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Russian Basketball Super League 1

Sports league


Summary

Sports league

FieldValue
nameRussian Basketball Super League 1
imageSuperleague 1 Rus.jpg
organiserRussian Basketball Federation
founded
first1992–93
countryRussia
confedFIBA Europe (Europe)
teams16
promotionVTB United League
relegationRussian Basketball Super League 2
levels2
domest_cupRussian Cup
championsTemp-SUMZ-UGMK Revda (1st title)
season2024–25
most_champsCSKA Moscow (17 titles)
website

The Russian Basketball Super League 1, or Super Liga 1, (), formerly known as the Russian Basketball Super League A or the Russian Basketball Super Liga A, is a men's professional basketball league that was the pre-eminent league of Russian professional basketball until 2010. Currently, it is the second-tier division of the Russian professional basketball pyramid. The league is run by the Russian Basketball Federation (RBF).

History

After being the first-tier division of Russian basketball, from its first season in 1991–92, the Super League A was relegated to being the second-tier division of Russian basketball after the 2009–10 season, and was replaced with a different first-tier league, starting with the 2010–11 season of the Russian Professional Basketball League (PBL). The successor league to the Super League 1 was not controlled by the Russian Basketball Federation (RBF), like the Super League 1 is, but by a separate body named the Professional Basketball League (PBL).{{cite web | script-title = ru:Сергей Панов: Клубам предстоит решить – играть по-честному или по-старому | access-date = 2010-07-19 | script-title = ru:Дмитрий Сватковский: "Главный принцип Совета лиги - прозрачность принятия решений" | access-date = 2010-07-19

From the 2010–12 season onward, the Super League A and Super League B (the previous second division of the Russian basketball pyramid) divisions were united into a single league that serves as the second tier of Russian basketball, named the Super League 1. The 2010–11 season featured 11 clubs.

Clubs 2021/2022

  • BC Samara
  • Runa Basket Moscow
  • Temp-SUMZ Revda
  • Irkut Irkutsk
  • Uralmash Yekaterinburg
  • Universitet Yugra Surgut
  • Novosibirsk
  • Barnaul
  • Ufimets Ufa
  • Khimki
  • CSKA Moscow-2
  • Dome Springs Izhevsk
  • MBA Moscow
  • Lokomotiv Kuban 2
  • Dynamo Vladivostok

Super League A ([[Russian basketball league system|first-tier league]]) champions 1992-2010

  • 1991–92 [[File:600px_blu_e_rosso_con_stella.png|20px]] CSKA Moscow
  • 1992–93 [[File:600px_blu_e_rosso_con_stella.png|20px]] CSKA Moscow
  • 1993–94 [[File:600px_blu_e_rosso_con_stella.png|20px]] CSKA Moscow
  • 1994–95 [[File:600px_blu_e_rosso_con_stella.png|20px]] CSKA Moscow
  • 1995–96 [[File:600px_blu_e_rosso_con_stella.png|20px]] CSKA Moscow
  • 1996–97 [[File:600px_blu_e_rosso_con_stella.png|20px]] CSKA Moscow
  • 1997–98 [[File:600px_blu_e_rosso_con_stella.png|20px]] CSKA Moscow
  • 1998–99 [[File:600px_blu_e_rosso_con_stella.png|20px]] CSKA Moscow
  • 1999–00 [[File:600px_blu_e_rosso_con_stella.png|20px]] CSKA Moscow
  • 2000–01 [[File:600px_Arancione_con_banda_Bianca_e_Blu.png|20px]] Ural Great
  • 2001–02 [[File:600px_Arancione_con_banda_Bianca_e_Blu.png|20px]] Ural Great
  • 2002–03 [[File:600px_blu_e_rosso_con_stella.png|20px]] CSKA Moscow
  • 2003–04 [[File:600px_blu_e_rosso_con_stella.png|20px]] CSKA Moscow
  • 2004–05 [[File:600px_blu_e_rosso_con_stella.png|20px]] CSKA Moscow
  • 2005–06 [[File:600px_blu_e_rosso_con_stella.png|20px]] CSKA Moscow
  • 2006–07 [[File:600px_blu_e_rosso_con_stella.png|20px]] CSKA Moscow
  • 2007–08 [[File:600px_blu_e_rosso_con_stella.png|20px]] CSKA Moscow
  • 2008–09 [[File:600px_blu_e_rosso_con_stella.png|20px]] CSKA Moscow
  • 2009–10 [[File:600px_blu_e_rosso_con_stella.png|20px]] CSKA Moscow

Super League 1 ([[Russian basketball league system|second-tier league]]) champions 2011-present

  • 2011 Spartak Primorye
  • 2012 Ural Yekaterinburg
  • 2013 Ural Yekaterinburg
  • 2014 Avtodor Saratov
  • 2015 Novosibirsk
  • 2016 PSK Sakhalin
  • 2017 Universitet Yugra Surgut
  • 2018 BC Spartak Primorye
  • 2019 BC Samara
  • 2020 * not awarded*
  • 2021 BC Samara
  • 2022 Uralmash Yekaterinburg
  • 2023 Uralmash Yekaterinburg
  • 2024 Dinamo Vladivostok
  • 2025 Temp-SUMZ-UGMK Revda
ClubWinnersWinning years
CSKA Moscow1992–2000, 2003–2010
Ural Yekaterinburg2012, 2013
Uralmash Yekaterinburg2022, 2023
Ural Great Perm2001, 2002
BC Samara2019, 2021
Spartak Primorye2011, 2018
Avtodor Saratov2014
Novosibirsk2015
PSK Sakhalin2016
Universitet Yugra Surgut2017
Dinamo Vladivostok2024
Temp-SUMZ-UGMK Revda2025

Super League A ([[Russian basketball league system|first-tier league]]) regular season winners 1992-2010

  • 1995 CSKA Moscow
  • 1996 CSKA Moscow
  • 1997 Avtodor Saratov
  • 1998 Avtodor Saratov
  • 1999 CSKA Moscow
  • 2000 CSKA Moscow
  • 2001 Ural Great Perm
  • 2002 Ural Great Perm
  • 2003 CSKA Moscow
  • 2004 CSKA Moscow
  • 2005 CSKA Moscow
  • 2006 CSKA Moscow
  • 2007 CSKA Moscow
  • 2008 CSKA Moscow
  • 2009 CSKA Moscow
  • 2010 CSKA Moscow

Super League 1 ([[Russian basketball league system|second-tier league]]) regular season winners 2011-present

  • 2011 Universitet Yugra Surgut
  • 2012 Ural Yekaterinburg
  • 2013 Universitet Yugra Surgut
  • 2014 Avtodor Saratov
  • 2015 Samara SGEU
  • 2016 PSK Sakhalin
  • 2017 Novosibirsk
  • 2018 BC Samara
  • 2019 Vostok-65
  • 2020 Spartak Primorye
  • 2021 Samara
  • 2022 Uralmash Yekaterinburg
  • 2023 Uralmash Yekaterinburg
  • 2024 Khimki
  • 2025 Temp-SUMZ-UGMK Revda
ClubWinnersWinning years
CSKA Moscow1995, 1996, 1999, 2000, 2003–2010
Avtodor Saratov1997, 1998, 2014
Samara2015, 2018, 2021
Ural Great Perm2001, 2002
Universitet Yugra Surgut2011, 2013
Uralmash Yekaterinburg2022, 2023
Ural Yekaterinburg2012
PSK Sakhalin2016
Novosibirsk2017
Khimki2024
Temp-SUMZ-UGMK Revda2025

Russian basketball clubs in European and worldwide competitions

Main article: Russian basketball clubs in European and worldwide competitions

Awards

Main article: Russian Gold Basket Awards

Players

Yearwidth="146"Playerwidth="146"Team
1994
1995
1999
2001
Yearwidth="146"2004width="146"2005width="146"2006width="152"2007width="152"2008width="166"2009Russian Super League A Player of the Year
United States Marcus BrownGreece Theo Papaloukas
Yearwidth="146"Playerwidth="146"Team
2011
2012
2013

Coaches

Yearwidth="146"2004width="146"2005width="146"2006width="152"2007width="152"2008width="166"2009Russian Super League A Coach of the Year
Serbia Dušan IvkovićUnited States/Israel David Blatt

Predecessor league

  • USSR Premier League: (1923–1992)

Successor leagues

  • Russian Professional League: (2010–2013)
  • VTB United League: (2008–present)

References

References

  1. link. (15 June 2010). Russian Basketball Federation
Wikipedia Source

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