| Olimpia Milano | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nickname | Scarpette Rosse (Little Red Shoes) | ||||
| Leagues | LBA EuroLeague | ||||
| Founded | 1930; 95 years ago (1930) | ||||
| History | Dopolavoro Borletti (1930–1947) Pallacanestro Olimpia Milano (1947–present) | ||||
| Arena | Unipol Forum | ||||
| Capacity | 12,700[1] | ||||
| Location | Assago, Italy | ||||
| Team colors | White, red | ||||
| Main sponsor | EA7 Emporio Armani | ||||
| President | Pantaleo Dell'Orco | ||||
| General manager | Christos Stavropoulos | ||||
| Head coach | Giuseppe Poeta | ||||
| Team captain | Giampaolo Ricci andShavon Shields | ||||
| Ownership | Armani Foundation | ||||
| Championships | 3EuroLeague 1Intercontinental Cup 3Saporta Cups 2Korać Cup 31Italian Championships 8Italian Cups 6Italian Supercups | ||||
| Retired numbers | 4 (8,11,18,36) | ||||
| Website | olimpiamilano.com | ||||
| |||||
Pallacanestro Olimpia Milano, commonly known asOlimpia Milano or asEA7 Emporio Armani Milan after its title sponsor,[2] is anLBA Italian professionalbasketball team, based inMilan, Italy. Its colors are white and red, and the team is sometimes referred as "Scarpette Rosse" (Little Red Shoes) because team officials imported redConverse All-Star shoes for players from the United States. The tag line stuck, and the nickname is still used by many fans today.
As per custom in the Italian league, sponsorship has kept the team name changing frequently. From 1930 until 1955, it was called Borletti Milano. From 1956 to 1973, it was renamed Simmenthal. Other famous sponsorship names were Billy, Simac, Tracer, and Philips, in the 1980s. For past club sponsorship names, seethe list below.
Olimpia is the most successful basketball club in Italy and one of the most successful in Europe, having won 31Italian League Championships, 8Italian National Cups, 5Italian Super Cups, 3EuroLeague, 1FIBA Intercontinental Cup, 3FIBA Saporta Cups, 2FIBA Korać Cups and many junior titles.
In 2016, the club was included in theItalian Basketball Hall of Fame.
The birth of Pallacanestro Olimpia Milano is traditionally dated 1936, year of the firstItalian League Championship title won by the team. Actually it was founded 6 years earlier (in 1930) as "Dopolavoro Borletti" byFratelli Borletti managers.[3] Borletti team won 4 consecutiveItalian League Championships from1936 to1939.
In 1947, Milan businessman Adolfo Bogoncelli merged Pallacanestro Como and Borletti to form a new society,[4] commonly known as "Borolimpia". "Borletti" brand was the main sponsor of the team, becoming the first sponsor in the history of Italian sport.[5]
In 1955, after 9Italian League Championships, Borletti brand leaves Olimpia Milano jersey.
The team regularly won theItalian League Championship in the 1950s and the 1960s, with players includingGabriele Vianello,Sandro Riminucci,Gianfranco Pieri, andBill Bradley. In1966, Olimpia won its firstFIBA European Champions Cup.
In the 1970s, three teams were fighting across Europe for supremacy: Olimpia Milano,Ignis Varese, andReal Madrid.Pallacanestro Varese and Olimpia Milano were arch-rivals, as the two cities are 25 miles (40 km) apart. While Milano was a frequentItalian League champion, they were unable to win again the prestigiousFIBA European Champions Cup. Late in the 1970s, the quality of the club declined, but Olimpia Milano still managed to win aFIBA Cup Winners' Cup.
In 1973, Simmenthal brand leaves Olimpia jersey after 17 years and 10Italian League Championships.
In the 1970s through the 1980s, the team acquired several notable players, including the Boselli twins (Franco and Dino),Mike Sylvester, Chas Menatti,Dino Meneghin,Mike D'Antoni,John Gianelli,Roberto Premier.Bob McAdoo,Joe Barry Carroll,Russ Schoene,Antoine Carr, andMike Brown. Americanhead coachDan Peterson led the team back to prominence.
In the 1980s, the team was sold to the Gabetti family. After this, they qualified for nine Serie A championships finals, winning five, with the 1987 team winning the Serie A title, the1986–87 FIBA European Champions Cup (won also in1988: both finals were won againstMaccabi Tel Aviv), theItalian Cup and the1987 FIBA Club World Cup. This gave the club the coveted"Triple Crown" and the even rarer "Quadruple Crown".
Led by point guardSasha Djordjević, the team won anotherFIBA Korać Cup in 1993. Bepi Stefanel purchased the team franchise in 1994, and signed-up notable European players likeDejan Bodiroga,Gregor Fučka, Sandro De Pol, andNando Gentile. In 1996, the team won the Italian Cup and its 25th Italian National Championship, celebrating the 60th anniversary of the club.
Team management was inconsistent, as ownership groups from 1998 to 2004. Players of the team includedWarren Kidd,Hugo Sconochini,Claudio Coldebella andPetar Naumoski. In 2005, owner Corbelli, which bought the club in 2002, fromSergio Tacchini, was flanked byAdriano Galliani (managing director of Italian Football clubA.C. Milan),Massimo Moratti (President of rival clubInternazionale),NBA starKobe Bryant, and stylistGiorgio Armani, as sponsor with the Armani Jeans brand. After difficult years, led by coach Lino Lardo, Olimpia reached the national championship Finals, finally being beaten byClimamio Bologna.
On January 25, 2006, in the midst of a disappointing season in the EuroLeague and domestically, Djordjevic was named as the team's new coach. He left as coach after the 2006–07 season, but not before securing Olimpia a berth in the2007–08 Euroleague.
In 2008,Giorgio Armani bought the team from Giorgio Corbelli, standing as the only owner, entirely changing the management structure, naming Livio Proli as president, and Lucio Zanca asgeneral manager.Piero Bucchi was chosen to coach the new team, leading Olimpia twice to second place inLEGA Basket, being defeated byMontepaschi Siena in both cases.

In January 2011, after 23 years away from coaching,Dan Peterson came back from retirement at the request of team ownerGiorgio Armani to replace Piero Bucchi, who was fired in mid-season.[6] Peterson was hired on an interim basis and agreed to coach only the remainder of the season, in which he guided the team to the semi-finals. On June 9, Olimpia Milano announcedSergio Scariolo as new head coach for the 2011–12 season. The first player signed for the 2011–12 season wasOmar Cook, an American-bornplay maker, who had played the previous season withPower Electronics Valencia. Owing to theNBA lockout,Danilo Gallinari went back to his alma mater, playing 15 games (8 in the Italian League, 7 inEuroLeague): he left the team in December.Sergio Scariolo was replaced byLuca Banchi at the beginning of the 2013–14 season, and the team brought fromMontepaschi Siena:David Moss,Kristjan Kangur, andDaniel Hackett.
The team reached the quarterfinals ofEuroLeague, 16 years after its last appearance, but the team lost against the eventual league champions,Maccabi Tel Aviv. The team finished in the 1st position theLEGA Basket regular season, and in the 7th game of the playoff's finals, Olimpia won its 26th Italian League championship title, its first after 18 years.Alessandro Gentile, thecaptain of Olimpia, was namedMVP of the finals.
On June 29, 2017,Simone Pianigiani was hired as the new head coach and on June 15, 2018, Milano went to win his 28th title by beatingDolomiti Energia Trento in game 6 of the2018 LBA Finals.[7]
On June 11, 2019, legendEttore Messina signed a deal as the new head coach of the club and president of all basketball operations for the following three seasons.[8]
On May 4, 2021, the club reached theEuroleague Final Four after 29 years (1992 Final Four).[9]

| Arena | Photo | Capacity | Years | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Court of Via Costanza | — | 1930–1948 | Outdoor court of the ONDBorletti factory | |
| Palazzo dello Sport dellaFiera | c. 18,000 | 1948-1960 | The first sports palace ofMilan and the biggest in Europe at that time | |
| PalaLido | c. 10,000 (3,500)* | 1960–1980 (1985)* | Indoor arena specifically designed for basketball *(temporarily used in 1985-86 season) | |
| Palasport di San Siro | c. 15,000 | 1980–1985 | On January 17, 1985, a large snowfall collapsed the roof and the arena was closed | |
| PalaTrussardi | 10,045 | 1986–1990 | Also known as "PalaVobis", "Mazda Palace" and "PalaSharp" | |
| Unipol Forum | 12,700 | 1990–present | Originally named "the Forum ofAssago", it was previously known as "FilaForum", "DatchForum" and "Mediolanum Forum". |
| Arena | Photo | Capacity | Years | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PalaLido | 3,800 | 1990–2011 | Used whenMediolanum Forum was unavailable | |
| PalaDesio | 6,700 | 2011–2019 | In 2011, the old PalaLido was destroyed and rebuilt. PalaDesio was used as a secondary arena during the construction of the new arena | |
| Allianz Cloud | 5,347 | 2019–present | Built in place of the old PalaLido, it is used whenMediolanum Forum is unavailable |
Olimpia Milano used the ONDBorletti outdoor court of Via Costanza for almost 20 years. In the mid-1940s, they moved to the Palazzo dello Sport dellaFiera, which had a seating capacity of 18,000 people, and was then the largest indoor sports arena in Europe, and second only to theMadison Square Garden inNew York City. In 1960, the Palazzo dello Sport della Fiera was abandoned, and Olimpia moved into the original structure of thePalaLido, which then had a smaller seating capacity of 3,500, but because of lack of security measures at the time, often was filled with up to 10,000 people.
At the end of the 1970s, Olimpia moved into the newly builtPalasport di San Siro, a multi-purpose facility built next to the Meazza Stadium, that was able to hold about 15,000 spectators. In 1985, the roof of thePalasport di San Siro collapsed and Olimpia returned to PalaLido for a season, waiting for the construction of a provisional arena. In 1986, they moved into the recently built 10,045 seatPalaTrussardi, where they played through the early 1990s.
The club then moved into its current home arena, theMediolanum Forum, which has a seating capacity of 12,700.[10] The club has also played some home games at the 6,700 seatPalaDesio. Recently, the club considered moving back to the newly rebuilt and modernizedPalaLido (named Allianz Cloud), after it was remodeled, and had its seating capacity expanded. However, the club ultimately decided to continue using theMediolanum Forum as its home arena, due to its much larger seating capacity, as compared to the newAllianz Cloud. However, the new arena is used whenMediolanum Forum is unavailable.
| Olimpia Milano roster | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Players | Coaches | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Updated:July 15, 2025 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Note: Flags indicate national team eligibility atFIBA-sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationalities not displayed.
| Pos. | Starting 5 | Bench 1 | Bench 2 | Bench 3 | Inactive |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C | Josh Nebo | Bryant Dunston | Ousmane Diop | ||
| PF | Zach LeDay | Giampaolo Ricci | Leonardo Totè | Devin Booker | Nate Sestina |
| SF | Shavon Shields | Quinn Ellis | |||
| SG | Marko Gudurić | Armoni Brooks | Stefano Tonut | Diego Flaccadori | |
| PG | Leandro Bolmaro | Nico Mannion | Lorenzo Brown |
(colors:Italian or homegrown players;foreign players;young players)
| Olimpia Milano retired numbers | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No | Nat. | Player | Position | Tenure | Date retired | Ref. |
| 8 | Mike D'Antoni | PG | 1977–1990 | 2015 | [12] | |
| 11 | Dino Meneghin | C | 1980–1990 1993-1994 | 2019 | [13][14][15] | |
| 18 | Art Kenney | PF/C | 1970–1973 | 2013 | [16] | |
| 36 | Dan Peterson | Coach | 1979-1987 2011 | 2023 | [6] | |
| Season | Tier | League | Pos. | Playoffs | Cup | European competitions | Coach | Main Sponsor | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1935-36 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | Giannino Valli | Borletti | ||||
| 1936-37 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | Giannino Valli | Borletti | ||||
| 1937-38 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | Giannino Valli | Borletti | ||||
| 1938-39 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | Giannino Valli | Borletti | ||||
| 1939-40 | 1 | Serie A | 7th | Giannino Valli | Borletti | ||||
| 1940-41 | 1 | Serie A | 2nd | Giannino Valli | Borletti | ||||
| 1941-42 | 1 | Serie A | 5th | Giannino Valli | Borletti | ||||
| 1942-43 | 1 | Serie A | 5th | Giannino Valli | Borletti | ||||
| 1945-46 | 1 | Serie A | 2nd round | Borletti | |||||
| 1946-47 | 1 | Serie A | 1st round | Umberto Fedeli | Borletti | ||||
| 1947-48 | 1 | Serie A | 2nd | Umberto Fedeli | Borletti | ||||
| 1948-49 | 1 | Serie A | 3rd | Cesare Rubini | Borletti | ||||
| 1949-50 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | Cesare Rubini | Borletti | ||||
| 1950-51 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | Cesare Rubini | Borletti | ||||
| 1951-52 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | Cesare Rubini | Borletti | ||||
| 1952-53 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | Cesare Rubini | Borletti | ||||
| 1953-54 | 1 | Elette | 1st | Cesare Rubini | Borletti | ||||
| 1954-55 | 1 | Elette | 3rd | Cesare Rubini | Borletti | ||||
| 1955-56 | 1 | Elette | 2nd | Cesare Rubini | Simmenthal | ||||
| 1956-57 | 1 | Elette | 1st | Cesare Rubini | Simmenthal | ||||
| 1957-58 | 1 | Elette | 1st | 1European Champions Cup | Quarterfinalist | Cesare Rubini | Simmenthal | ||
| 1958-59 | 1 | Elette | 1st | Cesare Rubini | Simmenthal | ||||
| 1959-60 | 1 | Elette | 1st | Cesare Rubini | Simmenthal | ||||
| 1960-61 | 1 | Elette | 3rd | Cesare Rubini | Simmenthal | ||||
| 1961-62 | 1 | Elette | 1st | Cesare Rubini | Simmenthal | ||||
| 1962-63 | 1 | Elette | 1st | 1European Champions Cup | Quarterfinalist | Cesare Rubini | Simmenthal | ||
| 1963-64 | 1 | Elette | 2nd | 1European Champions Cup | Semifinalist | Cesare Rubini | Simmenthal | ||
| 1964-65 | 1 | Elette | 1st | Cesare Rubini | Simmenthal | ||||
| 1965-66 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | 1European Champions Cup | Champion | Cesare Rubini | Simmenthal | ||
| 1966-67 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | 1European Champions Cup | Runner-up | Cesare Rubini | Simmenthal | ||
| 1967-68 | 1 | Serie A | 4th | 1European Champions Cup | Semifinalist | Cesare Rubini | Simmenthal | ||
| 1968-69 | 1 | Serie A | 2nd | Eight-finalist | Cesare Rubini | Simmenthal | |||
| 1969-70 | 1 | Serie A | 2nd | Runner-up | Cesare Rubini | Simmenthal | |||
| 1970-71 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | Runner-up | 3rd | 2European Cup Winners' Cup | Champion | Cesare Rubini | Simmenthal |
| 1971-72 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | Champion | 2European Cup Winners' Cup | Champion | Cesare Rubini | Simmenthal | |
| 1972-73 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | Runner-up | Quarterfinalist | 1European Champions Cup | Semifinalist | Cesare Rubini | Simmenthal |
| 1973-74 | 1 | Serie A | 2nd | Quarterfinalist | 3Korać Cup | R12 | Cesare Rubini | Innocenti | |
| 1974-75 | 1 | Serie A1 | 3rd | 3rd (second phase) | 3Korać Cup | R16 | Filippo Faina | Innocenti | |
| 1975-76 | 1 | Serie A1 | 11th | Relegated toSerie A2 | 2European Cup Winners' Cup | Champion | Filippo Faina | Cinzano | |
| 1976-77 | 2 | Serie A2 | 1st | 4th (second phase) | 2European Cup Winners' Cup | Semifinalist | Filippo Faina | Cinzano | |
| 1977-78 | 1 | Serie A1 | 6th | 4th (second phase) | 3Korać Cup | Semifinalist | Filippo Faina | Cinzano | |
| 1978-79 | 1 | Serie A1 | 5th | Runner-up | Dan Peterson | Billy | |||
| 1979-80 | 1 | Serie A1 | 1st | Semifinalist | Dan Peterson | Billy | |||
| 1980-81 | 1 | Serie A1 | 2nd | Semifinalist | Dan Peterson | Billy | |||
| 1981-82 | 1 | Serie A1 | 3rd | Champion | Dan Peterson | Billy | |||
| 1982-83 | 1 | Serie A1 | 2nd | Runner-up | 1European Champions Cup | Runner-up | Dan Peterson | Billy | |
| 1983-84 | 1 | Serie A1 | 1st | Runner-up | Semifinalist | 2Saporta Cup | Runner-up | Dan Peterson | Simac |
| 1984-85 | 1 | Serie A1 | 2nd | Champion | Quarterfinalist | 3Korać Cup | Champion | Dan Peterson | Simac |
| 1985-86 | 1 | Serie A1 | 1st | Champion | Champion | 1European Champions Cup | Semifinalist | Dan Peterson | Simac |
| 1986-87 | 1 | Serie A1 | 4th | Champion | Champion | 1European Champions Cup | Champion | Dan Peterson | Tracer |
| 1987-88 | 1 | Serie A1 | 2nd | Runner-up | Eighth-finalist | 1European Champions Cup | Champion | Franco Casalini | Tracer |
| 1988-89 | 1 | Serie A1 | 5th | Champion | Semifinalist | 3Korać Cup | Semifinalist | Franco Casalini | Philips |
| 1989-90 | 1 | Serie A1 | 10th | Eighth-finalist | RS | 1European Champions Cup | Quarterfinalist | Franco Casalini | Philips |
| 1990-91 | 1 | Serie A1 | 1st | Runner-up | Runner-up | Mike D'Antoni | Philips | ||
| 1991-92 | 1 | Serie A1 | 3rd | Quarterfinalist | Quarterfinalist | 1European League | 3rd | Mike D'Antoni | Philips |
| 1992-93 | 1 | Serie A1 | 2nd | Quarterfinalist | Quarterfinalist | 3Korać Cup | Champion | Mike D'Antoni | Philips |
| 1993-94 | 1 | Serie A1 | 5th | Quarterfinalist | Eighth-finalist | 3Korać Cup | Semifinalist | Mike D'Antoni | Recoaro |
| 1994-95 | 1 | Serie A1 | 4th | Semifinalist | Semifinalist | 3Korać Cup | Runner-up | Bogdan Tanjević | Stefanel |
| 1995-96 | 1 | Serie A1 | 5th | Champion | Champion | 3Korać Cup | Runner-up | Bogdan Tanjević | Stefanel |
| 1996-97 | 1 | Serie A1 | 4th | Semifinalist | 3rd | 1EuroLeague | Quarterfinalist | Franco Marcelletti | Stefanel |
| 1997-98 | 1 | Serie A1 | 6th | Eighth-finalist | Semifinalist | 2EuroCup | Runner-up | Franco Marcelletti | Stefanel |
| 1998-99 | 1 | Serie A1 | 5th | Quarterfinalist | Eighth-finalist | 2Saporta Cup | R32 | Marco Crespi | Sony |
| 1999-00 | 1 | Serie A1 | 13th | Quarterfinalist | 2Saporta Cup | R16 | Marco Crespi | Adecco | |
| 2000-01 | 1 | Serie A1 | 15th | Valerio Bianchini | Adecco | ||||
| 2001–02 | 1 | Serie A | 17th | Guido Saibene | Adecco | ||||
| 2002–03 | 1 | Serie A | 5th | Round of 16 | Quarterfinalist | Attilio Caja | Pippo | ||
| 2003–04 | 1 | Serie A | 10th | 2ULEB Cup | T16 | Attilio Caja | Breil | ||
| 2004–05 | 1 | Serie A | 4th | Runner-up | Quarterfinalist | Lino Lardo | Armani Jeans | ||
| 2005–06 | 1 | Serie A | 7th | Quarterfinalist | Quarterfinalist | 1Euroleague | RS | Lino Lardo | Armani Jeans |
| 2006–07 | 1 | Serie A | 2nd | Semifinalist | Semifinalist | Aleksandar Đorđević | Armani Jeans | ||
| 2007–08 | 1 | Serie A | 5th | Semifinalist | 1Euroleague | RS | Zare Markovski | Armani Jeans | |
| 2008–09 | 1 | Serie A | 6th | Runner-up | 1Euroleague | T16 | Piero Bucchi | Armani Jeans | |
| 2009–10 | 1 | Serie A | 3rd | Runner-up | Quarterfinalist | 1Euroleague | RS | Piero Bucchi | Armani Jeans |
| 2010–11 | 1 | Serie A | 3rd | Semifinalist | Quarterfinalist | 1Euroleague | RS | Piero Bucchi /Dan Peterson | Armani Jeans |
| 2011–12 | 1 | Serie A | 2nd | Runner-up | Semifinalist | 1Euroleague | T16 | Sergio Scariolo | EA7 Emporio Armani |
| 2012–13 | 1 | Serie A | 4th | Quarterfinalist | Quarterfinalist | 1Euroleague | RS | Sergio Scariolo | EA7 Emporio Armani |
| 2013–14 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | Champion | Quarterfinalist | 1Euroleague | QF | Luca Banchi | EA7 Emporio Armani |
| 2014–15 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | Semifinalist | Runner-up | 1Euroleague | T16 | Luca Banchi | EA7 Emporio Armani |
| 2015–16 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | Champion | Champion | 1Euroleague | RS | Jasmin Repeša | EA7 Emporio Armani |
| 2016–17 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | Semifinalist | Champion | 1EuroLeague | 16th | Jasmin Repeša | EA7 Emporio Armani |
| 2017–18 | 1 | Serie A | 2nd | Champion | Quarterfinalist | 1EuroLeague | 15th | Simone Pianigiani | EA7 Emporio Armani |
| 2018–19 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | Semifinalist | Quarterfinalist | 1EuroLeague | 12th | Simone Pianigiani | AX Armani Exchange |
| 2019–20 | 1 | Serie A | 4th[a] | Semifinalist | 1EuroLeague | — | Ettore Messina | AX Armani Exchange | |
| 2020–21 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | Runner-up | Champion | 1EuroLeague | 3rd | Ettore Messina | AX Armani Exchange |
| 2021–22 | 1 | Serie A | 2nd | Champion | Champion | 1EuroLeague | QF | Ettore Messina | AX Armani Exchange |
| 2022–23 | 1 | Serie A | 1st | Champion | Quarterfinalist | 1EuroLeague | 12th | Ettore Messina | EA7 Emporio Armani |
| 2023–24 | 1 | Serie A | 2nd | Champion | Runner-up | 1EuroLeague | 12th | Ettore Messina | EA7 Emporio Armani |
| 2024–25 | 1 | Serie A | 5th | Semifinalist | Runner-up | 1EuroLeague | 11th | Ettore Messina | EA7 Emporio Armani |
| Season | Achievement | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|
| EuroLeague | |||
| 1957–58 | Quarter-finals | eliminated byHonvéd, 80–72 (W) inMilan and 85–95 (L) inBudapest | |
| 1962–63 | Quarter-finals | eliminated byDinamo Tbilisi, 70–65 (W) inTbilisi and 68–74 (L) inMilan | |
| 1963–64 | Semi-finals | eliminated byReal Madrid, 82–77 (W) inMilan and 78–101 (L) inMadrid | |
| 1965–66 | Champions | defeatedCSKA Moscow 68–57 in the semi-final, defeatedSlavia VŠ Praha 77–72 in the final of the Final Four inBologna /Milan | |
| 1966–67 | Final | defeatedSlavia VŠ Praha 103–97 in the semi-final, lost toReal Madrid 83–91 in the final (Madrid) | |
| 1967–68 | Semi-finals | eliminated bySpartak ZJŠ Brno, 64–63 (W) inMilan, 86–103 (L) inBrno | |
| 1972–73 | Semi-finals | eliminated byIgnis Varese, 72–97 (L) inMilan, 100–115 (L) inVarese | |
| 1982–83 | Final | lost toFord Cantù, 68–69 in the final (Grenoble) | |
| 1985–86 | Semi-final group stage | 3rd place in a group withCibona,Žalgiris,Real Madrid,Maccabi Tel Aviv andLimoges CSP | |
| 1986–87 | Champions | defeatedMaccabi Tel Aviv, 71–69 in the final ofEuropean Champions Cup inLausanne | |
| 1987–88 | Champions | defeatedAris 87–82 in the semi-final, defeatedMaccabi Tel Aviv 90–84 in the final of the Final Four inGhent | |
| 1989–90 | Quarter-finals | 5th place in a group withFC Barcelona,Jugoplastika,Limoges CSP,Aris,Maccabi Tel Aviv,Commodore Den Helder andLech Poznań | |
| 1991–92 | Final Four | 3rd place inIstanbul, lost toPartizan 75–82 in the semi-final, defeatedEstudiantes Caja Postal 99–81 in the 3rd place game | |
| 1996–97 | Quarter-finals | eliminated 2–1 bySmelt Olimpija, 94–90 (W) inMilan, 69–73 (L) inLjubljana, 61–77 (L) inMilan | |
| 2013–14 | Quarter-finals | eliminated 3–1 byMaccabi Tel Aviv, 99–101 (L) and 91–77 (W) inMilan, 63–75 (L) and 66–86 (L) inTel Aviv | |
| 2020–21 | Final Four | 3rd place inCologne, lost toFC Barcelona 82–84 in the semi-final, defeatedCSKA Moscow 83–73 in the 3rd place game | |
| 2021–22 | Quarter-finals | eliminated 3–1 byAnadolu Efes, 48–64 (L) and 73–66 (W) inMilan, 65–77 (L) and 70–75 (L) inIstanbul | |
| FIBA Saporta Cup | |||
| 1970–71 | Champions | defeatedSpartak Leningrad 56–66 (L) inLeningrad and 71–52 (W) inMilan in the double final ofFIBA European Cup Winners' Cup | |
| 1971–72 | Champions | defeatedCrvena zvezda 74–70 in the final ofFIBA European Cup Winners' Cup inThessaloniki | |
| 1975–76 | Champions | defeatedASPO Tours 88–83 in the final ofFIBA European Cup Winners' Cup inTurin | |
| 1976–77 | Semi-finals | eliminated byForst Cantù, 78–101 (L) inCantù and 98–95 (W) inMilan | |
| 1983–84 | Final | lost toReal Madrid 81–82 in the final (Ostend) | |
| 1997–98 | Final | lost toŽalgiris 67–82 in the final (Belgrade) | |
| FIBA Korać Cup | |||
| 1977–78 | Semi-finals | eliminated byBosna, 79–76 (W) inMilan and 81–101 (L) inSarajevo | |
| 1984–85 | Champions | defeatedCiaocrem Varese, 91–78 in the final ofFIBA Korać Cup inBrussels | |
| 1988–89 | Semi-finals | eliminated byWiwa Vismara Cantù, 81–95 (L) inCantù and 70–65 (W) inMilan | |
| 1992–93 | Champions | defeatedVirtus Roma, 95–90 (W) in Rome and 106–91 (W) inMilan in the double finals ofFIBA Korać Cup | |
| 1993–94 | Semi-finals | eliminated byStefanel Trieste, 79–96 (L) inTrieste and 103–96 (W) inMilan | |
| 1994–95 | Final | lost toAlba Berlin, 87–87 (D) inMilan and 79–85 (L) in Berlin | |
| 1995–96 | Final | lost toEfes Pilsen, 68–76 (L) inIstanbul and 77–70 (W) inMilan | |
| EuroCup Basketball | |||
| 2015–16 | Quarter-finals | eliminated byDolomiti Energia Trento, 73–83 (L) inTrento and 79–92 (L) inMilan | |
| FIBA Intercontinental Cup | |||
| 1967 | 3rd place | 3rd place in Rome, lost toIgnis Varese 70–79 in the semi-final, defeatedCorinthians 90–89 in the 3rd place game | |
| 1968 | 3rd place | 3rd place inPhiladelphia, lost toReal Madrid 84–93 in the semi-final, defeatedBotafogo 82–54 in the 3rd place game | |
| 1983 | 5th place | 5th place with a 2–3 record in a league tournament inBuenos Aires | |
| 1987 | Champions | defeatedFC Barcelona 100–84 in the final ofFIBA Club World Cup inMilan | |
| McDonald's Championship | |||
| 1987 | 3rd place | 3rd place in a three teams Tournament inMilwaukee withMilwaukee Bucks andSoviet Union | |
| 1989 | 3rd place | 3rd place in Rome, lost toJugoplastika 97–102 in the semi-final, defeatedFC Barcelona 136–104 in the 3rd place game | |

Through the years, due to sponsorship deals, it has been also known as:[17]
Note: Flags indicate national team eligibility atFIBA-sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationalities not displayed.
| Criteria |
|---|
To appear in this section a player must have either:
|