| Valur | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Leagues | Úrvalsdeild karla | ||
| Founded | 25 December 1951 (as Gosi) | ||
| History | Gosi (1951–1957) KFR (1957–1970) Valur (1970–2000) Valur/Fjölnir (2000–2001) Valur (2001–present)  | ||
| Arena | Hlíðarendi | ||
| Location | Reykjavík, Iceland | ||
| Team colors | red, white, blue | ||
| President | Svali Björgvinsson[1] | ||
| Head coach | Finnur Freyr Stefánsson | ||
| Assistant(s) | Jamil Abiad | ||
| Championships | 3 Icelandic Championships | ||
| Website | Valur.is | ||
| 
 | |||
The Valur men's basketball team, commonly known as Valur, is a basketball team based in Reykjavík, Iceland. It is part of the Valur multi-sport club.
History
The club was founded as Gosi on 25 December 1951[2] and was one of the founding members of the Icelandic men's top division.[3] On 22 December 1957 the club changed its name to Körfuknattleiksfélag Reykjavíkur (English: Reykjavík Basketball Club) and played under that name until 1970.[4] On 3 October 1970 the club merged into Valur sports club and became its basketball department.[5][6]
Under the new name, Valur had considerable success in the 1980's, winning the Icelandic championship two times, in 1980 and 1983,[7] and the Icelandic cup three times, 1980, 1981 and 1983.[8]
In 1992, Valur reached the Úrvalsdeild finals where it lost to Keflavík 2-3.[9][10]
In 2022, Valur won its third national championship after beating Tindastóll in the Úrvalsdeild finals. On 2 October 2022, Valur won its first Super Cup, after defeating Icelandic Cup holders Stjarnan 80-77.[11]
On 14 January 2023, Valur won its fourth Icelandic Cup title, and its first in 40 years, after defeating Stjarnan in the Cup final.
Honours
- Winners (3): 1980, 1981, 1983, 2023
 
- Winners (2): 2022, 2023
 
- Winners (2): 1997, 2002
 
Individual awards
- Úrvalsdeild Men's Domestic Player of the Year [12]
- Kári Jónsson – 2023
 - Kristófer Acox – 2022
 - Magnús Matthíasson – 1991
 - Rick Hockenos – 1978
 - Torfi Magnússon – 1982
 - Þórir Magnússon – 1974
 
 - Úrvalsdeild Men's Foreign Player of the Year
- Tim Dwyer – 1979, 1980, 1983
 
 - Úrvalsdeild Men's Domestic All-First Team [13]
- Kári Jónsson – 2023
 - Kristófer Acox – 2021, 2022, 2023
 - Magnús Matthíasson – 1991, 1993
 - Tómas Holton – 1989
 
 - Úrvalsdeild Men's Young Player of the Year [14]
- Magnús Matthíasson – 1991
 
 - 1. deild karla Player of the Year[15]
- Ragnar Jónsson – 1997
 
 - 1. deild karla Coach of the Year[15]
- Torfi Magnússon – 1997
 
 - Icelandic Cup Finals MVP
- Kári Jónsson – 2023
 
 
Notable players
Note: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA-sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationality not displayed.
| Criteria | 
|---|
| 
 To appear in this section a player must have either: 
  | 
 Bárður Eyþórsson
 Brynjar Karl Sigurðsson
 Einar Matthíasson
 Einar Ólafsson
 Flosi Sigurðsson
 Frank Booker
 Frank Aron Booker
 Guðmundur Árnason
 Herbert Arnarson
 Hjálmar Stefánsson
 Ingi Þorsteinsson
 Ívar DeCarsta Webster
 Jóhannes Magnússon
 Jónatan James Bow
 Jón Arnór Stefánsson
 Jón H. Steingrímsson
 Kári Jónsson
 Kári Marísson
 Kristinn Pálsson
 Kristján Ágústsson
 Kristófer Acox
 Leifur Gústafsson
 Magnús Matthíasson
 Marinó Sveinsson
 Matthías Matthíasson
 Miguel Cardoso
 Pavel Ermolinskij
 Pétur Guðmundsson
 Ólafur Þór Thorlacius
 Ragnar Nathanaelsson
 Rick Hockenos
 Ríkharður Hrafnkelsson
 Sigurður Már Helgason
 Símon Ólafsson
 Stefán Bjarkason
 Sturla Örlygsson
 Svali Björgvinsson
 Tim Dwyer
 Torfi Magnússon
 Tómas Holton
 Valdimar Guðlaugsson
 Þórir Magnússon
Coaches
 Ólafur Þór Thorlacius 1970–1974
 Guðmundur Þorsteinsson 1974–1976
 Tim Dwyer 1978–1980, 1982–1983
 Vladimir Obuchov 1990–1991
 Tómas Holton 1991–1992
 Svali Björgvinsson 1992–1993, 1994, 1997–1999
 Ágúst Björgvinsson 2011–2019
 Finnur Freyr Stefánsson 2020–present
European record
| Season | Competition | Round | Opponent | Home | Away | Aggregate | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1980–81 | FIBA European Cup Winners' Cup | 1Q | 79–110 | 90–120 | 169–230 | ||
| 1981–82 | FIBA European Cup Winners' Cup | 1Q | 80–118 | 81–104 | 161–222 | ||
| 1992–93 | FIBA Korać Cup | 1Q | 74–109 | 88–128 | 162–237 | ||
References
- ↑ Stjórn körfuknattleiksdeildar Vals
 - ↑ Körfuknattleiksdeild stofnuð - K.F.R. sameinast Val
 - ↑ Fyrsta Íslandsmótið í körfuknattleik á morgun
 - ↑ „Körfuknattleiksfélag Reykjavíkur" í stað „Gosi"
 - ↑ Körfuknattleiksdeild stofnuð - K.F.R. sameinast Val
 - ↑ KFR lagt niður og gert að körfuknattleiksdeild Vals
 - ↑ Íslandsmeistarar - Úrvalsdeild karla
 - ↑ Bikarkeppni - Meistaraflokkur karla
 - ↑  Björn Blöndal (14 April 1992). "Keflvíkingar meistarar". Morgunblaðið (in Icelandic). pp. 6B–7B. Retrieved 13 September 2020 – via Timarit.is. 

 - ↑  Ægir Már Kárason (13 April 1992). "Keflavík meistari". Dagblaðið Vísir (in Icelandic). pp. 28–29. Retrieved 13 September 2020 – via Timarit.is. 

 - ↑ Árni Jóhannsson (2 October 2022). "Umfjöllun og viðtöl: Valur - Stjarnan 80-77 - Valur Meistarar meistaranna eftir spennuleik". Vísir.is (in Icelandic). Retrieved 3 October 2022.
 - ↑ Viðurkenningar - Besti leikmaður úrvalsdeildar karla
 - ↑ Úrvalslið úrvalsdeildar karla
 - ↑ Besti ungi leikmaður úrvalsdeildar karla
 - 1 2  "Þau eru best!". Dagur (in Icelandic). 15 April 1997. Retrieved 14 October 2018 – via Timarit.is. 
