MBC Mariupol
MBC Mariupol МБК «Маріуполь» | |||
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Founded | 1990 | ||
History | BC Azovmash (1990–2014) | ||
Arena | Azovmash Arena | ||
Capacity | 3,022 | ||
Location | Mariupol, Ukraine | ||
Team colors | Blue, White, Orange | ||
Championships | 7 Ukrainian Leagues 5 Ukrainian Cups | ||
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MBC Mariupol (Ukrainian: МБК «Маріуполь», formerly BK Azovmash) was a Ukrainian professional basketball club. It was founded in 1990 in the city of Mariupol in South-Eastern Ukraine. Mariupol was one of the strongest teams in Ukraine along with Kyiv, Khimik, and Cherkasy. The team's performance peak was an appearance in the EuroCup Final of 2007, against Akasvayu Girona.
History
The club was founded in 1990. Azovmash moved up from the Ukrainian third to first division by 1999. Azovmash won the 2002 Ukrainian SuperLeague title. Azovmash added another Ukrainian title in 2004 and following the arrival of point guard Khalid El-Amin, won the domestic championship again in 2006 and 2007. In 2007, with players like Kenan Bajramović, Panagiotis Liadelis, Serhiy Lishchuk and El-Amin, Azovmash reached the FIBA EuroCup Final Four, defeating Italian Serie A club Virtus Bologna by a point in the semis before falling to Spanish Liga ACB club Akasvayu Girona in the title game. In 2008, Azovmash reached the elimination rounds ULEB Cup and won the Ukrainian domestic championship and cup. After leaving the Ukrainian Basketball Superleague in 2014, the club did not join any competition until 2016, when the club joined the Higher League, the Ukrainian second division.[1]
Season by season
Season | Tier | League | Pos. | Ukrainian Cup | United League | European competitions | |
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2008–09 | 1 | SuperLeague | 1st | Winner | 2 Eurocup | T16
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2009–10 | 1 | SuperLeague | 1st | Semifinalist | 2 Eurocup | RS
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2010–11 | 1 | SuperLeague | 4th | Runner-up | Fourth place | 2 Eurocup | RS
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2011–12 | 1 | SuperLeague | 2nd | Regular season | 2 Eurocup | RS
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2012–13 | 1 | SuperLeague | 2nd | Regular season | 2 Eurocup | RS
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2013–14 | 1 | SuperLeague | 3rd
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Regular season |
Honours
- Ukrainian SuperLeague:
- Gold - 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010
- Silver - 2005, 2012, 2013
- Bronze - 2001, 2002
- Ukrainian Cup:
- Gold - 2001, 2002, 2006, 2008, 2009
- Silver - 2007
- FIBA EuroCup:
- Gold Conference North - 2003
- Finalist of the EuroCup 2006-07
Notable players
Note: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA-sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationalities not displayed.
Criteria |
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To appear in this section a player must have either:
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- Ukraine Oleksandr Rayevsky
- Ukraine Serhiy Lishchuk
- Ukraine Alexander Lokhmanchuk
- Ukraine Kyrylo Fesenko
- Ukraine Maksym Pustozvonov
- Ukraine Denys Lukashov
- Ukraine Vyacheslav Bobrov
- Ukraine Ihor Zaytsev
- Ukraine Oleksandr Kol'čenko
- Belgium Thomas Van Den Spiegel
- Bosnia and Herzegovina Kenan Bajramović
- Bosnia and Herzegovina Nemanja Gordić
- Bosnia and Herzegovina Ratko Varda
- Croatia Slaven Rimac
- United Kingdom Robert Archibald
- Greece Panagiotis Liadelis
- Italy Nikola Radulović
- Latvia Sandis Valters
- Lithuania Tomas Delininkaitis
- Lithuania Simonas Serapinas
- Montenegro Vladimir Golubović
- Slovenia Aleksandar Ćapin
- Slovakia Radoslav Rancik
- Serbia Miroslav Raduljica
- Serbia Ivan Paunić
- Serbia Tadija Dragićević
- United States William Avery
- United States Rodney Buford
- United States R. T. Guinn
- United States Tyus Edney
- United States Khalid El-Amin
- United States Junior Harrington
- United States Jermaine Jackson
- United States Kris Lang
- United States Carlos Powell
- United States Marc Salyers
- United States Dijon Thompson
- United States Joe Crispin
Head coaches
- Ukraine Andriy Podkovyrov (2002–2004)
- Lithuania Rimas Girskis (2004–2007)
- Lithuania Algirdas Brazys (2007–Dec. 2007)
- Ukraine Sergiy Zavalin (Dec. 2007–Feb. 2008 )
- Slovenia Memi Bečirovič (Feb.–Nov. 2008)
- Lithuania Rimas Girskis (Nov. 2008– Nov. 2009)
- Ukraine Andriy Podkovyrov (Nov. 2009–Feb. 2010)
- Ukraine Sergiy Zavalin (Feb.–Nov. 2010)
- Lithuania Rolandas Jarutis (Nov. 2010–Jun. 2011 )
- Serbia Aleksandar Petrović (Jun.–Dec. 2011)
- Lithuania Gintaras Krapikas (Dec. 2011–Feb. 2012)
- Italy Luca Bechi (Feb.–Jun. 2012)
- Serbia Aleksandar Kesar (Jul.–Nov. 2012)
- Ukraine Sergiy Zavalin (Nov. 2012)
- Ukraine Sergiy Zavalin (Jun. 2013–Jan. 2014)
- Montenegro Zvezdan Mitrović (Jan.–May 2014)
References
- ↑ Высшая лига сезон-2016/17 расписание игр (in українська). BC Azovmash. Retrieved 3 November 2016.