MarketKorvpalli Meistriliiga
Company Profile

Korvpalli Meistriliiga

The Korvpalli Meistriliiga (KML) is the top-tier men's basketball league in Estonia. The league is organized by the Estonian Basketball Association and played under FIBA rules.

History
Names of the competition • 1994–1998: Eesti Meeste Korvpalliliiga (EMKL) • 1998–2002: Eesti Korvpalliklubide Assotsiatsioon (EKKA) • 2002–present: Korvpalli Meistriliiga (KML) Title sponsorship • 2002–2004: Peugeot Korvpalli Meistriliiga • 2004–2009: Ühispanga/SEB Korvpalli Meistriliiga • 2009–2013: G4S Korvpalli Meistriliiga • 2013–2018: Alexela Korvpalli Meistriliiga • 2018–2019: OlyBet Korvpalli Meistriliiga • 2019–2024: PAF Korvpalli Meistriliiga • 2026–present: Optibet Korvpalli Meistriliiga ==Current teams==
Title holders
• 1925: Tallinna Sport • 1927: Tallinna Kalev • 1928: Tallinna Vitjas • 1929: Tallinna Russ • 1930: Tallinna Kalev • 1931: Tallinna Kalev • 1932: Tallinna Russ • 1933: Tallinna Russ • 1934: Tartu NMKÜ • 1935: Tallinna NMKÜ • 1936: Tartu NMKÜ • 1937: Tartu NMKÜ • 1938: Tartu EASK • 1939: Tartu EASK • 1940: Tartu EASK • 1941: Tallinna Dünamo • 1942: Tartu Kalev • 1944 Summer: Tartu Kalev • 1944 Winter: Tallinna Kalev • 1945: Tallinna Kalev • 1946: Tallinna Kalev • 1947: Tallinna Kalev • 1948: Tartu ÜSK • 1949: Tartu ÜSK • 1950: Tartu ÜSK • 1951: Tartu ÜSK • 1952: Tartu ÜSK • 1953: Tallinna Kalev • 1954: Tallinna Kalev • 1955: Tallinna Kalev • 1956: TRÜ • 1957: EPA • 1958: TRÜ • 1959: TRÜ • 1960: EPA • 1961: TPI I • 1962: TPI I • 1963: TPI I • 1964: TPI I • 1965: TPI I • 1966: TPI I • 1967: Tallinna Kalev • 1968: Tallinna Kalev • 1969: TRÜ • 1970: TRÜ • 1971: Tallinna Kalev • 1972: TRÜ • 1973: TRÜ • 1974: Harju KEK • 1975: TRÜ • 1976: TRÜ • 1977: TRÜ • 1977–78: TRÜ • 1978–79: Harju KEK • 1980: Standard • 1981: Metallist • 1981–82: Standard • 1982–83: Standard • 1983–84: TPI I • 1984–85: TPI I • 1985–86: Standard • 1986–87: Standard • 1987–88: Standard • 1988–89: Standard • 1989–90: Standard • 1990–91: Asto • 1991–92: BC Kalev • 1992–93: BC Rafter • 1993–94: Asto • 1994–95: BC Kalev/Auma • 1995–96: BC Kalev • 1996–97: BC Tallinn • 1997–98: BC Kalev • 1998–99: BC Tallinn • 1999–00: Tartu Ülikool-Delta • 2000–01: Tartu Ülikool-Delta • 2001–02: Tallinna Kalev • 2002–03: Tallinna Kalev • 2003–04: TÜ/Rock • 2004–05: Ehitustööriist • 2005–06: BC Kalev/Cramo • 2006–07: TÜ/Rock • 2007–08: TÜ/Rock • 2008–09: BC Kalev/Cramo • 2009–10: TÜ/Rock • 2010–11: BC Kalev/Cramo • 2011–12: BC Kalev/Cramo • 2012–13: BC Kalev/Cramo • 2013–14: BC Kalev/Cramo • 2014–15: TÜ/Rock • 2015–16: BC Kalev/Cramo • 2016–17: BC Kalev/Cramo • 2017–18: BC Kalev/Cramo • 2018–19: BC Kalev/Cramo • 2019–20: Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. • 2020–21: BC Kalev/Cramo • 2021–22: Pärnu Sadam • 2022–23: BC Kalev/Cramo • 2023–24: BC Kalev/Cramo • 2024–25: BC Kalev/Cramo ==Finals==
All Star Game
Korvpalli Meistriliiga used to organize the Estonian All-Star Game since 2000-01 before the merge with the Latvian league. The All-Star Game continued even after the Baltic Basketball All-Star Game was introduced. Notable players ==Awards==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com