YUBA League explained

YUBA League
Country: FR Yugoslavia
(1991–2002)

(2002–2006)
Confed:FIBA Europe
Founded:1992
First:1992–93
Folded:2006
Teams:18
Feeds:ABA League
Relegation:YUBA B League
Levels:1
Domest Cup:Yugoslav Cup
Radivoj Korać Cup
Most Champs:Partizan (8 titles)

The YUBA League was the top-tier men's professional basketball league in Serbia and Montenegro (previously FR Yugoslavia). Founded in 1992 and folded in 2006, it was run by the Basketball Federation of Serbia and Montenegro.

The name YUBA League (Yugoslav Basketball Association League) was used in Serbia and Montenegro until 2006. It consisted of the first-stage "First League", and the second-stage "Super League", with each having their own men's and women's divisions. The league was also named YUBA League: Sportstar YUBA League, Winston YUBA League, Frikom YUBA League, Efes Pils YUBA League, Atlas Pils YUBA League, and Sinalco First League, for sponsorship reasons. For past league sponsorship names, see the list below.

When Serbia and Montenegro peacefully separated in 2006, the YUBA League ceased to exist and was re-branded as the Basketball League of Serbia a Serbia-only organization, with Montenegro forming its own federation.

Rules

Competition format 2003–2006

Both the Super League and First League used a double round-robin style qualification round, where each team played every other team both at home and away. Even the quarters, semis, and finals were played at home and away, including a tie-breaker if necessary with the home advantage awarded to the better qualifying team.

The Super League men's contained eight clubs, while women's contained six. Immediately after the qualification round were the semi-finals, in which the top four qualifying teams competed in. While the two leagues worked exactly the same, the First League however, contained almost twice as many clubs as the Super League, fourteen and twelve for men's and women's respectively and therefore included quarter finals.

History

Championship history

Name of country First season Last season Seasons
1992–93 2001–02 10
2002–03 2005–06 4

Sponsorship naming

The League has had several denominations through the years due to its sponsorship:

Champions

Performance by club

Titles Club Years
style=text-align:center;vertical-align:top 8 1994–95, 1995–96, 1996–97, 2001–02, 2002–03, 2003–04, 2004–05, 2005–06
style=text-align:center;vertical-align:top 3 1992–93, 1993–94, 1997–98
style=text-align:center;vertical-align:top 3 1998–99, 1999–00, 2000–01

Play-off finals

Source[1] [2]

SeasonHome court advantageResultHome court disadvantage1st of Regular SeasonRecord
Crvena zvezdaPartizanCrvena zvezda
PartizanCrvena zvezdaPartizan
PartizanTG Borovica RumaPartizan
PartizanBFC BeočinPartizan
PartizanFMPPartizan
Crvena zvezdaFMPPartizan
Not played due to the NATO bombing of YugoslaviaBudućnost
BudućnostPartizanBudućnost
BudućnostPartizanBudućnost
BudućnostPartizan ICNBudućnost
Partizan MobtelFMPPartizan Mobtel
Partizan MobtelHemofarmPartizan Mobtel
Partizan Pivara MBHemofarmPartizan Pivara MB
Partizan Pivara MBCrvena zvezdaPartizan Pivara MB

Following national leagues

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: History of YUBA League . kosarka.co.yu . 13 December 2022.
  2. Web site: State championships . kls.rs . 13 December 2022.