2000 FIBA EuroLeague Final Four

The 2000 FIBA EuroLeague Final Four was the FIBA EuroLeague Final Four tournament of the 1999–2000 season. It was the second to last edition of the FIBA EuroLeague Final Fours that were organized by FIBA Europe. For the next edition of the tournament, it would be replaced by the FIBA SuproLeague's 2001 FIBA SuproLeague Final Four, and the new Euroleague Basketball competition's 2001 Finals series, which was organized by the Euroleague Basketball Company.

2000 FIBA EuroLeague Final Four
Season1999–2000 FIBA EuroLeague
Tournament details
ArenaP.A.O.K. Sports Arena
Thessaloniki, Greece
Dates18–20 April 2000
Final positions
ChampionsGreece Panathinaikos (2nd title)
Runners-upIsrael Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv
Third placeTurkey Efes Pilsen
Fourth placeSpain FC Barcelona
Awards and statistics
MVPFederal Republic of Yugoslavia Željko Rebrača
1999

Panathinaikos won its second title, after defeating Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv in the final game.

Bracket

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Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
 
 
 
  FC Barcelona 51
 
 
 
  Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv 65
 
  Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv 67
 
 
 
  Panathinaikos 73
 
  Panathinaikos 81
 
 
  Efes Pilsen71
 
Third place
 
 
 
 
 
  FC Barcelona 69
 
 
  Efes Pilsen 75

Semifinals

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FC Barcelona – Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv

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April 18
18:30
FC Barcelona   51–65   Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv
Scoring by half: 22–38, 29–27
Pts: Goldwire 13
Rebs: Dueñas 9
Asts: Alston, Goldwire 3
Pts: Huffman 24
Rebs: Henefeld 6
Asts: McDonald 4
P.A.O.K. Sports Arena, Thessaloniki
Attendance: 8,000
Referees: Romualdas Brazauskas (LTU), Carl Jungebrand (FIN)

Panathinaikos – Efes Pilsen

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April 18
21:00
Panathinaikos   81–71   Efes Pilsen
Scoring by half: 41–33, 40–38
Pts: Bodiroga 22
Rebs: Rebrača 7
Asts: Bodiroga, Kattash 3
Pts: Türkoğlu 15
Rebs: Beşok, Türkoğlu 5
Asts: Mulaomerović 6
P.A.O.K. Sports Arena, Thessaloniki
Attendance: 8,000
Referees: Stefano Cazzaro (ITA), Iztok Rems (SLO)

Third-place game

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April 20
18:30
FC Barcelona   69–75   Efes Pilsen
Scoring by half: 34–41, 35–34
Pts: Rentzias 29
Rebs: Elson 11
Asts: Rodríguez 5
Pts: Beşok 22
Rebs: Beşok 10
Asts: three players 2
P.A.O.K. Sports Arena, Thessaloniki
Attendance: 8,000
Referees: Stefano Cazzaro (ITA), Carl Jungebrand (FIN)

Final

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April 20
21:00
Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv   67–73   Panathinaikos
Scoring by half: 36–36, 31–37
Pts: Huffman 26
Rebs: Huffman 10
Asts: Comegys 3
Pts: Rebrača 20
Rebs: Rebrača 8
Asts: Bodiroga, Kattash 2
P.A.O.K. Sports Arena, Thessaloniki
Attendance: 8,500
Referees: Romualdas Brazauskas (LTU), Iztok Rems (SLO)
 
 
 
 
Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv
 
 
 
 
Panathinaikos
Starters: P R A
PG
14
  Ariel McDonald 11 3 1
PG
6
  Derrick Sharp 5 0 1
SF
4
  Nadav Henefeld 0 1 0
PF
8
  Dallas Comegys 3 5 3
C
7
  Nate Huffman 26 10 2
Reserves: P R A
SG
5
  Mark Brisker 13 3 0
SF
9
  Gur Shelef 0 1 0
G
11
  Doron Sheffer 6 2 2
G
12
  Doron Jamchy 3 1 0
C
15
  Constantin Popa 0 0 0
Head coach:
  Pini Gershon
1999–2000 FIBA EuroLeague
Champions
 
Panathinaikos
Second title
Starters: P R A
PG
9
  Nando Gentile 3 2 1
SG
10
  Dejan Bodiroga 9 4 2
SF
4
  Fragiskos Alvertis 4 3 0
PF
7
  Johnny Rogers 4 2 1
C
12
  Željko Rebrača 20 8 0
Reserves: P R A
SG
6
  Michael Koch 0 0 0
PF
8
  Antonis Fotsis 9 5 0
PG
11
  Nikos Boudouris DNP
C
13
  Pat Burke 7 3 0
PG
14
  Oded Kattash 17 1 2
Head coach:
  Željko Obradović

Awards

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FIBA EuroLeague All-Final Four Team
Player Team Ref.
  Oded Kattash Panathinaikos [1]
  Hedo Türkoğlu Efes Pilsen
  Dejan Bodiroga Panathinaikos
  Nate Huffman Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv
  Željko Rebrača (MVP) Panathinaikos

References

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