Basketball at the U-League | |
Pixels: | 200px |
Country: | South Korea |
Organiser: | Korea University Basketball Federation Korea University Sports Federation |
Founded: | 2010, as Korean University Basketball League 2018, as U-League |
Teams: | 12 (Division 1, men) 9 (women) |
Basketball at the U-League (Korean: 대학농구 U-리그), known as Korean University Basketball League (Korean: 한국대학농구리그) before being merged into the U-League in 2018,[1] is the main college basketball competition in South Korea. It is sanctioned by the Korea University Basketball Federation (KUBF; Korean: 한국대학농구연맹), which oversees college basketball in South Korea, and the Korea University Sports Federation (KUSF).
The following universities and colleges are members of the Korea University Basketball Federation:
The teams compete in a league/play-offs format with teams designated "home" or "away", mirroring the professional KBL and WKBL. Players who are registered with a team are eligible to participate in the rookie draft if they decide to become professional basketball players.
For the men's competition, only KUBF Division 1 members participate in the KUSF U-League.[5] The U-League is considered to be the elite competition and a stepping stone to the KBL as a majority of the players from Division 1 teams will declare for the KBL rookie draft. Teams from Division 2 member institutions participate in the KUSF Club Championship. Both Division 1 and Division 2 teams also participate in the older MBC Cup competition organized by the KUBF.
The women's teams participate in the KUSF U-League. They also compete in the MBC Cup, along with club teams (non U-League members).
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the full season was not played between 2020 and the first half of 2022.
Year | Championship (winner) | Championship (runner-up) | Championship MVPs | Regular season champion |
---|---|---|---|---|
2020[6] | Yonsei University | Korea University | Park Ji-won (Yonsei University) Han Seung-hee (Yonsei University) | Yonsei University |
2021[7] | Yonsei University | Korea University Dongguk University | Lee Jung-hyun (Yonsei University) Shin Seung-min (Yonsei University) | Yonsei University |
2022 | Korea University | Konkuk University Kyung Hee University Dankook University | Moon Jeong-hyeon (Korea University) | |
2023 | Korea University | Yonsei University | Park Mu-bin (Korea University) | |
Year | Championship (winner) | Championship (runner-up) | Regular season champion | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2015 | Yong In University | Gwangju University | Gwangju University | |
2016 | Gwangju University | University of Suwon | Gwangju University | |
2017 | Gwangju University | University of Suwon | Gwangju University | |
2018 | University of Suwon | Gwangju University | University of Suwon | |
2019 | Pusan National University | Dankook University | Pusan National University | |
2020 | Pusan National University | Vision College of Jeonju | Pusan National University | |
2021[8] | Pusan National University Pusan National University | Dankook University Dankook University | Gwangju University Dankook University |
The Basketball U-League was founded in 2010 (men's competition) and 2015 (women's competition) as part of the Korea University Sports Federation's effort to organize college sports into a more streamlined format similar to the National Collegiate Athletic Association in the United States.[9] The U-League system also includes five other sports.[10]
The Korea University Basketball Federation has existed since 1964 and college teams competed in the Korean Basketball Association-sanctioned National Basketball Festival (Korean: 농구대잔치). At that time, basketball was still an amateur sport and teams were all sponsored by corporate companies or universities. When the professional league (Korean Basketball League) was founded in 1997, the senior teams all became professional teams, leaving only the Korea Armed Forces Athletic Corps's Sangmu basketball team and college teams to compete in the tournament.[11] With the founding of the U-League, a large number of college teams opt not to send their teams to the National Basketball Festival or only send their freshmen.[12]