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European Champions' Cup 1987-1988
European Champions' Cup Final: Tracer Milano - Maccabi Elite Tel-Aviv 90-84 Tracer Olimpia (Franco Casalini): Mike D'Antoni 17, Roberto Premier 3, Ricky Brown 17, Bob McAdoo 25, Dino Meneghin 5, Massimiliano Aldi 7, Riccardo Pittis 8, Piero Montecchi 8, Fausto Bargna, Mario Governa European Champions Cup Standings 1987-1988
Quarterfinal Round
Other Teams
European Champions' Cup Final ![]() Tracer Milano conquer European Champions' Cup trophy ![]() Tracer Milano Champions European Champions' Cup
Philips Milano won European Champions Cup 1988-Apr 28, 1988
After 30 years with the classic formula of home and away games, and since 1966 a single-game final on neutral ground, FIBA decided to change the competition format in 1988. At that time, only one team, the champion per country, the domestic champion, was eligible to play. After two eliminatory rounds and an eight-team third round, the top qualifiers advanced to the first Final Four, played from April 5 to 7 in Ghent, Belgium. Partizan Belgrade, with a very young Dusan Vujosevic on the bench directing Vlade Divac, Zarko Paspalj, Aleksandar Djordjevic, Goran Grbovic, Ivo Nakic, even Zeljko Obradovic, arrived with the top record, 10-4, ahead of the Aris Thessaloniki (9-5) of Nikos Gallis, Panagiotis Yannakis and Slobodan Subotic. Philips Milan was also third (9-5) with Franco Casalini on the bench leading players like Mike D'Antoni, Mike Brown, Dino Meneghin and Bob McAdoo (206-C-1951, college: UNC). In fourth place was Maccabi Tel Aviv (8-6) with Doron Jamchy, Mickey Berkowitz, Kevin Magee, Motti Aroesti and Kenny Barlow. Barcelona (7-7), Saturn Cologne (5-9), Pau-Orthez (4-10) and Nashua Den Bosch (4-10) were the teams left out of the Final Four. In the final tournament, the experience of Milan's veterans prevailed over Maccabi's quality, Partizan's talent and Aris's individuality.
By Euroleague FINAL FOUR: Gand, Belgium FINAL: Tracer Milan - Maccabi Tel-Aviv 90-84 Tracer: McAdoo 25, D'Antoni 17, Brown 17, Meneghin 5, Premier 3; Pittis 8, Montecchi 8, Aldi 7 Maccabi: Jamchy 24, Barlow 21, Simms 15, Magee 13, Aroesti 0; Cohen 6, Berkowitz 3, Daniel 2, Lippin 0 THIRD PLACE: Partizan - Aris Thessaloniki 105-93 (48-39) Partizan: V. Divac 31, M. Pecarski 24, Z. Paspalj 23, G. Grbovic 11, A. Djordjevic 7, I. Nakic 7, Z. Obradovic 2, M. Savovic, O. Ignatovic, O. Popovic. Head Coach: Dusan Vujosevic Aris: N. Galis 39, L. Subotic 18, P. Yannakis 11, G. Wiltjer 10, M. Romanidis 7, N. Filipou 4, V. Lipiridis 4, P. Stamatis, D. Bousvaros, Y. Doxakis. Head coach: Iannis Ioannidis Final Four MVP: Bob McAdoo (Tracer Milano) SEMIFINALS Philips Milan - Aris Thessaloniki 87-82 (45-45) Milan: B. McAdoo 39, R. Brown 28, D. Meneghin 7, P. Montecchi 5, R. Pittis 4, M. D'Antoni 2, R. Premier 2, M. Governa, M. Aldi, F. Bargna. Head Coach: Franco Casalini Aris: N. Galis 28, L. Subotic 23, P. Yannakis 15, N. Filipou 8, G. Wiltjer 6, V. Lipiridis 2, M. Romanidis, P. Stamatis, D. Bousvaros, Y. Doxakis. Head Coach: Iannis Ioannidis Maccabi Tel Aviv - Partizan Beograd 87-82 (43-44) Maccabi: K. Magee 34, W. Sims 18, K. Barlow 12, M. Aoresti 10, D. Jamchi 8, M. Daniel 3, M. Berkowitz 2, C. Lipin, G. Katz, I. Cohen. Head Coach: Ralph Klein Partizan: G. Grbovic 19, V. Divac 19, Z. Paspalj 18, M. Pecarski 8, Z. Obradovic 8, M. Savovic 6, A. Djordjevic 2, I. Nakic 2, O. Ignatovic, O. Popovic. Head Coach: Dusan Vujosevic | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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