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KK Bosna Visit Sarajevo

Coordinates: 43°51′26.5″N 18°24′44″E / 43.857361°N 18.41222°E / 43.857361; 18.41222
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Bosna Visit Sarajevo
Bosna Visit Sarajevo logo
NicknameStudenti (Students)
Bordo-bijeli (Maroon-whites)
LeaguesBosnian League
Founded1951; 73 years ago (1951)
HistoryKK Bosna
(1951–2014)
KK Bosna Royal
(2014–present)
ArenaMirza Delibašić Hall
(capacity: 6,500)
Zetra Olympic Hall
(capacity: 12,000)
LocationSarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Team colors     
Main sponsorVisit Sarajevo[1]
PresidentDubravko Barbarić
Head coachZoran Kašćelan
Team captainHaris Delalić
Championships1 EuroLeague
4 Bosnian Championships
4 Bosnian Cups
3 Yugoslav Championships
2 Yugoslav Cups
Websitewww.kkbosna.ba

Košarkaški klub Bosna (transl. Basketball Club Bosna), commonly referred to as KK Bosna, currently named Bosna Visit Sarajevo for sponsorship reasons,[1] is a professional basketball club based in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is the most successful Bosnian club of all time, having been the EuroLeague champion by winning the 1978–79 FIBA European Champions Cup. The club competes in the Basketball Championship of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is part of the University Sport Society USD Bosna (Bosnian: Univerzitetsko sportsko društvo Bosna).

History

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1951–1955: Formation and early years

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The club was founded in 1951 as a member of the University Sports Society Bosna (Bosnian: Univerzitetsko sportsko društvo Bosna). The club's first chairman and coach was doctor Nedžad Brkić, with the roster composed mostly of students enrolled in the University of Sarajevo.[2] The first four years of the club's existence were spent in the lower-tier Sarajevo city league, which the team went on to win in 1955, earning a promotion to the SR Bosnia and Herzegovina league. The team roster in these early years included the likes of Brkić, Marušić, Takač, Bise, Bjelica, Cindrić, Bilić, Đurasković, Fetahagić, Uzelac, Džapa, Pilav, Hofbauer, Lovrenović, Beganović and Dimitrijević.[2]

1955–1972: Attempting to reach top-tier Yugoslav First League

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For the next 17 years the club competed in the regional SR Bosnia and Herzegovina league, steadily building a team with which it could enter the Yugoslav First League.

On 28 April 1972 a decisive win against cross-town rivals KK Željezničar Sarajevo would promote the club to the top-tier of Yugoslav basketball where it would compete for the next 20 years.[3] The architect of the club's historic triumf and later European glory was charismatic young coach Bogdan Tanjević. The players that managed to achieve the promotion to the top national league were Jovo Terzić, Mirsad Milavić, Zdravko Čečur, Milan Pavlić, Aleksandar Nadaždin, Dumić, Bruno Soče, Žarko Varajić, Slobodan Pejović, Svetislav Pešić, Rođeni Krvavac, and Anto Đogić.[3]

1972–1984: The glory years

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The future European championship winning roster was completed with the arrival of legendary Mirza Delibašić in 1972. The first 6 seasons in the Yugoslav First League represented a coming of age process, with the team eventually going on to win its first title in 1978, led by star players Ratko Radovanović, Žarko Varajić and Mirza Delibašić. A year later KK Bosna became the first team, aside from CSKA Moscow, to win the European championship without a single foreign player on its roster. Namely, on April 5, 1979 the team, led by the late Delibašić and game MVP Varajić, defeated Italian Powerhouse Emerson Varese 96:93.[4] The club started its EuroLeague season in the Quarterfinal group stage, finishing first in its group. Once in the Semifinals, the side sent a message to contenders by edging the defending champions Real Madrid 114:109 in overtime, in Sarajevo. KK Bosna would eventually win all of its home games and would advance to the title game by edging Greek side Olympiacos 83–88, in Piraeus. Bosna's opponent in the final would either be Emerson Varese or Real Madrid, who faced each other off in the final game of the round. The Italian side beat Madrid 82:83. The aforementioned game will be remembered for Prada's misses: Namely, Luis Maria Prada famously missed 3 consecutive free throws with no time on the clock, forever changing European basketball history. Once in the title game, KK Bosna downed mighty Emerson Varese 96:93 in front of 15,000 fans in the Palais des Sports, Grenoble, France. Varajić led the team in scoring with 45 points, while Delibašić followed with 30. The former is still the record holder for most points in a Euroleague final.[5] Radovanović added 10 more points, while Americans Bob Morse and Charlie Yelverton scored 30 and 27 points respectively for Varese.[6] In the next four seasons KK Bosna would go on to win two more Yugoslav championships (1979-80; 1982-83), as well as a silver medal in the 1980 FIBA Intercontinental Cup, which it hosted. A second Yugoslav Cup triumf followed a year later.[7]

1984–1992: Pre-war years

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After nearly a decade of continuous success, most of the star players transferred abroad in the mid-1980s. Namely, Delibašić, Varajić, Radovanović, Đogić along with coach Bogdan Tanjević who took over Juventus Caserta moved to foreign clubs. As a result, the club management decided to transfer members of its talented youth department to the senior team, along with bringing in a handful of new players from other Yugoslav clubs. Nenad Marković, Gordan Firić, Samir Avdić and others all came in through the youth ranks but their time in the club was cut short by the start of the Bosnian War.

1992–1997: Hardest of times

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With the start of the Bosnian War in 1992 competitive basketball was halted in the newly independent country for nearly four years. A talented generation on the verge of success was forced to transfer to foreign sides, and in doing so the club was forced to fight for bare survival. The side's star prospect, Nenad Marković, joined Italian side Stefanel Trieste, while the likes of Avdić, Firić and others left to Spain, Italy and Turkey. In 1993, under the helm of legendary Ante Djogic and his assistant Mladen Jojic, a talented group of youngsters, who stayed in Sarajevo under the siege, was selected and which continued with trainings and competition organized in difficult war environment. Those youngsters, aged btw. 15 and 19, were: Konaković, Moratić, Bradić, Tihić, Mirković, Džafo, Isaković, brothers Damir and Vedran Vukotić, Branković, Tinjak. At the end of the 1997–98 season, a play-off for the national title was organized. KK Bosna lost 2–1 to HKK Široki in the final series. A year later the maroon-whites, brandishing a roster that included Mirković, Terzić, Subašić, Konaković, Kurtagić, Halimić, Lerić, Isaković, Bukva, Džuho and Radović, coached by former European championship-winning team member, Sabit Hadžić won the national title after a play-off victory.

Famous members

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The club remembrance has gathered all players, coach Tanjević, assistant coaches Prodanović, Krehić, first club's coach Halilović and all the club members who helped Bosna achieve a great success, such as the winning of the European title. Unfortunately, two key members of Bosna championship team are not alive anymore. Mirza Delibašić and Sabahudin Bilalović have died, but they will be remembered by the club and fans forever. Many great players and coaches from the region joined the remembrance in memory to one great generation of Bosna players and their accomplishments.

2014–present: Change of name

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In October 2014, the club decided to continue under the new name, Bosna Royal.[8][9]

Sponsorship naming

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Bosna has had several denominations through the years due to its sponsorship:

  • Bosna ASA
  • Bosna ASA BH Telecom
  • Bosna Royal Jelly: 2016–2017[10]
  • Bosna Meridianbet: 2022–2024[11]
  • Bosna Visit Sarajevo: 2024–present[1]

Supporters

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KK Bosna traditionally garnered a majority of its fan base from supporters of FK Sarajevo, and more specifically the latter's ultras firm, Horde zla, given the fact that both clubs share unique maroon and white team colours.

Through time the two sides became colloquially interchangeable, as Horde zla equally followed both, with the two clubs forming an unofficial, so-called Maroon Family. On 29 August 2013 FK Sarajevo and KK Bosna's handball sister club, RK Bosna, signed a cooperation agreement based on the principle of strengthening ties between the aforementioned family members.[12] On 6 November 2013 the same was done between FK Sarajevo and KK Bosna Royal, by which the forty-year-old relationship was officialized.[13]

Home venues

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KK Bosna Royal play their home fixtures at the Skenderija Sports Center, located in the Centar Municipality of Sarajevo. It was constructed in 1969 as a cultural and sport center, but was later revitalized and expanded for the 1984 Winter Olympic Games. Below the structure is a shopping mall. It sustained minor damage during the war, but is decaying due to lack of upkeep, it is revitalized since 2007. On 12 February 2012, after a record snowfall in Sarajevo, the roof of one of the halls fell in making that building unusable. The damage after this is said to be 'huge' and is yet unknown if that building will be rebuilt.[14]

In 1977, when Sarajevo was voted to host the 1984 Winter Olympics, they discovered that they needed more than only the brand-new building Zetra to host every figure skating and ice hockey event. So they started to reconstruct and expand the Skenderija into a real state-of-the-art ice-sports centre. It was also chosen as the centre for the representatives and press-reporters.[15]

KK Bosna Royal occasionally hosts games in the Olympic Hall Juan Antonio Samaranch, previously known as Zetra Olympic Hall. The arena was constructed specifically for the 1984 Winter Olympics, hosted in Sarajevo, and was completed in 1983. Its first major event was the 1983 World Junior Speed Skating Championships. It was described as an "ultramodern, angular edifice"[16] with a copper roof.

Players

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Current roster

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Note: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA-sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationalities not displayed.

Bosna Visit Sarajevo roster
Players Coaches
Pos. No. Nat. Name Ht. Age
CG 0 Bosnia and Herzegovina Ramić, Kerim 1.94 m (6 ft 4 in) 22 – (2002-04-04)4 April 2002
CG 2 United States Underwood, Dimitrius 1.95 m (6 ft 5 in) 26 – (1998-04-20)20 April 1998
PG 3 Finland Blomgren, Perttu 1.95 m (6 ft 5 in) 23 – (2001-09-13)13 September 2001
SF 7 Bosnia and Herzegovina Vrabac, Adin 2.03 m (6 ft 8 in) 30 – (1994-01-27)27 January 1994
SG 8 Bosnia and Herzegovina Podojak, Anes 1.91 m (6 ft 3 in) 23 – (2000-11-16)16 November 2000
F 9 Bosnia and Herzegovina Delalić, Haris (C) 2.03 m (6 ft 8 in) 30 – (1994-04-24)24 April 1994
SG 10 Bosnia and Herzegovina Gutić, Asim 1.90 m (6 ft 3 in) 22 – (2001-12-12)12 December 2001
C 16 Serbia Šalić, Đoko 2.10 m (6 ft 11 in) 29 – (1995-09-18)18 September 1995
CG 23 United States West, Jarrod 1.82 m (6 ft 0 in) 25 – (1999-03-29)29 March 1999
SG 24 Democratic Republic of the Congo Lutete, Christian 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) 28 – (1996-10-09)9 October 1996
C 27 Bosnia and Herzegovina Džafić, Elmir 2.15 m (7 ft 1 in) 19 – (2005-09-06)6 September 2005
PF 31 Bosnia and Herzegovina Zubac, Jure 2.03 m (6 ft 8 in) 29 – (1995-03-15)15 March 1995
PF 35 Serbia Kovačević, Petar 2.03 m (6 ft 8 in) 21 – (2002-11-30)30 November 2002
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • Injured Injured

Notable players

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Note: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA-sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationalities not displayed.

Criteria

To appear in this section a player must have either:

  • Set a club record or won an individual award while at the club
  • Played at least one official international match for their national team at any time
  • Played at least one official NBA match at any time.

Honours

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Total titles: 14

Domestic competitions

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Winners (4): 1998–99, 2004–05, 2005–06, 2007–08
Winners (4): 2004–05, 2008–09, 2009–10, 2023–24

Former domestic competitions

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Winners (3): 1977–78, 1979–80, 1982–83
Runners-up (1): 1976–77
Winners (2): 1977–78, 1983–84
Runners-up (3): 1979-80, 1985–86, 1991–92

European competitions

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Winners (1): 1978–79
3rd place (1): 1979–80
4th place (2): 1980–81, 1983–84
Runners-up (1): 1977–78
Semifinalist (1): 1989–90

Worldwide competitions

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International record

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Season Achievement Notes
EuroLeague
1978–79 Champions defeated Emerson Varese, 96–93 in the final of European Champions Cup in Grenoble
1979–80 Semi-final group stage 3rd place in a group with Maccabi Tel Aviv, Real Madrid, Sinudyne Bologna, Nashua EBBC and Partizan
1980–81 Semi-final group stage 4th place in a group with Sinudyne Bologna, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Nashua EBBC, Real Madrid and CSKA Moscow
1983–84 Semi-final group stage 4th place in a group with FC Barcelona, Banco di Roma Virtus, Jollycolombani Cantù, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Limoges CSP
FIBA Korać Cup
1977–78 Final lost to Partizan, 110–117 in the final (Banja Luka)
1989–90 Semi-finals eliminated by Ram Joventut, 90-90 (D) in Sarajevo and 72-94 (L) in Badalona
FIBA Intercontinental Cup
1979 2nd 2nd place in a league with Sírio, Emerson Varese, Piratas de Quebradillas and Mo-Kan NCAA Stars
1980 3rd 3rd place in a league with Maccabi Tel Aviv, Atlética Francana, Real Madrid and Kansas NCAA All-Stars

In European and worldwide competitions

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Records

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Club management

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List of club presidents

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List of directors

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List of sporting directors

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Coaching history

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Below is a list of KK Bosna coaches from 1951 until the present day.

 
Name Nationality Years
Nedžad Brkić Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1951–1963
Milenko Novaković Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1963–1971
Bogdan Tanjević Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1971–1974
Luka Stančić Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1974–1975
Bogdan Tanjević Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1975–1980
Draško Prodanović Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1981–1982
Svetislav Pešić Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1982–1987
Mirza Delibašić Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1987
Milivoje Karalejić Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1988
Mladen Ostojić Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1988
Ibrahim Krehić Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1988-1989
Mirza Delibašić Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1989
Draško Prodanović Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1990
Miodrag Baletić Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1991–1992
Mirza Delibašić Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1992
Anto Đogić Bosnia and Herzegovina 1994
Jovo Terzić Bosnia and Herzegovina 1994
Sabit Hadžić Bosnia and Herzegovina 1998–2000
Asim Bradić Bosnia and HerzegovinaCroatia 2000–2001
Draško Prodanović Bosnia and Herzegovina 2001–2002
Hamdo Frljak Bosnia and Herzegovina 2002–2003
Mensur Bajramović Bosnia and Herzegovina 2003–2007
Nenad Marković Bosnia and Herzegovina 2007
Jurij Zdovc Bosnia and Herzegovina 2007–2008
 
Name Nationality Years
Alen Abaz Bosnia and Herzegovina 2008
Vlada Vukoičić Serbia 2008–2009
Goran Šehovac Bosnia and Herzegovina 2009–2010
Dejan Parežanin Serbia 2010–2011
Damir Zeljković Bosnia and Herzegovina 2011
Sabahudin Bašović Bosnia and Herzegovina 2011
Hamdo Frljak Bosnia and Herzegovina 2011–2012
Sabahudin Bašović Bosnia and Herzegovina 2012
Emir Halimić Bosnia and Herzegovina 2012
Dragoljub Vidačić Bosnia and Herzegovina 2012–2014
Samir Lerić Bosnia and Herzegovina 2014
Sabahudin Bašović Bosnia and Herzegovina 2014
Damir Zeljković Bosnia and Herzegovina 2014–2015
Senad Redžić Bosnia and Herzegovina 2015–2016
Dušan Gvozdić Serbia 2016–2017
Aleksandar Damjanović Bosnia and Herzegovina 2017–2018
Miloš Pejić Serbia 2018
Denis Bajramović CroatiaBosnia and Herzegovina 2018–2019
Sabahudin Bašović Bosnia and Herzegovina 2019
Ahmet Pašalić Bosnia and Herzegovina 2019–2022
Dženan Rahimić Bosnia and Herzegovina 2022–2023
Josip Pandža Bosnia and Herzegovina 2023
Aleksandar Damjanović Bosnia and Herzegovina 2023–2024
Zoran Kašćelan Montenegro 2024–present

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "Košarkaški klub Bosna promijenio ime pred početak nove sezone". www.klix.ba (in Bosnian). Klix.ba. 23 September 2024. Retrieved 24 September 2024.
  2. ^ a b "Počeci (1951.-1955.)" (in Bosnian). Kkbosna.ba. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  3. ^ a b "Republička liga BiH (1955.-1972.)" (in Bosnian). Kkbosna.ba. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  4. ^ "1979: Bosna starts a true dynasty". Euroleague.net. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  5. ^ "50 Years interview: Zarko Varajic, KK Bosna". Euroleague.net. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  6. ^ "KK Bosna-Emerson Varese Stats". Eurobasket.com. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  7. ^ "Historijat" (in Bosnian). Kkbosna.ba. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  8. ^ Basketball Club "Bosna" not dissolved, changed name to "Bosna Royal", Al Jazeera Balkans, 22 October 2014.
  9. ^ Club Assembly Decides: "Students" from now on KK Bosna Royal Archived 2014-10-23 at the Wayback Machine, Avaz daily, Sarajevo. 21 October 2014.
  10. ^ "U novu sezonu s novim takmičarskim imenom - KK „Bosna Royal Jelly"" (in Bosnian). Bosnalijek. 14 September 2016. Retrieved 26 September 2024.
  11. ^ "Šampionski potez: Meridianbet naslovni sponzor KK Bosna".
  12. ^ "RK Bosna i FK Sarajevo potpisali saradnju" (in Bosnian). Oslobođenje. Archived from the original on 30 December 2013. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
  13. ^ "Članovi FK Sarajevo besplatno na utakmice KK Bosna" (in Bosnian). Fcsarajevo.ba. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
  14. ^ "The roof of the Olympic sports hall "Skenderija" collapsed in Sarajevo, Bosnia, in February 2012 after heavy snow". Montreal Gazette. 21 January 2014. Retrieved 8 February 2014.
  15. ^ 1984 Winter Olympics official report. Archived 2011-11-26 at the Wayback Machine pp. 105-8.
  16. ^ "Now Bring On The Torch" Bob Ottum, Sports Illustrated, March 14, 1983
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43°51′26.5″N 18°24′44″E / 43.857361°N 18.41222°E / 43.857361; 18.41222