Date | R | Home vs Away | - |
---|---|---|---|
05/13 09:15 | - | Dinamo Vladivostok vs Khimki Podmoskovie | 84-79 |
05/12 15:00 | - | Zenit St. Petersburg 2 vs Temp-Sumz Revda | 64-72 |
05/11 08:00 | - | Dinamo Vladivostok vs Khimki Podmoskovie | 74-52 |
05/07 16:00 | - | Khimki Podmoskovie vs Dinamo Vladivostok | 55-59 |
05/05 15:00 | - | Khimki Podmoskovie vs Dinamo Vladivostok | 65-60 |
04/28 06:00 | - | Barnaul Altai vs Rodniki Izhevsk | 66-76 |
04/27 06:00 | - | Rodniki Izhevsk vs Novosibirsk | 55-78 |
04/26 06:00 | - | Novosibirsk vs Barnaul Altai | 85-68 |
04/25 14:00 | - | CSKA Moscow 2 vs Chelbasket | 54-77 |
04/25 11:00 | - | Rusichi Kursk vs Lokomotiv Kuban COP | 69-99 |
04/24 14:00 | - | Chelbasket vs Lokomotiv Kuban COP | 68-66 |
04/24 13:00 | - | Zenit St. Petersburg 2 vs Khimki Podmoskovie | 54-76 |
The Russian Basketball Super League 1, or Super Liga 1, (Russian: Баскетбольная Cуперлига 1), formerly known as the Russian Basketball Super League A or the Russian Basketball Super Liga A, is a men's professional basketball league that was the pre-eminent league of Russian professional basketball until 2010. Currently, it is the second-tier division of the Russian professional basketball pyramid. The league is run by the Russian Basketball Federation (RBF).
After being the first-tier division of Russian basketball, from its first season in 1991–92, the Super League A was relegated to being the second-tier division of Russian basketball after the 2009–10 season, and was replaced with a different first-tier league, starting with the 2010–11 season of the Russian Professional Basketball League (PBL). The successor league to the Super League 1 was not controlled by the Russian Basketball Federation (RBF), like the Super League 1 is, but by a separate body named the Professional Basketball League (PBL).
From the 2010–11 season onward, the Super League A and Super League B (the previous second division of the Russian basketball pyramid) divisions were united into a single league that serves as the second tier of Russian basketball, named the Super League 1. The 2010–11 season featured 11 clubs.[]