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KK Mega Basket

Basketball club in Belgrade, Serbia

KK Mega Basket

Basketball club in Belgrade, Serbia

FieldValue
nameMega Superbet
logoMega-logo-2020.png
logo_size230px
leaguesSerbian League
ABA League
founded
historyAvala Ada
(1998–2005)
Mega Basket
(2005–present)
arenaRanko Žeravica Hall
capacity5,000
locationBelgrade, Serbia
(1998–2012; 2019–present)
Kruševac (2012–2013)
Smederevo (2013–2014)
Sremska Mitrovica
(2014–2019)
colorsPink and white
presidentVelimir Mihailović
gmGoran Ćakić
managerAleksandar Rašić
coachVule Avdalović
affiliationŽKK Art Basket
(2017–present)
OKK Beograd
(2018–present)
championships1 National Cup
website
h_bodyec3d6d
h_shorts1f2444
a_body1f2444
a_shortsec3d6d

ABA League (1998–2005) Mega Basket (2005–present) (1998–2012; 2019–present) Kruševac (2012–2013) Smederevo (2013–2014) Sremska Mitrovica (2014–2019)

(2017–present) OKK Beograd (2018–present) Košarkaški klub Mega Basket (Кошаркашки клуб Мега Баскет), currently referred to as Mega Superbet for sponsorship reasons, is a men's professional basketball club based in Belgrade, Serbia. The club is a founding member and shareholder of the Adriatic Basketball Association.

In addition to Belgrade, the club also played its home games in Kruševac (2012–13 season), Smederevo (2013–14 season), and Sremska Mitrovica (2014–2019). The club participates in the Serbian League (KLS) and the ABA League.

History

The Avala Ada era (1998–2005)

KK Avala Ada (КК Авала Ада) was established on 23 December 1998 by a group of basketball enthusiasts, all employed at the Avala Ada packaging factory located in the Viline Vode neighbourhood on the outskirts of Belgrade. Finally implemented in late 1998, the idea of launching a full-fledged basketball club within the state-owned factory's legal framework had been considered since summer 1995, initially on the heels of yet another participation of Avala Ada employees in basketball competitions at the Workers' Sporting Games (Radničke sportske igre; state-funded excursionary social, leisure, and team building gatherings featuring semi-formal sporting competitions for employees within various industries). Even prior to 1995, Avala Ada employees had regularly participated at the Workers' Sporting Games, continually placing high against basketball select squads of other factories/companies within the packaging industry in FR Yugoslavia and also earlier in pre-1992 SFR Yugoslavia. Though the idea of launching a more formal and permanent basketball program within the factory had been bandied around since 1995, the immediate catalyst for its late 1998 formation turned out to be the factory basketball team's notable showing at the 1998 Workers' Sporting Games in Divčibare several months earlier during summer 1998. Furthermore, having already secured a steady revenue and regular customer base allowed the company to financially support such a venture outside of its core business activity. Within months, Košarkaški klub Avala Ada (Avala Ada Basketball Club) was established as a legal entity within the Avala Ada sports society that was formed simultaneously.

With KK Avala Ada's management—club president Veljko Grujić and sporting director Velimir Mihailović—appointed from the factory employee ranks, coaching hires were made from outside the factory: young head coach Miodrag "Miša" Perišić and his assistant Rade Orlović. Players on the roster were also a mix of factory's employees and outside acquisitions: the team's first captain was the factory's commercial director Bratislav Gajić.

The newly-established club started out in the lowest rank of the FR Yugoslavia basketball system: Belgrade Municipal League, the so-called "Concrete League" (Beton liga), fifth tier of competition in the country. In the early summer of 1999, the club won the Belgrade Municipal League (played outdoors only during summer), thus qualifying for the Serbian Second League (4th-tier competition on the FR Yugoslavia basketball pyramid). Playing the 1999–2000 season in the fourth-tier Serbian Second League, the Perišić-coached club set an ambitious goal of gaining promotion on its first try and succeeded.

The 2000–01 season was played in the third-tier Serbian First League, finishing third and barely missing out on promotion. Head coach Miša Perišić left the club after eventful two and a half years, taking the offer from the Serbian First League rivals KK Nova Pazova. The following 2001–02 season, Avala Ada finished third again, failing to gain promotion to the higher rank.

In the 2002–03 season, with Miša Perišić returning to the club as head coach, the club again missed promotion based on the league standing, however, it managed to qualify to the federal First B League through playoffs in Novi Bečej, beating Vrbas and KK Zeta.

Playing its first season, 2003–04, in the country-wide federal rank in the second-tier First B League (Serbian group), Avala Ada finished third thus missing promotion to the top league. Also, in 2003, Avala Ada packaging factory (founded in 1946) was privatized after 57 years of public ownership. Its new private owner Nebojša Šaranović was entirely not keen on continuing the financial support of a basketball club within his newly-acquired packaging factory asset and thus set about carving KK Avala Ada out of the factory's structure with the intention of selling it.

Before the start of the 2004–05 season, the most significant development in club's short history occurred—it was taken over by the Miško Ražnatović-owned BeoBasket sports agency.

The Mega Basket era (2005–present)

Based on their performance in the 2004–05 season, Avala Ada managed to gain promotion to the Serbia-Montenegro top-tier league. During the 2005–06 campaign, playing its first top flight season, the club changed its name to KK Mega Basket on 19 December 2005. At the same time, it signed a sponsorship deal with the Smederevo-based Ishrana food company, leading to the club competing as Mega Ishrana until 2007. The team got relegated at the end of the 2005–06 season, however, the May 2006 Montenegrin independence referendum that meant that Montenegro would become a fully independent state also resulted in the basketball league being re-organized and Mega Ishrana remaining in Serbia's top-tier basketball league.

Later, also via a naming-rights sponsorship deal, the club was called Mega Aqua Monta for the 2007–08 season, and Mega Hypo Leasing in the 2008–09 season.

In August 2009, before the start of the 2009–10 season, another Belgrade-based club KK Vizura merged into KK Mega Hypo Leasing, and the club was renamed KK Mega Vizura. In November 2014, the club changed its name to Mega Leks due to sponsorship reasons. In 2016, Mega Leks won its first trophy ever when it beat KK Partizan 86–80 in the Serbian Cup Final. In 2017, the club changed its name to Mega Bemax due to sponsorship reasons.

On June 14, 2018, the club signed a contract on sports and technical cooperation with OKK Beograd. Later that summer, on August 11, 2018, the club played a pre-season preparation game under NCAA basketball rules against the most recent NCAA tournament Southern Regional semifinalist University of Kentucky men's basketball team at the Imperial Arena on Paradise Island in the Bahamas, losing heavily 100–64. Some ten days later, on August 23, 2018, Mega played the University of Michigan men's basketball team, recent NCAA tournament runner-up, this time under FIBA rules, in Sant Julià de Vilatorta, Spain and winning 81–73.

As an organization focused primarily on showcasing its roster and providing a springboard platform for player transfers to bigger clubs in Europe and the NBA, in summer 2019, Mega continued the pre-season practice of travelling to the Bahamas to face off against top U.S. collegiate teams in preparatory games. This time, it was two games against the Texas Tech University basketball team, most recently the NCAA tournament runner-up; Texas Tech won the first contest 94–92 on August 16, 2019 at Imperial Arena on Paradise Island while Mega won 73–76 four days later at the Kendal Isaacs Gymnasium.

On September 15, 2020, the club changed its name to Mega Soccerbet for the 2020–21 season due to sponsorship reasons. On October 28, 2021, the club changed its name to Mega Mozzart for the 2021–22 season due to sponsorship reasons. In July 2022, the club changed its name to Mega MIS for the 2022–23 season due to sponsorship reasons. On 6 January 2025, the club changed its name to Mega Superbet.

Sponsorship naming

The club has had several denominations through the years due to its sponsorship:

  • Mega Ishrana (2005–2007)
  • Mega Aqua Monta (2007–2008)
  • Mega Hypo Leasing (2008–2009)
  • Mega Vizura (2009–2014)
  • Mega Leks (2014–2017)
  • Mega Bemax (2017–2020)
  • Mega Soccerbet (2020–2021)
  • Mega Mozzart (2021–2022)
  • Mega MIS (2022–2025)
  • Mega Superbet (2025–present)

Home arenas

Main article: Ranko Žeravica Sports Hall

Ranko Žeravica Sports Hall

Mega Basket plays their ABA League domestic home games at the Ranko Žeravica Sports Hall, located in the Belgrade municipality of New Belgrade. The arena, then named New Belgrade Sports Hall, was built in 1968. It has a seating capacity of 5,000. Mega Basket plays their BLS home matches at the Mega Factory Hall.

The club has had several home arenas through the years in four cities:

  • Šumice Hall, Belgrade (2008–2009)
  • Vizura Sports Center, Belgrade (2009–2012)
  • Kruševac Hall, Kruševac (2012–2013)
  • Smederevo Hall, Smederevo (2013–2014)
  • Pinki Hall, Sremska Mitrovica (2014–2019)
  • Mega Factory Hall, Belgrade (2017–present)
  • Ranko Žeravica Hall, Belgrade (2014–2015, 2019–present)

Players

Main article: Category:KK Mega Basket players

Current roster

Depth chart

Players at the [[NBA draft]]

Mega Basket}}"YearMega Basket}}"Rnd.Mega Basket}}"PickMega Basket}}; width:200px;"PlayerMega Basket}}"Pos.Mega Basket}}"Drafted by
2007260Milovan Raković#CDallas Mavericks (traded to Chicago Bulls)
2014241Nikola Jokić*CDenver Nuggets
2014252Vasilije MicićPGPhiladelphia 76ers (traded to Oklahoma City Thunder)
2014254Nemanja Dangubić#SFPhiladelphia 76ers (traded to Brooklyn Nets)
2016124Timothé Luwawu-CabarrotG/FPhiladelphia 76ers
2016232Ivica ZubacCLos Angeles Lakers
2016235Rade Zagorac#SFBoston Celtics (traded to Memphis Grizzlies)
2017249Vlatko ČančarSFDenver Nuggets
2017258Ognjen Jaramaz#PGNew York Knicks
2017260Alpha Kaba#PF/CAtlanta Hawks
2019118Goga BitadzeCIndiana Pacers
2020244Marko SimonovićCChicago Bulls
2021250Filip PetruševPF/CPhiladelphia 76ers
2022127Nikola JovićSFMiami Heat
2022252Karlo MatkovićCNew Orleans Pelicans (from Utah Jazz)
2024243Nikola Đurišić#SG/SFMiami Heat (traded to Atlanta Hawks)
2025247Bogoljub Marković#PFMilwaukee Bucks

Coaches

Main article: Category:KK Mega Basket coaches, Category:KK Avala Ada coaches

; Avala Ada

  • Miodrag Perišić (1999–2001)
  • Miodrag Perišić (2002–2004)
  • Boško Đokić (2005)
  • Miodrag Kadija (2005)
  • Oliver Popović (2005) ; Mega Basket
  • Vlade Đurović (2005–2006)
  • Oliver Popović (2006–2007)
  • Mihailo Uvalin (2007)
  • Dragiša Šarić (2007)
  • Aleksandar Kesar (2007–2008)
  • Mihailo Uvalin (2008–2009)
  • Miodrag Rajković (2009–2010)
  • Vlada Vukoičić (2010–2012)
  • Dejan Milojević (2012–2020)
  • Vlada Jovanović (2020–2022)
  • Marko Barać (2022–present)

Season-by-season

SeasonTierDivisionPos.PostseasonW–LNational CupRegional competitionsEuropean competitions
2005–061BLSM First League109–13
2006–071BLS First League3SL 6th16–20Quarterfinalist
2007–081BLS First League512–10
2008–091BLS First League515–11Balkan League3rd
2009–101BLS First League813–13
2010–111BLS First League4SL 8th18–22Quarterfinalist
2011–121BLS First League4SL 6th22–18Quarterfinalist
2012–131BLS First League2Semifinalist30–13Semifinalist
2013–141BLS Super League3Semifinalist9–7Runners-upABA League8
2014–151BLS Super League4Semifinalist7–9Runners-upABA League10
2015–161BLS Super LeagueB2Semifinalist4–4WinnersABA League2nd
2016–171BLS Super League4Semifinalist9–7SemifinalistABA League6
2017–181BLS Super LeagueA3Quarterfinals8–6SemifinalistABA 1st League9
2018–191BLS Super LeagueB2Semifinalist7–5SemifinalistABA 1st League5
2019–201BLS Super LeagueAbandonedSemifinalistABA 1st LeagueAbd6–15
2020–211BLS Super LeagueNHRunners-up5–3Runners-upABA 1st League6
2021–221BLS Super LeagueNHSemifinalist7–2SemifinalistABA 1st League10
2022–231BLS Super LeagueNHThird place5–3Runners-upABA 1st League6
2023–241BLS Super LeagueNHSemifinalist1–2QuarterfinalistABA 1st League4
2024–251BLS Super LeagueNHQuarterfinals5–6SemifinalistABA 1st League8

Trophies and awards

Trophies

  • Serbian League
  • Serbian Cup :Winners (1): 2016 :**Runners-up (4): 2014, 2015, 2021, 2023
  • Adriatic League
  • Balkan League

Individual awards

  • Serbian First League MVP (1):
    • Boban Marjanović – 2013
  • Serbian Super League MVP (1):
    • Boban Marjanović – 2013
  • Serbian Cup MVP (2):
    • Vasilije Micić – 2014
    • Nikola Ivanović – 2016
  • Adriatic League MVP (2):
    • Nikola Jokić – 2015
    • Filip Petrušev – 2021
  • Adriatic League Top Scorer (1):
    • Filip Petrušev – 2021
  • Adriatic League Top Prospect (2):
    • Filip Petrušev – 2021
    • Nikola Jović – 2022

Management and staff

Current officeholders are:

  • President: Vladimir Mihailović
  • General manager: Goran Ćakić
  • Team manager: Novica Veličković

Current head coaches are:

  • Senior team: Marko Barać
  • U18 and U19 teams: Milan Vidosavljević
  • U16 team: Dejan Pejić

Notable players

  • Danilo Anđušić
  • Nemanja Dangubić
  • Tadija Dragićević
  • Stevan Jelovac
  • Nikola Jokić
  • Nikola Jović
  • Marko Kešelj
  • Nemanja Krstić
  • Sava Lešić
  • Boban Marjanović
  • Vasilije Micić
  • Dragan Milosavljević
  • Dejan Musli
  • Ivan Paunić
  • Filip Petrušev
  • Aleksandar Rašić
  • Boriša Simanić
  • Jovo Stanojević
  • Stefan Stojačić
  • Milenko Tepić
  • Novica Veličković
  • Rade Zagorac
  • Stefan Glogovac
  • Aleksandar Lazić
  • Ratko Varda
  • Danko Branković
  • Karlo Matković
  • Ivica Zubac
  • Malcolm Cazalon
  • Timothé Luwawu-Cabarrot
  • Adam Mokoka
  • Goga Bitadze
  • Kostja Mushidi
  • Vlado Janković
  • Alpha Kaba
  • Dylan Ennis
  • Nikola Ivanović
  • Danilo Nikolić
  • Nikola Peković
  • Kendrick Perry
  • Petar Popović
  • Nemanja Radović
  • Marko Simonović
  • Corey Webster
  • Aleksander Balcerowski
  • Samson Ruzhentsev
  • Vlatko Čančar
  • Duşan Çantekin

International record

SeasonAchievementNotesBasketball Champions League
2016–17Regular season7th in Group D with SIG Strasbourg, Sidigas Avellino, Iberostar Tenerife, Telenet Oostende, Cibona, Juventus, and Mornar (4–10)

References

References

  1. "Company registration info: ABA LIGA j.t.d.".
  2. "Otišao "da pogine", pa osvojio Afriku! Perišić za MONDO: Beton liga, državni udari, pa tripleta za istoriju!".
  3. "Istorijat košarkaškog kluba "Mega Basket" Beograd".
  4. (15 September 2019). "KAKO IZGLEDA CONTROLLING U FABRICI SMURFIT KAPPA (AVALA ADA)?".
  5. "BC AVALA ADA CHANGED NAME TO BC MEGA ISHRANA".
  6. "Mega Vizura postala Mega Leks".
  7. [http://www.bcmegabasket.net/2016/02/22/istorijski-kup-koraca-za-megu/ ISTORIJSKI KUP KORAĆA ZA MEGU!] {{in lang. sr
  8. "Mega i OKK Beograd potpisali ugovor o saradnji".
  9. "POTPISANA SARADNJA Megini talenti u OKK Beogradu".
  10. (11 August 2018). "UK Basketball hammers Mega Bemax".
  11. (23 August 2018). "Michigan's rally falls short in exhibition loss to KK Mega Bemax".
  12. "PROMENILI IME! Košarkaški klub Mega Bemaks se od danas VIŠE NE ZOVE TAKO!".
  13. (15 September 2020). "Soccer novi glavni sponzor Mege".
  14. "MEGA I MOZZART PONOVO ZAJEDNO!".
  15. "ZAOKRET: Košarkaški klub Mega promenio ime".
  16. "MEDICAL INNOVATION SOLUTIONS NOVI NASLOVNI SPONZOR MEGE!".
  17. (6 January 2025). "Potpisivanje značajnog partnerstva: Mega Superbet ulazi u novu eru".
  18. "Kadija preuzima Avala Adu?".
  19. "Djurović trener Mega Ishrane umesto Popovića".
  20. "Vlado Đurović trener Mega Ishrane".
  21. "Juniori i kadeti KK Mega Soccerbet".
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