Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

KK Cibona

Basketball club in Zagreb, Croatia

KK Cibona

Summary

Basketball club in Zagreb, Croatia

FieldValue
nameCibona
nicknameVukovi (The Wolves)
logoKK Cibona logo.png
imagesize200px
leaguesCroatian League
founded1946; 74 years ago
arenaDražen Petrović Basketball Hall
capacity5,400
locationZagreb, Croatia
colorsBlue and white
presidentBrian Lu
gmTomislav Šerić
coachIvan Rudež
captainKrešimir Radovčić
championships2 EuroLeague
2 Saporta Cup
1 FIBA Korać Cup
1 Adriatic League
20 Croatian League
9 Croatian Cups
3 Yugoslav League
8 Yugoslav Cups
website
h_body002FA7
h_pattern_b_basket_in_white
h_shortsFFFFFF
h_pattern_s_adidasblue
a_body002FA7
a_pattern_b_basket_with_white
a_shorts002FA7
a_pattern_s_adidaswhite
ret_nums4 (4, 10, 11, 20)

2 Saporta Cup 1 FIBA Korać Cup 1 Adriatic League 20 Croatian League 9 Croatian Cups 3 Yugoslav League 8 Yugoslav Cups

Košarkaški klub Cibona, commonly referred to as Cibona Zagreb or simply Cibona, is a men's professional basketball club based in Zagreb, Croatia. The club is a founding member and shareholder of the Adriatic Basketball Association, and competes in the Croatian League.

History

Formation and early years

Cibona's history dates to late autumn of 1945 when Sloboda (Freedom) was founded as a sports society of bank workers, craftsmen, traders, and clerks. On April 24, 1946, thanks to basketball enthusiast Branimir Volfer and his friends Ljubo Prosen and Joso Miloš, basketball section of Sloboda, the predecessor of today's Cibona, was formed. Its first game was against local rival Slavija on May 7, 1946. Sloboda did not last too long under that name as in November 1946, it merged with Tekstilac, Amater and Grafičar into Sportsko društvo Zagreb (Sports Society Zagreb). Name changing continued through the next four years. In late 1948 it was known as Vihor (Vortex) and already in 1949 as Polet (Elan). Finally, in June 1950, the club changed the name to Lokomotiva (Locomotive) and that name is going to stick for the next 25 years. Lokomotiva competed in Yugoslav top division since 1951, with only two years (1952 and 1960) spent in the second division.

Apollo Hall in Amsterdam between AMVJ and Lokomotiva from Yugoslavia (37-64) in 1955

First trophies

Lokomotiva's first major trophy came in 1969, when they won the Yugoslav Cup, led by legendary Hall of Famer Mirko Novosel. The final game against AŠK Olimpija was played in Lokomotiva's new basketball hall "Kutija šibica" (literally meaning Matchbox). Led by phenomenal trio Većeslav Kavedžija, Nikola Plećaš and Milivoj Omašić, Lokomotiva won the game 78:77.

Their first European trophy came in 1972 when Lokomotiva won the premier edition of FIBA Korać Cup. Their opponent in finals was OKK Beograd and the first game was played in Belgrade. OKK Beograd won the first game 83:71 but in a return match Lokomotiva, led by great Nikola Plećaš (nicknamed Sveti Nikola) who scored 40 points, trashed the Belgrade side by 94–73.

Cibona's glory years

Nakić, D. Petrović & Knego's jerseys hanging in the rafters of the Dražen Petrović Basketball Hall
[[Dražen Petrović Basketball Hall

In November 1975, the basketball club split away from the Lokomotiva sports society and came under the direct control of the municipal authorities of the city of Zagreb. Politicians such as Slavko Šajber became very influential in the club during this period and set about getting the club some financial support. In that regard, the club's main sponsors became four SR Croatia-based food industry giants (all of them state-owned at the time): Kraš, Franck, Badel and Voće. The club took the name Cibona, taken from the Latin cibus bonus, which translates to good food.

For the first trophy under the new name Cibona, they had to wait until 1980, when they won the Yugoslav Cup. The Final match was played in Borovo, and Cibona's opponent was mighty Bosna, led by Bogdan Tanjević on the bench, and Mirza Delibašić on the court. But Cibona, led by impressive Andro Knego, managed to beat them 68:62. This trophy marked the beginning of Cibona's golden era, influenced by two great basketball players and Hall of Famers – Krešimir Ćosić and Dražen Petrović. Between 1980 and 1988, Cibona won 14 major trophies: 3 Yugoslav League championships (1982, 1984, 1985), 7 Yugoslav Cups (1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1985, 1986, 1988), 2 FIBA European Champions Cups (1985, 1986), and 2 Cup Winners' Cups (1982, 1987).

At the beginning of the war in the Former Yugoslavia in 1991, the team was forced to emigrate in order to play their games, and in an area with the minimum guarantees required by FIBA. For this reason, the club played in Spain for two years (seasons 1991–92 and 1992–93), specifically in Puerto Real (Cádiz).

Croatian powerhouse

In independent Croatia, Cibona became a dominant force strongly backed both politically and economically. The crisis of traditionally powerful Dalmatian clubs Split, Zadar and Šibenik also came in hand and Cibona won 11 national titles in a row (from 1992 to 2002). They were also regular Euroleague participant, reaching quarterfinals in 1996/97 and 1999/00.

Cibona's dominance in the national championship was broken in 2003 when Split CO led by coach Petar Skansi, legendary Dino Rađa and revived talent Josip Sesar won the championship. Cibona regained the title next season but was beaten in finals by Zadar season after. In 2005–06 and 2006–07 Cibona won championships beating Zadar in the final series twice but then shockingly missed the final series in 2007/08 after Split eliminated them in semifinal series.

In 2001 regional basketball league called Adriatic League was formed and Cibona took part in it. After disappointing first and second season, Cibona hosted Final Four and reached the final game in 2003/04 but was defeated on the home court by FMP Reflex.

Recent seasons

Recent seasons have been a mixture of success and failure for Cibona.

In national championship, Cibona won four out of five recent league titles but this dominance is seriously put on test by the rise of large company backed Cedevita.

In European competitions, Cibona lost its Euroleague license for the 2011/12 season after competing in Euroleague since its formation. During 2011/12 and 2012/13 seasons Cibona competed in Eurocup but failed to win any game.

In regional ABA League Cibona had a great 2009/10 season. Cibona entered the Final four held in Arena Zagreb as a top-seeded team. After beating Union Olimpija in semifinals, Cibona faced Partizan in the final game. Partizan won the title thanks to an off-the-glass three-pointer by Dušan Kecman from half-court at the buzzer, bringing the celebration of Cibona players and staff (who already invaded the floor as Bojan Bogdanović scored a corner three-pointer for Cibona with just 0.6 seconds left on the clock) to an abrupt end. The final score was 75–74 and Cibona once again didn't manage to win a title at the home court. The next three seasons in the regional league were disappointing for Cibona, finishing 12th, 7th, and 11th.

In the 2013–14 season, under head coach Slaven Rimac, Cibona won the ABA League championship, despite huge financial problems the club was facing. As a champion of the league, Cibona had direct spot in the Euroleague, but withdrew from it in order to stabilize financially. Eventually, Crvena Zvezda, as third in the standings, took its spot in the Euroleague.

Honours

Total titles: 48

Domestic competitions

  • Croatian League : Winners (20): 1991–92, 1992–93, 1993–94, 1994–95, 1995–96, 1996–97, 1997–98, 1998–99, 1999–00, 2000–01, 2001–02, 2003–04, 2005–06, 2006–07, 2008–09, 2009–10, 2011–12, 2012–13, 2018–19, 2021–22 : Runners-up (7): 2002–03, 2004–05, 2013–14, 2014–15, 2015–16, 2016–17, 2017–18

  • Croatian Cup : Winners (9): 1994–95, 1995–96, 1998–99, 2000–01, 2001–02, 2008–09, 2012–13, 2021–22, 2022–23 : Runners-up (11): 1991–92, 1993–94, 1996–97, 1999–00, 2002–03, 2004–05, 2007–08, 2009–10, 2017–18, 2018–19, 2019–20

  • Yugoslav League (defunct) : Winners (3): 1981–82, 1983–84, 1984–85 : Runners-up (4): 1960–1961, 1970–71, 1980–81, 1985–86

  • Yugoslav Cup (defunct) : Winners (8): 1968–69, 1979–80, 1980–81, 1981–82, 1982–83, 1984–85, 1985–86, 1987–88 : Runners-up (2): 1971–72, 1990–91

  • Yugoslav Supercup (defunct) : Winners (1): 1984 : Runners-up (2): 1980, 1988

European competitions

Regional competitions

Worldwide competitions

  • FIBA Intercontinental Cup : 3rd place (3): 1985, 1986, 1987

Other competitions

  • FIBA International Christmas Tournament (defunct) : 3rd place (1): 1992
  • Charleroi, Belgium Invitational Game : Winners (1): 2008
  • Porec, Croatia Invitational Game : Winners (1): 2009
  • Zagreb, Croatia Invitational Game : Winners (1): 2009
  • Županja, Croatia Invitational Game : Winners (1): 2010
  • Drazen Petrovic Cup : Winners (2): 2012, 2013 : Runners-up (1): 2014
  • Rijeka Tournament : Winners (1): 2015

Individual club awards

  • Triple Crown : Winners (1): 1984–85
  • Small Triple Crown : Winners (1): 1981–82

Season by season record

The following table shows the records from the season 1990–91 in all competitions:

Cibona}}; "Season by seasonSeasonLeagueCupRegionalEurope
1990–91Yugoslav League
SemifinalsYugoslav Cup
Runners-upNo tournamentKorać Cup
Quarterfinals
1991–92Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
Runners-upNo tournamentEuroleague
Quarterfinals
1992–93Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
SemifinalsNo tournamentEuroleague
Top 16
1993–94Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
Runners-upNo tournamentEuroleague
Top 16
1994–95Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
ChampionsNo tournamentEuroleague
Quarterfinals
1995–96Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
ChampionsNo tournamentEuroleague
Top 16
1996–97Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
Runners-upNo tournamentEuroleague
Top 16
1997–98Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
SemifinalsNo tournamentEuroleague
Top 16
1998–99Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
ChampionsNo tournamentEuroleague
Top 16
1999–00Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
Runners-upNo tournamentEuroleague
Quarterfinals
2000–01Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
ChampionsNo tournamentEuroleague
Top 16
2001–02Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
ChampionsABA League
SemifinalsEuroleague
Group stage
2002–03Croatian League
Runners-upKrešimir Ćosić Cup
Runners-upABA League
5thEuroleague
Top 16
2003–04Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
SemifinalsABA League
Runners-upEuroleague
Top 16
2004–05Croatian League
Runners-upKrešimir Ćosić Cup
Runners-upABA League
QuarterfinalsEuroleague
Top 16
2005–06Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
SemifinalsABA League
QuarterfinalsEuroleague
Top 16
2006–07Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
SemifinalsABA League
SemifinalsEuroleague
Group stage
2007–08Croatian League
SemifinalsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
Runners-upABA League
QuarterfinalsEuroleague
Group stage
2008–09Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
ChampionsABA League
Runners-upEuroleague
Top 16
2009–10Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
Runners-upABA League
Runners-upEuroleague
Top 16
2010–11Croatian League
SemifinalsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
SemifinalsABA League
12thEuroleague
Group stage
2011–12Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
QuarterfinalsABA League
7thEurocup
Group Stage
2012–13Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
ChampionsABA League
11thEurocup
Group Stage
2013–14Croatian League
Runners-upKrešimir Ćosić Cup
SemifinalsABA League
ChampionsEurocup
Group Stage
2014–15Croatian League
Runners-upKrešimir Ćosić Cup
SemifinalsABA League
11thdid not participate
2015–16Croatian League
Runners-upKrešimir Ćosić Cup
SemifinalsABA League
8thFIBA Europe Cup
Quarter-finals
2016–17Croatian League
Runners-upKrešimir Ćosić Cup
SemifinalsABA League
7thFIBA Europe Cup
Quarter-finals
2017–18Croatian League
Runners-upKrešimir Ćosić Cup
Runners-upABA League
11thdid not participate
2018–19Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
Runners-upABA League
7thdid not participate
2019–20Croatian League
cancelledKrešimir Ćosić Cup
Runners-upABA League
cancelleddid not participate
2020–21Croatian League
SemifinalsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
SemifinalsABA League
9thdid not participate
2021–22Croatian League
ChampionsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
ChampionsABA League
8thdid not participate
2022–23Croatian League
SemifinalsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
ChampionsABA League
11thdid not participate
2023–24Croatian League
SemifinalsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
Runners-upABA League
12thdid not participate
2024–25Croatian League
SemifinalsKrešimir Ćosić Cup
SemifinalsABA League
15thdid not participate

Home arenas

  • Open basketball court in Kranjčevićeva street (1946–1947)
  • Open basketball court Tuškanac (1947–1969)
  • Kutija Šibica Sports Hall (1969–1987)
  • Dražen Petrović Basketball Hall (1987–present)

Players

Main article: Category:KK Cibona players

Current roster

Depth chart

Retired numbers

Nakić, D. Petrović & Knego's jerseys hanging in the rafters of the Dražen Petrović Basketball Hall
  • 4 – CRO Mihovil Nakić
  • 10 – CRO Dražen Petrović
  • 11 – CRO Andro Knego
  • 20 – CRO Marin Rozić

Players at the [[NBA draft]]

Cibona Zagreb}}"PositionCibona Zagreb}}"PlayerCibona Zagreb}}"YearCibona Zagreb}}"RoundCibona Zagreb}}"PickCibona Zagreb}}"Drafted by
SGYUG Dražen Petrović^x19863rd round60thPortland Trail Blazers
CYUG Franjo Arapović#19877th round159thAtlanta Hawks
SG/SFCRO Gordan Giriček19992nd round40thDallas Mavericks
SGCRO Josip Sesar#20002nd round47thPortland Trail Blazers
SGCRO Zoran Planinić20031st round22ndNew Jersey Nets
PFCRO Damir Markota20062nd round59thSan Antonio Spurs
SG/SFCRO Bojan Bogdanović20112nd round31stMiami Heat
PF/CCRO Tomislav Zubčić#20122nd round56thToronto Raptors
PFCRO Dario Šarić20141st round12thOrlando Magic
CCRO Ante Žižić20161st round23rdBoston Celtics

Notable players

  • BIH Jasmin Hukić
  • BIH Bariša Krasić
  • BIH Haris Mujezinović
  • CAN Jermaine Anderson
  • CRO Vladan Alanović
  • CRO Lukša Andrić
  • CRO Franjo Arapović
  • CRO Dalibor Bagarić
  • CRO Marino Baždarić
  • CRO Bojan Bogdanović
  • CRO Danko Cvjetićanin
  • CRO Krešimir Ćosić
  • CRO Zoran Čutura
  • CRO Gordan Giriček
  • CRO Alan Gregov
  • CRO Vinko Jelovac
  • CRO Mario Kasun
  • CRO Andro Knego
  • CRO Vladimir Krstić
  • CRO Davor Kus
  • CRO Matej Mamić
  • CRO Davor Marcelić
  • CRO Damir Markota
  • CRO Veljko Mršić
  • CRO Damir Mulaomerović
  • CRO Aramis Naglić
  • CRO Mihovil Nakić
  • CRO Sandro Nicević
  • CRO Aleksandar Petrović
  • CRO Dražen Petrović
  • CRO Zoran Planinić
  • CRO Nikola Plećaš
  • CRO Marko Popović
  • CRO Nikola Prkačin
  • CRO Zdravko Radulović
  • CRO Dino Rađa
  • CRO Damir Rančić
  • CRO Slaven Rimac
  • CRO Damjan Rudež
  • CRO Tomislav Ružić
  • CRO Josip Sesar
  • CRO Mate Skelin
  • CRO Rok Stipčević
  • CRO Marko Tomas
  • CRO Dario Šarić
  • CRO Bruno Šundov
  • CRO Josip Vranković
  • CRO Stojko Vranković
  • CRO Andrija Žižić
  • CRO Ante Žižić
  • CRO Luka Žorić
  • CRO Ivica Žurić
  • HUN Marton Bader
  • KOS Dardan Berisha
  • PAN Chris Warren
  • RUS Evgeni Kisurin
  • USA Chucky Atkins
  • USA Alan Anderson
  • USA Jerel Blassingame
  • USA Gerald Fitch
  • USA Jamont Gordon
  • USA Smush Parker
  • USA Scoonie Penn
  • USA Bracey Wright

Members of the Basketball Hall of Fame

  • CRO Krešimir Ćosić
  • CRO Mirko Novosel
  • CRO Dražen Petrović
  • CRO Dino Rađa

Personnel

Head coaches

Main article: Category:KK Cibona coaches

Top performances in European and worldwide competitions

Main article: KK Cibona in European and worldwide competitions

SeasonAchievementNotesEuroleagueFIBA Saporta CupFIBA Korać CupFIBA Europe CupIntercontinental Cup
1982–83Semi-final group stage6th place in a group with Ford Cantù, Billy Milano, Real Madrid, CSKA Moscow and Maccabi Tel Aviv
1984–85Championsdefeated Real Madrid 87-78 in the final of European Champions Cup in Athens
1985–86Championsdefeated Žalgiris 94-82 in the final of European Champions Cup in Budapest
1991–92Quarter-finalseliminated by Montigalà Joventut, 68-73 (L) in Zagreb and 67-92 (L) in Badalona
1994–95Quarter-finalseliminated by Real Madrid Teka, 78-82 (L) in Zagreb and 70-82 (L) in Madrid
1999–00Quarter-finalseliminated by Panathinaikos, 62-73 (L) in Athens and 63-69 (L) in Zagreb
1969–70Quarter-finalseliminated by Fides Napoli, 80-89 (L) in Zagreb and 84-102 (L) in Napoli
1980–81Semi-finalseliminated by FC Barcelona, 85-92 (L) in Barcelona and 79-75 (W) in Zagreb
1981–82Championsdefeated Real Madrid 96-95 in the final of European Cup Winners' Cup in Brussels
1983–84Semi-finalseliminated by Real Madrid, 89-91 (L) in Zagreb and 80-94 (L) in Madrid
1986–87Championsdefeated Scavolini Pesaro 89-74 in the final of European Cup Winners' Cup in Novi Sad
1988–89Semi-finalseliminated by Real Madrid, 91-92 (L) in Zagreb and 97-119 (L) in Madrid
1972Championsdefeated OKK Beograd, 71-83 (L) in Belgrade and 94-73 (W) in Zagreb in the double finals of Korać Cup
1979–80Finallost to Arrigoni Rieti, 71-76 in the final (Liège)
1987–88Finallost to Real Madrid, 89-102 (L) in Madrid and 94-93 (W) in Zagreb in the double final
1990–91Quarter-finalseliminated by Shampoo Clear Cantù, 70-80 (L) in Cucciago and 77-80 (L) in Zagreb
2015–16Quarter-finalseliminated 2–1 by Enisey, 92-94 (L) in Krasnoyarsk, 77-69 (W) in Zagreb and 78-82 (L) in Krasnoyarsk
2016–17Quarter-finalseliminated by Élan Chalon, 87-85 (W) in Zagreb and 78-83 (L) in Chalon-sur-Saône
19853rd place3rd place in Barcelona, lost to FC Barcelona 68–74 in the semi-final (Girona), defeated San Andrés 109-82 in the 3rd place game
19863rd place3rd place in Buenos Aires, lost to Žalgiris 77–104 in the semi-final, defeated Corinthians 119-96 in the 3rd place game
19873rd place3rd place in Milan, lost to Tracer Milano 83–94 in the semi-final, defeated Maccabi Tel Aviv 106-96 in the 3rd place game

The road to the European Cup victories

1972 FIBA Korać Cup

RoundTeamHomeAway
Quarter-finalsFRA Caen103–87109–83
Semi-finalsBEL Standard Liège71–5496–91
FinalsYUG OKK Beograd94–7371–83

1981–82 FIBA European Cup Winners' Cup

RoundTeamHomeAway
Quarter-finalsENG Sutton & Crystal Palace105–9774–70
ITA Sinudyne Bologna121–9181–88
ISR Hapoel Ramat Gan98–9781–85
Semi-finalsURS Stroitel92–6666–82
FinalESP Real Madrid96–95

1984–85 FIBA European Champions Cup

RoundTeamHomeAway
1st RoundBUL CSKA Sofia89–7391–97
2nd RoundFIN NMKY Helsinki102–9588–83
Semi-finalsESP Real Madrid99–9089–87
ITA Granarolo Bologna96–8972–81
ISR Maccabi Tel Aviv88–7787–88
ITA Banco di Roma Virtus97–8387–89
URS CSKA Moscow95–7771–65
FinalESP Real Madrid87–78

1985–86 FIBA European Champions Cup

RoundTeamHomeAway
1st RoundTUR Galatasaray121–106110–97
2nd RoundAUT Klosterneuburg85–7098–83
Semi-finalsISR Maccabi Tel Aviv90–86102–105
ITA Simac Milano111–9566–90
URS Žalgiris99–9091–94
ESP Real Madrid88–81108–91
FRA Limoges CSP116–106106–95
FinalURS Žalgiris94–82

1986–87 FIBA European Cup Winners' Cup

RoundTeamHomeAway
Quarter-finalsITA Scavolini Pesaro123–9983–82
BEL Maes Pils130–90121–98
TUR Efes Pilsen125–7886–70
Semi-finalsFRA ASVEL109–9398–82
FinalITA Scavolini Pesaro89–74

References

References

  1. "Company registration info: ABA LIGA j.t.d.".
  2. "CEDEVITA – CIBONA 59-72 Briljantni Šarić srušio Cedevitu i odveo Cibonu do prvog trofeja u regionalnoj ABA ligi!". jutarnji.hr.
  3. "Zvezda direktno u Evroligi?". b92.net.
  4. "Cibona odustala, Zvezda u Evroligi!". b92.net.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about KK Cibona — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report