- Viestejä
- 608
Jopa yllattävän pieniä katsojamääriä Euroopan liigoissa. Varsinkin Turkin ja Kreikan katsojamäärät, jotka ovat vain hiukan parempia kuin Suomessa, tuntuvat pieniltä.
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ACB remains leader in attendance
June 12, 2008
BallinEurope checked the attendance figures of the different European leagues and has compiled some stats based on the averages. We didn’t see any big surprises, as Spanish ACB still tops the list.
The ACB is by far the league that has the best averages in 2007/2008. Second prize goes to Italy, while France takes the bronze medal. The total ranking is incomplete because we could not get figures from several European leagues, including those for Russia, Israel, Poland and the Adriatic League. And the figures we took into account are only those for the regular season.
So here is the ranking of the leagues according to information available to the public or received by BallinEurope.com from qualified sources.
1. ACB (Spain): 6387.00 in attendance per game
2. Lega (Italy): 3740.81
3. ProA (France): 3503.56
4. Bundesliga (Germany): 3469.75
5. LEB Gold (Spain): 2944.44
6. Baltic Elite Division: 2238.97
7. ProB (France): 1720.00
8. Beko League (Turkey): 1363.31
9. A1 (Greece): 1228.29
10. ProA (Germany): 1039.12
11. Finland: 865.67
12. LNBA (Switzerland): 678.93
13. ProB (Germany): 636.11
14. Baltic Challenge: 420.73
When it comes to the attendance for individual European teams, we see a common name at the top of the list: CAI Zaragoza, which is averaging an incredible 10,200 fans per game in Spain’s 2nd division, LEB Gold. Other top spots are also dominated by Spanish teams starting with Unicaja Malaga and MMT Estudiantes Madrid at numbers 2 and 3. The first non-Spanish team is Virtus Bologna, in 7th place.
For this ranking, we had no figures for the French teams, as the League only provided general attendance figures for the league without details per team.
1. Basket CAI Zaragoza (LEB Gold): 10,200.0 in attendance per game
2. Unicaja Málaga (ACB): 9492.0
3. MMT Estudiantes (ACB): 9120.0
4. Tau Ceramica (ACB): 8889.0
5. Real Madrid (ACB): 8440.0
6. CB Granada (ACB): 6990.0
7. La Fortezza Virtus Bologna (Lega): 6989.2
8. ALBA Berlin (Bundesliga): 6907.9
9. Brose Baskets Bamberg (Bundesliga): 6864.7
10. DKV Joventut (ACB): 6785.0
11. Pamesa Valencia (ACB): 6560.0
12. Scavolini Spar Pesaro (Lega): 6447.2
13. Bruesa GBC (LEB Gold): 6300.0
14. Capitol Valladolid (ACB): 5987.0
15. CB Murcia (ACB): 5537.0
16. Barons/LMT (Baltic League): 5235.6
17. Grupo Begar León (ACB): 5216.0
18. ViveMenorca (ACB): 5115.0
19. Iurbentia Bilbao (ACB): 5000.0
20. Alta Gestión Fuenlabrada (ACB): 4991.0
Some big names in European basketball place a bit lower in the rankings, such as like Montepaschi Siena (4987.5 per game), Panathinaikos (4360.4), FC Barcelona (3942.0), Benetton Treviso (2698.6), Zalgiris Kaunas (2384.1) and Efes Pilsen Istanbul (1098.0).
NB: Please note that all figures are official figures published or communicated by the leagues or transmitted by league officials to BallinEurope.com. The numbers from Spain were provided by the “Spanish Calculator,” as the ACB and LEB did not publish official figures.
******************************
ACB remains leader in attendance
June 12, 2008
BallinEurope checked the attendance figures of the different European leagues and has compiled some stats based on the averages. We didn’t see any big surprises, as Spanish ACB still tops the list.
The ACB is by far the league that has the best averages in 2007/2008. Second prize goes to Italy, while France takes the bronze medal. The total ranking is incomplete because we could not get figures from several European leagues, including those for Russia, Israel, Poland and the Adriatic League. And the figures we took into account are only those for the regular season.
So here is the ranking of the leagues according to information available to the public or received by BallinEurope.com from qualified sources.
1. ACB (Spain): 6387.00 in attendance per game
2. Lega (Italy): 3740.81
3. ProA (France): 3503.56
4. Bundesliga (Germany): 3469.75
5. LEB Gold (Spain): 2944.44
6. Baltic Elite Division: 2238.97
7. ProB (France): 1720.00
8. Beko League (Turkey): 1363.31
9. A1 (Greece): 1228.29
10. ProA (Germany): 1039.12
11. Finland: 865.67
12. LNBA (Switzerland): 678.93
13. ProB (Germany): 636.11
14. Baltic Challenge: 420.73
When it comes to the attendance for individual European teams, we see a common name at the top of the list: CAI Zaragoza, which is averaging an incredible 10,200 fans per game in Spain’s 2nd division, LEB Gold. Other top spots are also dominated by Spanish teams starting with Unicaja Malaga and MMT Estudiantes Madrid at numbers 2 and 3. The first non-Spanish team is Virtus Bologna, in 7th place.
For this ranking, we had no figures for the French teams, as the League only provided general attendance figures for the league without details per team.
1. Basket CAI Zaragoza (LEB Gold): 10,200.0 in attendance per game
2. Unicaja Málaga (ACB): 9492.0
3. MMT Estudiantes (ACB): 9120.0
4. Tau Ceramica (ACB): 8889.0
5. Real Madrid (ACB): 8440.0
6. CB Granada (ACB): 6990.0
7. La Fortezza Virtus Bologna (Lega): 6989.2
8. ALBA Berlin (Bundesliga): 6907.9
9. Brose Baskets Bamberg (Bundesliga): 6864.7
10. DKV Joventut (ACB): 6785.0
11. Pamesa Valencia (ACB): 6560.0
12. Scavolini Spar Pesaro (Lega): 6447.2
13. Bruesa GBC (LEB Gold): 6300.0
14. Capitol Valladolid (ACB): 5987.0
15. CB Murcia (ACB): 5537.0
16. Barons/LMT (Baltic League): 5235.6
17. Grupo Begar León (ACB): 5216.0
18. ViveMenorca (ACB): 5115.0
19. Iurbentia Bilbao (ACB): 5000.0
20. Alta Gestión Fuenlabrada (ACB): 4991.0
Some big names in European basketball place a bit lower in the rankings, such as like Montepaschi Siena (4987.5 per game), Panathinaikos (4360.4), FC Barcelona (3942.0), Benetton Treviso (2698.6), Zalgiris Kaunas (2384.1) and Efes Pilsen Istanbul (1098.0).
NB: Please note that all figures are official figures published or communicated by the leagues or transmitted by league officials to BallinEurope.com. The numbers from Spain were provided by the “Spanish Calculator,” as the ACB and LEB did not publish official figures.