EuroLeague Finals

The EuroLeague Finals are the championship finals of the EuroLeague competition. The EuroLeague is the highest level tier, and most important professional club basketball competition in Europe.

Real Madrid have won the European championship on 11 occasions, more than any other club, with its most recent victory in 2023.[1] Fenerbahce of Istanbul is the current holder of the Euroleague championship of 2024-2025.

Title holders

EuroLeague Finals

For finals not played in a single game, an * precedes the score of the team playing at home.

Season Host city Champion Runner-up 1st game / Final 2nd game 3rd game 4th game 5th game
1958
Details
Riga & Sofia Rīgas ASK Academic *86–81 84–*71
1958–59
Details
Riga & Sofia Rīgas ASK Academic *79–58 69–*67
1959–60
Details
Tbilisi & Riga Rīgas ASK Dinamo Tbilisi 61–*51 *69–62
1960–61
Details
Moscow & Riga CSKA Moscow Rīgas ASK *61–66 87–*62
1961–62
Details
Geneva Dinamo Tbilisi Real Madrid 90–83
1962–63
Details
Madrid & Moscow CSKA Moscow Real Madrid 69–*86 *91–74 *99–80
1963–64
Details
Brno & Madrid Real Madrid Spartak ZJŠ Brno 99–*110 *84–64
1964–65
Details
Moscow & Madrid Real Madrid CSKA Moscow 81–*88 *76–62
1965–66
Details
Bologna Simmenthal Milano Slavia VŠ Praha 77–72
1966–67
Details
Madrid Real Madrid Simmenthal Milano 91–83
1967–68
Details
Lyon Real Madrid Spartak ZJŠ Brno 98–95
1968–69
Details
Barcelona CSKA Moscow Real Madrid 103–99 (2OT)
1969–70
Details
Sarajevo Ignis Varese CSKA Moscow 79–74
1970–71
Details
Antwerp CSKA Moscow Ignis Varese 67–53
1971–72
Details
Tel Aviv Ignis Varese Jugoplastika 70–69
1972–73
Details
Liège Ignis Varese CSKA Moscow 71–66
1973–74
Details
Nantes Real Madrid Ignis Varese 84–82
1974–75
Details
Antwerp Ignis Varese Real Madrid 79–66
1975–76
Details
Geneva Mobilgirgi Varese Real Madrid 81–74
1976–77
Details
Belgrade Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv Mobilgirgi Varese 78–77
1977–78
Details
Munich Real Madrid Mobilgirgi Varese 75–67
1978–79
Details
Grenoble Bosna Emerson Varese 96–93
1979–80
Details
West Berlin Real Madrid Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv 89–85
1980–81
Details
Strasbourg Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv Sinudyne Bologna 80–79
1981–82
Details
Cologne Squibb Cantù Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv 86–80
1982–83
Details
Grenoble Ford Cantù Billy Milano 69–68
1983–84
Details
Geneva Banco di Roma FC Barcelona 79–73
1984–85
Details
Piraeus Cibona Real Madrid 87–78
1985–86
Details
Budapest Cibona Žalgiris 94–82
1986–87
Details
Lausanne Tracer Milano Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv 71–69
1987–88
Details
Ghent Tracer Milano Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv 90–84
1988–89
Details
Munich Jugoplastika Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv 75–69
1989–90
Details
Zaragoza Jugoplastika FC Barcelona Banca Catalana 72–67
1990–91
Details
Paris POP 84 FC Barcelona Banca Catalana 70–65
1991–92
Details
Istanbul Partizan Montigalà Joventut 71–70
1992–93
Details
Piraeus Limoges CSP Benetton Treviso 59–55
1993–94
Details
Tel Aviv 7up Joventut Olympiacos 59–57
1994–95
Details
Zaragoza Real Madrid Teka Olympiacos 73–61
1995–96
Details
Paris Panathinaikos FC Barcelona Banca Catalana 67–66
1996–97
Details
Rome Olympiacos FC Barcelona Banca Catalana 73–58
1997–98
Details
Barcelona Kinder Bologna AEK 58–44
1998–99
Details
Munich Žalgiris Kinder Bologna 82–74
1999–00
Details
Thessaloniki Panathinaikos Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv 73–67
2000–01 *
Details
2000–01 *
Details
Paris Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv Panathinaikos 81–67
Bologna & Vitoria Kinder Bologna Tau Cerámica *68–85 *94–73 80–*60 79–*96 *82–74
2001–02
Details
Bologna Panathinaikos Kinder Bologna 89–83
2002–03
Details
Barcelona FC Barcelona Benetton Treviso 76–65
2003–04
Details
Tel Aviv Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv Skipper Bologna 118–74
2004–05
Details
Moscow Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv Tau Cerámica 90–78
2005–06
Details
Prague CSKA Moscow Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv 73–69
2006–07
Details
Athens Panathinaikos CSKA Moscow 93–91
2007–08
Details
Madrid CSKA Moscow Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv 91–77
2008–09
Details
Berlin Panathinaikos CSKA Moscow 73–71
2009–10
Details
Paris Regal FC Barcelona Olympiacos 86–68
2010–11
Details
Barcelona Panathinaikos Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv 78–70
2011–12
Details
Istanbul Olympiacos CSKA Moscow 62–61
2012–13
Details
London Olympiacos Real Madrid 100–88
2013–14
Details
Milan Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv Real Madrid 98–86 (OT)
2014–15
Details
Madrid Real Madrid Olympiacos 78–59
2015–16
Details
Berlin CSKA Moscow Fenerbahçe 101–96 (OT)
2016–17
Details
Istanbul Fenerbahçe Olympiacos 80–64
2017–18
Details
Belgrade Real Madrid Fenerbahçe Doğuş 85–80
2018–19
Details
Vitoria-Gasteiz CSKA Moscow Anadolu Efes 91–83
2019–20 Cologne
Cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
2020–21
Details
Cologne Anadolu Efes FC Barcelona 86–81
2021–22
Details
Belgrade Anadolu Efes Real Madrid 58–57
2022–23
Details
Kaunas Real Madrid Olympiacos 79–78
2023–24
Details
Berlin Panathinaikos Real Madrid 95–80
2024–25
Details
Abu Dhabi Fenerbahçe Beko Monaco 81–70

* 2001 was a transition year, with the best European teams split into two major leagues, (SuproLeague, held by FIBA Europe, and Euroleague, held by Euroleague Basketball).

Titles by club

Rank Club Titles Runner-up Champion years
1 Real Madrid 11 10 1963–64, 1964–65, 1966–67, 1967–68, 1973–74, 1977–78, 1979–80, 1994–95, 2014–15, 2017–18, 2022–23
2 CSKA Moscow 8 6 1960–61, 1962–63, 1968–69, 1970–71, 2005–06, 2007–08, 2015–16, 2018–19
3 Panathinaikos 7 1 1995–96, 1999–00, 2001–02, 2006–07, 2008–09, 2010–11, 2023–24
4 Maccabi Tel Aviv 6 9 1976–77, 1980–81, 2000–01, 2003–04, 2004–05, 2013–14
5 Varese 5 5 1969–70, 1971–72, 1972–73, 1974–75, 1975–76
6 Olympiacos 3 6 1996–97, 2011–12, 2012–13
7 Olimpia Milano 3 2 1965–66, 1986–87, 1987–88
8 Rīgas ASK 3 1 1958, 1958–59, 1959–60
Split 3 1 1988–89, 1989–90, 1990–91
10 FC Barcelona 2 6 2002–03, 2009–10
11 Virtus Bologna 2 3 1997–98, 2000–01
12 Fenerbahçe 2 2 2016–17, 2024–25
13 Anadolu Efes 2 1 2020–21, 2021–22
14 Cantù 2 1981–82, 1982–83
Cibona 2 1984–85, 1985–86
16 Dinamo Tbilisi 1 1 1961–62
Joventut Badalona 1 1 1993–94
Žalgiris 1 1 1998–99
19 Bosna 1 1978–79
Virtus Roma 1 1983–84
Partizan 1 1991–92
Limoges CSP 1 1992–93
23 Academic 2
Brno 2
Treviso 2
Baskonia 2
27 USK Praha 1
AEK 1
Fortitudo Bologna 1
Monaco 1

Titles by national domestic league

Rank Country League Titles Runners-up
1 Spain LEB Primera División / Liga ACB 14 19
2 Italy Lega Basket Serie A 13 13
3 Greece Greek Basket League 10 8
4 Soviet Union USSR Premier Basketball League 8 6
5 Yugoslavia Yugoslav First Federal Basketball League 7 1
6 Israel Israeli Basketball Premier League 6 9
7 Russia Russian Professional Basketball Championship 4 3
Turkey Turkish Basketball Super League 4 3
9 France LNB Pro A 1 1
10 Lithuania Lithuanian Basketball League 1 0
11 Czechoslovakia Czechoslovak Basketball League 0 3
12 Bulgaria National Basketball League 0 2
Total 66 66

Notes

a 2001 was a transition year, with the best European teams split into two major leagues, SuproLeague, held by FIBA Europe and EuroLeague, held by Euroleague Basketball. The finals series of the latter:
Season Home team Score Away team Venue Location
2000–01
Details
Kinder Bologna 65–78 Tau Cerámica PalaMalaguti Bologna, Italy
Kinder Bologna 94–73 Tau Cerámica PalaMalaguti Bologna, Italy
Tau Cerámica 60–80 Kinder Bologna Fernando Buesa Arena Vitoria, Spain
Tau Cerámica 96–79 Kinder Bologna Fernando Buesa Arena Vitoria, Spain
Kinder Bologna 82–74 Tau Cerámica PalaMalaguti Bologna, Italy
Kinder Bologna won 3–2

EuroLeague Finals Top Scorers, MVPs, and Champion coaches (1958 to present)

From 1958 to 1987, the Top Scorer of the EuroLeague Finals was noted, regardless of whether he played on the winning or losing team. However, there was no actual MVP award given.[2] On the other hand, since the end of the 1987–88 season, when the first modern era EuroLeague Final Four was held, an MVP is named at the conclusion of each Final Four, at the end of the EuroLeague Final.

Bronze
Member of the FIBA Hall of Fame.
Silver
Member of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.
Gold
Member of both the FIBA Hall of Fame and the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.
(X)
Denotes the number of times the player has been the Top Scorer, has won the MVP award, or the coach has won the championship.
Season Top Scorer Team Points Scored MVP Team Champion Coach
Jānis Krūmiņš Rīgas ASK
22.5 average
(2 games)
Alexander Gomelsky
Jānis Krūmiņš (2×) Rīgas ASK
28.0 average
(2 games)
Alexander Gomelsky (2×)
Jānis Krūmiņš (3×) Rīgas ASK
21.5 average
(2 games)
Alexander Gomelsky (3×)
Viktor Zubkov CSKA Moscow
21.5 average
(2 games)
Evgeny Alekseev
Wayne Hightower Real Madrid
30
Otar Korkia
Emiliano Rodríguez Real Madrid
21.0 average
(3 games)
Evgeny Alekseev (2×)
Emiliano Rodríguez (2×) Real Madrid
29.5 average
(2 games)
Joaquín Hernández
Clifford Luyk Real Madrid
24.0 average
(2 games)
Pedro Ferrándiz
Jiří Zídek Sr. Slavia VŠ Praha
22
Cesare Rubini
Steve Chubin Simmenthal Milano
34
Pedro Ferrándiz (2×)
Miles Aiken Real Madrid
26
Pedro Ferrándiz (3×)
Vladimir Andreev CSKA Moscow
37
Armenak Alachachian
Sergey Belov CSKA Moscow
21
Aca Nikolić
Sergey Belov (2×) CSKA Moscow
24
Alexander Gomelsky (4×)
Petar Skansi Jugoplastika
26
Aca Nikolić (2×)
Sergey Belov (3×) CSKA Moscow
36
Aca Nikolić (3×)
Dino Meneghin Ignis Varese
25
Pedro Ferrándiz (4×)
Bob Morse Ignis Varese
30
Sandro Gamba
Bob Morse (2×) Mobilgirgi Varese
28
Sandro Gamba (2×)
Jim Boatwright Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv
26
Ralph Klein
Walter Szczerbiak Sr. Real Madrid
25
Lolo Sainz
Žarko Varajić Bosna
47
Bogdan Tanjević
Earl Williams Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv
31
Lolo Sainz (2×)
Marco Bonamico Sinudyne Bologna
26
Rudy D'Amico
Bruce Flowers Squibb Cantù
23
Valerio Bianchini
Antonello Riva Ford Cantù
20
Giancarlo Primo
J.A. San Epifanio "Epi" FC Barcelona
31
Valerio Bianchini (2×)
Dražen Petrović Cibona
36
Mirko Novosel
Arvydas Sabonis Žalgiris
27
Željko Pavličević
Lee Johnson Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv
24
Dan Peterson
Bob McAdoo Tracer Milano
25
Bob McAdoo Tracer Milano Franco Casalini
Doron Jamchi Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv
25
Dino Rađa Jugoplastika Božidar Maljković
Toni Kukoč Jugoplastika
20
Toni Kukoč Jugoplastika Božidar Maljković (2×)
Zoran Savić POP 84
27
Toni Kukoč (2x) POP 84 Željko Pavličević (2×)
Sasha Danilović Partizan
25
Sasha Danilović Partizan Željko Obradović
Terry Teagle Benetton Treviso
19
Toni Kukoč (3×) Benetton Treviso Božidar Maljković (3×)
Ferran Martínez 7up Joventut
17
Žarko Paspalj Olympiacos Željko Obradović (2×)
Arvydas Sabonis (2×) Real Madrid Teka
23
Arvydas Sabonis Real Madrid Teka Željko Obradović (3×)
Artūras Karnišovas FC Barcelona Banca Catalana
23
Dominique Wilkins Panathinaikos Božidar Maljković (4×)
David Rivers Olympiacos
26
David Rivers Olympiacos Dušan Ivković
Antoine Rigaudeau Kinder Bologna
14
Zoran Savić Kinder Bologna Ettore Messina
Antoine Rigaudeau (2×) Kinder Bologna
27
Tyus Edney Žalgiris Jonas Kazlauskas
Nate Huffman Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv
26
Željko Rebrača Panathinaikos Željko Obradović (4×)
Dejan Bodiroga Panathinaikos
27
Ariel McDonald Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv Pini Gershon
Manu Ginóbili &
Elmer Bennett &
Victor Alexander
Kinder Bologna &
Tau Cerámica
15.4 average
(5 games)
Manu Ginóbili Kinder Bologna Ettore Messina (2×)
Manu Ginóbili (2×) Kinder Bologna
27
Dejan Bodiroga Panathinaikos Željko Obradović (5×)
Dejan Bodiroga (2×) FC Barcelona
20
Dejan Bodiroga (2×) FC Barcelona Svetislav Pešić
Anthony Parker &
Miloš Vujanić
Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv &
Skipper Bologna
21
Anthony Parker Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv Pini Gershon (2×)
Šarūnas Jasikevičius Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv
22
Šarūnas Jasikevičius Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv Pini Gershon (3×)
Will Solomon Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv
20
Theo Papaloukas CSKA Moscow Ettore Messina (3×)
Theo Papaloukas CSKA Moscow
23
Dimitris Diamantidis Panathinaikos Željko Obradović (6×)
Will Bynum Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv
23
Trajan Langdon CSKA Moscow Ettore Messina (4×)
J.R. Holden CSKA Moscow
14
Vassilis Spanoulis Panathinaikos Željko Obradović (7×)
Juan Carlos Navarro Regal FC Barcelona
21
Juan Carlos Navarro Regal FC Barcelona Xavi Pascual
Mike Batiste Panathinaikos
18
Dimitris Diamantidis (2×) Panathinaikos Željko Obradović (8×)
Kostas Papanikolaou Olympiacos
18
Vassilis Spanoulis (2×) Olympiacos Dušan Ivković (2×)
Vassilis Spanoulis Olympiacos
22
Vassilis Spanoulis (3×) Olympiacos Georgios Bartzokas
Tyrese Rice Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv
26
Tyrese Rice Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv David Blatt
Matt Lojeski Olympiacos
17
Andrés Nocioni Real Madrid Pablo Laso
Nando de Colo CSKA Moscow
22
Nando de Colo CSKA Moscow Dimitrios Itoudis
Nikola Kalinić &
Bogdan Bogdanović
Fenerbahçe
Fenerbahçe
17
Ekpe Udoh Fenerbahçe Željko Obradović (9×)
Nicolò Melli Fenerbahçe Doğuş
28
Luka Dončić Real Madrid Pablo Laso (2×)
Shane Larkin Anadolu Efes
29
Will Clyburn CSKA Moscow Dimitrios Itoudis (2×)
Cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
Vasilije Micić Anadolu Efes
25
Vasilije Micić Anadolu Efes Ergin Ataman
Vasilije Micić (2×) Anadolu Efes
23
Vasilije Micić (2×) Anadolu Efes Ergin Ataman (2×)
Aleksandar Vezenkov Olympiacos
29
Edy Tavares Real Madrid Chus Mateo
Kostas Sloukas Panathinaikos
24
Kostas Sloukas Panathinaikos Ergin Ataman (3×)
Nigel Hayes-Davis Fenerbahçe
23
Nigel Hayes-Davis Fenerbahçe Šarūnas Jasikevičius

* The 2000–01 season was a transition year, with the best European teams splitting into two different major leagues: The SuproLeague, held by FIBA Europe, and the EuroLeague, held by Euroleague Basketball.

Multiple EuroLeague Finals Top Scorers

Number Player
3 Jānis Krūmiņš
Sergey Belov
2 Emiliano Rodríguez
Bob Morse
Arvydas Sabonis
Antoine Rigaudeau
Manu Ginóbili
Dejan Bodiroga
Vasilije Micić

Multiple EuroLeague Finals MVP award winners

Number Player
3 Toni Kukoč
Vassilis Spanoulis
2 Dejan Bodiroga
Dimitris Diamantidis
Vasilije Micić

Head coaches with the most finals appearances and players with the most championships

Finals appearances by head coach

Head Coach Championships Won Finals Losses Years In Finals
(wins in bold)
Željko Obradović
9*
3*
1992, 1994, 1995, 2000, 2001 FIBA SuproLeague*, 2002, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2016, 2017, 2018
Ettore Messina
4*
5*
1998, 1999, 2001 Euroleague Basketball*, 2002, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009
Pedro Ferrándiz
4
3
1962, 1965, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1974, 1975
Alexander Gomelsky
4
2
1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1971, 1973
Božidar Maljković
4
1
1989, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1996
Aca Nikolić
3
2
1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1981
Pini Gershon
3*
2*
2000, 2001 FIBA SuproLeague*, 2004, 2005, 2006
Ergin Ataman
3
1
2019, 2021, 2022, 2024
Lolo Sainz
2
3
1976, 1978, 1980, 1985, 1992
Pablo Laso
2
3
2013, 2014, 2015, 2018, 2022
Sandro Gamba
2
2
1974, 1975, 1976, 1977
Evgeny Alekseev
2
1
1961, 1963, 1965
Valerio Bianchini
2
-
1982, 1984
Željko Pavličević
2
-
1986, 1991
Dušan Ivković
2
-
1997, 2012
Dimitrios Itoudis
2
-
2016, 2019
Ralph Klein
1
3
1977, 1980, 1982, 1988
Otar Korkia
1
1
1960, 1962
Joaquín Hernández
1
1
1963, 1964
Cesare Rubini
1
1
1966, 1967
Armenak Alachachian
1
1
1969, 1970
Dan Peterson
1
1
1983, 1987
Jonas Kazlauskas
1
1
1999, 2012
David Blatt
1
1
2011, 2014
Georgios Bartzokas
1
1
2013, 2023
Chus Mateo
1
1
2023, 2024
Šarūnas Jasikevičius
1
1
2021, 2025
Bogdan Tanjević
1
-
1979
Rudy D'Amico
1
-
1981
Giancarlo Primo
1
-
1983
Mirko Novosel
1
-
1985
Franco Casalini
1
-
1988
Svetislav Pešić
1
-
2003
Xavi Pascual
1
-
2010
Zvi Sherf
0
3
1987, 1989, 2008
Aito Garcia Reneses
0
3
1990, 1996, 1997
Giannis Ioannidis
0
3
1994, 1995, 1998
Bozhidar Takev
0
2
1958, 1959
Ivo Mrázek
0
2
1964, 1968
Duško Ivanović
0
2*
2001 Euroleague Basketball*, 2005
Ioannis Sfairopoulos
0
2
2015, 2017
Jaroslav Šíp
0
1
1966
Branko Radović
0
1
1972
Nico Messina
0
1
1978
Edoardo "Dodo" Rusconi
0
1
1979
Antoni Serra
0
1
1984
Vladas Garastas
0
1
1986
Petar Skansi
0
1
1993
Jasmin Repeša
0
1
2004
Panagiotis Giannakis
0
1
2010
Vassilis Spanoulis
0
1
2025

* The 2000–01 season was a transition year, with the best European teams splitting into two different major leagues: The SuproLeague, held by FIBA Europe, and the EuroLeague, held by Euroleague Basketball.

Players with the most championships

Player Championships Won[3] Finals Lost Years Won
Dino Meneghin
7
6
1970, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1976, 1987, 1988
Clifford Luyk
6
4
1964, 1965, 1967, 1968, 1974, 1978
Aldo Ossola
5
5
1970, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1976
Fragiskos Alvertis
5
1
1996, 2000, 2002, 2007, 2009
Ivan Bisson
4
4
1972, 1973, 1975, 1976
Kostas Sloukas
4
4
2012, 2013, 2017, 2024
Wayne Brabender
4
3
1968, 1974, 1978, 1980
Cristóbal Rodríguez
4
3
1967, 1968, 1974, 1978
Emiliano Rodríguez
4
3
1964, 1965, 1967, 1968
Lolo Sainz
4
3
1964, 1965, 1967, 1968
Carlos Sevillano
4
3
1964, 1965, 1967, 1968
Marino Zanatta
4
3
1972, 1973, 1975, 1976
Fausto Bargna
4
-
1982, 1983, 1987, 1988
Šarūnas Jasikevičius
4
-
2003, 2004, 2005, 2009
Kyle Hines
4
-
2012, 2013, 2016, 2019

Top scoring performances in EuroLeague Finals games

  • The top scoring performances in EuroLeague Finals games:
  1. Žarko Varajić (Bosna) 45 points vs. Emerson Varese (in 1978–79 Final)
  2. Vladimir Andreev (CSKA Moscow) 37 points vs. Real Madrid (in 1968–69 Final)
  3. Dražen Petrović (Cibona) 36 points vs. Real Madrid (in 1984–85 Final)
  4. Sergei Belov (CSKA Moscow) 36 points vs. Ignis Varese (in 1972–73 Final)
  5. Steve Chubin (Simmenthal Milano) 34 points vs. Real Madrid (in 1966–67 Final)
  6. Earl Williams (Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv) 31 points vs. Real Madrid (in 1979–80 Final)
  7. Emiliano Rodríguez (Real Madrid) 31 points vs. Spartak ZJŠ Brno (in first leg of 1963–64 Finals)
  8. Juan Antonio San Epifanio (FC Barcelona) 31 points vs. Banco di Roma (in 1983–84 Final)
  9. Wayne Hightower (Real Madrid) 30 points vs. Dinamo Tbilisi (in 1961–62 Final)
  10. Mirza Delibašić (Bosna) 30 points vs. Emerson Varese (in 1978–79 Final)
  11. Clifford Luyk (Real Madrid) 30 points vs. CSKA Moscow (in first leg of 1964–65 Finals)
  12. František Konvička (Spartak ZJŠ Brno) 30 points vs. Real Madrid (in first leg of 1963–64 Finals)

EuroLeague Finals attendance figures

Final Total attendance Average Attendance
(Number of Games)
FIBA Europe
(1958–2001)
1958
34,300
17,150
(2 Games)
1959
37,000
18,500
(2 Games)
1960
17,000
17,000
1961
23,000
11,500
(2 Games)
5,000
5,000
1963
45,000
15,000
(3 Games)
1964
16,400
8,200
(2 Games)
1965
20,000
10,000
(2 Games)
8,000
8,000
5,000
5,000
1968
8,000
8,000
1969
9,000
9,000
1970
6,500
6,500
1971
4,700
4,700
1972
9,444
9,444
1973
3,700
3,700
1974
5,000
5,000
1975
5,000
5,000
1976
7,000
7,000
6,000
6,000
1978
5,000
5,000
1979
12,000
12,000
1980
8,513
8,513
1981
7,400
7,400
8,000
8,000
12,000
12,000
10,000
10,000
14,500
14,500
12,500
12,500
10,500
10,500
9,000
9,000
12,000
12,000
11,000
11,000
13,500
13,500
12,000
12,000
8,500
8,500
8,000
8,000
11,000
11,000
12,500
12,500
12,500
12,500
11,900
11,900
9,000
9,000
8,500
8,500
13,200
13,200
Euroleague Basketball
(2001–present)
40,983
8,197
(5 Games)
8,278
8,278
16,670
16,670
10,000
10,000
13,607
13,607
16,805
16,805
18,363
18,363
13,480
13,480
13,238
13,238
14,768
14,768
15,768
15,768
15,550
15,550
15,169
15,169
11,843
11,843
12,987
12,987
12,250
12,250
15,671
15,671
16,967
16,967
13,420
13,420
Cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
Behind closed doors due to COVID-19 pandemic restrictions
15,000
15,000
11,066
11,066
13,578
13,578

Rosters of the EuroLeague Finalists

See also

References

  1. ^ Eternal Llull gives to Real Madrid its 11th EuroLeague title
  2. ^ "European club champions: 1958-2011". Euroleague.net. 2007-05-02. Retrieved 2012-03-06.
  3. ^ Milestones, Most EuroLeague Titles by Player