia has built a squad that has been to four straight EuroLeague Final Fours and now is looking to take the last step to becoming a EuroLeague champion. Baskonia's first trophy of any kind came in 1995, the Spanish King's Cup, when Pablo Laso and Velimir Perasović led the team to an historical win. The club was already making noise internationally too, reaching the Saporta Cup final in both 1994 and 1995.

When it hosted the same title game in 1996, Baskonia pleased its many fans by downing PAOK behind 31 points from Ramón Rivas. Baskonia made its first Spanish Championship playoff final in 1998 and added a second Spanish King's Cup title in 1999.

Fernando Buesa Arena (formerly known as Araba Arena), home of Baskonia since 1991

They then found quick success in the newly reborn EuroLeague. With a deep roster featuring Elmer Bennett, Saulius Štombergas, Victor Alexander, Fabricio Oberto and a young Luis Scola, Baskonia reached the 2001 Euroleague Finals, before losing to Kinder Bologna in the fifth and final game on the road. With winning momentum and the additions of Dejan Tomašević and Andrés Nocioni, Baskonia celebrated the next season with another Spanish King's Cup trophy and its first Spanish League title ever. Trophy lifting became a habit now. Baskonia snatched two more Spanish King's Cups, in 2004 and 2006, as Luis Scola and Pablo Prigioni played decisive roles, and success followed the team in the EuroLeague. Baskonia's arrival to its first EuroLeague Final Four in 2005 couldn’t have been louder, as the team upset favored host CSKA Moscow in the semifinals, but couldn’t overcome defending champ Maccabi in the title game.

Back home, Baskonia again reached the Spanish League finals, only to lose in dramatic fashion. Baskonia returned to the EuroLeague Final Four in 2006, but once again Maccabi stood in its way, this time in the semifinal. The team also made it to the Spanish League finals, but was swept there.

Fernando Buesa Arena at night

The next season, Baskonia won its EuroLeague regular season and Top 16 groups before sweeping Olympiacos in the Quarterfinal Playoffs, as Scola became the Euroleague Basketball's top all-time scorer at that time. Nonetheless, eventual champion Panathinaikos downed Baskonia in the semifinals and once home again in Spain, Baskonia lost in the playoff semifinals. Coming so close, but walking away without any trophies is sure to make Baskonia as hungry as ever going forward.

In 2016, Baskonia reached ten years later to the Final Four but was defeated in the overtime of the semifinals by Fenerbahçe.[3]

With a solid track record for building some of the most competitive teams in the world, it is safe to say that Baskonia is always a top candidate for EuroLeague greatness.

Well-known players who have played with the club have included Ramón Rivas, Marcelo Nicola, Joe Arlauckas, Velimir Perasović, Saulius Štombergas, Fabricio Oberto, Dejan Tomašević, José Calderón, Jorge Garbajosa, Arvydas Macijauskas, Andrés Nocioni, Pablo Prigioni, Igor Rakočević, Luis Scola, Goran Dragić, Tiago Splitter, Mirza Teletović, Zoran Planinić, Nemanja Bjelica, Thomas Heurtel, Fernando San Emeterio, and Ioannis Bourousis.

Sponsorship naming

Outside of Spain, the club was often referred to for years as TAU Cerámica, a Spanish brand name of ceramics manufacturer TAULELL, which name sponsored the club from 1987–2009. Originally, TAULELL used another of its brand names, Taugrés, as the name of the team, before changing the name to TAU Cerámica in 1997.[4] TAU, Taugrés and TAU Vitoria were also frequently used to refer to the team. Baskonia, Saski Baskonia, and Saski Baskonia, S.A.D. refer to the name of the actual sports club itself. In 2009, the Spanish credit union Caja Laboral became the new name sponsor of the club[5] and increased the amount of money that the name sponsor contributes to the sports club's budget. In 2016, Laboral Kutxa end its sponsorship naming to Baskonia.[6]

Baskonia has received diverse sponsorship names along the years:[7][8]

Players

Current roster

Baskonia roster
Players Coaches
Pos. # Nat. Name Ht. Wt. Age
F/C 1 Italy Bargnani, Andrea 2.13 m (7 ft 0 in) 111 kg (245 lb) 31 – (1985-10-26)26 October 1985
G 10 France Beaubois, Rodrigue 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in) 84 kg (185 lb) 28 – (1988-02-24)24 February 1988
G/F 11 Slovenia Blažič, Jaka 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) 96 kg (212 lb) 26 – (1990-06-30)30 June 1990
PF 22 Brazil Bordignon, Daniel  2.04 m (6 ft 8 in) 95 kg (209 lb) 20 – (1996-02-03)3 February 1996
SF 34 United States Budinger, Chase 2.01 m (6 ft 7 in) 98 kg (216 lb) 28 – (1988-05-22)22 May 1988
C 12 Spain Diop, Ilimane 2.11 m (6 ft 11 in) 104 kg (229 lb) 21 – (1995-04-04)4 April 1995
G/F 8 Hungary Hanga, Ádám (C) 2.01 m (6 ft 7 in) 93 kg (205 lb) 27 – (1989-04-12)12 April 1989
PG 0 United States Larkin, Shane 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in) 79 kg (174 lb) 24 – (1992-10-02)2 October 1992
PG 55 Brazil Luz, Rafael 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in) 92 kg (203 lb) 24 – (1992-02-11)11 February 1992
G/F 9 Lithuania Sedekerskis, Tadas 2.04 m (6 ft 8 in) 96 kg (212 lb) 18 – (1998-01-17)17 January 1998
F 23 Georgia (country) Shengelia, Tornike 2.06 m (6 ft 9 in) 109 kg (240 lb) 25 – (1991-10-05)5 October 1991
F/C 14 France Tillie, Kim 2.11 m (6 ft 11 in) 105 kg (231 lb) 28 – (1988-07-15)15 July 1988
C 7 Germany Voigtmann, Johannes 2.11 m (6 ft 11 in) 115 kg (254 lb) 24 – (1992-09-30)30 September 1992
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)
  • Spain Óscar Lata
  • Spain David Gil

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • Injured

Roster
Updated: 10 November 2016

Depth chart

Pos. Starting 5 Bench 1 Bench 2 Bench 3
C Andrea Bargnani Johannes Voigtmann Ilimane Diop
PF Tornike Shengelia Kim Tillie Daniel Bordignon
SF Ádám Hanga Chase Budinger Tadas Sedekerskis
SG Rodrigue Beaubois Jaka Blažič
PG Shane Larkin Rafael Luz

From the youth squad

Note: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationality not displayed.

No. Position Player
Latvia F Rinalds Mālmanis (on loan to Valmiera)
Slovenia F Jurij Macura
Serbia C Filip Petrušev
Latvia PG Artūrs Kurucs
Georgia (country) PG Luka Bulashvili (on loan to Ourense)
No. Position Player
Argentina PG Luca Vildoza (on loan to Quilmes)
Estonia F Sander Raieste
Georgia (country) PF Nika Darbaidze (on loan to UCAM Murcia B)
Czech Republic PG Ondřej Hanzlík

Head coaches

  • Spain Iñaki Iriarte 1981–1983
  • Spain Juan Antonio Ortiz de Pinedo 1983
  • Spain Txema Capetillo 1983–1984
  • Spain Xabier Añúa 1984–1985
  • Spain Pepe Laso 1985–1987
  • Spain Manu Moreno 1987–1989
  • Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Željko Pavličević 1989–1990
  • United States Herb Brown 1990–1992
  • Spain Iñaki Iriarte 1992–1993

Logos

Season by season

Season Tier Division Pos. Postseason RS PO Copa del Rey Other cups European competitions
1959 Foundation of Club Deportivo Vasconia
1959–60 4 Provincial 2
1960–61 4 Provincial 2
1961–62 4 Provincial 1
1962–63 4 Provincial 2
1963–64 4 Provincial 1
1964–65 4 Provincial 2
1965–66 4 Provincial 1
1966–67 4 Provincial 2
1967–68 4 Provincial 1
1968–69 4 Provincial 1 Promoted
1969–70 3 3ª División 1 Promoted
1970–71 2 2ª División 2 16–4 4–0
1971–72 2 2ª División 1 PromotedChampion 19–3 2–0
1972–73 1 1ª División 10 12–18 Semifinalist
1973–74 1 1ª División 8 12–16
1974–75 1 1ª División 8 8–14 Quarterfinalist
1975–76 1 1ª División 8 Relegation group 8–14 6–4
1976–77 1 1ª División 10 8–14 First Round
1977–78 1 1ª División 10 7–1–14 First Round
1978–79 1 1ª División 8 9–13 Semifinalist
1979–80 1 1ª División 11 5–2–15 Round of 16
1980–81 1 1ª División 14 Relegated 6–20 Round of 16
1981–82 2 1ª División B 2 Promoted 19–1–6
1982–83 1 1ª División 13 3–3–20 Round of 16
1983–84 1 Liga ACB 9 Round of 16 7–21 2–1 Round of 16
1984–85 1 Liga ACB 10 Round of 16 8–20 0–2 Copa Asociación C
1985–86 1 Liga ACB 9 Round of 16 16–12 0–2 Copa Príncipe QF 3 Korać Cup R2 0–1–1
1986–87 1 Liga ACB 8 Quarterfinalist 13–15 2–3 Copa Príncipe R16
1987–88 1 Liga ACB 8 Quarterfinalist 16–12 3–2 Copa Príncipe R16
1988 Converting in Saski-Baskonia S.A.D.
1988–89 1 Liga ACB 7 Quarterfinalist 21–15 0–2 Round of 16
1989–90 1 Liga ACB 7 Quarterfinalist 23–13 0–2 Quarterfinalist
1990–91 1 Liga ACB 4 Semifinalist 21–13 5–3 Quarterfinalist
1991–92 1 Liga ACB 4 Semifinalist 24–10 6–5 Quarterfinalist 3 Korać Cup QF 6–6
1992–93 1 Liga ACB 11 Round of 16 17–14 2–0 Third position 3 Korać Cup GS 6–4
1993–94 1 Liga ACB 11 Round of 16 16–12 1–3 Runner-up 2 European Cup RU 11–4
1994–95 1 Liga ACB 5 Quarterfinalist 23–15 1–2 Champion 2 European Cup RU 12–3
1995–96 1 Liga ACB 8 Quarterfinalist 21–17 1–2 2 European Cup C 13–1–3
1996–97 1 Liga ACB 5 Quarterfinalist 20–14 1–3 3 Korać Cup R16 8–2
1997–98 1 Liga ACB 2 Runner-up 27–7 7–3 Quarterfinalist 3 Korać Cup R32 5–3
1998–99 1 Liga ACB 5 Quarterfinalist 24–10 1–3 Champion 1 Euroleague GS 4–6
1999–00 1 Liga ACB 4 Semifinalist 21–13 4–5 Quarterfinalist 2 Saporta Cup R16 9–5
2000–01 1 Liga ACB 3 Semifinalist 27–7 5–4 Quarterfinalist 1 Euroleague RU 15–7
2001–02 1 Liga ACB 1 Champion 24–10 9–2 Champion 1 Euroleague T16 13–7
2002–03 1 Liga ACB 6 Quarterfinalist 18–16 2–3 Runner-up 1 Euroleague T16 11–9
2003–04 1 Liga ACB 3 Semifinalist 28–6 4–4 Champion 1 Euroleague T16 13–7
2004–05 1 Liga ACB 2 Runner-up 28–6 8–5 Semifinalist Supercopa 4th 1 Euroleague RU 13–11
2005–06 1 Liga ACB 2 Runner-up 25–9 6–4 Champion Supercopa C 1 Euroleague 3rd 18–7
2006–07 1 Liga ACB 3 Semifinalist 26–8 5–3 Semifinalist Supercopa C 1 Euroleague 4th 20–4
2007–08 1 Liga ACB 1 Champion 22–12 7–1 Runner-up Supercopa C 1 Euroleague 4th 16–9
2008–09 1 Liga ACB 2 Runner-up 28–4 5–4 Champion Supercopa C 1 Euroleague QF 14–7
2009–10 1 Liga ACB 1 Champion 27–7 8–2 Semifinalist Supercopa SF 1 Euroleague QF 11–9
2010–11 1 Liga ACB 4 Semifinalist 23–11 2–3 Semifinalist Supercopa SF 1 Euroleague QF 10–10
2011–12 1 Liga ACB 3 Semifinalist 23–11 4–3 Semifinalist Supercopa RU 1 Euroleague RS 5–5
2012–13 1 Liga ACB 5 Quarterfinalist 25–9 1–2 Semifinalist 1 Euroleague QF 13–15
2013–14 1 Liga ACB 6 Quarterfinalist 19–15 0–2 Quarterfinalist Supercopa SF 1 Euroleague T16 11–13
2014–15 1 Liga ACB 6 Quarterfinalist 19–15 1–2 Supercopa SF 1 Euroleague T16 11–13
2015–16 1 Liga ACB 4 Semifinalist 24–10 3–4 Semifinalist 1 Euroleague 4th 18–11
2016–17 1 Liga ACB Supercopa SF 1 EuroLeague

Honours

Domestic competitions

Spanish Championship

Spanish Cup

Spanish Supercup

Copa Asociación

2nd Division

Basque Cup

European competitions

EuroLeague

FIBA Saporta Cup

Individual awards

Notable players

To appear in this section a player must have either:

Matches against NBA teams

14 October 2010
Memphis Grizzlies United States 110105 Spain Caja Laboral
16 October 2010
San Antonio Spurs United States 10885 Spain Caja Laboral

Fundación 5+11

Fundación 5+11 is the reserve team of Baskonia. Formerly called Fundación Baskonia, its current name becomes from the agreement between the club and Deportivo Alavés, the main football club in Vitoria. It currently plays in Primera División, fifth tier of Spanish basketball.

In the 2000–01 season, it played in Liga EBA with Tiago Splitter as its most important player.

Season Tier Division Pos. Postseason RS PO
2000–01 4 Liga EBA 15 Relegated 9–21
2001–05 5 1ª División
2005–06 5 1ª División 13 20–10
2006–07 5 1ª División 3 20–6
2007–08 6 1ª División 6 13–15
2008–09 6 1ª División 4 20–8
2009–10 5 1ª División 15 15–13
2010–11 5 1ª División 7 16–12
2011–12 5 1ª División 7 13–15
2012–13 5 1ª División 16 Relegated 2–28
2013–14 5 1ª División 9 13–15
2014–15 5 1ª División 1 Promoted[9] 22–4
2015–16 5 1ª División 3 17–9 1–1

References and notes

  1. "Relación de SAD — Portal del Consejo Superior de Deportes" (in Spanish). Consejo Superior de Deportes. Retrieved 7 September 2016.
  2. "History – Baskonia Vitoria-Gasteiz". Euroleague Basketball. Retrieved 7 September 2016.
  3. "Bogdanovic's late heroics put Fenerbahce in final". Euroleague. 13 May 2016. Retrieved 28 September 2016.
  4. "Taulell S.A. y Saski Baskonia S.A.D. han decidido de mutuo acuerdo dar por terminada la relación de patrocinio del equipo de baloncesto TAU Cerámica" (in Spanish). baskonia.com. 23 July 2009. Retrieved 17 February 2012.
  5. "Caja Laboral, nuevo Patrocinador Principal del Baskonia" (in Spanish). baskonia.com. 24 July 2009. Retrieved 17 February 2012.
  6. "Laboral Kutxa and Saski Baskonia end their main sponsorhip agreement". baskonia.com. 6 September 2016. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  7. "Los patrocinadores del Baskonia a lo largo de la historia del club (1969-2016)" (in Spanish). baskonistas.com. 6 September 2016. Retrieved 7 September 2016.
  8. "De Embutidos Celedón a Laboral Kutxa" (in Spanish). elcorreo.com. 7 September 2016. Retrieved 7 September 2016.
  9. They could not promote to the league.

External links

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