Yugoslav Basketball Cup
SportBasketball
Founded1959 (1959)
Inaugural season1959
Ceased1992 (1992)
CountrySocialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia SFR Yugoslavia
1959–1992
Most titles8 titles
Cibona
Related
competitions
First Federal League (1959–1992)

The Yugoslav Basketball Cup (Serbo-Croatian: Kup Jugoslavije u košarci / Куп Југославије у кошарци) was the men's national basketball cup of Yugoslavia between its inauguration in 1959 and the breakup of Yugoslavia.

Title holders

The finals

Season Champions Score Runners-up Venue Location Winning Coach
1959 ŽKK Ljubljana mini league OKK Beograd Belgrade Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Kruno Brumen
1960 OKK Beograd mini league AŠK Olimpija Slavonski Brod Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Borislav Stanković
1961 Not held
1962 OKK Beograd 10382 Partizan Belgrade Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Aleksandar Nikolić
1962–68 Not held
1968–69 Lokomotiva 7877 AŠK Olimpija Zagreb Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Mirko Novosel
1969–70 Zadar 6460 Jugoplastika Split Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Trpimir Lokin
1970–71 Crvena zvezda 8270 AŠK Olimpija Tivoli Hall Ljubljana Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Đorđe Andrijašević
1971–72 Jugoplastika 8881 Lokomotiva Zagreb Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Branko Radović
1972–73 Crvena zvezda 7165 Partizan Dom Sportova Zagreb Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Bratislav Đorđević
1973–74 Jugoplastika 9285 Crvena zvezda Split Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Petar Skansi
1974–75 Crvena zvezda 8272 Jugoplastika Čair Sports Center Niš Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Nemanja Đurić
1975–76 Radnički Belgrade 8975 Rabotnički Veliki Park Sports Hall Užice Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Slobodan Ivković
1976–77 Jugoplastika 8062 Kvarner Dom Sportova Zagreb Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Petar Skansi (2)
1977–78 Bosna 9887 Radnički Belgrade Hala Zorka Šabac Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Bogdan Tanjević
1978–79 Partizan 9386 Zadar Čair Sports Center Niš Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Dušan Ivković
1979–80 Cibona 6862 Bosna Borovo Sports Hall Vukovar Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Mirko Novosel (2)
1980–81 Cibona 11287 Kvarner Mladost Hall Karlovac Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Mirko Novosel (3)
1981–82 Cibona 9079 Iskra Olimpija SPC Vojvodina Novi Sad Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Mirko Novosel (4)
1982–83 Cibona 9279 Rabotnički Bosanski Brod Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Mirko Novosel (5)
1983–84 Bosna 9278 Alkar Metković Sports Hall Metković Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Svetislav Pešić
1984–85 Cibona 10483 Jugoplastika Zrinjevac Sport Hall Osijek Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Željko Pavličević
1985–86 Cibona 11098 Bosna SPC Vojvodina Novi Sad Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Željko Pavličević (2)
1986–87 IMT 7673 Smelt Olimpija Čair Sports Center Niš Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Dragan Šakota
1987–88 Cibona 8280 Jugoplastika Dvorana Mladosti Rijeka Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Mirko Novosel (6)
1988–89 Partizan 8774 Jugoplastika Tabor Hall Maribor Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Duško Vujošević
1989–90 Jugoplastika 7977 Crvena zvezda ŠD Gospino polje Dubrovnik Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Božidar Maljković
1990–91 POP 84 8079 Cibona Dvorana Mladosti Rijeka Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Željko Pavličević (3)
1991–92 Partizan 10570 Bosna Čair Sports Center Niš Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Željko Obradović

Results

1989-90 season[1]
Tournament

locations

1/8 finals
Split Jugoplastika - Vojvodina

80-73

Zadar - MZT Skopje

93-68

Jugoplastika - Zadar

90-75

Titovo Užice Bosna - Vellaznimi

104-66

Prvi partizan - Olimpija

68-82

Bosna - Olimpija

81-87

Belgrade Crvena zvezda - Čelik

84-76

IMT - OKK Beograd

89-76

Crvena zvezda - IMT

84-73

Prilep Cibona - Budućnost

93-77

Partizan - Šibenka

85-70

Cibona - Partizan

110-73

1/4 finals
Semi-final
Final

Performance by club

Rank Club Titles Runner-up Winning Years
1 Socialist Republic of Croatia Cibona 8 2 1968–69, 1979–80, 1980–81, 1981–82, 1982–83, 1984–85, 1985–86, 1987–88
2 Socialist Republic of Croatia Split 5 5 1971–72, 1973–74, 1976–77, 1989–90, 1990–91
3 Socialist Republic of Serbia Crvena zvezda 3 2 1970–71, 1972–73, 1974–75
5 Socialist Republic of Serbia Partizan 2 2 1978–79, 1988–89
4 Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosna 2 3 1977–78, 1983–84
6 Socialist Republic of Serbia OKK Beograd 2 1 1960, 1962
7 Socialist Republic of Croatia Zadar 1 1 1969–70
8 Socialist Republic of Serbia Radnički Belgrade 1 1 1975–76
9 Socialist Republic of Slovenia ŽKK Ljubljana 1 0 1959
10 Socialist Republic of Serbia IMT 1 0 1986–87
11 Socialist Republic of Slovenia Olimpija 0 5
12 Socialist Republic of Macedonia Rabotnički 0 2
13 Socialist Republic of Croatia Kvarner 0 2
14 Socialist Republic of Croatia Alkar 0 1

See also

References

  1. "magazin-kos 1.pdf". Google Docs. Retrieved 2023-12-29.
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