Date | R | Home v Away | - |
---|---|---|---|
12/26 15:00 | 12 | [11] Apollon Patras v GS Kymis [8] | 75-60 |
12/26 15:00 | 12 | [10] Koroivos Amaliadas v PAOK [5] | 80-82 |
12/26 14:00 | 12 | [7] Kolossos Rhodes v AEK [3] | 86-73 |
12/18 16:00 | 11 | [8] PAOK v Olympiacos [1] | 84-89 |
12/18 14:00 | 11 | [14] Trikala BC v Panathinaikos [3] | 77-82 |
12/17 15:00 | 11 | [6] Rethymno Cretan Kings v Koroivos Amaliadas [10] | 101-70 |
12/17 15:00 | 11 | [11] Apollon Patras v Aris [5] | 64-79 |
12/17 15:00 | 11 | [3] AEK v Doxa Lefkadas [13] | 84-60 |
12/17 15:00 | 11 | [9] GS Kymis v Promitheas [8] | 77-66 |
12/17 14:30 | 11 | [12] GS Lavrio v Kolossos Rhodes [7] | 65-67 |
12/11 19:30 | 10 | [2] Panathinaikos v AEK [3] | 77-68 |
12/11 16:00 | 10 | [1] Olympiacos v Rethymno Cretan Kings [7] | 83-58 |
12/10 15:00 | 10 | [13] Doxa Lefkadas v GS Lavrio [12] | 63-64 |
12/10 15:00 | 10 | [7] Kolossos Rhodes v Apollon Patras [10] | 71-59 |
12/10 15:00 | 10 | [9] Promitheas v PAOK [4] | 73-75 |
12/10 15:00 | 10 | [6] Aris v GS Kymis [8] | 85-72 |
12/10 15:00 | 10 | [11] Koroivos Amaliadas v Trikala BC [14] | 87-76 |
12/05 17:00 | 9 | [13] GS Lavrio v Panathinaikos [3] | 60-84 |
12/05 15:00 | 9 | [14] Trikala BC v Olympiacos [2] | 60-81 |
12/03 15:00 | 9 | [12] Apollon Patras v Doxa Lefkadas [14] | 74-65 |
12/03 15:00 | 9 | [9] GS Kymis v PAOK [4] | 93-82 |
12/03 15:00 | 9 | [7] Aris v Kolossos Rhodes [6] | 84-60 |
12/03 15:00 | 9 | [3] AEK v Koroivos Amaliadas [10] | 89-75 |
12/03 15:00 | 9 | [5] Rethymno Cretan Kings v Promitheas [8] | 104-97 |
11/28 17:00 | 8 | [3] Panathinaikos v Apollon Patras [14] | 96-59 |
11/26 17:00 | 8 | [2] Olympiacos v AEK [1] | 78-67 |
11/26 15:00 | 8 | [5] PAOK v Rethymno Cretan Kings [4] | 77-75 |
11/26 15:00 | 8 | [13] Doxa Lefkadas v Aris [7] | 69-79 |
11/26 15:00 | 8 | [8] Promitheas v Trikala BC [10] | 84-67 |
11/26 15:00 | 8 | [6] Kolossos Rhodes v GS Kymis [9] | 64-54 |
The Greek Basketball League (abbreviated as GBL), and also known as the Stoiximan Greek Basketball League (GBL) for sponsorship reasons, is the first tier level professional basketball league in Greece. It is run by the Hellenic Basketball Association (abbreviated as HEBA; Greek: ΕΣΑΚΕ), under the legal authority of the Hellenic Basketball Federation (abbreviated as HBF; Greek: Ε.Ο.Κ.). Over the years, the league has previously been known by several different names, which have included: the Panhellenic Basketball Championship or Greek Basketball Championship, the Panhellenic Basketball First Category Championship (1st) (A) or Greek Basketball First Category Championship (1st) (A), the Greek Alpha National Basketball Category Championship (A), the Greek Alpha1 National Basketball Category Championship (A1), the HEBA Alpha1 (A1), and most recently, the Greek Basket League. The league's current official main sponsor is Stoiximan.
The GBL is the highest-tier level of the Greek league system. The GBL plays under FIBA rules and currently consists of 12 teams, with each season's lowest-placed team being relegated to the A2 Basketball League, and then being replaced by the winner of the playoffs of that tier. The league runs from October to June, with teams playing 22 games each during the regular season, and the top 8 placed teams in the regular season standings then competing in the league's playoffs. The first official Greek Basketball Championship was held in the 1927–28 season. The league held a competition in which the teams of the league played under a format with a nationwide schedule, for the first time, in the 1963–64 season. The league first held a playoff round in the 1986–87 season. The league first allowed foreign (non-Greek) players, in the 1988–89 season. The league first became a fully professional competition in the 1992–93 season, and that was also when its competition status was officially changed from the amateur category, to the professional category.
Historically, the GBL has been ranked as one of the top 3 level national domestic leagues in European basketball, since the league rankings began. For further information, see historical European national basketball league rankings, and European national basketball league rankings.
The first official regional club basketball tournament in Greece, took place in the year 1924. While the first edition of the Greek basketball championship took place in the 1927–28 season, the first fully organized Greek basketball championship began. The league was originally organized by the Hellenic Amateur Athletic Association (SEGAS). There have been four different official championship eras. The first era was the Panhellenic Championship (Πανελλήνιο Πρωτάθλημα), which lasted from the 1927–28 to 1962–63 seasons, when the champions of every regional district played each other to decide the Greek Champion. The second era started in the 1963–64 season, when the A National Category (Α' Εθνική Κατηγορία), or Alpha National Category was founded.
In 1969, the Hellenic Basketball Federation (E.O.K.) took over the duties of overseeing the competition, and did so until the year 1992. The third era of the championship existed between the 1986–87 and 1991–92 seasons, when the first division A1 National Category (Α1 Εθνική Κατηγορία), with a regular season and playoffs, and the second division A2 National Category (Α2 Εθνική Κατηγορία) were formed. The 1988–89 season, marked the first time that Greek Basket League teams were allowed to have foreign players on their rosters.
The fourth era of the championship began in the 1992–93 season, when the Hellenic Basketball Association (HEBA) took over the competition and renamed the first division the HEBA A1 (ΕΣΑΚΕ Α1). The league was then renamed to Greek Basket League (Ελληνική Μπάσκετ Λιγκ), starting with the 2010–11 season.
The Greek League has been one of the most competitive basketball leagues in Europe through the years, and it was widely regarded as the second best national domestic league in the world, after only the NBA, in the 1990s decade. It currently ranks among the best national domestic leagues in the world (excluding the NBA), such as Liga ACB in Spain, VTB United League (counts as the domestic league for Russian clubs), and BSL in Turkey. Historically, the league has been ranked as one of the top 3 European national domestic leagues, along with Italy's Lega Basket Serie A and Spain's Liga ACB, under the historical European national basketball league rankings and European national basketball league rankings.
The league has several European historical basketball powers, which also belong to some of the most traditional European basketball clubs, especially Panathinaikos, Olympiacos, and AEK (which had great success in the 1960s), which are three of the most successful European basketball clubs of all time. Also, Aris, led by Nikos Galis, Panagiotis Giannakis, and Slobodan "Lefteris" Subotić, was the dominant Greek club, and one of the most powerful European teams in the 1980s. Other clubs that have had significant success throughout the history of Greek basketball, as well as success in European basketball, are PAOK and Panellinios. The first five aforementioned clubs (Panathinaikos, Olympiacos, AEK, Aris and PAOK), are also the most widely supported by fans in Greece.
Despite the championship having been contested 84 times, only nine different clubs have won it so far. The dominating club has usually been Panathinaikos, having claimed the championship 40 times. Since the foundation of the Alpha National Category in the 1963–64 season, only two teams have participated in every season of the competition, Panathinaikos and Aris.