Second Division Men (Icelandic basketball)
Current season, competition or edition: 2016–17 season | |
Sport | Basketball |
---|---|
Founded | 1973 |
Inaugural season | 1973 |
CEO | Hannes S. Jónsson |
No. of teams | 10 |
Country | Iceland |
Continent | FIBA Europe (Europe) |
Most recent champion(s) | Augnablik |
Most titles | KFÍ, Laugdælir, Ármann (3 titles) |
Level on pyramid | 3 |
Official website | KKÍ.is |
Second Division or D2 (Icelandic: 2. deild karla) is the third tier basketball competition among clubs in Iceland. It is organized by the Icelandic Basketball Federation (Icelandic: Körfuknattleikssamband Íslands – KKÍ). It consists of 10 teams and the season consists of a home-and-away schedule of 18 games. The top four teams meet in a playoff for the victory in the Second Division. The two finalists achieve promotion to Division I (Icelandic: 1. deild karla).[1]
History
Creation
The Second Division originated in 1973 and, as of 2016, consists of 10 teams.[2] KFÍ, Laugdælir and Ármann have won the most championships with 3 three each.[3]
Champions
Season | Champion | Runner-up |
---|---|---|
1973–74 | Fram Reykjavík | --- |
1974–75 | KFÍ | --- |
1975–76 | Laugdælir | --- |
1976–77 | ÍV (now ÍBV) | --- |
1977–78 | Keflavík | --- |
1978–79 | Skallagrímur | --- |
1979–80 | KFÍ (2) | --- |
1980–81 | Haukar | --- |
1981–82 | Thor AK | --- |
1982–83 | Laugdælir (2) | --- |
1983–84 | Reynir Sandgerði | --- |
1984–85 | Breiðablik | --- |
1985–86 | Tindastóll | --- |
1986–87 | UÍA | --- |
1990–91 | Keilufélag Reykjavíkur | --- |
1991–92 | Bolungarvík | --- |
1992–93 | ÍKÍ | --- |
1993–94 | KFÍ (3) | --- |
1994–95 | Stjarnan | --- |
1995–96 | Stafholtstungur | --- |
1996–97 | Hamar | --- |
1997–98 | Fylkir | --- |
1998–99 | ÍV (now ÍBV) (2) | --- |
1999-00 | Ármann | --- |
2000–01 | Reynir Sandgerði (2) | --- |
2001–02 | Fjölnir | --- |
2002–03 | Thor AK (2) | --- |
2003–04 | Drangur | --- |
2004–05 | HHF | --- |
2005–06 | Ármann (2) | --- |
2006–07 | Þróttur Vogum | --- |
2007–08 | UMFH (Hrunamenn) | --- |
2008–09 | ÍA | ÍG |
2009–10 | Laugdælir (3) | Leiknir Reykjavík |
2010–11 | ÍG | ÍA |
2011–12 | Augnablik | Reynir Sandgerði |
2012–13 | Vængir Júpíters | Mostri |
2013–14 | ÍG (2) | Álftanes |
2014–15 | Ármann (3) | Reynir Sandgerði |
2015–16 | Leiknir Reykjavík | KV |
Titles per club
Titles | Club |
---|---|
3 | Laugdælir, KFÍ (now Vestri), Ármann |
2 | Thor AK, Reynir Sandgerði, ÍV (now ÍBV), ÍG |
1 | Augnablik, ÍA, UMFH (Hrunamenn), Þróttur Vogum, HHF, Drangur, Fylkir, Hamar, Stafholtstungur, Stjarnan, ÍKÍ, Bolungarvík, Keilufélag Reykjavíkur, UÍA, Breiðablik, Haukar, Skallagrímur, Keflavík, Fram Reykjavík, Leiknir Reykjavík |
References
External links
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