By Eurohoops team/ info@eurohoops.net
You can read the full article here which explains the full criteria used. The first Final Four was held in 1988 and that means this list misses some legendary names,
Still it’s quite representative of the modern European basketball and includes illustrious with long careers full of successes and titles. However, there’s one coach that in any list of this kind has “locked’ the top.
10. Dimitris Itoudis (born in 1970)
The youngest of the elite, but in just his third year coaching CSKA he’s already in his third Final Four and won the title in 2016. This season, he has a chance to win another. For 13 years he was more than Zeljko Obradovic‘s assistant coach at Panathinaikos, where they lifted five EuroLeague trophies together. A physical education teacher and a passionate basketball coach, Itoudis is a modern coach with clear ideas. He has put CSKA back atop European basketball.
9. David Blatt (1959)
The only head coach who worked in big European clubs as well as the NBA (Cleveland). He was EuroLeague champ with Maccabi Tel Aviv in 2014 and also won the Coach of the Year award. He also guided Maccabi to the 2002 and 2011 Final Fours, and was assistant coach there for their 2001 SuproLeague and 2004 EuroLeague crowns. He showed his coaching abilities this year with Darussafaka Dogus, a team few counted on being in the playoffs. He also won the EuroBasket with Russia in 2007 and a bronze medal at the London Olympics in 2012.
8. Pablo Laso (1967)
He has spent all of his EuroLeague coaching career with Real Madrid. In six years he won a title for Madrid in 2015 and also lost a pair of finals (2013 and 2014), but he has made his presence in the elite permanent. As a player he was a great point guard and assist master and his coaching style mirrors his playing style: fast, joyful, with a lot of scoring and with freedom for his players to create. He has established a healthy rivalry with Itoudis, like Nikolic had with Ferrandiz and Gomelskiy in the old days.
7. Aito Garcia Reneses (1946)
A man of basketball who has been in the game for more than 50 years. He is a coach without a EuroLeague title, but won the Cup Winners’ Cup, two Korac Cups (with Barcelona), a ULEB Cup and a FIBA Eurocup (with Joventut). For some, six Final Four appearances without a title is failure, but we can look at it another way: he was always there, proving great work over the long term, and especially showing a great ability to find new talents and give them an opportunity. Aito discovered names like Pau Gasol, Juan Carlos Navarro, Rudy Fernandez, Ricky Rubio and Kristaps Porzingis. He was also an Olympic finalist with Spain in Beijing in 2008.
6. Xavi Pascual (1972)
Another member of the new coaching generation, he’s been in the EuroLeague less than 10 years, but already won a title (2010 with Barcelona) and has made five Final Four appearances. After eight years working in Barcelona, he went abroad for the first time this season with Panathinaikos and did rather well. He won a Greek Cup and took the Greens to the EuroLeague playoffs. He’s a systematic coach with no big desires to experiment or take risks, but always willing and able to get the best out of his players.
5. Dusan Ivkovic (1943)
A veteran who retired last year after a long and successful career. He won two EuroLeague crowns with Olympiacos (1997, 2012) and made eight Final Four appearances with three teams: PAOK Thessaloniki, Olympiacos and CSKA Moscow. He is the only coach ever to have won all the European trophies, as he also won the Saporta Cup with AEK Athens and the ULEB Cup with Dynamo Moscow. He was also a EuroBasket champ three times with Yugoslavia, with whome he also won a World Championship and made it to an Olympic final.
4. Pini Gershon (1951)
If we count the 2001 SuproLeague, Gershon was a three-time European champ with Maccabi with five Final Four appearances. He is not your usual coach as he had a colorful temperament. His teams always played fast, attractive basketball with lots of fastbreaks. He is also a great motivator and a coach loved by the media because he never minced words and always spoke his mind, usually with a high dose of humor. He took Maccabi to back-to-back crowns in 2004 and 2005, something that only Olympiacos has repeated since.
3. Bozidar Maljkovic (1952)
He’s the first coach who repeated as a EuroLeague champ in the Final Four era, in 1989 and 1990, with Jugoplastika Split. He was also a finalist with Barcelona in 1991. He became the first coach to win titles with three different teams when he won the crown with Limoges in 1993 and then again with Panathinaikos in 1996, the first Greek team ever to win the title. He had three more appearances in the Final Four and is a master of adapting to the style of the team and the players he has at his disposal.
2. Ettore Messina (1959)
One of the most charismatic coaches, a four-time EuroLeague champ: two with Virtus Bologna and two more with CSKA Moscow, totaling 11 Final Four appearances. He helped a young Manu Ginobili in Bologna lift the 2001 EuroLeague title and is now coaching him again in San Antonio in the NBA, where Messina is an assistant for Gregg Popovic. He was also the coach who took CSKA back to the top of Europe in 2006, 35 years after it has last won the title. Messina coached in almost 400 EuroLeague games with Virtus, Benetton, CSKA and Real Madrid. He was also a finalist at EuroBasket 1997 with Italy.