Austrian Basketball Bundesliga

Austrian Basketball Bundesliga
Founded1947 (1947)
First season1947–48
Folded2019 (2019)
Replaced byBasketball Superliga
CountryAustria
ConfederationFIBA Europe (Europe)
Number of teams10
Level on pyramid1
Domestic cup(s)Austrian Cup
SupercupAustrian Supercup
International cup(s)FIBA Europe Cup
Last championsKapfenberg Bulls (7th title)
(2018–19)
Most championshipsUBSC Wien (11 titles)
TV partnersSky Sport
2018–19 Austrian Basketball Bundesliga (last before name change)

The Austrian Basketball Bundesliga (in German: Österreichische Basketball Bundesliga) was the top men's professional basketball league in Austria.[1] Until the 2004–05 season, the league was known as the A-Liga (A-League) and then until the 2008–09 season it was called the Österreichische Basketball Bundesliga (ÖBL). From 2008 to 2019, it was named the Admiral Basketball League, after the league's main sponsor, Admiral Sportwetten.

In 2019, the competition was replaced by the Austrian Basketball Superliga.

Competition format

In the current season each team plays the other nine teams four times, creating a 36-game regular-season schedule. After that, the top six teams move on. The two semi-finals winners meet in a best-of-seven championship series.

Clubs

Club Place Arena Capacity
Allianz Swans Gmunden Gmunden Volksbank Arena 2,200
Kraftwerk Wels Wels Raiffeisen Arena 1,700
Raiffeisen Panthers Fürstenfeld Fürstenfeld Stadthalle Fürstenfeld 1,200
Arkadia Traiskirchen Lions Traiskirchen Lions Dome 1,200
Kapfenberg Bulls Kapfenberg Sporthalle Walfersam 1,000
Zepter Vienna Wien Admiral Dome 1,500
Unger Steel Oberwart Gunners Oberwart Sporthalle Oberwart 1,700
Xion Dukes Klosterneuburg Klosterneuburg Happyland Klosterneuburg 1,000
Raiffeisen Graz Graz Raiffeisen Sportpark Graz 3,000

Title holders

Finals

Season Champion Result Runners-up Champions' coach Finals MVP
2000–01 Kapfenberg Bulls 3–2 Wörthersee Piraten
2001–02 Kapfenberg Bulls 3–2 Panthers Fürstenfeld
2002–03 Kapfenberg Bulls 3–2 Swans Gmunden
2003–04 Kapfenberg Bulls 3–1 Swans Gmunden
2004–05 Swans Gmunden 3–0 Oberwart Gunners Bob Gonnen
2005–06 Swans Gmunden 3–0 Kraftwerk Wels Bob Gonnen Peter Hütter
2006–07 Swans Gmunden 3–0 Oberwart Gunners Bob Gonnen De'Teri Mayes
2007–08 Panthers Fürstenfeld 3–2 Oberwart Gunners Aaron Mitchell Anthony Shavies
2008–09 Kraftwerk Wels 3–1 Swans Gmunden Raoul Korner Ricky Moore
2009–10 Swans Gmunden 3–2 Panthers Fürstenfeld Matthias Fischer De'Teri Mayes
2010–11 Oberwart Gunners 3–2 Swans Gmunden Neno Ašćerić Bernd Volcic
2011–12 Dukes Klosterneuburg 3–1 Swans Gmunden Werner Sallomon Christoph Nagler
2012–13 Zepter Vienna 3–2 Oberwart Gunners Andrea Maghelli Shawn Ray
2013–14 Güssing Knights
3–2
Kapfenberg Bulls Matthias Zollner Anthony Shavies
2014–15 Güssing Knights
3–1
Zepter Vienna Matthias Zollner Travis Taylor
2015–16 Redwell Oberwart Gunners
3–0
WBC Raiffeissen Wels Chris Chougaz Chris McNealy
2016–17 ece Bulls Kapfenberg
4–1
Redwell Oberwart Gunners Michael Schrittwieser Bogić Vujošević
2017–18 ece Bulls Kapfenberg
4–2
Swans Gmunden
2018–19 ece Bulls Kapfenberg
3–0
Swans Gmunden

Awards

All-Star Game

The ÖBL held an annual all-star game, pitting a team of the best Austrian players in the league against a team made up of the league's top international players. Like the NBA All-Star Game, the ÖBL All-Star festivities included a slam dunk contest and a three-point shooting competition.

References