BC Rytas

Rytas Vilnius
Rytas Vilnius logo
NicknameBlack White Reds
LeaguesLithuanian Basketball League
Champions League
Founded1963 (as Statyba) [1]
1997 (as BC Lietuvos rytas)
HistoryStatyba
1963–1997
Statyba-Lietuvos rytas
1997–1998
Lietuvos rytas
1998–2018
Rytas
2018–present
ArenaJeep Arena (LKL)
ASG Arena (BCL)
Capacity10,000[2] (ASG Arena)
2,741 (Jeep Arena)
LocationVilnius, Lithuania
Team colorsBlack, white, red
     
Team managerMantvydas Dabašinskas
Head coachGiedrius Žibėnas
OwnershipDarius Gudelis (main), Vilnius City Municipality, Perlas and Norvelita[3]
Affiliation(s)Rytas-2 (NKL)
Rytas MRU (RKL)
Championships2 EuroCup
7 LKL
3 LKF Cup
2 King Mindaugas Cup
1 North European League
3 Baltic Championships
1 Baltic Presidents Cup
6 Lithuanian SSR League
5 Lithuanian SSR "Sports" Cup
2 USSR A class League
Retired numbers2 (7) (13)
WebsiteOfficial website Edit this at Wikidata

Rytas Vilnius is a professional basketball club based in Vilnius, Lithuania. They compete domestically in the Lithuanian Basketball League and the King Mindaugas Cup, while internationally in the FIBA Champions League since 2020–21. Rytas have won two EuroCup titles, seven Lithuanian League titles, five LKF / King Mindaugas Cups and three Baltic championships. The team plays its domestic home games in the Jeep Arena and they share the ASG Arena with BC Wolves for their European home games. The club was founded in 1997 from another club, BC Statyba.

Notable members of the club include Šarūnas Marčiulionis, Šarūnas Jasikevičius, Ramūnas Šiškauskas, Arvydas Macijauskas, Jonas Valančiūnas, Martynas Gecevičius, Renaldas Seibutis, Simas Jasaitis, Robertas Javtokas, Darius Songaila, Marijonas Petravičius, Rimantas Kaukėnas, Rimas Kurtinaitis, Gintaras Einikis, Deividas Sirvydis, Rokas Giedraitis, Artūras Gudaitis, Ąžuolas Tubelis.

The team's farm club Rytas-2 is used for the development of young players and plays in the second-tier NKL.

  1. ^ "Guoga apie konkurenciją "Žalgiriui": "Mūsų biudžetas turi siekti apie 10 mln. eurų"". BasketNews.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 22 June 2017.
  2. ^ "History and facts".
  3. ^ "Antanas Guoga traukiasi iš Vilniaus "Lietuvos ryto": "Toliau esu šalia"". 24sek.lt (in Lithuanian). 24 October 2017. Retrieved 24 October 2017.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia · View on Wikipedia

Developed by Tubidy