International basketball competition
Baltic Basketball League (BBL ) was the Baltic states basketball league founded in 2004. The league mainly focused on teams from the Baltic states , but teams from Sweden , Russia , Kazakhstan , Finland , and Belarus have participated in the Baltic League. After the 2017–18 season, the league announced that it was suspending its operations.[ 1]
History
For the 2015–16 season, the format of the BBL included a regular season composed by two groups of seven teams that competed in a round-robin competition system, with each team facing their opponent twice. The teams qualified for the eight-finals based on their ranking after the regular season. Out of the five teams who participated in FIBA Europe Cup competition – Ventspils , Juventus , Šiauliai , Tartu Ülikool/Rock and Pieno žvaigždės – the latter three did not qualify for the FIBA Europe Cup playoffs and thus started playing at the start of the BBL playoffs, seeded respectively first, second and third based on last season's results.[ 2] All play-off games are played in home-and-away series.
Baltic Basketball League also featured a Baltic Basketball League Cup competition before the beginning of the regular season since 2008.
Teams
These are the teams that participated in 2017–18 season :
Group
Team
City, Country
Arena
Head coach
Group A
AVIS Rapla
Rapla , Estonia
Sadolin Sports Hall
Aivar Kuusmaa
Pärnu Sadam
Pärnu , Estonia
Pärnu Sports Hall
Heiko Rannula
Betsafe/Liepāja
Liepāja , Latvia
Liepāja Olympic Center
Agris Galvanovskis
Jūrmala
Jūrmala , Latvia
Jūrmala State Gymnasium
Mārtiņš Gulbis
Šiauliai
Šiauliai , Lithuania
Šiauliai Arena
Antanas Sireika
Vytautas
Prienai /Birštonas , Lithuania
Prienai Arena
Virginijus Šeškus
Tsmoki-Minsk II
Minsk , Belarus
The team will play away
Rostislav Vergun
Group B
University of Tartu
Tartu , Estonia
University of Tartu Sports Hall
Priit Vene
TLÜ/Kalev
Tallinn , Estonia
Kalev Sports Hall
Gert Kullamäe
TTÜ
Tallinn , Estonia
TTÜ Sports Hall
Rait Käbin
Valmiera/ORDO
Valmiera , Latvia
Vidzeme Olympic Center
Kristaps Valters
Ogre
Ogre , Latvia
Ogre 1st Secondary School
Arturs Visockis-Rubenis
Pieno žvaigždės
Pasvalys , Lithuania
Pieno žvaigždės Arena
Gediminas Petrauskas
Barsy Atyrau
Atyrau , Kazakhstan
The team will play away
Aleksandar Vrzina
Baltic League champions
Elite Division champions
Challenge Cup champions
BBL Cup winners
Baltic League awards
Regular season MVP
Finals MVP
Statistical leaders
Statistics include regular season and play-off games
Points per game
2004–05 Jason Coleman (neptunas): 25.00 (in 14 games)
2005–06 Akselis Vairogs (Valmiera): 20.90 (in 31 games)
2006–07 Travis Reed (Kalev/Cramo): 19.93 (in 29 games)
2007–08 Travis Reed (Kalev/Cramo): 17.39 (in 18 games)
2008–09 Ingus Bankevics (Valmiera): 19.61 (in 18 games)
2009–10 - Josh Akognon (Kalev/Cramo): 19.53 (in 15 games)
2010–11 Bambale Osby (TTÜ/Kalev): 18.64 (in 22 games)
2011–12 Denzel Bowles (Šiauliai): 19.33 (in 12 games)
2012–13 Reimo Tamm (Rakvere Tarvas): 18.06 (in 18 games)
2013–14 Jānis Kaufmanis (Valmiera): 19.50 (in 14 games)
2014–15 Brandis Raley-Ross (Rakvere Tarvas): 21.18 (in 11 games)
2015–16 Andrew Warren (Pärnu Sadam): 25.57 (in 7 games)
2016–17 Trevin Parks (Barsy Atyrau): 21.57 (in 14 games)
2017–18 Yauheni Beliankou (Tsmoki-Minsk II): 18.40 (in 10 games)
Rebounds per game
2004–05 Duke Freeman-McKamey (Panevėžys): 13.22 (in 9 games)
2005–06 Darjuš Lavrinovič (Žalgiris): 9.87 (in 31 games)
2006–07 A. J. Bramlett (ASK Rīga): 8.38 (in 21 games)
2007–08 Vladimir Štimac (Valmiera): 10.95 (in 20 games)
2008–09 Tanoka Beard (Tartu Ülikool/Rock): 9.26 (in 23 games)
2009–10 Alex Renfroe (VEF Rīga): 7.24 (in 21 games)
2010–11 Bambale Osby (TTÜ/Kalev): 11.95 (in 22 games)
2011–12 David James McClure (Kedainiai/Triobet): 9.28 (in 18 games)
2012–13 Tyler Cain (Barons kvartāls): 11.43 (in 14 games)
2013–14 Joakim Kjellbom (Norrköping Dolphins): 9.69 (in 16 games)
2014–15 Ronaldas Rutkauskas (KK Pärnu): 10.44 (in 9 games)
2015–16 Stephan Zack (Liepaja/Triobet): 11.00 (in 12 games)
2016–17 Thomas van der Mars (AVIS Rapla): 11.43 (in 14 games)
2017–18 Viktors Iļjins (Valmiera ORDO): 11.00 (in 11 games)
Assists per game
2004–05 Raimonds Gabrāns (Bumerangs/Gulbene/ASK): 6.38 (in 16 games)
2005–06 Raimonds Gabrāns (Bumerangs/Gulbene/ASK): 5.19 (in 32 games)
2006–07 Tomas Gaidamavičius (Panevėžys): 4.58 (in 24 games)
2007–08 Curtis Nash (Valmiera): 4.18 (in 11 games)
2008–09 Giorgi Tsintsadze (Tartu Ülikool/Rock): 5.09 (in 23 games)
2009–10 Charron Fisher (Kalev/Cramo): 8.79 (in 14 games)
2010–11 Evaldas Dainys (Rūdupis): 5.25 (in 16 games)
2011–12 Rashaun Broadus (Šiauliai): 4.39 (in 23 games)
2012–13 Augustas Pečiukevičius (KK Pärnu): 5.71 (in 14 games)
2013–14 Rinalds Sirsniņš (Jēkabpils): 4.83 (in 12 games)
2014–15 Nikos Gkikas (Ventspils): 5.88 (in 8 games)
2015–16 Rait-Riivo Laane (TTÜ KK): 6.58 (in 12 games)
2016–17 Toni Prostran (Nevėžis): 9.33 (in 15 games)
2017–18 Donatas Sabeckis (Šiauliai): 6.88 (in 16 games)
See also
References
External links
Inter-Baltic competitions
Football Others