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FIBA EuroCup

EuroChallenge
FIBA EuroChallenge logo.png
Primary logo (2013–2015)
Formerly FIBA Europe League (2003–2005)
FIBA EuroCup (2005–2008)
Sport Basketball
Founded 2003
Ceased 2015
Replaced by FIBA Europe Cup
Motto We Are Basketball
No. of teams 32
Country FIBA Europe member associations
Continent European Union FIBA Europe (Europe)
Last
champion(s)
France Nanterre
(1st title)
Most titles 12 teams from 8 countries
(1 title each)
Level on pyramid 3rd Tier on European Pyramid
Promotion to Eurocup2nd tier (Finalists)
Official website EuroChallenge

EuroChallenge (called the FIBA Europe League in 2003–05, and EuroCup in 2005–08) was the 3rd tier level transnational men's professional club basketball competition in Europe. It was organized and run by FIBA Europe. It is not to be confused with the EuroCup Challenge – the now defunct 4th tier level transnational men's professional club basketball competition in Europe, which was also organized and run by FIBA Europe, and played during the 2002–03 to 2006–07 seasons. In 2015, FIBA dissolved the EuroChallenge to start a new second-tier competition, the FIBA Europe Cup, to compete with the Eurocup.

Each season's two EuroChallenge finalists were promoted to the next season's 2nd tier level, the Eurocup competition.

The competition was created in 2003, following the defections of most of the top European basketball teams from the former FIBA SuproLeague, which heralded the formation of the new version of the Turkish Airlines Euroleague, under the umbrella of Euroleague Basketball. Since the 2004–05 season, EuroChallenge is considered to be the 3rd strongest international professional basketball competition for men's clubs in Europe, after both the Turkish Airlines Euroleague and the Eurocup (both of which fall under the supervision of Euroleague Basketball). Though, during the first two seasons of the competition's coexistence with the Eurocup, the EuroChallenge (under the name FIBA Europe League) was favored by Italian, Russian and Greek teams, making both competitions quite comparable in strength.


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Wikipedia

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