List of EuroLeague-winning head coaches
The list of EuroLeague-winning head coaches shows all of the head coaches that have won the EuroLeague championship. The EuroLeague is the European-wide top-tier level professional basketball club competition. The competition was originally called the FIBA European Champions Cup, or simply European Champions Cup.
Turkish Airlines EuroLeague awards, honours, and records |
---|
EuroLeague: (ECA) (History) (Arenas) |
Individual Awards: |
|
Individual Honours: |
Stats & Records: |
Club Stats & Records: |
Key
Elected into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as a coach | |
* | Elected into the FIBA Hall of Fame |
* | Member of both the FIBA Hall of Fame and the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. |
List
Multiple winners
Number | Head Coach | Winning team(s) | First | Last |
---|---|---|---|---|
Željko Obradović | Partizan; Joventut Badalona; Real Madrid; Panathinaikos (5); Fenerbahçe | |||
Ettore Messina | Virtus Bologna (2); CSKA Moscow (2) | |||
Božidar Maljković | Split (2); Limoges; Panathinaikos | |||
Pedro Ferrándiz | Real Madrid | |||
Alexander Gomelsky | ASK Riga (3); CSKA Moscow | |||
Pini Gershon | Maccabi Tel Aviv | |||
Aca Nikolić | Varèse | |||
Željko Pavličević | Cibona, Split | |||
Dušan Ivković | Olympiacos | |||
Valerio Bianchini | Virtus Roma | |||
Lolo Sainz | Real Madrid | |||
Sandro Gamba | Varèse | |||
Evgeny Alekseev | CSKA Moscow | |||
Pablo Laso | Real Madrid | |||
Dimitrios Itoudis | CSKA Moscow |
Winners per country
Number | Country | Coach(es)[2] | First | Last |
---|---|---|---|---|
Serbia | Željko Obradović (9), Božidar Maljković (4), Aca Nikolić (3), Dušan Ivković (2), Svetislav Pešić | |||
Italy | Ettore Messina (4), Valerio Bianchini (2), Sandro Gamba (2), Cesare Rubini, Giancarlo Primo, Franco Casalini | |||
Spain | Pedro Ferrándiz (4), Pablo Laso (2), Lolo Sainz (2), Xavi Pascual, Joaquín Hernández | |||
Russia | Alexander Gomelsky (4); Evgenii Alexeev (2) | |||
Israel | Pini Gershon (3), Ralph Klein, David Blatt | |||
Greece | Dimitrios Itoudis (2), Giorgos Bartzokas | |||
Croatia | Željko Pavličević (2), Mirko Novosel | |||
United States | Rudy D'Amico, Dan Peterson | |||
Lithuania | Jonas Kazlauskas | |||
Montenegro | Bogdan Tanjević | |||
Armenia | Armenak Alachachian | |||
Georgia | Otar Korkia | |||
References
- "Basketball / EuroLeague". allcompetitions.com. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
- "The EuroLeague coaching dynasties by countries". eurohoops.net. Retrieved 19 August 2018.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.