In the 2011/12 season, Valencia Basket Club reached the final of a European competition for the fifth time, but lost 68:77 in the Eurocup against the Russian team BK Khimki. After it became known in Valencia on May 23, 1808 that Karl IV. when the German Football Association was allowed to play international matches again in Bayonne in 1950, players from the then German champions, such as Karl Barufka, were finally appointed. In the final round of the German soccer championship, Remark made four appearances. Due to the low playful potential of the Dinamo players, he used a strategy that no Soviet team had used before by setting up four lines of attack. Also involved in the decisions taken were Shimon Mizrahi, President Maccabi Tel Aviv for nearly four decades, Costas Rigas, Head of Refereeing at EuroLeague Basketball, and Jean-Luc Thomas of L'Equipe, a journalist for the French daily. Other participants in the competition were: Jonction BC (Geneva, Switzerland), BK Slovan Orbis (Prague/then Czechoslovakia), Union Babenberg (Vienna/Austria), Honved SE (Budapest/ Hungary), The Wolves (Amsterdam/Netherlands), BK Akademik (Sofia/Bulgaria), CJS Aleppo (Syria), ASK Olimpia (Ljubljana/then Yugoslavia), Fenerbahce SK (Istanbul/Turkey), Panellinios GS (Athens/ Greece), CCA Bucarest (Romania), Basket Villeurbanne (France), ASK (Riga/then USSR), HSG Wissenschaft HU (Berlin/then East Germany), Pantterit (Helsinki/Finland), CWKS Legia (Warsaw/Poland), Simenthal Olimpia (Milano/Italia), Maccabi (Tel Aviv/Israel), FC Barreirense (Barreiro/Portugal) and Real Madrid (Spain).
Its members were given the task of developing a concept that proposed the establishment of a competition for the champion teams of the FIBA associations at European level. Zaragoza was mathematically not relegated before the last matchday, but the team had to pick up more points in the season finale than relegation rivals Celta Vigo and Deportivo La Coruña. With the Canadiens de Montréal, Lafleur shaped the 1970s of the NHL, in which he won the Stanley Cup five times with the team between 1972 and 1979. For the first time since the 1961/62 season, there was a Frankfurt city derby between Eintracht Frankfurt and FSV Frankfurt this season. Selected players were also named to their respective All-Tournament Team or FIBA All Star Team of the Season. Players' participation in a number of major international competitions, such as the FIBA World Championships, is not shown. In addition to Boris Stanković and Eduard Portela, the EuroLeague Basketball Committee of Experts included seven other basketball personalities with special expertise in international basketball. The side of the former players was represented by two outstanding personalities of the world organized basketball sport, by Sergei Belov from Russia and Dino Meneghin from Italy.
Euroleague Historic Gallery – Photos: The Fifties – New Millenium. ↑ The All-Time Coaches nominees – A to Z. Euroleague Basketball website. The Euroleague History Archive – The Eighties: Decade of the stars. The Euroleague History Archive – The Fifties: When it all began. Pau Gasol, on the other hand, had been voted MVP of the Spanish championship final series and cup competition in Spain in 2001 while playing for FC Barcelona, but had made only six appearances in the Euroleague that season, having been in the Champions Cup the year before had insufficient playing time. Euroleague Basketball website, archives. ↑ Pini Gershon – 50 Greatest Contributors List (Memento of 9 August 2011 at the Internet Archive) – Coach. ↑ Pedro Ferrandiz – 50 Greatest Contributors List (Memento of 9 August 2011 at the Internet Archive) – Coach. ↑ Drazen Petrovic – 50 Greatest Contributors List – Player. ↑ Mike D'Antoni – 50 Greatest Contributors List (Memento of January 27, 2010 at the Internet Archive) – Player.
↑ Radivoj Korac – 50 Greatest Contributors List (Memento of 9 August 2011 at the Internet Archive) – Player. ↑ Miki Berkowitz – 50 Greatest Contributors List – Player. ↑ Manolo Raga – 50 Greatest Contributors List – Player. ↑ Pierluigi Marzorati – 50 Greatest Contributors List – Player. ^ "Artenik Arabadjian – 50 Greatest Contributors List" (Memento of 28 October 2011 at the Internet Archive) – Referee. ↑ Clifford Luyk – 50 Greatest Contributors List – Player. ↑ Arminia releases Saibene and Rump. ↑ Ettore Messina – 50 Greatest Contributors List (Memento of 9 August 2011 at the Internet Archive) – Coach. ↑ Yvan Mainini – 50 Greatest Contributors List (Memento of 28 October 2011 at the Internet Archive) – Referee. ↑ Mikhail Davidov – 50 Greatest Contributors List (Memento of October 28, 2011 at the Internet Archive) – Referee. ↑ Costas Rigas – 50 Greatest Contributors List (Memento of October 28, 2011 at the Internet Archive) – Referee.