FIBA Intercontinental Cup

(Redirected from Club World Cup (basketball))

The FIBA Intercontinental Cup, previously known to as the FIBA World Cup for Champion Clubs and the FIBA Club World Cup, is an annual international men's basketball competition organised by FIBA, the sport's global governing body. The competition features the club champions of the five FIBA continental confederations, as well as one representative from the NBA G League.

FIBA Intercontinental Cup
Organising bodyFIBA
Founded1965; 59 years ago (1965)
First season1965
Confederation6 regions:
FIBA Americas (Central and South America)
FIBA Europe (Europe)
FIBA Africa (Africa)
FIBA Asia (Asia)
FIBA Oceania (Oceania)
NBA G League (North America)
Number of teams6
Current championsSpain Unicaja (1st title)
Most championshipsSpain Real Madrid
(5 titles)
Websiteintercontinentalcup.basketball
2024 FIBA Intercontinental Cup

Historically, its purpose has been to gather the premier basketball clubs from each of the world's geographical zones, and to officially decide the best basketball club of the world, which is officially crowned as the world club champion. The World Cup for Clubs has been contended mainly by the champions of the continents and/or world geographical regions that are of the highest basketball levels.

Instead of the National Basketball Association (NBA) champions, which is widely considered the most prestigious basketball league in the world, the North American spot is usually allocated to the champions of the NBA's developmental league, the G League. In place of the EuroLeague, which has long been considered Europe's most prestigious club competition, FIBA Europe sends the champions of their main club competition, the Basketball Champions League (BCL).

The champions of the Basketball Africa League (BAL), the Basketball Champions League Asia and National Basketball League (NBL) also receive a place in the tournament.[1][2][3]

History

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The FIBA Intercontinental Cup competition was originally organized between the years 1966 and 1987. The tournament had its origins with a friendly test game in São Paulo, Brazil, in 1965. The test game was contested by the winners of the South American Championship of Champions Clubs, the Brazilian club S.C. Corinthians Paulista, and the FIBA European Champions Cup (now the EuroLeague) champions, the Spanish club Real Madrid. S.C. Corinthians Paulista won the test game, by a score of 118 to 109. After the success of the test tournament, the first official tournament took place in the year 1966.[4]

In 1973, the competition adopted the name FIBA Intercontinental Cup William Jones, to honour the secretary general of FIBA, William Jones. FIBA tried to rebirth the competition in 1996, by reorganizing the Intercontinental Cup into a best-of-three playoff tournament between the winners of the Euroleague and the winners of the FIBA South American League (the champions of South America). After that tournament, however, the competition was not held until the 2013 edition.

 
Eduardo Cadillac of Obras Sanitarias the cup in 1983, after becoming the first team from South America to win the competition.

In August 2013, an agreement reached between Euroleague Basketball Company, FIBA Americas, and FIBA World, allowed for the World Cup for Champion Clubs to be relaunched, and to be played between the Euroleague champion and the FIBA Americas League champion.[5][6]

1965 test tournament

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Ginásio Poliesportivo Parque São Jorge, where the 1965 FIBA Intercontinental Cup Test was held.

The FIBA Intercontinental Cup unofficially began with the friendly competition of the 1965 FIBA Intercontinental Cup Test in São Paulo, Brazil, in 1965. The game was played by the defending champions of the South American Club Championship, S.C. Corinthians Paulista, and the defending champions of the FIBA European Champions Cup (EuroLeague), Real Madrid. It was held at the Ginásio Poliesportivo Parque São Jorge. Corinthians won the game 118 to 109, with Wlamir Marques of S.C. Corinthians scoring 40 points in the game.[7] Due to the test tournament's great success (attendance for the game was 10,000),[8] the FIBA Intercontinental Cup was made an official annual tournament by FIBA. The first official FIBA Intercontinental Cup tournament was then held the following year.[9]

1972 special version

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In 1972, FIBA held a 4 team tournament, featuring the Soviet Union national basketball team, the Polish national basketball team, the Brazilian national basketball team, and the NABL All-Stars Team, which participated in the place of Team USA. Although this tournament is not a part of the actual Club World Cup, it is still listed in the event's history as a special version of the tournament and counts as one of the editions, while the actual club competition was on hiatus between the years of 1970 and 1973.[10]

Four team format (2016–2023)

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In 2016, the tournament again changed format, with the EuroLeague champions no longer being allowed to compete in the tournament due to the EuroLeague's dispute with FIBA. In place of the EuroLeague champions, FIBA Europe began to send the champions of their club competition, originally the FIBA Europe Cup and later the FIBA Champions League, instead.[11][12] For the 2019 tournament, FIBA increased the competition's number of teams to four, by adding the NBA G League's champions, and also a tournament host club. The tournament was also reconfigured into a final four format.[13]

FIBA has also considered plans to expand the tournament at some point in the future, with plans to add the champion teams from the FIBA AfroLeague, the FIBA Asia Champions Cup, the Australian NBL, and possibly the NBA.[14][15]

In the 2022 tournament, the league expanded to include the winner of the Basketball Africa League (BAL).[16] From the 2023 tournament, the winners of the FIBA Asia Champions Cup will also be included in the tournament.[17]

Expanded format (2023–present)

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In March 2023, the tournament format received an overhaul. The event was changed from February to September so that it adapts more efficiently to the domestic and continental leagues' calendar and the schedule of international players, and to better accommodate participating clubs.[18]

FIBA also signed a three-year deal partnership with Sport Singapore to hold the competition in the Singapore Sports Hub for three years in a row (until 2025). This makes it the first time in the Intercontinental Cup's history that the event will be held in Asia. Additionally, the tournament was expanded to six teams as an Asian representative was added. For the 2023 edition a team from the Chinese Basketball Association (CBA) was chosen by FIBA to participate.[18]

The 2024 season will feature a team from Oceania for the first time, as the winners of Australia and New Zealand's National Basketball League (NBL) earn direct qualification.[3] The Tasmania JackJumpers are the first representative in tournament history.[3]

Names of the competition

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Part of the official logo with the current competition name.
  • FIBA Intercontinental Cup (or FIBA World Cup for Champion Clubs): (1966–1980)
  • FIBA Club World Cup: (1981)
  • FIBA Intercontinental Cup (or FIBA World Cup for Champion Clubs): (1982–1984)
  • FIBA Club World Cup: (1985–1987)
  • FIBA Intercontinental Cup (or FIBA World Cup for Champion Clubs): (2013–present)
    • Since 1973, the tournament has also been named in Honor of Renato William Jones, so the tournament's full official names would be either FIBA Intercontinental Cup "William Jones", or FIBA Club World Cup "William Jones".
    • The tournament is also referred to as the FIBA Intercontinental Cup of Clubs, in order to avoid confusion with the 1972 FIBA Intercontinental Cup of National Teams.

Format

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From the 2013 edition of the tournament through to the 2015 edition, the competition was played in either an aggregate score two-legged series, or in a single-game final format between two teams, that determined the official club world champions. Those two teams were the champions of Europe's most prestigious competition, the EuroLeague, and the champions of Latin America's premier competition, the FIBA Americas League.

For the 2016 edition and 2017 edition, the champions of the FIBA Americas League played against the champions of FIBA Europe's main club competition (now second-tier), FIBA Europe Cup (2016) and FIBA Europe's new top competition, the Basketball Champions League (2017), as EuroLeague clubs were no longer allowed to participate by FIBA due to its dispute with Euroleague Basketball.[19][20]

For the 2019 edition of the tournament, FIBA expanded the competition to include the NBA G League's champions and a tournament host club. Thus, the tournament format was also changed to a final four format involving four teams.[21]

Results

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Real Madrid from Spain holds the record for most victories, with a total of five titles.

Edition Year Hosts Champions Runners-up Third place Fourth place Result(s) / Note(s) Number of teams
1965[a]
Details
 
São Paulo
 
Corinthians
 
Real Madrid
N/A N/A 118–109
Unofficial test tournament
2
1 1966
Details
 
Madrid
 
Ignis Varese
 
Corinthians
 
Real Madrid
 
Chicago Jamaco Saints
Final: 66–59
3rd place game: 112–96
4
2 1967
Details
 
Italy (3 cities)
 
Akron Goodyear Wingfoots
 
Ignis Varese
 
Simmenthal Milano
 
Corinthians
Final: 78–72
3rd place game: 90–89
5
3 1968
Details
 
Philadelphia
 
Akron Goodyear Wingfoots
 
Real Madrid
 
Simmenthal Milano
 
Botafogo
Final: 105–73
3rd place game: 82–54
4
4 1969
Details
 
Macon
 
Akron Goodyear Wingfoots
 
Spartak ZJŠ Brno
 
Sírio
 
Real Madrid
Final: 84–71
3rd place game: 72–60
5
5 1970
Details
 
Varese
 
Ignis Varese
 
Real Madrid
 
Corinthians
 
Slavia VŠ Praha
Five team league stage 5
6 1972[b]
Details
 
São Paulo
 
NABL All-Stars
 
Soviet Union
 
Brazil
 
Poland
Four team league stage 5
7 1973
Details
 
São Paulo
 
Ignis Varese
 
Sírio
 
Vaqueros de Bayamón
 
Jugoplastika
Five team league stage 5
8 1974
Details
 
Mexico City
 
Maryland Terrapins
 
Ignis Varese
 
Vila Nova
 
Real Madrid
Six team league stage 6
9 1975
Details
 
Italy (2 cities)
 
Birra Forst Cantù
 
Amazonas Franca
 
Real Madrid
 
Penn Quakers
Six team league stage 6
10 1976
Details
 
Buenos Aires
 
Real Madrid
 
Mobilgirgi Varese
 
Obras Sanitarias
 
Amazonas Franca
Six team league stage 6
11 1977
Details
 
Madrid
 
Real Madrid
 
Mobilgirgi Varese
 
Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv
 
Atlética Francana
Six team league stage 6
12 1978
Details
 
Buenos Aires
 
Real Madrid
 
Obras Sanitarias
 
Sírio
 
Mobilgirgi Varese
Five team league stage 5
13 1979
Details
 
São Paulo
 
Sírio
 
Bosna
 
Emerson Varese
 
Piratas de Quebradillas
Five team league stage 5
14 1980
Details
 
Sarajevo
 
Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv
 
Atlética Francana
 
Bosna
 
Real Madrid
Five team league stage 5
15 1981
Details
 
São Paulo
 
Real Madrid
 
Sírio
 
Clemson Tigers
 
Atlética Francana
Final: 109–83
3rd place game: 79–73
10
16 1982
Details
 
Netherlands (3 cities)
 
Ford Cantù
 
Nashua EBBC
 
Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv
 
Air Force Falcons
Six team league stage 6
17 1983
Details
 
Buenos Aires
 
Obras Sanitarias
 
Jollycolombani Cantù
 
Peñarol
 
Monte Líbano
Six team league stage 6
18 1984
Details
 
São Paulo
 
Banco di Roma
 
Obras Sanitarias
 
Sírio
 
FC Barcelona
Five team league stage 5
19 1985
Details
 
Spain (2 cities)
 
FC Barcelona
 
Monte Líbano
 
Cibona
 
San Andrés
Final: 93–89
3rd place game: 109–82
10
20 1986
Details
 
Argentina (2 cities)
 
Žalgiris
 
Ferro Carril Oeste
 
Cibona
 
Corinthians
Final: 84–78
3rd place game: 119–96
8
21 1987
Details
 
Milan
 
Tracer Milano
 
FC Barcelona
 
Cibona
 
Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv
Final: 100–84
3rd place game: 106–96
8
1988–1995 Competition inactive
22 1996
Details[22]
Away, home and home  
Panathinaikos
 
Olimpia
N/A N/A 2–1
83–89 (away) / 83–78 (home) / 101–76 (home)
2
1997–2012 Competition inactive
23 2013
Details
Home and away  
Olympiacos
 
Pinheiros Sky
N/A N/A 167–139
81–70 / 86–69
2
24 2014
Details
Home and away  
Flamengo
 
Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv
N/A N/A 156–146
66–69 / 90–77
2
25 2015
Details
Home and away  
Real Madrid
 
Bauru
N/A N/A 181–170
90–91 / 91–79
2
26 2016
Details
 
Frankfurt
 
Guaros de Lara
 
Fraport Skyliners
N/A N/A 74–69 2
27 2017
Details
 
Tenerife
 
Iberostar Tenerife
 
Guaros de Lara
N/A N/A 76–71 2
28 2019
Details
 
Rio de Janeiro
 
AEK
 
Flamengo
 
San Lorenzo
 
Austin Spurs
Final: 86–70
3rd place game: 77–59
4
29 2020
Details
 
Tenerife
 
Iberostar Tenerife
 
Virtus Segafredo Bologna
 
San Lorenzo
 
Rio Grande Valley Vipers
Final: 80–72
3rd place game: 96–90
4
30 2021
Details
 
Buenos Aires
 
San Pablo Burgos
 
Quimsa
N/A N/A Final: 82–73 2
31 2022
Details
 
Cairo
 
Flamengo
 
San Pablo Burgos
 
Lakeland Magic
 
Zamalek
Final: 75–62
3rd place game: 113–78
4
32 2023 (I)
Details
 
Tenerife
 
Lenovo Tenerife
 
São Paulo
 
Rio Grande Valley Vipers
 
US Monastir
Final: 89–67
3rd place game: 107–84
4
33 2023 (II)
Details
 
Singapore
 
Sesi Franca
 
Telekom Baskets Bonn
 
Zhejiang Golden Bulls
 
Al Ahly
Final: 70–69
3rd place game: 81–74
6
34 2024
Details
 
Singapore
 
Unicaja
 
NBA G League United
 
Tasmania JackJumpers
 
Al Riyadi
Final: 75–60
3rd place game: 80–75
6
35 2025  
Singapore
Future event 6

Statistics

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Performance by club

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Club Titles Runners-up Seasons won Seasons runner-up
  Real Madrid 5 2 1976, 1977, 1978, 1981, 2015 1968, 1970
  Varese 3 4 1966, 1970, 1973 1967, 1974, 1976, 1977
  Akron Wingfoots 3 0 1967, 1968, 1969
  Canarias 3 0 2017, 2020, 2023 (I)
  Cantù 2 1 1975, 1982 1983
  Flamengo 2 1 2014, 2022 2019
  Sírio 1 2 1979 1973, 1981
  Obras Sanitarias 1 2 1983 1978, 1984
  Franca 1 2 2023 (II) 1975, 1980
  Maccabi Tel Aviv 1 1 1980 2014
  FC Barcelona 1 1 1985 1987
  Guaros de Lara 1 1 2016 2017
  San Pablo Burgos 1 1 2021 2022
  Maryland Terrapins 1 0 1974
  Virtus Roma 1 0 1984
  Žalgiris 1 0 1986
  Olimpia Milano 1 0 1987
  Panathinaikos 1 0 1996
  Olympiacos 1 0 2013
  AEK 1 0 2019
  Unicaja Málaga 1 0 2024
  Corinthians 0 1
1966
  Brno 0 1
1969
  Bosna 0 1
1979
  EBBC 0 1
1982
  Monte Líbano 0 1
1985
  Ferro Carril Oeste 0 1
1986
  Olimpia 0 1
1996
  Pinheiros 0 1
2013
  Bauru 0 1
2015
  Skyliners Frankfurt 0 1
2016
  Virtus Bologna 0 1
2020
  Quimsa 0 1
2021
  São Paulo 0 1
2023 (I)
  Baskets Bonn 0 1
2023 (II)
  NBA G League United 0 1
2024

Performance by country

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Rank Country League(s) Title(s) Runner(s)-up
1   Spain Primera División / ACB 11 4
2   Italy LBA 7 6
3   Brazil CBB / NBB 4 10
4   United States NABL3 4
NCAA Division I1
NBA G League 1
5   Greece GBL 3
6   Argentina CAC / LNB 1 5
7   Israel BSL 1 1
  Venezuela LPB 1 1
9   Soviet Union Premier League 1
10   Germany BBL 2
11   Czechoslovakia CSBL 1
  Netherlands DBL 1
  Yugoslavia FFL 1
Total 33 33

Winners by confederation

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Rank Confederation Winners Runners-up
1 FIBA Europe 23 16
2 FIBA Americas 6 16
3 NABL 3 0
4 NBA G League 0 1

Medals by country

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RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Spain114217
2  Italy76316
3  Brazil410519
4  United States4138
5  Greece3003
6  Argentina1539
7  Israel1124
8  Venezuela1102
9  Soviet Union1001
10  Germany0202
11  Yugoslavia0145
12  Czechoslovakia0101
  Netherlands0101
14  Australia0011
  China0011
  Puerto Rico0011
  Uruguay0011
Totals (17 entries)33332692

Individual performances

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Top scorers

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Bob Morse was the FIBA Intercontinental Cup Top Scorer in 1973 and 1976.
 
Dražen Petrović was the FIBA Intercontinental Cup Top Scorer in 1985, 1986 and 1987 with Cibona Zagreb.
 
Dar Tucker was the FIBA Intercontinental Cup Top Scorer in 2019 and 2020.

Wlamir Marques holds the record for most points scored in a single game, when he scored 51 points in the 1965 test tournament. Dražen Petrović was top scorer of the tournament three times, a record. The players' nationalities in the following table are shown by national team.[23][24]

Year Name(s) Club(s) Points Ref.
1965[a]   Wlamir Marques   Corinthians 51
1966   Clifford Luyk   Real Madrid 38
1967   Steve Chubin   Simmental Milano 79
1968   Miles Aiken   Real Madrid 53
1969   Jan Bobrovský   Spartak ZJŠ Brno
1970   Jiří Zídek Sr.   Slavia VŠ Praha 125
1972[b]   Robertão   Brazil
1973   Bob Morse   Ignis Varese 103
1974   Walt Szczerbiak   Real Madrid
1975   Wayne Brabender   Real Madrid
1976   Bob Morse   Ignis Varese 90
1977   Wayne Brabender
  Bruce Campbell
  Real Madrid
  Providence Friars
141
1978   Walt Szczerbiak   Real Madrid 114
1979   Oscar Schmidt   Sírio 138
1980   Miki Berkovich   Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv 94
1981   Mirza Delibašić   Real Madrid 176
1982   David Lawrence   Nashua EBBC 92
1983   Antonello Riva   Jollycolombani Cantù 158
1984   San Epifanio   FC Barcelona 101
1985   Dražen Petrović   Cibona Zagreb 141
1986   Dražen Petrović   Cibona Zagreb 120
1987   Dražen Petrović   Cibona Zagreb 175
1996   Jorge Racca   Olimpia 74
2013   Shamell Stallworth   Pinheiros Sky 53
2014   Jeremy Pargo   Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv 49
2015   Rafael Hettsheimeir   Bauru 44
2016   Zach Graham   Guaros de Lara 19
2017   Mario Little   Guaros de Lara 23
2019   Dar Tucker   San Lorenzo 37
2020   Dar Tucker   San Lorenzo 38
2021   Brandon Robinson   Quimsa 25 [87]
2022   Luke Martínez   Flamengo 44 [88]
2023 (I)   Jarrett Culver   Rio Grande Valley Vipers 45
2023 (II)   Lucas Dias   Sesi Franca 54 [89]
2024   Elmedin Kikanović   Al Riyadi 50

MVP award

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After each tournament, FIBA awards the Most valuable player award to the player that is deemed the most important to his team during the Intercontinental Cup. The first MVP award was given to Walt Szczerbiak Sr. of Real Madrid after he guided them to the 1977 title. The last winner is Dylan Osetkowski of Unicaja in 2024.

Broadcasters

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All four games are streamed through FIBA's YouTube channel for free in the USA and the unsold markets with highlights available in all territories.[90] The tournament is also streamed for free through FIBA-DAZN's subscription streaming service Courtside 1891.

Nation(s) Broadcaster
  Argentina TNT Sports
Balkan countries Arena Sport
  Canada DAZN
  Italy
  Japan
  Spain
  Greece Cosmote Sport
  Singapore meWatch

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b The 1965 edition of the tournament was a test edition.
  2. ^ a b The 1972 edition of the tournament was contested by national teams rather than professional clubs.

References

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  1. ^ Esportes.Opovobr Com Copa Intercontinental, Fiba ensaia Campeonato Mundial. Archived 2019-01-17 at the Wayback Machine (in Portuguese)
  2. ^ Estadao.com Pinheiros e Olympiacos começam a disputar o título da Intercontinental. (in Portuguese)
  3. ^ a b c "FIBA Intercontinental Cup global expansion peaks with inclusion of Oceania". FIBA.basketball. 13 June 2024. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
  4. ^ Basquetepinheirense Especial Mundial: O Mundial é nosso!. (in Portuguese)
  5. ^ FIBA - Intercontinental Cup of Clubs re-launched; FIBA, 5 August 2013
  6. ^ Euroleague.net Intercontinental Cup of clubs re-launched.
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  8. ^ disse, Rubens S. Filho (5 July 2017). "Corinthians 118 x 109 Real Madrid-ESP (1965)". Timoneiros (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 3 February 2022.
  9. ^ Basquetepinheirense Especial Mundial: O Mundial é nosso!. (in Portuguese)
  10. ^ "Intercontinental Cup 1972". www.linguasport.com. Retrieved 3 February 2022.
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  12. ^ "Fraport to represent Europe in the Intercontinental cup". Eurohoops. 25 August 2016. Retrieved 3 February 2022.
  13. ^ "FIBA Intercontinental Cup to reportedly go back to a Final Four format". Eurohoops. 15 January 2019. Retrieved 3 February 2022.
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  18. ^ a b "Singapore to host FIBA Intercontinental Cup under three-year partnership as competition reaches Asia in historical first". FIBA.basketball. 3 March 2023. Retrieved 9 March 2023.
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Sources

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