This page will contain images about Euroleague, as they become available.EuroleagueThe Euroleague is a high-caliber professional basketball league with teams from all over Europe.
The Euroleague is currently contested in four phases. The first phase is the regular season, in which 24 teams, divided into three groups of eight, participate. Each team plays two games (home-and-home) against every other team in its group. At the end of the regular season, the field is cut from 24 to 16; the surviving teams are divided into four groups. The second phase, known as the Top 16, then begins. As in the regular season, each Top 16 group is contested in a double round-robin format. New for the 2004-05 season was a quarterfinal round. Before, only the group winners advanced to the Final Four (see below). Now, the first- and second-place teams from each group advance. In the quarterfinal round, the first-place team from each group is matched against a second-place team from another group in a best-of-three series, with two of the three possible games scheduled at the first-place team's home court. The Final Four, held at a predetermined site, features the winners of the four quarterfinal series in one-off knockout matches. The semifinal losers play for third place; the winners play for the championship. The 2005 Final Four was held in Moscow, Russia. The semifinals took place on May 6, with the third-place and championship games on May 8. The following teams were involved:
The semifinal matchups were:
In the final, Maccabi successfully defended its title, defeating TAU 90-78. The third-place game saw Panathinaikos erase a 22-point deficit in the third quarter and go on to defeat the hosts CSKA 94-91 in double overtime. The 2006 Final Four will be held at Sazka Arena in Prague, Czech Republic. Teams of 2005-2006 EuroleagueCroatia
France
Germany
Greece
Israel
Italy
Lithuania
Poland
Russia
Serbia and Montenegro
Slovenia
Spain
Turkey
Champions 1958-2005
*2001 was a transition year, with the best European teams split into two major leagues (Suproleague held by FIBA, Euroleague by ULEB). Suproleague 2001 was won by Maccabi Tel-Aviv (Israel). Titles by Team*
Titles by CountryNote that the Pallacanestro Cantù, that won the European Champions Cup twice is the team of a small city of only 35.172 inhabitans, located in the Milano Metropolitan Area, 25 km north of the main city. Few miles western at 40 km from Milano there is the city of Varese (only 82,282 inhabitants), that won 5 European Champions Cups with the Pallacanestro Varese. So in a small area of less than 40 km in the Northern Metropolitan Area of Milano there are 3 teams that won totally 10 European Champions Cup and played totally 16 finals of the same cup! This page about Euroleague includes information from a Wikipedia article. Additional articles about Euroleague News stories about Euroleague External links for Euroleague Videos for Euroleague Wikis about Euroleague Discussion Groups about Euroleague Blogs about Euroleague Images of Euroleague |
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So in a small area of less than 40 km in the Northern Metropolitan Area of Milano there are 3 teams that won totally 10 European Champions Cup and played totally 16 finals of the same cup!. Anthony Field is a registered breeder of Miniature Fox Terriers. Few miles western at 40 km from Milano there is the city of Varese (only 82,282 inhabitants), that won 5 European Champions Cups with the Pallacanestro Varese. However, there has never been a legitimate article stating this as fact. Note that the Pallacanestro Cantù, that won the European Champions Cup twice is the team of a small city of only 35.172 inhabitans, located in the Milano Metropolitan Area, 25 km north of the main city. There is an occasional Internet urban legend that Anthony Field is a very distant cousin of New York father-and-son TV weathercasters Frank Field and Storm Field. Suproleague 2001 was won by Maccabi Tel-Aviv (Israel). It can be argued that the Wiggles are among the first cultural influences on the yet-unnamed generation that follows the Millenials, that is, the children of Generation Z. *2001 was a transition year, with the best European teams split into two major leagues (Suproleague held by FIBA, Euroleague by ULEB). In the United States, these series are broadcast on the Disney Channel. . The Australian Broadcasting Corporation has produced several series of Wiggles television programs. The 2006 Final Four will be held at Sazka Arena in Prague, Czech Republic. What are The Wiggles' middle names?:. The third-place game saw Panathinaikos erase a 22-point deficit in the third quarter and go on to defeat the hosts CSKA 94-91 in double overtime. Are The Wiggles married and do they have any children?:. In the final, Maccabi successfully defended its title, defeating TAU 90-78. How Tall are The Wiggles:. The semifinal matchups were:. The Wiggles' Birthdays:. The following teams were involved:. The Wiggles recently appeared in the telemovie special Da Kath & Kim Code as guest stars. The semifinals took place on May 6, with the third-place and championship games on May 8. A mention is also made in the popular TV series Scrubs in which Doctor Cox makes a reference to "Jeff that Wiggle that sleeps too darn much" while speaking to another cast member. The 2005 Final Four was held in Moscow, Russia. A measure of the Wiggles' growing fame in America is the fact that Captain Feathersword was mentioned in an episode of the acclaimed political TV drama The West Wing. The semifinal losers play for third place; the winners play for the championship. By guest-starring on their show, the Wiggles have also introduced non-Australian audiences to performers such as Jimmy Little, Kamahl, and Christine Anu (though many will recognize her by face if not by name). The Final Four, held at a predetermined site, features the winners of the four quarterfinal series in one-off knockout matches. They have also recorded with numerous Australian and international music stars including John Fogerty, Tim Finn and Ross Wilson. In the quarterfinal round, the first-place team from each group is matched against a second-place team from another group in a best-of-three series, with two of the three possible games scheduled at the first-place team's home court. [1] The group is currently franchising its concept to non-English speaking countries, with the idea already successfully sold in Taiwan, which now has its own Taiwanese Wiggles. Now, the first- and second-place teams from each group advance. In 2001 The Wiggles were reported to have earned more than A$14 million, a sum which had grown to A$45 million by 2004. Before, only the group winners advanced to the Final Four (see below). All the members play a musical instrument, which has become an important educational aspect of their shows. New for the 2004-05 season was a quarterfinal round. The Wiggles' music and performances were given an additional strength by the members' interest and experience in live pop music, skills which they incorporate into their CDs, videos and live shows. As in the regular season, each Top 16 group is contested in a double round-robin format. Informed by their studies and teaching expertise, they brought a fresh approach to the genre which, at its worst, could be simplistic, old-fashioned and sometimes downright patronising in both style and content. The second phase, known as the Top 16, then begins. The quality of content was another crucial factor in The Wiggles' success. At the end of the regular season, the field is cut from 24 to 16; the surviving teams are divided into four groups. Increasing reliability, falling cost and simplicity of operation saw many children in this age group learning how to operate CD players and VCRs themselves. Each team plays two games (home-and-home) against every other team in its group. Crucially for the Wiggles, both the VCR and the CD player were ideally suited to repeat playing, and like TV before them, both technologies were almost immediately harnessed to entertain the preschool children of the late Baby Boomer generation (most of whom had grown up with TV as a constant childhood companion and babysitter). The first phase is the regular season, in which 24 teams, divided into three groups of eight, participate. By the early 1990s, the introduction of the new compact disc technology saw CD players emulating the near-universal market penetration of TVs and VCRs. The Euroleague is currently contested in four phases. Just as they did with television in the 1960s, Australians took up the domestic video cassette recorder in the 1980s with extraordinary speed, with the result that, by the end of the 1980s there was both a TV and a VCR in more than 90% of Australian households. Most of the founding clubs came from Spain, Italy and Greece. By the time the Wiggles became established, two important changes had taken place in the Australian household. The titles are dated back to 1958 when the first European Champions cup was played. The Wagglets are Wags the Dog's 'children' as such, in which he takes care of them in his house. 2005 Maccabi Tel-Aviv (Israel). The Wiggles have a rather unusual house, mainly because it's alive! The house can be very moody and stubborn, and in the movie didn't even recognise the wiggles! When the password 'sillypants' is stated, the house opens up like a lolly wrapper, much to the house's dislike, as he says he thinks he's falling apart. 2004 Maccabi Tel-Aviv (Israel). She was only featured in the video/DVD appropriately named 'Wiggle Bay'. 2003 FC Barcelona (Spain). She helped the wiggles find their adrift rowing boat when they visited the bay. 2002 Panathinaikos Athens (Greece). Magdelena is a mermaid who lives in the ocean near Wiggle Bay. 2001* Virtus (Kinder) Bologna (Italy). In The Wiggles Movie: Magical Adventure, Officer Beaples had a speaking role. 2000 Panathinaikos Athens (Greece). The part is typically mimed; she usually communicates through her whistle, and has many young police officers to teach (As seen on the Wiggles Live Video). 1999 Žalgiris Kaunas (Lithuania). Dressed resembling a British bobby, Officer Beaples is played by a woman in drag. 1998 Virtus (Kinder) Bologna (Italy). He longs to be like his grandfather Waldo the Great, and finally realized his dream after winning a magic competition in the Wiggles Movie. 1997 Olympiacos (Greece). Wally is a children's magician who, despite his regular tries, fails at being a great magician. 1996 Panathinaikos (Greece). Vanessa taught Dorothy how to dance, but was only featured in one video. 1995 Real Madrid (Spain). (A special note is that the video 'Toot Toot Chugga Chugga' Video had a special note at the end acknowledging John's death). 1994 Joventut Badalona (Spain). The first Wiggles Chef was John Field Snr., until his death. 1993 CSP Limoges (France). He was played by former Crowded House drummer Paul Hester until his death in 2005. 1992 Partizan Belgrade (Yugoslavia). A friendly cook who taught the wiggles how to cook cold spaghetti, mashed bananas, and hot potatoes. 1991 KK Split (Pop 84) (Yugoslavia). 1990 KK Split (Jugoplastika) (Yugoslavia). Originally played by Anthony Field and his brother Paul Field, Captain Feathersword is now permanently played by Paul Paddick. 1989 KK Split (Jugoplastika) (Yugoslavia). A running joke with Captain Feathersword is his use of the phrase "Well, blow me down!", which usually results in the characters nearest him obeying his wishes by blowing him to the ground with a gust of breath. 1988 Olimpia (Philips) Milan (Italy). His catch-phrase is "Ahoy There, Me Hearties". 1987 Olimpia (Tracer) Milan (Italy). Captain Feathersword is a friendly pirate, and is characterised by his pirate coat and hat, eyepatch and eponymous sword made of feathers. 1986 Cibona Zagreb (Yugoslavia). 1982 Pallacanestro Cantù (Squibb) (Italy). He wears tartan clothes, a straw hat and black polished shoes on the end of every tentacle. 1981 Maccabi Tel-Aviv (Israel). Henry is a fun-loving octopus with purple skin. 1980 Real Madrid (Spain). 1978 Real Madrid (Spain). Wags is a skilled Tango dancer. 1977 Maccabi Tel-Aviv (Israel). Wags cannot talk, but The Wiggles understand him when he barks. 1976 Pallacanestro Varese (Mobilgirgi) (Italy). Wags also enjoys digging in his garden. 1975 Pallacanestro Varese (Ignis) (Italy). He enjoys eating, and is said to keep The Wiggles up all night if he gets hungry. 1974 Real Madrid (Spain). Wags is a tall, brown, furry dog with floppy ears and a happy face. 1973 Pallacanestro Varese (Ignis) (Italy). Dorothy has a heart of gold and is a very friendly dinosaur. 1972 Pallacanestro Varese (Ignis) (Italy). She loves her birthday as The Wiggles always make it a very special fun day for her. 1971 CSKA Moscow (USSR). She loves dancing, and is known to do ballet, Irish, Scottish, and line dancing. 1970 Pallacanestro Varese (Ignis) (Italy). Dorothy is 5 Dinosaur years old, and is very wise for her age. 1969 CSKA Moscow (USSR). She wears a floppy white hat and enjoys eating roses. 1968 Real Madrid (Spain). Dorothy is a large green dinosaur with yellow spots. 1967 Real Madrid (Spain). Occasionally touring without The Wiggles as "Dorothy The Dinosaur And Friends", they enable the group to maintain a touring presence even when The Wiggles themselves are off the road. 1966 Olimpia (Simmenthal) Milan (Italy). They were developed in the early 1990s, and were originally played by group members and by Anthony's brother Paul, but are now played by hired actors. 1965 Real Madrid (Spain). Aside from the four Wiggles, there are many secondary characters that appear in their many songs and shows. 1964 Real Madrid (Spain). American audiences responded warmly to the freewheeling Wiggles style and they now regularly sell out major venues around the country. 1963 CSKA Moscow (USSR). audiences with the same easygoing presentation style that they had used in Australia. 1962 Tbilisi (USSR). Their early experiences touring in the USA with the 'Barney' shows -- which reportedly featured high production values but lacked spontaneity -- showed The Wiggles that they could break through to U.S. 1961 CSKA Moscow (USSR). Their stage routines are often augmented by some gentle ironic humour aimed at the adults, although this is never done cynically, or at the expense of the children. 1960 ASK Riga (USSR). They have, notably, made few concessions to the cultural imperatives supposedly prevalent in the American media, and they still display the same relaxed, accessible and good-natured performance style that was evident in their earlier Australian work. 1959 ASK Riga (USSR). Although their live shows have lately become increasingly sophisticated, the Wiggles' basic style has changed little since their earliest days and a Wiggles concert can be enjoyed by parents and children alike. 1958 ASK Riga (USSR). Aside from their commitment, dedication and sheer hard work, a crucial aspect in The Wiggles' American success has been their on-stage spontaneity, humour and talent for improvisation. Ülker (Istanbul). They now regularly play to packed houses across the USA, have performed at both Madison Square Garden and Radio City Music Hall, and have appeared on TV shows such as the NBC "Today" show and the Regis Philbin talk show, as well as featuring in several Thanksgiving Parades in New York City. Efes Pilsen (Istanbul). Since it was originally shown from 1997 to 1999, and in 2002 (also entitled Network Wiggles or Lights, Camera, Action, Wiggles!) on ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) Kids, The Wiggles are now seen nationally in the USA on the Disney Channel and as a result their popularity has sky-rocketed. Winterthur FCB (Barcelona). After an initial slow entry into the United States market (touring with the organization that produces the Barney & Friends children's show), the Wiggles secured a breakthrough deal with The Walt Disney Company, and saw their videos and TV series screened to preschool children across America. Unicaja (Málaga). that they had their first major international success. TAU Cerámica (Vitoria/Gasteiz). Their first overseas tours brought the Wiggles to the United States and Britain in the mid-1990s, but like many other Australian acts, it was in the U.S. Real Madrid-Teka. They performed literally hundreds of shows each year, their videos and CDs sold in ever increasing numbers and they regularly won every major industry award in their category. Union Olimpija (Ljubljana). After several years of relentless touring around Australia, the group were firmly established as the most successful children's entertainment act Australia had ever seen. Partizan PMB (Belgrade). With international exposure, the group became extremely popular in the United States and elsewhere in the 2000s. CSKA Moscow. Their first CD, released in 1991, is the only recording to feature founding member Philip Wilcher, who left the group soon after the CD's release. Prokom Trefl Sopot. Their combination of kid-friendly songs, videos and characters were a quick hit in Australia in the early 1990s. Žalgiris (Kaunas). The group was able to capitalise on the contacts and goodwill that The Cockroaches had built up during the 1980s -- that band toured regularly and successfully throughout Australia -- and they also built up their performance expertise and public exposure with occasional busking around Sydney, although they would undoubtedly be mobbed if they were to attempt this today. Lietuvos Rytas (Vilnius). They developed a hugely successful system where receipts for their shows were split with the centres, who were able to use the popular Wiggles concerts as lucrative fund-raising events. Montepaschi Siena. Originally a five-piece group, the Wiggles began their career playing at pre-schools and childcare centres. Climamio Bologna. They have also been able to successfully respond to criticism of the content of their act by pointing out the sound theoretical and educational bases of their work. Benetton Treviso. They have been (unfairly) accused of pandering to allegedly 'trendy' notions of political correctness, but the Wiggles were in that case able to defend themselves by pointing out that the composition of the group -- including the Chinese-Australian Jeff Fatt -- was a matter of pure happenstance which arose out of a simple necessity, rather than being a concept deliberately created to try and exploit a market or imitate an existing act (e.g Hi-5). Armani Jeans Milano. Although there is now regular coverage of their ongoing financial success, The Wiggles near-universal popularity has meant that they have only rarely been victims of the so-called "tall poppy syndrome", though they have occasionally come in for some mild criticism. Maccabi Tel Aviv. In the process their success has spawned a slew of lesser imitators including The Hooley Dooleys and the 'concept' children's group Hi-5. Panathinaikos (Athens). Thanks to a productive (if occasionally difficult) alliance with the ABC, the Wiggles created a distinctive blend of music, comedy and educational content that saw them rise over the course of the 1990s to become the most popular and successful children's group in Australian entertainment history, and then in turn become one of the most successful Australian entertainment exports of all time. Olympiacos Piraeus. Children's entertainment was up to this time dominated by presence of the long-running ABC-TV children's program Playschool, who marketed much of the most successful children's material, and whose various presenters often performed at children's concerts and similar events. AEK Athens. In Australia it had become a small but profitable "cottage industry" which operated in fairly traditional styles. Bamberg. Up to this time, the mass-market potential of entertainment for preschool children had yet to be tapped to its full extent. Strasbourg. Their shows were such a hit with young audiences that they soon found themselves in regular demand and they soon discovered that could earn considerably more working as children's entertainers than as preschool teachers (a profession that is notoriously underpaid in Australia). Pau-Orthez. The original five Wiggles initially teamed up to produce a music performance project for their studies. Cibona VIP (Zagreb). Like Field, Cook had experience playing on the booming Sydney live rock scene of that period; he had played bass in a minor Sydney 1980s pop band, Finger Guns, while working as a clerk at the Australian Taxation Office. Maccabi 91-82 Panathinaikos. Page, the youngest of the group, had come into the course straight from high school, but Cook, Field and Wilcher were all mature-age students. CSKA 78-85 TAU Cerámica. Field enrolled in early childhood studies at Macquarie University in Sydney in the late 1980s, and it was here that he met three other students who were also musicians -- classically trained pianist Philip Wilcher, guitarist and singer Murray Cook and vocalist Greg Page. Panathinaikos (Greece). Anthony Field (vocals, guitar) and Jeff Fatt (vocals, keyboards) had been members of The Cockroaches, a popular eighties pub rock band who toured widely and had a number of Top 40 hits in Australia. TAU Cerámica (Spain) (official club name: Saski Baskonia, or simply Baskonia). The animal characters also enabled them to create a (hugely successful) range of merchandising items that did not have to rely exclusively on the Wiggles own personae. Maccabi Tel Aviv. The inclusion of the Dorothy character was one of their most successful innovations, since it enabled them to tap into the massive expansion of interest of dinosaurs among young children. CSKA Moscow. The basic act was later augmented with popular supporting characters -- the parodic pirate Captain Feathersword (Paul Paddick) and the animal characters Dorothy the Dinosaur, Henry the Octopus and Wags the Dog. This simple device also allows the Wiggles to go about in public (at least in Australia) with relative ease, since children rarely recognise them without their trademark colors. The colour coding is -- Greg, yellow; Murray, red; Anthony, blue; Jeff, purple. Very early on, they adopted differently coloured shirts for each member, which assisted their recognition by very young children, and they invariably wear the Wiggles 'uniform' when appearing as The Wiggles in the media or in public. The Wiggles originally consisted of five people, but for almost all of their career the lineup has consisted of the remaining four founder members. The Wiggles also adapted the Bob Wills tune "Silver Bells That Ring In The Night" with a duck-like "quack quack-quack" in the refrain. Much of the Wiggles' music was written by John Field, the brother of the blue wiggle - Anthony. Another distinctive feature of the group's songs is easy-to-repeat gestures, such as the "romp bomp a chomp" hand motions in the song "Dorothy the Dinosaur". These costumed characters include Dorothy the Dinosaur (a horticulturalist dinosaur who eats only roses), Captain Feathersword (a harmless pirate), Wags the Dog, Henry the Octopus, and Officer Beaples (a female police officer who communicates through mime). Wiggles songs are often about simple topics that children can relate to: sleeping ("Rock A Bye Bear", "Wake Up Jeff"), eating ("Fruit Salad"), animals ("Do the Monkey", "Rockabye Your Bear", "Ponies") or the cast of characters created for their home videos and TV shows. . The Wiggles are an Australian band who specialise in creating and performing music for preschool children. Anthony Wiggle Field. Jeff Wiggle Fatt. Murray Wiggle Cook. Greg Wiggle Page. Jeff - single with no children. Anthony - married with two children. Greg - married with two children. Murray - married with two children. Jeff: 177 cm (5'10"). Anthony: 182cm (6'). Murray: 192 cm (6'3 1/2"). Greg: 194 cm (6'4 1/2"). Jeff: 21st July. Murray: 30th June. Anthony: 8th May. Greg: 16th January. Greg wears a yellow shirt, drives the Big Red Car, and often performs magic tricks. Originally, he wore a green shirt but switched to blue because Dorothy is green. Anthony eats healthy food, especially fruit salad. Murray wears a red shirt and plays a guitar. Jeff wears a purple shirt and falls asleep (children are asked to shout 'Wake Up Jeff!'). |