2005–06_Euroleague

2005–06 Euroleague

2005–06 Euroleague

Sports season


The 2005–06 Euroleague was the 6th season of the professional basketball competition for elite clubs throughout Europe, organised by Euroleague Basketball Company, and it was the 49th season of the premier competition for European men's clubs overall.

Quick Facts Euroleague, Season ...

The 2005–06 season featured 24 competing teams from 13 countries. The Final Four was held at the Sazka Arena in Prague, Czech Republic on April 30, 2006. CSKA Moscow defeat the defending champions, Maccabi Elite by a score of 73–69 in the final.

Team allocation

Distribution

The table below shows the default access list.

More information Teams entering in this round, Regular season (24 teams) ...

Teams

The labels in the parentheses show how each team qualified for the place of its starting round (TH: EuroLeague title holders)

  • 1st, 2nd, etc.: League position after Playoffs
  • WC: Wild card

Regular season

The first phase was a regular season, in which the competing teams were drawn into three groups, each containing eight teams. Each team played every other team in its group at home and away, resulting in 14 games for each team in the first stage. The top 5 teams in each group and the best sixth-placed team advanced to the next round. The complete list of tiebreakers was provided in the lead-in to the Regular Season results.

If one or more clubs were level on won–lost record, tiebreakers were applied in the following order:

  1. Head-to-head record in matches between the tied clubs
  2. Overall point difference in games between the tied clubs
  3. Overall point difference in all group matches (first tiebreaker if tied clubs were not in the same group)
  4. Points scored in all group matches
  5. Sum of quotients of points scored and points allowed in each group match

3–5 are used to break ties between 6th place teams

Key to colors
     Top five places in each group, plus highest-ranked sixth-place team, advanced to Top 16
More information Team, Pld ...

Group C

More information Team, Pld ...


Top 16

The surviving teams were divided into four groups of four teams each, and again a round robin system was adopted, resulting in 6 games each, with the two top teams advancing to the quarterfinals. Tiebreakers were identical to those used in the Regular Season.

The draw was held in accordance with Euroleague rules.

The teams were placed into four pools, as follows:

Level 1: The three group winners, plus the top-ranked second-place team

Level 2: The remaining second-place teams, plus the top two third-place teams

Level 3: The remaining third-place team, plus the three fourth-place teams

Level 4: The fifth-place teams, plus the top ranked sixth-place team

Each Top 16 group included one team from each pool. The draw was conducted under the following restrictions:

  1. No more than two teams from the same Regular Season group could be placed in the same Top 16 group.
  2. No more than two teams from the same country could be placed in the same Top 16 group.
  3. If there was a conflict between these two restrictions, (1) would receive priority.

Another draw was held to determine the order of fixtures. In the case of two teams from the same city in the Top 16 (Panathinaikos and Olympiacos, Efes Pilsen and Ülker) they were scheduled so that every week, only one team would be at home.

Key to colors
     Top two places in each group advanced to quarterfinals
More information Team, Pld ...
More information Team, Pld ...

Quarterfinals

Each quarterfinal was a best-of-three series between a first-place team in the Top 16 and a second-place team from a different group, with the first-place team receiving home advantage.

More information Team 1, Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score ...

Final four

Semifinals

April 28, Sazka Arena, Prague

More information Team 1, Score ...

3rd place game

April 30, Sazka Arena, Prague

More information Team 1, Score ...

Final

April 30, Sazka Arena, Prague

More information Team 1, Score ...
More information 2005–06 Euroleague Champions ...

Final standings

More information Team ...

Final Four 2006 MVP

Greece Theodoros Papaloukas (CSKA Moscow)

Individual statistics

Rating

More information Rank, Name ...

Points

More information Rank, Name ...

Rebounds

More information Rank, Name ...

Assists

More information Rank, Name ...

Other Stats

Category Name Team Games Stat
Steals per gameUnited States Jeff TrepagnierTurkey Ülker203.05
Blocks per gameLithuania Darjuš LavrinovičLithuania Žalgiris202.10
Turnovers per gameItaly Massimo BulleriItaly Armani Jeans Milano143.79
Fouls drawn per gameUnited States Scoonie PennCroatia Cibona205.80
Minutes per gameIsrael Yotam HalperinSlovenia Union Olimpija1436:04
2FG%Lithuania Tomas MasiulisPoland Prokom Trefl140.666
3FG%Italy Giacomo GalandaItaly Armani Jeans Milano140.536
FT%Greece Nikos ChatzisGreece Olympiacos200.969

Game highs

Category Name Team Stat
RatingUnited States Spencer NelsonGermany Brose Bamberg48
PointsArgentina Luis ScolaSpain Tau Cerámica36
ReboundsUnited States Spencer NelsonGermany Brose Bamberg20
AssistsNorth Macedonia Vrbica StefanovTurkey Ülker12
United States Lonnie CooperFrance Pau-Orthez
StealsUnited States Jeff TrepagnierTurkey Ülker11
BlocksUnited States Maceo BastonIsrael Maccabi Elite6
TurnoversSerbia and Montenegro Igor RakočevićSpain Real Madrid9
Greece Giannis KalampokisGreece AEK
Fouls DrawnSlovenia Jaka LakovičGreece Panathinaikos15

Awards

Euroleague MVP

Final Four MVP

Finals Top Scorer

All-Euroleague Team 2005–06

[1]

Best Defender

Rising Star

Alphonso Ford Top Scorer

Alexander Gomelsky Coach of the Year

Club Executive of the Year

Regular season

Top 16

Playoffs

More information Game, Player ...

MVP of the Month

More information Month, Player ...

References and notes

  1. "All-Euroleague team, MVP announced in Prague - MAIN PAGE - Welcome to EUROLEAGUE BASKETBALL". www.euroleague.net. Archived from the original on January 17, 2010. Retrieved 2021-12-09.

Euroleague Competition Format


Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article 2005–06_Euroleague, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.