Resilience is the key for overcoming crises… But how resilient is the European Basketball?

A detailed look at some major crises in the past and how European Basketball reacted

Currently, as in all other areas of human life, there is only one item on the agenda of European Basketball, namely the Corona pandemic and its impact on different layers of basketball. The outbreak of the coronavirus is a human tragedy with unprecedented impact for the entire world. It seems likely that global economy will fall into a recession whose length will be dependent on the actual recovery path to be followed. In that context, the word “resilience” is being called out more and more often as being the key for a successful recovery from the corona pandemic.

Clearly, it cannot be argued that the European Basketball is being managed effectively and rationally, especially in financial terms. And it, for sure, does not have a sustainable operating and financial model. Vast majority of the clubs have been in a loss-making situation for many years. They manage to survive only because there are sponsors and/or shareholders who are (due to different reasons) passionate about basketball and feel committed to it. While it is true that the (financial) history of European Basketball has been pretty turbulent witnessing quite a few number of clubs going out of “business”, in almost all cases, there is one main reason that stands out for the insolvency of clubs, namely the high dependency on a single or a small number of sponsors and/or shareholders. In that case, if a sponsor and/or shareholder decides (for whatever reason) to withdraw its support, it is virtually certain that the related basketball club goes out of business.

As mentioned earlier, it is a fact that European basketball clubs have had structural problems for many years. This is also one of the main reasons as to why there is so much fear and concern about the impact of the corona pandemic. It seems possible that some clubs might cease their activities (due to the main reason explained above) and the others end up cutting their budgets for the future seasons. There are many different scenarios about the future of European Basketball, most of them being extremely negative. Without underestimating the seriousness of the crisis, we believe that, despite all these losses and challenges over years, the European Basketball has also developed a certain level of resilience over the years. Why do we think like that? Here are some examples of demonstrating resilience and overcoming crises in the history of European Basketball.

Oil Price Shock and German Basketball

The oil crisis began in October 1973 when the members of the OPEC proclaimed an oil embargo. The embargo was targeted at nations perceived as supporting Israel during the Yom Kippur War. By the end of the embargo in March 1974, the price of oil had risen by nearly 400%. The embargo caused an oil crisis with many short- and long-term effects on global politics and the global economy. Among other nations, the impact of the oil crisis on the German economy was devastating. In 1975, the peak of the crisis, the unemployment rate had almost doubled compared to the preceding year and Germany’s economy shrank for the first time in the history of Federal Republic of Germany, leading to a stagnation. Additionally, certain restrictions were imposed in the daily life as to the consumption of oil such as driving bans on Sundays, speed limitations on highways (in a country that is famous for not having any speed limits at all), restrictions on flights etc.

During this crisis, and despite all the associated challenges, German Basketball managed to achieve two important milestones: German Basketball League (BBL) had played its inaugural season in 1966, consisting of one northern division and one southern division, each comprising 10 teams. Starting with the 1971-72 season, the size of each division was reduced to 8 teams. With the 1975-76 season, essentially in the middle of the economic crisis, the league structure was changed into a ten team first league (1. Basketball Bundesliga), and a 20 team second league (2. Basketball Bundesliga), i.e. increasing the number of professional teams from 16 to 30 including the creation of a second division. Furthermore, in the same year the German Basketball Federation (DBB) signed a contract with the European Professional Basketball League and put together a team in this competition, the Munich Eagles. Hence, despite the crisis, German Basketball managed to achieve two important milestones while further increasing its popularity. A total of over 100.000 spectators attended the 90 games of the 1975-76 season, the games of 1. FC Bamberg visited an average of over 2.000 fans per game, and almost 2.500 people attended Leverkusen’s last game of the season against ASV Cologne.

Yugoslav Wars and Partizan

The Yugoslav Wars were a series of separate but related ethnic conflicts, wars of independence and insurgencies fought in the former Yugoslavia from 1991 to 2001, which led to the breakup of the Yugoslav state. Its constituent republics declared independence, despite unresolved tensions between ethnic minorities in the new countries, fueling the wars.

After the departure of Divac, Paspalj, Grbovic, Savovic and other main players from the 1980s, Partizan started the 1991-92 season with a rejuvenated squad, led by an exceptionally talented backcourt pair of Aleksandar Djordjevic and Predrag Danilovic. A previous team captain and former national team player with no coaching experience, Zelimir Obradovic, was chosen as a first team coach. Another former Partizan coach and player, an established European basketball expert, Professor Aleksandar Nikolic became his mentor. Ethnic conflicts in the region have escalated towards the autumn on 1991, upon which FIBA decided not to allow teams from Yugoslavia to play their home games at their home venues. Partizan decided to play its “home” games in the Madrid suburb of Fuenlabrada, in the Polideportivo Fernando Martín arena. Coach Obradovic’s team began a long season of European and domestic matches, often traveling thousands of kilometers in just a few days, with performance gradually improving. Partizan finished the competition in the group stage in the Euroleague in fourth place with nine wins and five defeats. That meant that Partizan had to play crucial matches to qualify for the Final Four with Knorr Bologna. Bolognese had a strong team, however Partizan came on top in three games and for the second time qualified for the Final Four. At the Final Four held in Istanbul in April 1992, Partizan won the title of European champion after winning both games – in the semifinals against Italian Philips Milano and in the finals Spanish Joventut Badalona. The average age of the team was only 21.7 years, and out of 17 games all but one (the quarter-final game against Knorr Bologna) were played on foreign grounds. The season finished triumphantly with victories in the national championship and the Cup. Despite all the negative challenges of a civil war, Partizan managed to win the highest competition in European Basketball and brought up a great generation of players (and later coaches and basketball managers) who still continue shaping the European Basketball landscape.

Another amazing story from these difficult times is that after wining his first Euroleague title, Coach Obradovic decided to stay with Partizan for one more year, without receiving any salary for the entire season mainly due to economic challenges caused by the war, just for the sake of completing his “learning and education” process with Professor Nikolic. In hindsight, it can be concluded that it was a great decision made in tough times which seems to have paid off multiple times over Coach Obradovic’s amazing career so far.

Economic Crises in Turkey and Turkish Basketball

Turkey, as an emerging economy, has experienced several economic crises over the years and decades. Its economy has been fragile, especially due to its heavy dependence on foreign investments for economic growth. Some structural problems (such as in the banking system) and political instability were among the main reasons.

In 1994, the country experienced its one of the most devastating economic crises in its history. Turkish lira has devalued by more than 160% against USD within a timeframe of only three months. To stop the bleeding, government had to issue debt instruments with an interest rate of up to 400% p.a. In the same year, Turkey registered its highest-ever inflation rate which exceeded 125% and the economy shrank by 6%. The years between 1994 and 2001, continued to be challenging which witnessed the bankruptcy of 10 private banks causing losses in billions. In 1999, the country experienced a major earthquake which killed more than 17.000 people. Since it occurred in the heart of Turkish economy (its epicenter was only a few kilometers away from the Country’s largest oil refinery and all leading industrial cities like Kocaeli, Sakarya and to a certain extent also Istanbul were heavily impacted), its impact on the economy was major. Triggered by a political dispute between the Turkish prime minister and president, huge panic broke out in the country’s markets. Stocks plummeted by 18% in one day and overnight interest rates reached unbelievable levels of 7500%. Large quantities of Turkish lira were exchanged for U.S. dollars or euro leading to significant devaluation of the currency by about 40%. In all these years, especially in the period from 1994 through 2001, the Turkish economy was under severe pressure. Unemployment rates increased, all areas of life, from health to education, were negatively impacted. Political and social climate was very tense.

Despite this extremely adverse environment, Turkish Basketball won its very first European trophy in 1996, with Efes Pilsen (currently known as Anadolu Efes) bringing the FIBA Korac Cup to the country. In the following season (1996-97), another Turkish club, TOFAS, again reached the final in Korac Cup ultimately losing to Aris Thessaloniki. Three years later, Efes Pilsen showed up in FIBA Euroleague Final Four tournaments in two consecutive seasons 1999-00 (for the first time in club history) and 2000-01 which were in the middle of the country’s hardest economic, political and social crises. Just to put into the right context: Until Fenerbahce’s first appearance in EuroLeague Final Four in the 2014-15 season, no other Turkish team could achieve that. Anadolu Efes could finally repeat that success only in last season, i.e. after 18 years. As to the Turkish national team, 2001 was a special year when they reached the final game of Eurobasket, for the very first time in the Turkish basketball history.

Russian Financial Crisis and Russian Basketball

The Russian financial crisis hit Russia on 17 August 1998. Declining productivity, a high fixed exchange rate between the ruble and foreign currencies to avoid public turmoil, and a chronic fiscal deficit were the reasons that led to the crisis. Two external shocks, the Asian financial crisis that had begun in 1997 and the following declines in demand for (and thus price of) crude oil and nonferrous metals, severely impacted Russian foreign exchange reserves.

On 17 August 1998, the Russian government devalued the ruble, defaulted on domestic debt, and declared a moratorium (i.e. delay) on repayment of foreign debt for three months which caused severe turbulence in international markets as well, including a collapse of a very prominent hedge fund based in the US despite bailout attempts from the world’s leading banks. Russian inflation in 1998 reached 84% and welfare costs grew considerably. Many banks closed as a result of the crisis. The financial collapse resulted in a political crisis, too.

Only two years following the country’s most severe economic crisis after the Soviet era, CSKA was back on the stage of the top European basketball competition by reaching the FIBA Euroleague Final Four in the 2000-01 season. One year later, Lokomotiv Kuban appeared in the final game of FIBA Korac Cup losing against Nancy from France.

Global Financial Crisis and Its Aftershocks in Spain and Greece

The financial crisis of 2007-08, also known as the global financial crisis, was a severe worldwide economic crisis. It is considered by many economists to have been the most serious financial crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

The crisis began in 2007 with a depreciation in the subprime mortgage market in the United States, and it developed into an international banking crisis with the collapse of the investment bank Lehman Brothers in September 2008. Excessive risk-taking by certain banks helped to magnify the financial impact globally. Massive bailouts of financial institutions and other palliative monetary and fiscal policies were employed to prevent a possible collapse of the world financial system. The crisis was nonetheless followed by a global economic downturn, the Great Recession. The Asian markets (China, Hong Kong, Japan, India, etc.) were immediately impacted and volatilized after the U.S. sub-prime crisis. The European debt crisis, a crisis in the banking system of the European countries using the euro, followed later.

Spanish Financial Crisis

The 2008-2014 Spanish financial crisis, also known as the Great Recession in Spain or the Great Spanish Depression, began in 2008 during the world financial crisis of 2007–08. In 2012, it made Spain a late participant in the European sovereign debt crisis when the country was unable to bail out its financial sector and had to apply for a €100 billion rescue package provided by the European Stability Mechanism. The main cause of Spain’s crisis was the housing bubble and the accompanying unsustainably high GDP growth rate. During the third quarter of 2008 the national GDP contracted for the first time in 15 years, and, in February 2009, Spain (and other European economies) officially entered recession. The economy contracted 3.7% in 2009 and again in 2010 by 0.1%. It grew by 0.7% in 2011. By the 1st quarter of 2012, Spain was officially in recession once again. In 2012, the European Commission approved the Spanish government’s plan to shrink and restructure three major Spanish banks. In terms of unemployment, Spain suffered a severe setback in October 2008, when it saw its unemployment rate surging to 1996 levels. By the end of March 2009, unemployment rate hit 17.4% with the jobless total having doubled over the past 12 months. By March 2012, Spain’s unemployment rate reached 24.4%, twice the eurozone average.

In the time period between 2008 and 2014, Spanish teams achieved eight appearances in EuroLeague Final Four, winning one of them and losing twice in the final game. In EuroCup, Spanish teams reached eight times the semifinals (or above) within the same period, winning it twice and losing in the finals three times.

Greek Debt Crisis

The Greek government-debt crisis was the sovereign debt crisis faced by Greece in the aftermath of the financial crisis of 2007-08. The Greek crisis started in late 2009, triggered by the turmoil of the world-wide Great Recession, structural weaknesses in the Greek economy, and lack of monetary policy flexibility as a member of the Eurozone. In all, the Greek economy suffered the longest recession of any advanced capitalist economy to date, overtaking the US Great Depression. Greek GDP’s worst decline, −6.9%, came in 2011, a year in which seasonally adjusted industrial output ended 28.4% lower than in 2005. During that year, 111.000 Greek companies went bankrupt (27% higher than in 2010). As a result, the seasonally adjusted unemployment rate grew from 7.5% in September 2008 to a then record high of 23.1% in May 2012, while the youth unemployment rate time rose from 22.0% to 54.9%. From 2009 to 2012, the Greek GDP declined by more than a quarter, causing a ” depression dynamic” in the country.

From 2009 through 2018, Greek teams attended the EuroLeague Final Four for seven times, winning the title three times and losing in the finals three times. Despite this success, it can be argued that overall the club budgets were negatively impacted over time due to the Greek debt crisis and the overall economic situation.

Every crisis has a different reason and impact, and corona pandemic is definitely an unprecedented disruptive event for the entire world. And for sure, we are not arguing that economic crises in the past did not have any impact on European Basketball. In the contrary, the impact was definitely felt, like in the case of Montepaschi Siena, one of the most successful Italian basketball teams in 2000s, whose main sponsor was significantly hit by the Global Financial Crisis which led to their withdrawal from basketball, just to give one example. Therefore, it could definitely be argued that the European Basketball would be better off without all the economic and financial crises explained above. However, it is also a fact that even in the most difficult times European Basketball continued to exist and showed great examples of resilience.

The key here is to focus on “doing the right thing” in a persistent manner, especially in terms of reducing dependency on one single or a small number of revenue sources, and tapping into own resources by developing next generations of European Basketball stars made in Europe. History shows that the European Basketball does have the potential as well as the resilience for that. We just need to remember it and start acting accordingly, carefully but with full confidence!

EBAG