French Basketball Cup
Appearance
(Redirected from French Federation Basketball Cup)
Sport | Basketball |
---|---|
Founded | 1953 |
No. of teams | 64 |
Country | France |
Continent | Europe |
Most recent champion(s) | JDA Dijon (3rd title) (2023–24) |
Most titles | ASVEL (11 titles; 10 French Cups and 1 Federation Cup) |
Related competitions | LNB Pro A LNB Pro B Leaders Cup (League Cup) Match des Champions (Supercup) |
Official website | coupedefrance.ffbb.com |
The French Basketball Cup, or French Federation Basketball Cup, (French: Coupe de France de Basket) is the annual national basketball federation cup competition of France. It is organized by the French Basketball Federation. It is also known as the Trophée Robert Busnel (Robert Busnel Trophy), named after the late basketball player Robert Busnel, who died in 1991. [1]
A total of 54 amateur and professional teams from France, participate in the cup competition.[2]
History
[edit]- 1952–53 to 1968–69 French Cup (including professional clubs)*
- 1981–82 to 1984–85 Federation Cup
- 1992–93 to 1994–95 League Cup
- 1995–96 to present French Cup (including professional clubs)
- *From 1971 to 1995, the French Cup was not contested by professional clubs.
Title holders
[edit]- 1952–53 ASVEL
- 1953–54 PUC
- 1954–55 PUC
- 1955–56 Auboué
- 1956–57 ASVEL
- 1957–58 Étoile Charleville-Mézières
- 1958–59 Étoile Charleville-Mézières
- 1959–60 Denain Voltaire
- 1960–61 Stade Auto Lyon
- 1961–62 PUC
- 1962–63 PUC
- 1963–64 Moderne
- 1964–65 ASVEL
- 1965–66 Nantes
- 1966–67 ASVEL
- 1967–68 Not held
- 1968–69 JA Vichy
- 1969–70 JA Vichy
- 1970–81 Not held
- 1981–82 Limoges CSP
- 1982–83 Limoges CSP
- 1983–84 ASVEL
- 1984–85 Limoges CSP
- 1985–92 Not held
- 1992–93 JDA Dijon
- 1993–94 Limoges CSP
- 1994–95 Limoges CSP
- 1995–96 ASVEL
- 1996–97 ASVEL
- 1997–98 Cholet
- 1998–99 Cholet
- 1999–00 Limoges CSP
- 2000–01 ASVEL
- 2001–02 Pau-Orthez
- 2002–03 Pau-Orthez
- 2003–04 Le Mans Sarthe
- 2004–05 BCM Gravelines
- 2005–06 JDA Dijon
- 2006–07 Pau-Orthez
- 2007–08 ASVEL
- 2008–09 Le Mans Sarthe
- 2009–10 Orléans
- 2010–11 Élan Chalon
- 2011–12 Élan Chalon
- 2012–13 Paris-Levallois
- 2013–14 JSF Nanterre
- 2014–15 SIG
- 2015–16 Le Mans Sarthe
- 2016–17 Nanterre 92
- 2017–18 SIG
- 2018–19 ASVEL
- 2019–20 Not held
- 2020–21 ASVEL
- 2021–22 Pau-Orthez
- 2022–23 Monaco
- 2023–24 JDA Dijon
Finals
[edit]French Cup (1982–1995)
[edit]Year | Winner | Finalist | Score |
1982 | CO Briochin | Denain Voltaire | 81–79 |
1983 | Challans | CRO Lyon | 114–98 |
1984 | Denain Voltaire | OS Hyères | 75–85 |
1985 | OS Hyères | Saint-Quentin | 66–63 |
1986 | RCM Toulouse | AS Tarare | 95–84 |
1987 | Saint-Quentin | Montpellier | 102–86 |
1988 | AS Esquennoy | Villeneuve-sur-Lot | 86–79 |
1989 | Nice BC | SIG | 86–85 |
1990 | Toulon | CRO Lyon | 89–84 |
1991 | EB Châlons-en-Champagne | USO Athis-Mons | 107–83 |
1992 | Anjou BC Angers | AS Poissy | 82–70 |
1993 | Besançon | Élan Chalon | 79–64 |
1994 | Anjou BC Angers | Gauloise Vitry le François | 82–74 |
1995 | Gauloise Vitry le François | Reims Champagne | 73–69 |
Most Valuable Player
[edit]See also
[edit]- French Pro A League
- French Leaders Cup (French League Cup)
- Match des Champions (French Supercup)
References
[edit]External links
[edit]- Official website (in French)