Balkan Basketball Championship

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Balkan Basketball Championship
SportBasketball
Founded1959
Inaugural season1959
Ceased1990
No. of teams3 to 5
CountriesBalkans nations

The Balkan Basketball Championship, sometimes also referred to as the Balkan Basketball Cup or the Balkan Basketball Games, was the men's basketball competition of the Balkan Games. The purpose of the Balkan Games, which were first held in 1929, was to strengthen the relations between the nations of the Balkans region. Originally, the Balkan Games was just an athletics competition, but numerous other sports were added to the event over the years. In 1959, basketball was added to the event.

History[]

The first men's basketball competition took place in Bucharest, in 1959. When it started, the basketball competition was considered to be an important event by the countries that competed in it. For many years of the competition, the best players from the Balkans region often competed at the tournament. However, over the years, the emphasis on the tournament waned, and it was eventually cancelled. The last basketball tournament was held at Skopje, in 1990.

Results[]

Year Host City Gold Silver Bronze 4th Place 5th Place
1959 Romania Bucharest  Bulgaria  Yugoslavia  Romania  Albania
1960 Bulgaria Sofia  Bulgaria  Yugoslavia  Romania  Turkey  Albania
1961 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Skopje  Yugoslavia  Bulgaria  Romania  Turkey
1962 Turkey Istanbul  Yugoslavia  Turkey  Bulgaria  Romania  Greece
1963 Greece Athens  Yugoslavia  Greece  Bulgaria  Romania  Turkey
1964 Romania Bucharest[1]  Yugoslavia  Romania  Greece  Bulgaria  Turkey
1965 Albania Tirana  Yugoslavia  Bulgaria  Turkey  Romania  Albania
1966 Bulgaria Sofia  Yugoslavia  Romania  Greece  Bulgaria  Turkey
1967 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Skopje  Yugoslavia  Bulgaria  Greece  Romania  Turkey
1968 Turkey İzmir  Yugoslavia  Romania  Turkey  Bulgaria  Greece
1969 Greece Thessaloniki  Yugoslavia  Greece  Romania  Bulgaria  Turkey
1970 Romania Bucharest  Yugoslavia  Bulgaria  Romania  Greece
1971 Bulgaria Vidin  Yugoslavia  Yugoslavia  Turkey  Greece  Romania
1972 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Sarajevo  Yugoslavia  Greece  Romania  Bulgaria  Turkey
1973 Turkey Istanbul  Yugoslavia  Bulgaria  Romania  Turkey  Greece
1974 Greece Thessaloniki  Yugoslavia  Romania  Greece  Bulgaria
1975 Romania Bucharest  Yugoslavia  Romania  Bulgaria  Greece
1976 Bulgaria Burgas  Yugoslavia  Bulgaria  Greece  Romania
1977 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Skopje  Yugoslavia  Romania  Greece  Bulgaria  Turkey
1978 Turkey Ankara  Yugoslavia  Romania  Bulgaria  Greece  Turkey
1979 Greece Athens  Greece[2][3]  Yugoslavia  Turkey  Bulgaria  Romania
1980 Romania Cluj-Napoca  Yugoslavia  Greece
1981 Bulgaria Sofia  Turkey  Greece
1982 Turkey Istanbul  Yugoslavia
1983 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Titov Vrbas  Yugoslavia  Greece
1984 Greece Athens  Yugoslavia  Greece
1985 Romania Bucharest  Yugoslavia  Greece
1986 Bulgaria Sofia  Greece  Yugoslavia
1987
1988 Turkey Antalya  Greece
1989
1990 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Skopje  Yugoslavia  Greece

Sources[]

  • Athletic Echo Newspaper 14 September 1979 page 5 (in Greek)

References[]

External links[]

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