ABA League Second Division

ABA League Second Division
ABA2 League Vertical logo
FoundedJuly 2017 (2017-07)
First season2017–18
Country
ConfederationFIBA Europe
Number of teams16
Level on pyramid2nd
Promotion toABA League First Division
SupercupABA Supercup
International cup(s)Champions League
Current champions Bosna Visit Sarajevo (1st title)
(2024–25)
Most championships Krka (2 titles)
TV partnersArena Sport
Websitedruga.aba-liga.com
2024–25 season

The ABA League Second Division, also ABA League 2, is the 2nd-tier men's basketball division of the ABA League system. It is run by the ABA League JTD. It is a regional competition between men's professional clubs from six countries: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia, and Slovenia.

History

The ABA League Assembly, held on 24 July 2017, in Belgrade, Serbia, decided to organize the ABA League Second Division with 12 participants. Based on the results in the national championships and by taking into account which clubs have sent applications for participation in the ABA League Second Division, these teams will play in the inaugural season of the ABA League Second Division.[1]

Teams from Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia, and Slovenia previously played similar second-tier competition called First B Federal League when they were part of SFR Yugoslavia. The First B Federal League was played for 11 seasons from 1980 to 1991.

On 12 March 2020, the ABA League Assembly temporarily suspended the 2019–20 season due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[2] On 27 May 2020, the ABA League Assembly canceled definitely the season due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[3] On 29 June 2020, the Assembly decided to extend the number of clubs from 12 to 14 until the 2024–25 season.[4] Further on 15 July 2024 Assembly changed competition format to number 16 teams divided into 4 groups of 4 teams each. [5]

Seasons

Season Champion Runner-up Top seed Champion's Coach Finals MVP
Krka Sixt Primorska Borac Čačak Simon Petrov Marko Jošilo
Sixt Primorska MZT Skopje Sixt Primorska Goran Jagodnik Marko Jagodić-Kuridža
Canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic Borac Čačak None Not awarded
Studentski centar Spars Studentski centar Nenad Trajković Marko Tejić
Zlatibor MZT Skopje MZT Skopje Strajin Nedović Dušan Kutlešić
Krka Helios Suns Helios Suns Jure Balažič Mate Vucić
Spartak Office Shoes Vojvodina MTS Spartak Office Shoes Vlada Jovanović Filip Barna
Bosna Visit Sarajevo Ilirija None Aleksandar Damjanović Jarrod West

First Division promotion and relegation

The champions of the Second Division are promoted to a following Adriatic League First Division season, while the last-placed team in the First Division are relegated to a following season of the Second Division.[1] Also, as of the 2018–19 season, the 11th placed team of the ABA League First Division and the 2nd placed team of the Second Division, will play in the Qualifiers for a spot in the First Division for the following season.[6]

Season Promotion to First Division Relegation from First Division
2016–17 None Krka (14)
2017–18 Krka (1) MZT Skopje Aerodrom (12)
2018–19 Primorska (1) Petrol Olimpija[Note 1] (12)
2019–20 Borac Čačak; Split[Note 2] None
2020–21 Studentski centar (1) Koper Primorska[Note 3]
2021–22 MZT Skopje Aerodrom (Finalist) Krka (14)
2022–23 Krka (Champion) MZT Skopje Aerodrom (14)
2023–24 Spartak Office Shoes (Champion) None
2024–25 Bosna Visit Sarajevo (Champion); Ilirija (Runner-up) Cibona (15); Mornar Barsko zlato (16)

Current clubs

Team Home city Arena Capacity
Borac Banja Luka Borik Sports Hall 3,060
Bosna Sarajevo Mirza Delibašić Hall 6,500
Cedevita Junior Zagreb Dom Sportova 3,100
Helios Suns Domžale Komunalni center Hall 2,500
Ilirija Ljubljana Tivoli Hall 4,500
MZT Skopje Aerodrom Skopje Jane Sandanski 7,500
Pelister Bitola Sports Hall Boro Čurlevski 5,000
Podgorica Podgorica Bemax Arena 2,000
Rabotnički Šenčur Gradski Park 1,400
Šibenka Šibenik Baldekin Sports Hall 900
Široki Široki Brijeg Pecara Sports Hall 4,500
Sutjeska Nikšić Nikšić Sports Center 3,000
Teodo Tivat Dvorana Župa Tivat 1,500
Vojvodina Novi Sad SPC Vojvodina 7,022
Joker Sombor Mostonga Hall 1,000
Zlatibor Čajetina Čajetina Sports Hall 500

All-time participants

The following is a list of clubs that have played in the Second Division, at any time, since its formation in 2017, to the current season.

Key

1D Played in the First Division
Cn. Canceled season
LR Lose right to compete in the next season
Defunct Defunct teams
1st Champions
2nd Runners-up
SF Semni-finalists
Bold Teams playing in the 2024–25 season
R Regular season winners

List of participants

Note: Statistics are correct through the end of the 2024–25 season.

The 2019–20 season was canceled due to COVID-19 pandemic in Europe.

Team 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 Total
seasons
Highest
finish
Borac Banja Luka QF SF QF 9th 12th 5 Semi-finals
Bosna 11th 1st 2 Champions
Sloboda Tuzla Cn. 1
Spars SF Cn. 2nd QF 12th 5 Runners-up
Široki Cn. 9th SF SF QF QF 6 Semi-finals
Zrinjski 7th 9th 2 7th
Cedevita Junior 12th QF 2 Quarter-finals
Gorica 10th 13th 2 10th
Šibenka 13th 15th 2 13th
Split 8th 8th Cn. 1D 3 8th
Vrijednosnice Osijek 14th 14th 2 14th
Lovćen 1947 6th 7th Cn. 12th 13th 5 6th
Podgorica SF 10th SF SF QF 5 Semi-finals
Studentski centar 1stR 1D 1 Champions
Sutjeska 6th Cn. 13th QF QF QF 11th 7 6th
Teodo 9th 13th 2 9th
AV Ohrid 12th LR Defunct 1 12th
MZT Skopje 1D 2nd Cn. QF 2ndR 1D SF 10th 6 Runners-up
Pelister 11th QF 10th 14th 4 Quarter-finals
Rabotnički 11th 16th 2 11th
TFT Skopje 11th 14th 2 11th
Borac Čačak SFR SF Cn. 1D 3 Semi-finals
Dynamic 10th 5th Cn. 3 5th
Joker 9th 1 9th
Mladost Zemun SF QF 2 Semi-finals
Novi Pazar Cn. 1
Sloboda Užice QF 1 Quarter-finals
Sloga Kraljevo 9th 1 9th
Spartak Subotica 1st R 1D 1 Champions
Vojvodina 9th 2nd SF 3 Runners-up
Vršac SF 12th LR 2 Semi-finals
Zlatibor QF 1st QF QF SF 5 Champions
Helios Suns 11th Cn. 14th QF 2ndR QF QF 7 Runners-up
Ilirija 2nd 1 Runners-up
Krka 1st 1D 1st 1D 2 Champions
Primorska 2nd 1stR 1D Defunct 2 Champions
Rogaška 5th 10th Cn. 12th 4 5th
Šenčur 10th 11th 2 10th

See also

Notes

  1. ^
    Olimpija Ljubljana and Cedevita Zagreb made a merger and established a new club based in Ljubljana in July 2019 under the name Cedevita Olimpija.[7]
  2. ^
    Borac Čačak and Split were awarded with wild cards to participate in the 2020–21 ABA League First Division.[3]
  3. ^
    Koper Primorska was disqualified from the ABA League in December 2020 after failing to play two consecutive games due to financial problems.[8] Later that month, the club also withdrew from the Slovenian League and was disbanded.[9][10]

References

  1. ^ a b "The ABA League Second Division will start from the 2017/18 season". aba-liga.com. 24 July 2017. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  2. ^ "ABA competitions suspended". aba-liga.com. Retrieved 2 April 2020.
  3. ^ a b "Conclusions of the ABA League j.t.d. Assembly". aba-liga.com. Retrieved 28 May 2020.
  4. ^ "29 June 2020 - Conclusions of the ABA League j.t.d. Assembly". druga.aba-liga.com. Retrieved 29 June 2020.
  5. ^ "First Phase Groups have been drawn". druga.aba-liga.com. Retrieved 4 September 2024.
  6. ^ "Important decisions confirmed at the ABA League j.t.d. Assembly Session". aba-liga.com. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  7. ^ "Rimac trener Cedevite Olimpije, prva okrepitev Edo Murić". rtvslo.si. Retrieved 13 July 2019.
  8. ^ Maver, Rok (17 December 2020). "Koper Primorska izključena iz lige Aba". Primorske novice (in Slovenian). Retrieved 21 December 2020.
  9. ^ S. J. (23 December 2020). "Koper izstopil tudi iz domačih tekmovanj" (in Slovenian). RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 23 December 2020.
  10. ^ Jamnik, Tilen (25 December 2020). "Žakelj ob koncu Primorske: Na tak način ni moglo več iti" (in Slovenian). RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 25 December 2020.