Obradovic, the “Lord of the Rings” in the Final Four!

12/May/16 09:23 May 20, 2018

Lefteris Moutis

12/May/16 09:23

Eurohoops.net

If there is one coach whose name can be linked to the Final Four institution, that’s no other than Zeljko Obradovic. Eurohoops looks back at Zoc’s more than a few doings in the major appointments of the Euroleague, highlighting his biggest achievements.

 

By Stelios Toromanidis/ info@eurohoops.net

If there is one coach whose name can be linked to the Final Four institution, that’s no other than Zeljko Obradovic. Eurohoops looks back at Zoc’s more than a few doings in the major appointments of the Euroleague, highlighting his biggest achievements.

He has been nicknamed the “Lord of the Rings” and not without reason. After all, we’re talking about the man who has lifted the Euroleague trophy eight times, and has reached the Final Four 15 times (including this year’s qualification)!

In fact, in nine of the 14 appearances in the Final Four to date, he led his team to the final (a success rate of 64,3%). Regarding the games that decide the title, he’s almost… unbeatable. The only time he has left the court a loser was in the 2000-01 season, in the only Final Four of the Suproleague.

To Zoc’s significant achievements, add the fact that he remains the only one to have won a triple crown in just his first year as coach (!), while he has won a European title in every club he’s worked in so far, a record that he would like to expand with Fenerbahce.

What he does against Spaniards in the semifinals

In Friday’s semifinal (13/05) he will come up against Laboral Kutxa. Obradovic counts two wins and two defeats against Spanish teams.

Euroleague semifinals Obradovic vs Spanish team (2-2 record)

YEAR FINAL FOUR SEMIFINAL FINAL

RANKING

1994 Tel Aviv Badalona-Barcelona 79-65 Winners
1996 Paris Real Madrid-Barcelona 66-76 4th place
2007 Athens Panathinaikos-Tau Ceramica 67-53 Winners
2015 Madrid FenerbahceReal Madrid 87-96 4th place

 

A look back at the 14 Final Fours and the 8 titles!

Just before the very experienced Serbian coach’s 15th participation in a Euroleague Final Four, Eurohoops collected all the previous ones and presents them to you in a list that will take you back in time and remind you of the greatest moments of the most successful coach in the history of the competition.

Start the countdown…

 

obradovic 1992

Final Four: Istanbul (14-16/04/1992)

Team: Partizan

Semifinal: Partizan – Philips Milan 82-75

Final: Partizan – Badalona 71-70

Place: 1st

In his maiden appearance in a Final Four, Obradovic won the Euroleague in Istanbul in perhaps the most… epic way. He led the ultimate outsiders, Partizan, to the title, relying on a youthful team from which Djordjevic and Danilovic stood out. In the semifinal the Serbs overcame the hurdle of Philips Milan and in the final they came up against Badalona. The Catalans were ahead 70-68 a few seconds before the end, but Sasa Djordjevic’s three-pointer as the game expired gave Partizan their only Euroleague title.

 

obradovic 1994

Final Four: Tel Aviv (19-21/04/1994)

Team: Badalona

Semifinal: Badalona – Barcelona 79-65

Final: Badalona – Olympiacos 59-57

Place: 1st

Obradovic took over Badalona midway through the 1992-93 season and one year later the Spaniards reached the Final Four in Tel Aviv as outsiders and went all the way up to the top step of the podium! In the semifinal they easily overcame the obstacle of Barcelona and in the game for the title they defeated the Olympiacos of Tarpley, Fasoulas and Paspalj thanks to Cornelius Thompson’s three-pointer just before the end!

 

obradovic 1995

Final Four: Zaragoza (11-13/04/1995)

Team: Real Madrid

Semifinal: Real Madrid – Limoges 62-49

Final: Real Madrid – Olympiacos 73-61

Place: 1st

Zoc’s third Final Four in his third year in the Euroleague and with the third different club. Of course this time Obradovic was sitting on the bench of the best team and not an outsider. The Real of Sabonis and Arlauckas had been playing excellently throughout the entire season and kept doing so in the Final Four where they got two easy wins, reaching their eighth Euroleague win in their history.

obradovic 1996

Final Four: Paris (9-11/04/1996)

Team: Real Madrid

Semifinal: Barcelona – Real Madrid 76-66

Third place playoff: CSKA Moscow – Real 74-73

Place: 4th

A year after the triumph in Zaragoza, and this time without Arvydas Sabonis who had left for the Portland Trail Blazers, Zoc led Real to a second Final Four in a row. In the semifinal he faced Barcelona and while the “queen” were leading by 20 points, with Karnisovas and Godfread the main protagonists the Blaugrana turned the game around and got a 76-66 win. The Madrilenos were defeated by CSKA in the third place playoff, staying at 4th place.

 

obradovic 1998

Final Four: Barcelona (21-23/04/1998)

Team: Benetton Treviso

Semifinal: Benetton Treviso – AEK 66-69

Third place playoff: Partizan – Benetton Treviso 89-96

Place: 3rd

Obradovic’s Benetton reached the big appointment in Barcelona with a 16-5 record. But there, Giannis Ioannidis’s AEK put a stop in Zoc’s… onslaught as they prevailed 69-66 in the semifinal against the Italians. In this way, the “blond one” got a little revenge on the Serbian coach for the two times he cut him off on the road to the trophy in Tel Aviv (’94) and Zaragoza (’95). In the end Benetton were… consoled with 3rd place following their win in the third place playoff against Partizan (96-89).

 

obradonic 2000

Final Four: Thessaloniki (18-20/04/2000)

Team: Panathinaikos

Semifinal: PanathinaikosEfes 81-71

Final: Panathinaikos – Maccabi Tel Aviv 73-67

Place: 1st

In the summer of 1999 the Giannakopoulos brothers brought the “Lord of the Rings” to Greece on behalf of Panathinaikos and they were instantly vindicated. The Final Four was held on Greek territory (Thessaloniki) and the greens took part, getting there with great ease (17-4 record). In the semifinal they imposed themselves on Efes and in the big final they overcame Maccabi’s resistance. In this way, Obradovic reached his 4th Euroleague title and Panathinaikos their 2nd.

 

obradovic 2001

Final Four: Paris (11-13/05/2001) (Suproleague)

Participants: Maccabi Tel AvivPanathinaikosEfesCSKA Moscow

Team: Panathinaikos

Semifinal: Panathinaikos – Efes 74-66

Final: Panathinaikos – Maccabi Tel Aviv 67-81

Place: 2nd

In the year of the… split (2000-01) Panathinaikos decided to take part in the Suproleague, in fact reaching the Final Four. After first overcoming the obstacle of Efes, they subsequently faced Maccabi Tel Aviv in the déjà vu of the previous season’s final. But Obradovic could not lead his team to the title for the second year in a row.

 

obradovic 2002

Final Four: Bologna (03-05/05/2002)

Team: Panathinaikos

Semifinal: PanathinaikosMaccabi Tel Aviv 83-75

Final: Panathinaikos – Kinder Bologna 89-83

Place: 1st

In Bologna, Panathinaikos won the most impressive European title in their history and Obradovic celebrated another epic… trophy. Initially, the greens imposed themselves on the Suproleague champions, Maccabi, in the semifinal and in the final they prevailed over Messina’s Kinder at home, in fact turning around a 14-point deficit (!). In this way, Jaric, Ginobili, Rigaudeau, Andersen and Smodis were left… feeling hungry as they watched Bodiroga, Kutluay and Papadopoulos defeating in the final a team hosting the Final Four for the first time.

 

obradovic 2005

Final Four: Moscow (06-08/05/2005)

Team: Panathinaikos

Semifinal: MaccabiPanathinaikos 91-82

Third place playoff: CSKA Moscow – Panathinaikos 91-94

Place: 3rd

Zoc’s Panathinaikos returned to a Final Four after three years, but were… unlucky as they stumbled on the supersonic Maccabi of Jasikevicius, Parker, Vujcic who proved to be an insurmountable obstacle (91-82 defeat) in the semifinal. Despite this, the greens prevailed over the hosts, CSKA, in the battle for third place with an stunning overturn in the score, with Mike Batiste on a big day (28 points, 10 rebounds).

 

obradovic 2007

Final Four: Athens (04-06/05/2007)

Team: Panathinaikos

Semifinal: Panathinaikos – Tau Ceramica 67-53

Final: Panathinaikos – CSKA Moscow 93-91

Place: 1st

Five years without a Euroleague trophy were too many for the European Midas of the benches. So in 2007 Panathinaikos reached yet another Final Four and in fact at home, as the competition was held in OAKA. There, with Diamantidis, Batiste and Siskauskas leading the effort, Zoc celebrated his 6th title by beating in turn the Tau Ceramica of Scola, Splitter and Prigioni, and the CSKA Moscow of Papaloukas, Langdon, Holden, and Smodis in what was an excellent final.

 

obradovic 2009

Final Four: Berlin (01-03/05/2009)

Team: Panathinaikos

Semifinal: PanathinaikosOlympiacos 84-82

Final: Panathinaikos – CSKA Moscow 73-71

Place: 1st

In the 2008-09 season, Zoc had to manage perhaps the best roster in Panathinaikos’s history (Diamantidis, Spanoulis, Jasikevicius, Nicholas, Pekovic, Batiste, etc.). In the quarterfinals, Obradovic’s armada subjugated Siena (3-1) to reach the Final Four in Berlin. There they got a big win in the semifinal against the “eternal” enemy, Olympiacos, while in the final they subjugated CSKA Moscow for the second time in three years. In this way, Zoc beat the Russians’ coach, Messina, one more time, and the “three-leaf clover” blossomed at the top of Europe for the fifth time.

 

obradovic 2011

Final Four: Barcelona (06-08/05/2011)

Team: Panathinaikos

Semifinal: Panathinaikos – Siena 77-69

Final: Panathinaikos – Maccabi Tel Aviv 78-70

Place: 1st

In 2011 Obradovic’s last trophy to date was won.  Even though the Final Four in Barcelona was an easy task for the Serbian coach’s Panathinaikos, who won the trophy by easily defeating Siena and Maccabi, it was in the quarterfinal stage where they had to surpass themselves. In particular, they overcame the obstacle of the European champions, Barcelona, who actually had a home court advantage.

 

obradovic 2012

Final Four: Istanbul (11-13/05/2012)

Team: Panathinaikos

Semifinal: CSKA MoscowPanathinaikos 66-64

Third place playoff: Panathinaikos – Barcelona 69-74

Place: 4th

This was Obradovic’s last Final Four as Panathinaikos’s coach. In the semifinal he read excellently the game of Kirilenko’s CSKA Moscow, making things very hard for them. In the end, though, the Russians got the 66-64 win, with the “three-leaf clover” having strong complaints of the referees. In the third place playoff game the greens were defeated by Barcelona (74-69), with Zoc remaining in fourth place in a Final Four for the second time in his coaching career.

 

obradovic 2015

Final Four: Madrid (15-17/05/2015)

Team: Fenerbahce

Semifinal: Real MadridFenerbahce 96-87

Third place playoff: Fenerbahce – CSKA Moscow 80-86

Place: 4th

The Serbian coach led Fenerbahce to the first Final Four in their history. There, however, the Turks’ inexperience in big games played, as it turned out, a big role. First came the 96-87 defeat in the semifinals by the hosts, Real Madrid, and then, the 86-80 defeat by CSKA Moscow.

 

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