By Lefteris Moutis/ moutis@eurohoops.net
From which country do most European club champions come from? Eurohoops.net counted the countries whose players have celebrated winning the Turkish Airlines Euroleague the most times and listed the top twelve.
From 2000-01 up to last season’s Final Four in Madrid, 15 teams have won the Euroleague and a total of 216 players have played for them, even if it was for one game. The task of tracing the players that have celebrated the Euroleague trophy was easy, but their registration by country was harder.
We chose to rank the players according to their country of origin and not the one they later got a passport from. The criterion then, has to do with the country each player grew up in and not so much the national team they played in.
For example, Aleks Maric grew up in Australia, despite the Serbian origin of his parents, while Dusan Sakota grew up in Greece from the age of 4. Similarly, Gregor Fucka came of age in Slovenia and later acquired Italian citizenship.
In the following pages you can see in detail all the players who appeared on the roster of a team in the year they won the Euroleague (even if they didn’t finish the season there) based on their country of origin.
Presented here are the countries that have at least five European club champions.
5 champions
A Croatian player has won the Turkish Airlines Euroleague five times since 2000-01 and only Damir Mulaomerovic (in 2002 with Panathinaikos Athens) hasn’t done so with the colors of Maccabi FOX Tel Aviv. Nikola Vujcic (two times), Bruno Sundov and Andrija Zizic did so with the Israeli team.
2001-02 | Panathinaikos | Damir Mulaomerovic |
2003-04 | Maccabi Tel Aviv | Bruno Sundov |
2003-04 | Maccabi Tel Aviv | Nikola Vujcic |
2004-05 | Maccabi Tel Aviv | Nikola Vujcic |
2013-14 | Maccabi Tel Aviv | Andrija Zizic |
Australia
5 champions
Faraway Australia has celebrated winning the Turkish Airlines Euroleague title through one of its basketball children five times. Of course, three of those belong to David Andersen, who lifted the Euroleague trophy in 2001 with Kinder Bologna, and in 2006 and 2008 with CSKA Moscow. The group is completed by Aleks Maric, who was raised in Australia, and Joe Ingles.
2000-01 | Kinder Bologna | David Andersen |
2005-06 | CSKA Moscow | David Andersen |
2007-08 | CSKA Moscow | David Andersen |
2010-11 | Panathinaikos | Aleks Maric |
2013-14 | Maccabi Tel Aviv | Joe Ingles |
Argentina
5 champions
Five different Argentinians have won the Turkish Airlines Euroleague all these years. The start was made by Manu Ginobili and Hugo Sconochini with Kinder Bologna in 2001, followed by Pepe Sanchez next year with Panathinaikos Athens and Facundo Campazzo and Andres Nocioni last year with Real Madrid.
2000-01 | Kinder Bologna | Manu Ginobili |
2000-01 | Kinder Bologna | Hugo Sconochini |
2001-02 | Panathinaikos | Pepe Sanchez |
2014-15 | Real Madrid | Facundo Campazzo |
2014-15 | Real Madrid | Andres Nocioni |
Slovenia
7 champions
Slovenia is by far the smallest – in terms of population – country that is included in this list and with seven presences! Matjaz Smodis has celebrated winning the Turkish Airlines Euroleague three times (two with CSKA Moscow and one with Kinder Bologna) and Gregor Fucka, Sani Becirovic, Jaka Lakovic and Erazem Lorbek have all made it once.
2000-01 | Kinder Bologna | Matjaz Smodis |
2002-03 | Barcelona | Gregor Fucka |
2005-06 | CSKA Moscow | Matjaz Smodis |
2006-07 | Panathinaikos | Sani Becirovic |
2007-08 | CSKA Moscow | Matjaz Smodis |
2009-10 | Barcelona | Jaka Lakovic |
2009-10 | Barcelona | Erazem Lorbek |
Italy
8 champions
Kinder Bologna’s triumph in the first year of the new era of the Turkish Airlines Euroleague (2000-01) boosted Italy on the list with the most European champions. That season, a total of seven Italians won the title. The only one who did so with a separate team is Gianluca Basile, who celebrated the trophy as an FC Barcelona Lassa player in 2010.
2000-01 | Kinder Bologna | Alessandro Abbio |
2000-01 | Kinder Bologna | Davide Bonora |
2000-01 | Kinder Bologna | Fabrizio Ambrassa |
2000-01 | Kinder Bologna | Alessandro Frosini |
2000-01 | Kinder Bologna | Gianluca Ghedini |
2000-01 | Kinder Bologna | Cristian Akrivos |
2009-10 | Barcelona | Gianluca Basile |
Serbia
10 champions
Serbia is the second country with the most European champions without having a championship team. A total of ten Serbs have won the Turkish Airlines Euroleague, with Dejan Bodiroga being the only one who has done so twice. Historically, the team with the most Serbs is Panathinaikos Athens, who had at least one Serb in every season they became European champions, bringing together a total of five.
2000-01 | Kinder Bologna | Nikola Jestratijevic |
2000-01 | Kinder Bologna | Marko Jaric |
2000-01 | Kinder Bologna | David Brkic |
2001-02 | Panathinaikos | Dejan Bodiroga |
2002-03 | Barcelona | Dejan Bodiroga |
2006-07 | Panathinaikos | Dejan Tomasevic |
2006-07 | Panathinaikos | Milos Vujanic |
2008-09 | Panathinaikos | Dusan Kecman |
2010-11 | Panathinaikos | Milenko Tepic |
2011-12 | Olympiacos | Marko Keselj |
Lithuania
10 champions
No Lithuanian team has ever reached the Final Four of the Turkish Airlines Euroleague from 2000-01 onwards, but a player from this big basketball country has won the trophy ten times. And all this is entirely due to five players!
The Euroleague legend Sarunas Jasikevicius has climbed on the highest step of the podium four times with three different teams (FC Barcelona Lassa, Maccabi FOX Tel Aviv, Panathinaikos Athens), Ramunas Siskauskas did it two years in a row (Panathinaikos, CSKA Moscow), just like Martynas Gecevicius with Olympiacos Piraeus. Robertas Javtokas and Jonas Maciulis complete the Lithuanians’ glorious five.
2002-03 | Barcelona | Sarunas Jasikevicius |
2003-04 | Maccabi Tel Aviv | Sarunas Jasikevicius |
2004-05 | Maccabi Tel Aviv | Sarunas Jasikevicius |
2006-07 | Panathinaikos | Robertas Javtokas |
2006-07 | Panathinaikos | Ramunas Siskauskas |
2007-08 | CSKA Moscow | Ramunas Siskauskas |
2008-09 | Panathinaikos | Sarunas Jasikevicius |
2011-12 | Olympiacos | Martynas Gecevicius |
2012-13 | Olympiacos | Martynas Gecevicius |
2014-15 | Real Madrid | Jonas Maciulis |