www.fgks.org   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

The All-Liga ACB Team (Spanish: Quinteto Ideal de la ACB) is an award for the top-tier professional basketball league in Spain, the Spanish ACB League. It is the yearly selection of the league's top 10 basketball players by position. The award began with the 2003–04 season. The award is voted on by coaches, players, fans (through online voting), and the media.

All-Liga ACB Team by season

edit
Player (X) Denotes the number of times the player has been selected.
Bold text indicates the player who won the league's MVP in the same year.
Season First Team Second Team
Player Team Player Team
2003–04 United States  Elmer Bennett Real Madrid
Serbia and Montenegro  Dejan Bodiroga FC Barcelona
Argentina  Andrés Nocioni (MVP) TAU Cerámica
United States  Lou Roe Etosa Alicante
Argentina  Luis Scola TAU Cerámica
2004–05 Spain  José Manuel Calderón TAU Cerámica
United States  Charlie Bell Leche Río Breogán
Spain  Carlos Jiménez Adecco Estudiantes
Spain  Jorge Garbajosa Unicaja
Argentina  Luis Scola (2×) (MVP) TAU Cerámica
2005–06 Argentina  Pablo Prigioni TAU Cerámica
Spain  Juan Carlos Navarro (MVP) Winterthur FC Barcelona
Spain  Carlos Jiménez (2×) Adecco Estudiantes
Spain  Jorge Garbajosa (2×) Unicaja
Argentina  Luis Scola (3×) TAU Cerámica
2006–07 Argentina  Pablo Prigioni (2×) TAU Cerámica
Spain  Juan Carlos Navarro (2×) Winterthur FC Barcelona
Spain  Rudy Fernández DKV Joventut
Spain  Felipe Reyes Real Madrid
Argentina  Luis Scola (4×) (MVP) TAU Cerámica
2007–08 Spain  Ricky Rubio DKV Joventut
Brazil  Marcelinho Huertas Iurbentia Bilbao Basket
Spain  Rudy Fernández (2×) DKV Joventut
Spain  Felipe Reyes (2×) Real Madrid
Spain  Marc Gasol (MVP) Akasvayu Girona
2008–09[1] Argentina  Pablo Prigioni (3×) TAU Cerámica
Serbia  Igor Rakočević TAU Cerámica
Spain  Juan Carlos Navarro (3×) FC Barcelona Regal
Spain  Fran Vázquez FC Barcelona Regal
Spain  Felipe Reyes (3×) (MVP) Real Madrid
2009–10[2] Spain  Ricky Rubio (2×) Regal FC Barcelona
Spain  Juan Carlos Navarro (4×) Regal FC Barcelona
Spain  Carlos Suárez Asefa Estudiantes
Slovenia  Erazem Lorbek Regal FC Barcelona
Brazil  Tiago Splitter (MVP) Caja Laboral
2010–11[3] Brazil  Marcelinho Huertas (2×) Caja Laboral
Azerbaijan  Jaycee Carroll Gran Canaria 2014
Spain  Fernando San Emeterio (MVP) Caja Laboral
Azerbaijan  Nik Caner-Medley Asefa Estudiantes
Croatia  Ante Tomić Real Madrid
2011–12[4] Spain  Sergio Llull Real Madrid
Spain  Sergi Vidal Lagun Aro GBC
United States  Andy Panko (MVP) Lagun Aro GBC
Bosnia and Herzegovina  Mirza Teletović Caja Laboral
Slovenia  Erazem Lorbek (2×) FC Barcelona Regal
2012–13[5] Spain  Sergio Rodríguez Real Madrid
Spain  Rudy Fernández (3x) Real Madrid
Argentina  Andrés Nocioni (2×) Laboral Kutxa
Spain  Nikola Mirotić (MVP) Real Madrid
Croatia  Ante Tomić (2x) FC Barcelona Regal
2013–14[6] Spain  Sergio Rodríguez (2×) Real Madrid
Spain  Rudy Fernández (4×) Real Madrid
Central African Republic  Romain Sato Valencia Basket
Spain  Nikola Mirotić (2×) Real Madrid
Kosovo  Justin Doellman (MVP) Valencia Basket
2014–15[7] Uruguay  Jayson Granger Unicaja
Spain  Sergio Llull (2×) Real Madrid
Spain  Pau Ribas Valencia Basket
Spain  Felipe Reyes (4×) (MVP) Real Madrid
Montenegro  Marko Todorović Dominion Bilbao Basket
2015–16[8][9] Spain  Sergio Rodríguez (3×) Real Madrid Czech Republic  Tomáš Satoranský FC Barcelona Lassa
Bulgaria  Darius Adams Laboral Kutxa Baskonia Croatia  Marko Popović Montakit Fuenlabrada
Spain  Álex Mumbrú Dominion Bilbao Basket Hungary  Ádám Hanga Laboral Kutxa Baskonia
Croatia  Justin Hamilton Valencia Basket Mexico  Gustavo Ayón Real Madrid
Greece  Ioannis Bourousis (MVP) Laboral Kutxa Baskonia Serbia  Dejan Musli ICL Manresa
2016–17[10][11] Spain  Sergio Llull (3x) (MVP) Real Madrid United States  Shane Larkin Baskonia
France  Edwin Jackson Movistar Estudiantes Argentina  Facundo Campazzo UCAM Murcia
Hungary  Ádám Hanga (2×) Baskonia Serbia  Nemanja Nedović Unicaja
Montenegro  Bojan Dubljević Valencia Basket Slovenia  Anthony Randolph Real Madrid
Georgia (country)  Giorgi Shermadini MoraBanc Andorra Croatia  Ante Tomić (3×) FC Barcelona Lassa
2017–18 United States  Gary Neal Tecnyconta Zaragoza France  Thomas Heurtel FC Barcelona Lassa
Slovenia  Luka Dončić (MVP) Real Madrid Argentina  Facundo Campazzo (2×) Real Madrid
Israel  Sylven Landesberg Movistar Estudiantes Poland  Mateusz Ponitka Iberostar Tenerife
Georgia (country)  Tornike Shengelia Baskonia Montenegro  Bojan Dubljević (2×) Valencia Basket
Netherlands  Henk Norel Delteco GBC Croatia  Ante Tomić (4×) FC Barcelona Lassa
2018–19 Argentina  Facundo Campazzo (3×) Real Madrid France  Thomas Heurtel (2×) FC Barcelona Lassa
Argentina  Nicolás Laprovittola (MVP) Divina Seguros Joventut Spain  Jaime Fernández Unicaja
Nigeria  Stan Okoye Tecnyconta Zaragoza Spain  Javier Beirán Iberostar Tenerife
Montenegro  Bojan Dubljević (3×) Valencia Basket Georgia (country)  Tornike Shengelia (2×) Baskonia
Cape Verde  Edy Tavares Real Madrid France  Vincent Poirier Baskonia
2019–20 Argentina  Facundo Campazzo (4×) Real Madrid Brazil  Marcelinho Huertas (3×) Iberostar Tenerife
Slovenia  Klemen Prepelič Joventut Badalona Hungary  Ádám Hanga (3×) FC Barcelona
France  Axel Bouteille Unicaja Spain  Alberto Abalde Valencia Basket
Spain  Nikola Mirotić (3×) (MVP) FC Barcelona Georgia (country)  Tornike Shengelia (3×) Baskonia
Georgia (country)  Giorgi Shermadini (2×) Iberostar Tenerife Cape Verde  Edy Tavares (2×) Real Madrid (2×)
2020–21 Brazil  Marcelinho Huertas (4×) Lenovo Tenerife United States  Melo Trimble Urbas Fuenlabrada
United States  Pierriá Henry TD Systems Baskonia United States  Cory Higgins FC Barcelona
Spain  Xabier López-Arostegui Joventut Badalona Lithuania  Rokas Giedraitis TD Systems Baskonia
Cape Verde  Edy Tavares (3×) Real Madrid Spain  Nikola Mirotić (4×) FC Barcelona
Georgia (country)  Giorgi Shermadini (3×) (MVP) Lenovo Tenerife Cuba  Jasiel Rivero Hereda San Pablo Burgos
2021–22 Brazil  Marcelinho Huertas (5×) Lenovo Tenerife United States  Shannon Evans Coosur Real Betis
Argentina  Nicolás Laprovittola (2×) FC Barcelona United States  Isaiah Taylor UCAM Murcia
Bosnia and Herzegovina  Džanan Musa (MVP) Río Breogán United States  Joe Thomasson BAXI Manresa
Nigeria  Chima Moneke BAXI Manresa Spain  Nikola Mirotić (5×) FC Barcelona
Georgia (country)  Giorgi Shermadini (4×) Lenovo Tenerife Cape Verde  Edy Tavares (4×) Real Madrid
2022–23 United States  Darius Thompson Cazoo Baskonia Brazil  Marcelinho Huertas (6×) Lenovo Tenerife
United States  Markus Howard Cazoo Baskonia Argentina  Nicolás Laprovittola (3×) FC Barcelona
Bosnia and Herzegovina  Džanan Musa (2×) Real Madrid Spain  Joel Parra Joventut Badalona
Cape Verde  Edy Tavares (5×) Real Madrid Spain  Nikola Mirotić (6×) FC Barcelona
Georgia (country)  Giorgi Shermadini (5×) (MVP) Lenovo Tenerife Croatia  Ante Tomić (5×) Joventut Badalona
2023–24 Argentina  Facundo Campazzo (5×) (MVP) Real Madrid Brazil  Marcelinho Huertas (7×) Lenovo Tenerife
United States  Markus Howard (2×) Cazoo Baskonia Dominican Republic  Jean Montero Morabanc Andorra
Dominican Republic  Andrés Feliz Joventut Badalona Senegal  Brancou Badio Baxi Manresa
United States  Dylan Osetkowski Unicaja Argentina  Nicolás Brussino Dreamland Gran Canaria
Georgia (country)  Giorgi Shermadini (6×) Lenovo Tenerife Nigeria  Chima Moneke (2×) Baskonia

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Prigioni, Navarro, Rakocevic, Vázquez y Reyes forman el Quinteto Ideal ACB 08-09.
  2. ^ Ricky, Navarro, Suárez, Splitter y Lorbek componen el quinteto ideal de la ACB. Archived 2014-01-01 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Huertas y San Emeterio en el mejor quinteto de la ACB". Archived from the original on 2014-01-01. Retrieved 2013-05-24.
  4. ^ Andy Panko es el MVP de la fase regular de la Liga Endesa.
  5. ^ "Sergio Rodríguez, Rudy Fernández, Andrés Nocioni, Nikola Mirotic y Ante Tomic forman el Mejor Quinteto de la Liga Endesa 2012–13". Archived from the original on 2015-10-05. Retrieved 2013-05-24.
  6. ^ "ACB.com - Mejor Quinteto de la Liga Endesa 2013-14". Archived from the original on 2015-10-05. Retrieved 2014-05-22.
  7. ^ "ACB.com - Mejor Quinteto de la Liga Endesa 2014-15". Archived from the original on 2015-05-25. Retrieved 2015-05-21.
  8. ^ "Mejor Quinteto Liga Endesa 2015-16" (in Spanish). ACB.com. 19 May 2016. Archived from the original on 23 June 2016. Retrieved 19 May 2016.
  9. ^ "Segundo Mejor Quinteto Liga Endesa 2015-16" (in Spanish). ACB.com. 19 May 2016. Archived from the original on 24 June 2016. Retrieved 19 May 2016.
  10. ^ "Mejor Quinteto de la Liga Endesa 2016-17" (in Spanish). ACB.com. 15 May 2017. Archived from the original on 16 August 2017. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  11. ^ "Segundo Mejor Quinteto de la Liga Endesa 2016-17" (in Spanish). 15 May 2017. Archived from the original on 16 August 2017. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
edit