1. deild karla (basketball)
Iceland's second category in basketball
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1. deild karla (English: Men's First Division) or D1 is the second-tier basketball competition among clubs in Iceland. It is organized by the Icelandic Basketball Federation (Icelandic: Körfuknattleikssamband Ãslands - KKÃ). The season consists of a home-and-away schedule of 18 games, followed by a four-team playoff round. Both semifinals and finals series are best-of-three. The top team from the regular-season phase and the four-team playoff round winner are promoted to the Ãrvalsdeild karla. The bottom club is relegated, and replaced by the four-team playoff round winner of the third-tier 2. deild karla.
1978 (as 1. deild karla)
| Founded | 1964 (as 2. deild karla) 1978 (as 1. deild karla) |
|---|---|
| First season | 1964 |
| Country | |
| Confederation | FIBA Europe |
| Number of teams | 12 |
| Level on pyramid | 2 |
| Promotion to | Ãrvalsdeild |
| Relegation to | 2. deild karla |
| Domestic cup | Bikarkeppni KKÃ |
| Supercup | Meistarakeppni karla |
| Most championships | Ãór Akureyri (7 titles) |
| TV partners | Stöð 2 Sport |
| Website | KKÃ.is |
History
Creation
The 1. deild karla was founded in 1964. Up until 1978 it was known as 2. deild karla.
ÃS and ÃKF's dominance
For the first years, from its foundation in 1964 until the 1970â71 season, the 1. deild was led by the ÃS (with three wins) and ÃKF (with two wins).
Fram ReykjavÃk's leadership
Some years later, from the 1974â75 season, Fram ReykjavÃk started their leadership on the 1. deild and their series of wins, which ended in the 1985â86 season when they won their fourth title.
Danny Shouse
In 1979, Danny Shouse joined Ãrmann and took the league by storm. On December 1, 1979, Shouse scored 100 points against SkallagrÃmur, setting the Icelandic single-game scoring record.[1][2] In January 1980 he scored 76 points in an overtime loss against GrindavÃk[3] and in February he broke the 70 point barrier again, scoring 72 points against Ãór Akureyri.[4] His scoring prowess helped Ãrmann win the league and achieve promotion to the Ãrvalsdeild karla.[2] Even though Shouse played in the nation's tier 2 league during his first season, he was widely regarded as one of the best players in the country.[5][6]
The double fall of ÃR
After their golden years, in which they won 15 Ãrvalsdeild karla titles in less than 25 years, the ÃR was relegated to the First Division. In the 1986â87 season they won the 1. deild for their first time and came back to the Ãrvalsdeild karla. Afterwards, the ÃR was relegated again to the 1. deild. In the 1999â00 season they won their second 1. deild title and came back to the Ãrvalsdeild karla.
Modern era
In the 2006â07 season, Ãór Akureyri won their fifth title. In the following season, the 2007â08 season, Breiðablik also won their fifth title, becoming the most successful franchise together with Ãór Akureyri. In the 2011â12 season, KFà won their fourth title.[7]
On 13 March 2020, the rest of the 2019â20 season was postponed due to the coronavirus outbreak in Iceland.[8]
Champions
| Season | Champion | Playoff winner | Playoff runner-up |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1964-65 | ÃKF | --- | --- |
| 1965-66 | ÃS | --- | --- |
| 1966-67 | Ãór Akureyri | --- | --- |
| 1967-68 | ÃS (2) | --- | --- |
| 1968-69 | ÃKF (2) | --- | --- |
| 1969-70 | HSK | --- | --- |
| 1970-71 | ÃS (3) | --- | --- |
| 1971-72 | NjarðvÃk | --- | --- |
| 1972-73 | SkallagrÃmur | --- | --- |
| 1973-74 | Snæfell | --- | --- |
| 1974-75 | Fram ReykjavÃk | --- | --- |
| 1975-76 | Breiðablik | --- | --- |
| 1976-77 | Ãór Akureyri (2) | --- | --- |
| 1977-78 | Snæfell (2) | --- | --- |
| 1978-79 | Fram ReykjavÃk (2) | --- | --- |
| 1979-80 | Ãrmann | --- | --- |
| 1980-81 | Fram ReykjavÃk (3) | --- | --- |
| 1981-82 | KeflavÃk | --- | --- |
| 1982-83 | Haukar | --- | --- |
| 1983-84 | ÃS (4) | --- | --- |
| 1984-85 | KeflavÃk (2) | --- | --- |
| 1985-86 | Fram ReykjavÃk (4) | --- | --- |
| 1986-87 | ÃR | --- | --- |
| 1987-88 | Tindastóll | --- | --- |
| 1988-89 | Reynir Sandgerði | --- | --- |
| 1989-90 | Snæfell (3) | --- | --- |
| 1990-91 | SkallagrÃmur (2) | --- | --- |
| 1991-92 | Breiðablik (2) | --- | --- |
| 1992-93 | ÃA | --- | --- |
| 1993-94 | Ãór Akureyri (3) | --- | --- |
| 1994-95 | Breiðablik (3) | --- | --- |
| 1995-96 | KFÃ | --- | --- |
| 1996-97 | Valur | --- | --- |
| 1997-98 | Snæfell (4) | --- | --- |
| 1998-99 | Hamar | --- | --- |
| 1999-00 | ÃR (2) | --- | --- |
| 2000-01 | Breiðablik (4) | --- | --- |
| 2001-02 | Valur (2) | --- | --- |
| 2002-03 | KFÃ (2) | --- | --- |
| 2003-04 | SkallagrÃmur (3) | --- | --- |
| 2004-05 | Ãór Akureyri (4) | --- | --- |
| 2005-06 | Tindastóll (2) | --- | --- |
| 2006-07 | Ãór Akureyri (5) | --- | --- |
| 2007-08 | Breiðablik (5) | --- | --- |
| 2008-09 | Hamar (2) | --- | --- |
| 2009-10 | KFÃ (3) | --- | --- |
| 2010-11 | Ãór Ãorlákshöfn | Valur | Ãór Akureyri |
| 2011-12 | KFÃ (4) | SkallagrÃmur | ÃA |
| 2012-13 | Haukar (2) | Valur | Hamar |
| 2013-14 | Tindastóll (3) | Fjölnir | Höttur |
| 2014-15 | Höttur | FSu | Hamar |
| 2015-16 | Ãór Akureyri (6) | SkallagrÃmur | Fjölnir |
| 2016-17 | Höttur (2) | Valur | Hamar |
| 2017-18 | SkallagrÃmur | Breiðablik | Hamar |
| 2018-19 | Ãór Akureyri (7)[9] | Fjölnir | Hamar |
| 2019-20 | Höttur (3) | Canceled due to the coronavirus outbreak in Iceland[10] | |
| 2020-21 | Breiðablik (6) | Vestri | Hamar |
| 2021-22 | Haukar (3) | Höttur | Ãlftanes |
| 2022-23 | Ãlftanes[11] | Hamar[12] | SkallagrÃmur |
| 2023-24 | KR (1) | ÃR | Sindri |
| 2024-25 | ÃA (2) | Ãrmann | Hamar |
| 2025-26 | Höttur (4) | TBD | TBD |
Titles per club
| Titles | Club |
|---|---|
| 7 | Ãór Akureyri |
| 6 | Breiðablik |
| 4 | KFÃ, Snæfell, Fram ReykjavÃk, SkallagrÃmur, ÃS, Höttur |
| 3 | Haukar, NjarðvÃk / ÃKF1, Tindastóll, ÃR |
| 2 | Hamar, ÃA, KeflavÃk, Haukar, Valur |
| 1 | Ãór Ãorlákshöfn, Reynir Sandgerði, Ãrmann, KR, HSK |
- ÃKF merged into Ungmennafélag NjarðvÃkur in 1969 and became its basketball subdivision. It is today known as NjarðvÃk. The club won 2 titles under the ÃKF name and has added 1 more after the merger
Awards and honors
Individual awards
| Season | Domestic MVP | Foreign MVP | Defense Player of The Year | Young Player of The Year | Coach of The Year | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022â23[13] | Ãlftanes | |||||
| 2021â22 | Haukar | |||||
| 2020â21[14] | Breiðablik | |||||
| 2019â20 | Season canceled in March 2020 due to the coronavirus outbreak in Iceland | |||||
| 2018â19[15] | Ãór Akureyri | |||||
| 2017â18[16] | SkallagrÃmur | |||||
| 2016â17[17] | Höttur | |||||
| 2015â16[18] | SkallagrÃmur | |||||
| 2014â15[19] | Höttur | |||||
| ... | ||||||
| 2009â10[20] | KFÃ | |||||
| 2008â09[21] | Fjölnir | |||||
| 2007â08[22] | Breiðablik | |||||
| ... | ||||||
| 1998â99[23] | Ãór Ãorlákshöfn | |||||
| 1997â98[24] | Snæfell | |||||
| 1996â97[25] | Valur | |||||
Domestic All-First team
| Season | Domestic First team | |
|---|---|---|
| Players | Teams | |
| 2022â23[13] | Dúi Ãór Jónsson | Ãlftanes |
| Björn Ãsgeir Ãsgeirsson | Hamar | |
| Björgvin Hafþór RÃkharðsson | SkallagrÃmur | |
| Eysteinn Bjarni Ãvarsson | Ãlftanes | |
| Ragnar Nathanaelsson | Hamar | |
| 2021â22 | DanÃel Ãgúst Halldórsson | Fjölnir |
| Eysteinn Bjarni Ãvarsson | Ãlftanes | |
| Orri Gunnarsson | Haukar | |
| Friðrik Anton Jónsson | Breiðablik | |
| Ãlafur Ingi Styrmisson | Ãlftanes | |
| 2020â21[14] | Ãrni Elmar Hrafnsson | Breiðablik |
| Róbert Sigurðsson | Ãlftanes | |
| Ragnar Jósef Ragnarsson | Hamar | |
| Snorri Vignisson | Breiðablik | |
| Sveinbjörn Jóhannesson | Breiðablik | |
| 2019â20 | Season canceled in March 2020 due to the coronavirus outbreak in Iceland | |
| 2018â19[15] | JúlÃus Orri Ãgústsson | Ãór Akureyri |
| Róbert Sigurðsson | Fjölnir | |
| Eysteinn Ãvarsson | Höttur | |
| Snjólfur Marel Stefánsson | Selfoss | |
| Pálmi Geir Jónsson | Ãór Akureyri | |
| 2017â18[16] | Eyjólfur Ãsberg Halldórsson | SkallagrÃmur |
| Snorri Vignisson | Breiðablik | |
| Sigvaldi Eggertsson | Fjölnir | |
| Bjarni Guðmann Jónsson | SkallagrÃmur | |
| Jón Arnór Sverrisson | Hamar | |
| 2016â17[17] | Róbert Sigurðsson | Fjölnir |
| Austin Magnús Bracey | Valur | |
| Ragnar Gerald Albertsson | Höttur | |
| Ãrn Sigurðarson | Hamar | |
| Mirko Stefán Virijevic | Höttur | |
| 2015â16[18] | Ragnar Friðriksson | Ãór Akureyri |
| Sigtryggur Arnar Björnsson | SkallagrÃmur | |
| Róbert Sigurðsson | Fjölnir | |
| Illugi Auðunsson | Valur | |
| Tryggvi Hlinason | Ãór Akureyri | |
| 2014â15[19] | Hlynur Hreinsson | FSu |
| Ari Gylfason | FSu | |
| Hreinn Gunnar Birgisson | Höttur | |
| Fannar Freyr Helgason | ÃA | |
| Ãrn Sigurðarson | Hamar | |
| ... | ||
| 2009â10[20] | Sævar Haraldsson | Haukar |
| Baldur Ãór Ragnarsson | Ãór Ãorlákshöfn | |
| Hörður Hreiðarsson | Valur | |
| Ãðinn Ãsgeirsson | Ãór Akureyri | |
| Grétar Erlendsson | Ãór Ãorlákshöfn | |
| 2008â09[21] | Marvin Valdimarsson | Hamar |
| Svavar Páll Pálsson | Hamar | |
| Ãgir Ãór Steinarsson | Fjölnir | |
| Haukur Helgi Pálsson | Fjölnir | |
| Sveinn Ãmar Sveinsson | Haukar | |
| 2007â08[22] | Rúnar Ingi Erlingsson | Breiðablik |
| Kristján Rúnar Sigurðsson | Breiðablik | |
| Ãrni Ragnarsson | FSu | |
| Steinar Kaldal | Ãrmann | |
| Sævar Sigurmundsson | FSu | |
| ... | ||
| 1998â99[23] | Jón Ãrn Guðmundsson | Ãór Ãorlákshöfn |
| Pálmi Freyr Sigurgeirsson | Breiðablik | |
| Pétur Ingvarsson | Hamar | |
| Ãskar Ãorðarson | Ãór Ãorlákshöfn | |
| Birgir Guðfinnsson | Selfoss | |
| 1997â98[24] | Jón Ãrn Guðmundsson | Ãór Ãorlákshöfn |
| Hrafn Kristjánsson | Hamar | |
| Atli Ãorbjörnsson | ÃS | |
| Birgir Guðfinnsson | Leiknir | |
| Birgir Mikaelsson | Snæfell | |
| 1996â97[25] | Ragnar Ãór Jónsson | Valur |
| Jón Ãrn Guðmundsson | Ãór Ãorlákshöfn | |
| Bjarki Gústafsson | Valur | |
| Birgir Guðfinnsson | Leiknir | |
| Gylfi Ãorkelsson | Selfoss | |