1974–75 Yugoslav First Basketball League
LeagueYugoslav First Basketball League
SportBasketball
1974-75
Season championsSocialist Republic of Croatia Zadar

The 1974–75 Yugoslav First Basketball League season was the 31st season of the Yugoslav First Basketball League, the highest professional basketball league in SFR Yugoslavia.

Teams

Socialist Republic of Serbia SR Serbia

Socialist Republic of Croatia SR Croatia

Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina SR Bosnia and Herzegovina

Socialist Republic of Macedonia SR Macedonia

Socialist Republic of Slovenia SR Slovenia

Classification

Regular season ranking 1974-75 G V P PF PS Pt
1.Zadar262512309202850
2.Jugoplastika262242564221044
3.Partizan261972527238138
4.Crvena Zvezda261882473232136
5.Rabotnički2613132285234226
6.Olimpija2612142549250324
7.Bosna2612142362229524
8.Lokomotiva2611152374240622
9.Borac Čačak2611152474258222
10.Radnički FOB Belgrade2611152366235722
11.Beko Beograd268182325249716
12.Metalac Valjevo268182213238916
13.Vojvodina267192351260814
14.Istravino265212142239510

The winning roster of Zadar:[1]

  • Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Čedomir Perinčić
  • Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Jure Fabijanić
  • Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Branko Bakija
  • Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Žarko Bjedov
  • Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Bruno Marcelić
  • Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Bruno Petani
  • Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Branko Šuljak
  • Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Josip Đerđa
  • Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Krešimir Ćosić
  • Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Zdravko Jerak
  • Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Nedjeljko "Mišo" Ostarčević
  • Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Tomislav Matulović
  • Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Branko Skroče
  • Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Josip Grdović

Coach: Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Lucijan Valčić

Results

Home \ Away ZAD JUG PAR CZV RAB OLI BOS LOK BOR RAD BEK MET VOJ IST
Zadar 89–81 102–98 80–73 114–84 115–96 80–76 77–75 70–65 95–87 101–77 75–60 113–86 89–76
Jugoplastika 76–68 114–85 86–88 106–90 103–98 84–83 97–70 121–103 93–76 109–89 105–58 115–63 103–93
Partizan 84–102 89–94 93–81 107–91 109–95 112–93 100–95 101–96 106–102 83–72 103–79 126–100 93–69
Crvena Zvezda 78–82 102–94 81–86 97–96 108–98 87–83 117–102 105–88 109–108 117–97 90–75 107–91 111–81
Rabotnički 80–92 81–84 81–80 77–83 103–98 90–73 92–110 114–88 81–80 91–85 89–78 84–76 85–75
Olimpija 75–81 100–93 99–104 89–87 99–91 108–104 103–106 102–104 85–87 91–86 92–76 123–97 113–75
Bosna 67–71 87–94 94–75 88–90 81–85 84–86 110–106 83–86 96–93 109–69 97–85 108–94 85–83
Lokomotiva 80–82 85–97 82–87 106–97 78–86 91–90 85–101 94–86 104–116 78–90 90–83 119–80 87–83
Borac Čačak 72–91 79–98 99–104 92–109 120–99 113–116 98–95 97–101 107–105 99–98 107–97 110–97 80–77
Radnički FOB Belgrade 71–76 81–82 92–108 99–87 83–78 85–87 81–84 78–87 81–85 92–82 105–87 111–103 77–72
Beko Beograd 84–90 83–110 96–95 82–79 85–95 102–101 89–110 108–100 97–102 96–105 100–81 96–85 96–68
Metalac Valjevo 80–96 92–104 69–77 81–91 98–81 107–103 70–76 82–80 103–92 73–79 116–98 76–78 103–89
Vojvodina 77–95 95–111 107–122 83–97 94–78 90–100 92–95 92–85 109–94 90–84 100–88 105–108 90–78
Istravino 70–84 83–110 96–100 84–102 79–83 78–86 98–96 74–78 115–112 88–83 90–80 83–92 85–77
Source: Pearlbasket
Legend: Blue = home team win; Red = away team win.
Matches with lighter background shading were decided after overtime.

Other source:[2][3][4]

Scoring leaders

  1. Nikola Plećaš (Lokomotiva) - ___ points (33.1ppg)[5]

Qualification in 1975-76 season European competitions

FIBA European Champions Cup

FIBA Cup Winner's Cup

FIBA Korać Cup

References

  1. "Yugoslav basketball league standings 1945-91". nsl.kosarka.co.yu. Archived from the original on 2 July 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
  2. "1974-75: Zadru pehar, a Moki - televizor". KOS magazin. 2019-12-27. Retrieved 2023-10-19.
  3. Vićentijević, Branko. "Prvi uspeh Valjevaca u Ljubljani". Kolubarske. Retrieved 2023-10-19.
  4. "OKK Beograd" (PDF).
  5. Martinović, Dragan (22 January 2017). "DRAŽEN PETROVIĆ ILI RADIVOJ KORAĆ?". Koš magazin. Retrieved 12 February 2017.
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