By M. Bahadır Akgün & Semih Tuna / info@eurohoops.net
The Turkish Airlines EuroLeague has been the leading basketball competition on the Old Continent for quite a while and has seen many superstars come and go. The EuroLeague has been the stage on which great players such as Anthony Parker, Nikola Vujcic, Sarunas Jasikevicius, Dejan Bodiroga, Vassilis Spanoulis and Dimitris Diamantidis have performed their art. Those players all managed to bring home championships, even though the competition for the title was always tough.
Unfortunately, there are scores of great players who never got to hold the biggest basketball trophy in Europe, though that hasn’t affected their superstar status. However, the fact that they were never EuroLeague champions cannot change since they have now retired from playing professional basketball. They were not champs on paper, but they are champs in our minds and hearts. Those greats deserve to be remembered by real EuroLeague fans.
At Eurohoops, we decided to take a look at the dusty pages of history and uncover those great names with enormous respect. Distinguished readers, here we are: 10 great players who never experienced the unique taste of being a EuroLeague champion.
Luis Scola
Teams: Tau Ceramica (2000-2007, 144 games)
EuroLeague Career Stats: 14.3 points, 5.6 rebounds, 1.7 assists, 1.2 steals, 0.5 blocks
The Argentinian legend only played for one team in his seven-year career in the EuroLeague. Luis Scola is one of the greatest players the competition has ever seen despite the fact he came up short in his bid to win it all. Scola was so good that he was named to the All-EuroLeague team three times in those seven seasons. He won almost everything in Vitoria – including the Spanish League. Scola came close to the title with Tau Ceramica; he led the team to three straight Final Fours between 2005 and 2007, including an appearance in the championship game in the first of those seasons.
Arvydas Macijauskas
Teams: Tau Ceramica (2003-2005, 42 games), Olympiacos (2006-2008, 14 games)
EuroLeague Career Stats: 17.4 points, 2.3 rebounds, 2.2 assists, 1.6 steals, 0.1 blocks
Tau was both an opportunity and a disappointment for certain great players in the mid-2000s. The club has always been a fascinating organization and developed some of the biggest talents from all around the world, yet was unable to win a EuroLeague championship. After helping Tau to the EuroLeague Championship Game in 2005, Arvydas Macijauskas left Tau for one season in the NBA, which was followed by a move to Greece. The Lithuanian’s stint at Olympiacos Piraeus was cut short by injuries, but he still scored a lot in a short period of time.
Nemanja Bjelica
Teams: Laboral Kutxa Vitoria (2010-2013, 49 games), Fenerbahce Ulker (2013-2015, 53 games)
EuroLeague Career Stats: 9 points, 5.5 rebounds, 1.6 assists, 1.0 steals, 0.4 blocks
Bjelica came really close to winning the EuroLeague in 2015 with Fenerbahce, but an injury right before the Final Four in Madrid negatively affected his performance and his team came up short. The 2014-15 EuroLeague MVP, Bjelica became a real force under the almighty Coach Zeljko Obradovic and made his way to the NBA after just one Final Four experience. Would he have been able to lift the 2017 trophy along with his Fenerbahce teammates if he had stayed? Who knows?