Campeonato Sudamericano de Clubes Campeones de Básquetbol

The Campeonato Sudamericano de Clubes Campeones de Básquetbol (Portuguese: Campeonato Sul-Americano de Clubes Campeões de Basquetebol, English: South American Basketball Championship of Champion Clubs), or Campeonato Sudamericano de Clubes de Básquetbol (South American Basketball Club Championship), was an international men's professional basketball cup competition that took place between South American sports clubs. It was originally organized by the South American Basketball Confederation, and then later by FIBA Americas. It was played annually between the league champions in each country, plus the winner of the previous edition.

Campeonato Sudamericano de Clubes Campeones de Básquetbol
South American Basketball Championship of Champion Clubs
Founded1946; 78 years ago (1946)
Folded2008; 16 years ago (2008)
Level on pyramid1st
(1946–1992)
2nd
(1993–1996, 2001–2007)
3rd
(1996–2000, 2008)
Last championsUruguay Biguá
Most championshipsBrazil Sírio (8 titles)

History edit

The South American Championship of Champion Clubs was founded in 1946, and it was the first international tournament in South America. It was played in a round robin format, usually hosted by a single city. From 1965 until 1987 the champion teams (and on many occasions the runners-up too) participated in the FIBA Intercontinental Cup represented South America.
The competition was the first-tier and most important club competition in South America until 1996 when the FIBA South American League was launched, with a format that looked more of one of a European completion and not a single tournament.
The competition was finally discontinued in the year 2008, after the new top-tier panamerican FIBA Americas League had been recently formed in December 2007 and meant that each South America country's top teams would qualify to the new league and not the FIBA South American League. Subsequently the South American Championship lost its importance and it was abolished.

South American Championship of Champion Clubs levels on the South American pyramid edit

  • 1st-tier: (1946 – 1992)
  • 2nd-tier: (1993 – 1996, 2001 – 2007)
  • 3rd-tier: (1996 – 2000, 2008)

Names of the top-tier level South American / Latin American competition edit

Format edit

The competition was hosted in one or more cities. In the first round, the eight clubs were divided in two groups of four teams each. The two best placed teams of each group advanced to the semifinals. In the semifinals, the first placed team of a group played against the other group's runner-up. The final was contested by the semifinal winners.

List of champions edit

Final tournament edit

Year Host Champion Runner-up Score
1946
  Buenos Aires   Olimpia Montevideo   Gimnasia y Esgrima (VdP)
  Antofagasta   Olimpia
  Flamengo
  Provincia de Santa Fé[1][2][3]
  Club Deportivo Palestino
  Paysandu
Round robin
1956
  Montevideo   Sporting Club Uruguay   Ateneo de la Juventud Round robin
1958
  Guayaquil   Sporting Club Uruguay   San Lorenzo
  Selección Valley del Cauca
Round robin
1961
  Asunción   Sírio   Olimpia Round robin
1965
  São Paulo   Corinthians   Tabaré
1966
  São Paulo   Corinthians[4]   L.D. Estudantil 100-83,
109-84
1967
  Antofagasta   Thomas Bata   Welcome 65-61
1968
  Montevideo   Sírio   Welcome
1969
  Guayaquil   Corinthians   L.D. Estudantil
1970
  Punta Arenas   Sírio   Atenas
1971
  Arequipa   Sírio   Sportiva Italiana
1972
  São Paulo   Sírio   Olimpia
1974
  Mercedes, Salto, Montevideo   Franca   CA Peñarol
1975
  La Paz   Franca   Obras Sanitarias
1977
  Corrientes, Buenos Aires   Franca   Palmeiras
1978
  São Paulo   Sírio   Franca
1979
  Isla Margarita   Sírio   Guaiqueríes de Margarita 81-80
1980
  Cúcuta   Franca   Sírio
1981
  Asunción, Encarnación   Ferro Carril Oeste   São José dos Campos
1982
  Buenos Aires,   Montevideo   Ferro Carril Oeste   Obras Sanitarias
1983
  Buenos Aires,   Montevideo   Peñarol   Monte Líbano
1984
  Tarija, Sucre   Sírio   River Plate
  Limeira, Jundiaí   Monte Líbano   San Andrés 108-85
  Buenos Aires   Monte Líbano   Ferro Carril Oeste
1987
  Valparaíso, Santiago de Chile   Ferro Carril Oeste   Monte Líbano
1988
  Caracas   Trotamundos   Atenas Round robin
1989
  Asunción   Trotamundos   Biguá Round robin
1990
  Guayaquil   Franca   San Pedro Pascual
1991
  Franca   Franca   Atenas Round robin
1992
  Montevideo   Biguá   Franca 85-68
1993
  Córdoba   Atenas   Franca 76-73
1994
  Lima   Atenas   Olimpia (VT) 77-70
1995
  Bucaramanga   Rio Claro   Hebraica y Macabi Round robin
1996
  Concepción, Talca   Independiente   Rio Claro Round robin
1998
  Tarija   Vasco da Gama   Atlético Welcome Round robin
1999
  Rio de Janeiro   Vasco da Gama   Bauru Round robin
2000
  Valencia   Trotamundos   Vasco da Gama Round robin
2001
  Isla Margarita   Delfines de Cabimas   Espartanos de Margarita 78-73
2002
  Valdivia   Delfines de Miranda   Valdivia Round robin
  Maracaibo   Delfines de Miranda   Gimnasia y Esgrima (CR) Round robin
2004
  Asunción   Boca Juniors   Delfines de Miranda Round robin
  Rafaela   Boca Juniors   Unitri/Uberlândia 85-75
  Barquisimeto   Boca Juniors   Guaros de Lara Round robin
  Brasília   Minas Tênis   Boca Juniors Round robin
  Guayaquil   Biguá   Libertad Round robin

Titles by club edit

Titles Club Years won
8   Sírio 1961, 1968, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1978, 1979, 1984
6   Franca 1974, 1975, 1977, 1980, 1990, 1991
3   Corinthians 1965, 1966, 1969
  Ferro Carril Oeste 1981, 1982, 1987
  Trotamundos 1988, 1989, 2000
  Delfines de Miranda 2001, 2002, 2003
  Boca Juniors 2004, 2005, 2006
2   Defensor 1956, 1958
  Monte Líbano 1985, 1986
  Biguá 1992, 2008
  Atenas 1993, 1994
  Vasco da Gama 1998, 1999
1   Olimpia 1946
  Olimpia 1953
  Flamengo 1953
  Provincia de Santa Fé 1953
  Thomas Bata 1967
  Peñarol 1983
  Rio Claro 1995
  Independiente 1996
  Minas 2007

Titles by country edit

Titles Country
24   Brazil
10   Argentina
6   Uruguay
  Venezuela
1   Paraguay
  Chile

Topscorers per tournament edit

1946:   Roberto Lovera (Club Atlético Olimpia)
1953:   Aristides Isusi (Club Olimpia) 140 pts
1958:   Héctor Costa (Sporting Club Uruguay) 124 pts
1966:   Wlamir Marques (Corinthians)
1989:   Al Smith (Trotamundos B.B.C.) - Sam Shepherd of Trotamundos was MVP
1995:   Billy Law (Rio Claro)
1998:   Charles Byrd (Vasco da Gama) 161 pts
2000:   Victor David Diaz (Trotamundos B.B.C.) 99 pts
2003:   Jervaughn Scales (Gimnasia)
2004:  Paolo Quinteros (Boca Juniors) 138 pts
2006:   Maurice Spillers (Boca Juniors) (also MVP)
2007:   Evandro Fernandes Pinto (Minas Tenis Clube) 113 pts
2008:   Leandro Garcia Morales (Bigua) 94 pts

Winning rosters edit

 
Fabricio Oberto helped Athens Cordoba winn the 1994 South American Championship.
 
NBA champion Carl Herrera won the trophy 3 times (2000, 2002, 2003) after the competition was branded as 2nd tier.

1950s edit

  • 1958 Sporting Club Uruguay: Héctor Costa (c), Adolfo Lubnicki, Enrique Baliño, José Llera, Jorge Pagani, Zafiro Antúnez, Hugo Vázquez, Luciano Aranzadi, Tydeo Irigoyen, Carlos Peinado, Nelson Chelle, Carlos Roselló, José Otonello. Coach: Héctor López Reboledo

1960s edit

1970s edit

  • 1974 Franca: Hélio Rubens Garcia, Fransérgio, Fausto Giannechini, Gilson Trindade, Robertão -Betão, Gustavo Aguirre, Carlão, Carrarinho, Carraro. Coach: Pedroca.
  • 1975 Franca: Hélio Rubens Garcia, Fransérgio, Fausto Giannechini, Gilson Trindade, Robertão - Betão, Gustavo Aguirre, Carlão, Carrarinho, Carraro.Coach: Pedroca.

1980s edit

1990s edit

2000s edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Urusubasket (February 22, 2012.) Páginas de la Historia Retrieved September 2, 2012. (in Spanish)
  2. ^ Troche, José María Los 60 años del básquetbol en el Paraguay (Oct. 12, 2004) Retrieved September 2, 2012. (in Spanish)
  3. ^ Jornal do Brasil, (Dec. 23, 1953) Basket-ball em marcha (in portuguese).
  4. ^ Timoneiros (October 1, 2019.) Especial Basquete: Corinthians Tricampeão Sul-Americano 1965/66/69 Retrieved November 2, 2019. (in Portuguese)

Sources edit

External links edit