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Partizan Mozzart Bet Belgrade

  • WonW14
  • LostL17

Partizan Mozzart Bet Belgrade

There is great excitement in the Serbian capital this season with Partizan Mozzart Bet Partizan, guided by the Coach Zeljko Obradovic, back in the Turkish Airlines EuroLeague for the first time in eight years. Founded in 1945, Partizan started to make noise in European competitions in the late 1970s, when Dragan Kicanovic and Drazen Dalipagic led the club to Korac Cup titles in 1978 and 1979. Vlade Divac and Zarko Paspalj helped the club reach the 1988 EuroLeague Final Four and lift the 1989 Korac Cup. In 1992, Partizan won the club's first – and to date only – EuroLeague crown, with Obradovic on the bench, by downing DKV Joventut 70-71 on a miraculous three-pointer by Sasha Djordjevic, which ranks among the most amazing shots in basketball history. At home, Partizan remained a dominant force by winning trophies at a steady clip and it returned to the EuroLeague Final Four in 1998, but lost in the semifinals against eventual champion Kinder Bologna. From the turn of the century, Partizan managed to remain fully competitive while developing players, including some of the best big men in European basketball, such as Nikola Pekovic, Aleks Maric, Kosta Perovic, Jan Vesely, Novica Velickovic and Milan Macvan. Before them, Dejan Tomasevic, Nenad Krstic and Predrag Drobnjak all played for Partizan, too. With a fan base that treats the club and basketball like a religion, success turned the club from contender to EuroLeague giant. Partizan registered three consecutive EuroLeague Playoff appearances between 2008 and 2010, with the latter being the year in which the club once again reached the EuroLeague Final Four. Maric, Bo McCalebb, Dusan Kecman and Vesely helped Partizan top Maccabi Tel Aviv in the playoffs to get to the big event, where it was stopped in the semifinals by Olympiacos Piraeus only after overtime. Partizan kept dominating domestically with a run of 13 consecutive Serbian League crowns, five consecutive Serbian Cups from 2008 through 2012, and ruling the Adriatic League with five trophies from 2007 through 2011 and another one in 2013. After it topped archrival Crvena Zvezda 3-1 in the 2014 Serbian League final to win the title, Partizan hit a dry spell and suffered its first title-free season in 14 years. Partizan ended that drought by lifting the Serbian Cup in 2018, '19 and '20 and competed in the 7DAYS EuroCup for five seasons, setting its goals higher each season. Now, back in the EuroLeague, and with an army of basketball die-hards behind the players and a coaching legend on the sidelines, Partizan hopes to recapture its glory and get back to winning silverware.

There is great excitement in the Serbian capital this season with Partizan Mozzart Bet Partizan, guided by the Coach Zeljko Obradovic, back in the Turkish Airlines EuroLeague for the first time in eight years. Founded in 1945, Partizan started to make noise in European competitions in the late 1970s, when Dragan Kicanovic and Drazen Dalipagic led the club to Korac Cup titles in 1978 and 1979. Vlade Divac and Zarko Paspalj helped the club reach the 1988 EuroLeague Final Four and lift the 1989 Korac Cup. In 1992, Partizan won the club's first – and to date only – EuroLeague crown, with Obradovic on the bench, by downing DKV Joventut 70-71 on a miraculous three-pointer by Sasha Djordjevic, which ranks among the most amazing shots in basketball history. At home, Partizan remained a dominant force by winning trophies at a steady clip and it returned to the EuroLeague Final Four in 1998, but lost in the semifinals against eventual champion Kinder Bologna. From the turn of the century, Partizan managed to remain fully competitive while developing players, including some of the best big men in European basketball, such as Nikola Pekovic, Aleks Maric, Kosta Perovic, Jan Vesely, Novica Velickovic and Milan Macvan. Before them, Dejan Tomasevic, Nenad Krstic and Predrag Drobnjak all played for Partizan, too. With

a fan base that treats the club and basketball like a religion, success turned the club from contender to EuroLeague giant. Partizan registered three consecutive EuroLeague Playoff appearances between 2008 and 2010, with the latter being the year in which the club once again reached the EuroLeague Final Four. Maric, Bo McCalebb, Dusan Kecman and Vesely helped Partizan top Maccabi Tel Aviv in the playoffs to get to the big event, where it was stopped in the semifinals by Olympiacos Piraeus only after overtime. Partizan kept dominating domestically with a run of 13 consecutive Serbian League crowns, five consecutive Serbian Cups from 2008 through 2012, and ruling the Adriatic League with five trophies from 2007 through 2011 and another one in 2013. After it topped archrival Crvena Zvezda 3-1 in the 2014 Serbian League final to win the title, Partizan hit a dry spell and suffered its first title-free season in 14 years. Partizan ended that drought by lifting the Serbian Cup in 2018, '19 and '20 and competed in the 7DAYS EuroCup for five seasons, setting its goals higher each season. Now, back in the EuroLeague, and with an army of basketball die-hards behind the players and a coaching legend on the sidelines, Partizan hopes to recapture its glory and get back to winning silverware.

Next game

Streak
l
w
l
l
w
game Olympiacos Piraeus vs Partizan Mozzart Bet Belgrade
Group Regular Season
STARK ARENA
STARK ARENA
Partizan Mozzart Bet Belgrade
PAR
Partizan Mozzart Bet Belgrade
VS
Olympiacos Piraeus
Olympiacos Piraeus
OLY
All games

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  • President

    Ostoja Mijailovic

  • Arena

    STARK ARENA, Bulevar Arsenija Carnojevica 58, 11070 Belgrade - Serbia

  • Club address

    Humska 1, 11040 Belgrade - Serbia

  • Official website

    http://www.kkpartizan.rs

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