2018 Basketball Champions League Final Four

2018 Basketball Champions League Final Four
Season 2017–18 season
Tournament details
Arena O.A.C.A. Olympic Indoor Hall
Marousi, Athens, Greece
Dates 4–6 May 2018
Final positions
Champions Greece AEK Athens
1st title
Runners-up France Monaco
Third place Spain UCAM Murcia
Fourth place Germany MHP Riesen Ludwigsburg
Awards and statistics
MVP United States Mike Green
Top scorer(s) United States Kevin Punter (32)

The 2018 Basketball Champions League (BCL) Final Four was the second concluding Basketball Champions League Final Four tournament. It was the concluding phase of the 2017–18 Basketball Champions League season, which marked the second season of Basketball Champions League (BCL). The Final Four took place on 4–6 May 2018.[1] The O.A.C.A. Olympic Indoor Hall in Athens, home arena of hosts AEK Athens, hosted the tournament. AEK won the league title after defeating Monaco in the final.

Venue

On 5 April 2018, the O.A.C.A. Olympic Indoor Hall in Athens, Greece was announced as the venue of the 2018 Final Four.[2] AEK Athens, which qualified for the Final Four on 4 April, would serve as host. The arena was completed in 1995, and was the largest indoor venue in use for sporting events at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece. It is located in the Athens suburb of Marousi. It is considered to be one of the biggest and most modern indoor sports arenas in all of Europe.

Athens
2018 Basketball Champions League Final Four (Europe)
O.A.C.A. Olympic Indoor Hall
Capacity: 18,989

Draw

The draw for the pairings for the Final Four was held on 12 April 2018.

Teams

Road to the Final Four

Club Clinched
Final Four
Season performance
Regular season
record
Round of 16 Quarterfinals
France Monaco3 April 2018[3] 13–1
(1st Group A)
Poland Zielona Góra
174–142
82–84 (A)90–60 (H) Turkey Banvit
159–152
77–85 (A)74–75 (H)
Germany MHP Riesen Ludwigsburg4 April 2018[4] 12–2
(2nd Group B)
Germany Oldenburg
162–149
63–88 (A)74–86 (H) Germany medi Bayreuth
170–163
81–86 (H)77–89 (A)
Greece AEK Athens4 April 2018[5] 8–6
(3rd Group C)
Czech Republic ČEZ Nymburk
181–180
88–98 (H)82–93 (A) France SIG Strasbourg
156–151
78–69 (H)83–83 (A)
Spain UCAM Murcia4 April 2018[6] 7–7
(4th Group A)
Spain Iberostar Tenerife
149–143
66–71 (H)72–83 (A) Turkey Pınar Karşıyaka
160–137
65–79 (A)81–72 (H)

Background

MHP Riesen Ludwigsburg

Ludwigsburg qualified for its first ever final phase of a European competition, as in the 2016–17 season they were eliminated by Banvit on a buzzer-beater. In the Basketball Bundesliga (BBL), Riesen was having a solid year as it was battling for playoff position. In the BCL play-offs, Riesen eliminated two German sides, EWE Baskets Oldenburg and medi Bayreuth in order to advance to the final four.

Monaco

Monaco was at the top of the standings in its domestic Pro A season. In February, Monaco won the Leaders Cup for its third consecutive time. In the previous season, the team also qualified for the Final Four but was eliminated in the semi-finals, by runners-up Banvit.

AEK Athens

AEK was having a successful season as well, as the team captured its fourth Greek Cup title, while beating EuroLeague teams Olympiacos and Panathinaikos on the way. AEK had a remarkable path to the final four, as it was nearly eliminated in the round of 16 but was saved by a three-pointer by Kevin Punter to defeat Czech side ČEZ Nymburk. In the quarter-finals, AEK eliminated French side SIG Strasbourg.

Guard Manny Harris was named the Basketball Champions League MVP as well.[7]

UCAM Murcia

In its first BCL season, and just its second year ever playing in European competitions, Murcia eliminated the defending champions Iberostar Tenerife in the round of 16. In the quarter-finals, Pınar Karşıyaka was defeated. In the 2017–18 ACB season, Murcia was close to qualifying to the playoffs.

Bracket

 
Final
 
      
 
4 May
 
 
Germany MHP Riesen Ludwigsburg 65
 
6 May
 
France Monaco87
 
France Monaco94
 
4 May
 
Greece AEK Athens100
 
Greece AEK Athens 77
 
 
Spain UCAM Murcia75
 
Third place game
 
 
6 May
 
 
Germany MHP Riesen Ludwigsburg 74
 
 
Spain UCAM Murcia85


Semifinals

MHP Riesen Ludwigsburg vs Monaco

4 May 2018 MHP Riesen Ludwigsburg Germany 6587 France Monaco Athens, Greece
17:30 (UTC+3) Scoring by quarter: 20–11, 18–25, 16–25, 9–26
Pts: Johnson 12
Rebs: Evans 7
Asts: Johnson, Walkup 2
Eff: Walkup 14
Boxscore Pts: Kikanović 19
Rebs: Evans 8
Asts: Cooper 9
Eff: Evans 24
Arena: O.A.C.A. Olympic Indoor Hall
Attendance: 5,862
Referees: Aleksandar Glišić (SRB), Tomas Jasevičius (LTU), Manuel Mazzoni (ITA)


Starters:PtsRebAst
PG 3 United States Kerron Johnson 12 2 2
SG 4 Germany David McCray 0 2 1
SF 0 United States Thomas Walkup 10 5 2
PF 23 United States Elgin Cook 10 4 1
C 19 Germany Adam Waleskowski 6 3 1
Reserves:
PF 1 United States Dwyane Evans 9 7 1
PG 7 Germany Niklas Geske 0 0 1
SG 10 Canada Adika Peter-McNeilly 11 0 0
SG 11 Germany Malik Müller 0 2 0
SF 12 Germany Florian Koch 0 0 0
PF 17 Germany Mateo Seric 2 1 0
PF 42 United States Jacob Wiley 5 3 0
Head coach:
United States John Patrick
Riesen
Monaco

RiesenStatistics[8]Monaco
19/38 (50%)2-pt field goals23/34 (67.7%)
4/17 (23.5%)3-pt field goals9/28 (32.1%)
15/23 (65.2%)Free throws14/23 (60.9%)
13Offensive rebounds13
21Defensive rebounds22
34Total rebounds35
9Assists27
16Turnovers9
7Steals11
1Blocks2
16Fouls21
Starters:PtsRebAst
PG 2 United States D. J. Cooper 2 1 9
SG 22 United States Gerald Robinson 16 3 1
SF 8 Ukraine Sergiy Gladyr 12 0 0
PF 5 France Amara Sy 10 2 4
C 9 Bosnia and Herzegovina Elmedin Kikanović 19 7 1
Reserves:
PG 4 United States Aaron Craft 7 3 3
SF 6 France Paul Lacombe 2 4 5
PF 7 Croatia Damjan Rudež 0 1 0
SF 10 France Romain Poinas 0 0 0
PF 14 France Georgi Joseph 2 3 1
PF 23 United States Christopher Evans 17 8 3
C 24 France Ali Traoré 0 0 0
Head coach:
Montenegro Zvezdan Mitrović

AEK Athens vs UCAM Murcia

4 May 2018 AEK Athens Greece 7775 Spain UCAM Murcia Athens, Greece
20:30 (UTC+3) Scoring by quarter: 18–17, 22–17, 15–20, 22–21
Pts: Harris 20
Rebs: Hunter 6
Asts: Xanthopoulos 7
Eff: Harris 20
Boxscore Pts: Benite 19
Rebs: Rojas 12
Asts: Hannah 6
Eff: Rojas 19
Arena: O.A.C.A. Olympic Indoor Hall
Attendance: 16,191
Referees: Srđan Dožai (CRO), Tolga Sahin (ITA), Marius Ciulin (ROU)


Starters:PtsRebAst
PG 2 United States Mike Green 7 3 3
SG 12 Greece Giannoulis Larentzakis 3 1 1
SF 3 United States Manny Harris 20 2 1
PF 1 United States Delroy James 6 0 1
C 32 United States Vince Hunter 0 6 0
Reserves:
SG 0 United States Kevin Punter 16 3 0
PG 4 Greece Vassilis Xanthopoulos 0 2 7
PF 5 Greece Dušan Šakota 15 4 2
SF 8 Greece Panagiotis Vasilopoulos 1 3 0
SF 9 Bosnia and Herzegovina Edin Atić DNP
C 22 Greece Dimitrios Mavroeidis 9 5 0
C 24 Greece Vassilis Kavvadas 0 0 0
Head coach:
Serbia Dragan Šakota
AEK
Murcia

AEKStatisticsMurcia
17/31 (54.8%)2-pt field goals19/43 (44.1%)
8/22 (36.4%)3-pt field goals6/20 (30%)
19/31 (61.3%)Free throws19/25 (76%)
6Offensive rebounds15
26Defensive rebounds29
32Total rebounds44
15Assists14
14Turnovers15
9Steals10
6Blocks3
25Fouls28
Starters:PtsRebAst
PG 11 United States Clevin Hannah 17 4 6
SG 12 Spain Brad Oleson 10 0 2
SF 27 Dominican Republic Sadiel Rojas 8 12 3
PF 0 United Kingdom Ovie Soko 12 8 2
C 24 Belgium Kevin Tumba 5 6 0
Reserves:
SF 1 Bosnia and Herzegovina Lazar Mutić DNP
SG 3 Spain Álex Urtasun 0 0 0
PF 6 Spain José Ángel Antelo 0 2 0
SG 8 Brazil Vítor Benite 19 1 1
PG 9 Netherlands Charlon Kloof 0 0 0
PF 13 Brazil Vítor Faverani DNP
C 23 Brazil Augusto Lima 4 6 0
Head coach:
Spain Ibon Navarro

Third place game

6 May 2018 MHP Riesen Ludwigsburg Germany 7485 Spain UCAM Murcia Athens, Greece
16:30 (UTC+3) Scoring by quarter: 17–18, 15–24, 21–18, 21–25
Pts: Johnson 17
Rebs: Evans 5
Asts: Johnson 9
PIR: Eff: Johnson 27
Boxscore Pts: Rojas 18
Rebs: Soko 10
Asts: Urtasun 4
PIR: Eff: Rojas 21
Arena: O.A.C.A. Olympic Indoor Hall
Attendance: 8,221
Referees: Manuel Mazzoni (ITA), Petar Obradović (BIH), Marius Ciulin (ROU)


Starters:PtsRebAst
PG 3 United States Kerron Johnson 17 3 9
SG 4 Germany David McCray 2 0 0
SF 0 United States Thomas Walkup 7 4 2
PF 23 United States Elgin Cook 11 0 2
C 19 Germany Adam Waleskowski 10 4 3
Reserves:
PF 1 United States Dwyane Evans 6 5 1
PG 7 Germany Niklas Geske 0 0 1
SG 10 Canada Adika Peter-McNeilly 11 4 2
SG 11 Germany Malik Müller 6 3 0
SF 12 Germany Florian Koch 4 1 0
PF 17 Germany Mateo Seric DNP
PF 42 United States Jacob Wiley 0 0 1
Head coach:
United States John Patrick
Riesen
Murcia

RiesenStatisticsMurcia
20/39 (51.3%)2-pt field goals18/37 (48.6%)
7/22 (31.8%)3-pt field goals9/24 (37.5%)
13/18 (72.2%)Free throws22.31 (71%)
7Offensive rebounds17
21Defensive rebounds29
28Total rebounds46
20Assists23
12Turnovers17
11Steals8
3Blocks4
26Fouls20
Starters:PtsRebAst
PG 11 United States Clevin Hannah 10 2 8
SG 12 Spain Brad Oleson 3 1 3
SF 27 Dominican Republic Sadiel Rojas 18 9 1
PF 0 United Kingdom Ovie Soko 15 10 0
C 23 Brazil Augusto Lima 8 3 1
Reserves:
SF 1 Bosnia and Herzegovina Lazar Mutić DNP
SG 3 Spain Álex Urtasun 6 3 4
PF 6 Spain José Ángel Antelo DNP
SG 8 Brazil Vítor Benite 8 1 2
PG 9 Netherlands Charlon Kloof 12 3 4
PF 13 Brazil Vítor Faverani DNP
C 24 Belgium Kevin Tumba 5 8 0
Head coach:
Spain Ibon Navarro

Final

6 May 2018 Monaco France 94100 Greece AEK Athens Athens, Greece
19:30 (UTC+3) Scoring by quarter: 20–29, 24–24, 26–20, 24–27
Pts: Gladyr 18
Rebs: Kikanović, Lacombe 6
Asts: Cooper 9
PIR: Eff: Gladyr 22
Boxscore Pts: Green 19
Rebs: Harris 10
Asts: Xanthopoulos 6
PIR: Eff: James 18
Arena: O.A.C.A. Olympic Indoor Hall
Attendance: 17,984
Referees: Aleksandar Glišić (SRB), Tomas Jasevičius (LTU), Mārtiņš Kozlovskis (LAT)


Starters:PtsRebAst
PG 2 United States D. J. Cooper 8 1 9
SG 22 United States Gerald Robinson 13 2 3
SF 6 France Paul Lacombe 2 4 5
PF 5 France Amara Sy 8 2 0
C 9 Bosnia and Herzegovina Elmedin Kikanović 12 6 0
Reserves:
PG 4 United States Aaron Craft 9 5 4
PF 7 Croatia Damjan Rudež 0 0 0
SF 8 Ukraine Sergiy Gladyr 18 5 0
SF 10 France Romain Poinas DNP
PF 14 France Georgi Joseph 0 0 0
PF 23 United States Christopher Evans 6 4 1
C 24 France Ali Traoré 8 2 2
Head coach:
Montenegro Zvezdan Mitrović
Monaco
AEK

MonacoStatisticsAEK
24/45 (53.3%)2-pt field goals23/45 (51.1%)
7/19 (36.8%)3-pt field goals9/17 (52.9%)
25/35 (71.4%)Free throws27/40 (67.5%)
13Offensive rebounds11
25Defensive rebounds23
38Total rebounds34
21Assists18
13Turnovers12
6Steals9
7Blocks6
30Fouls26


2017–18 Basketball Champions League champions
Greece
AEK Athens
1st title
Starters:PtsRebAst
PG 2 United States Mike Green 19 5 3
SG 12 Greece Giannoulis Larentzakis 8 0 2
SF 3 United States Manny Harris 9 10 4
PF 1 United States Delroy James 13 4 1
C 32 United States Vince Hunter 10 4 0
Reserves:
SG 0 United States Kevin Punter 16 0 0
PG 4 Greece Vassilis Xanthopoulos 2 2 6
PF 5 Greece Dušan Šakota 16 2 1
SF 8 Greece Panagiotis Vasilopoulos 0 2 1
SF 9 Bosnia and Herzegovina Edin Atić DNP
C 22 Greece Dimitrios Mavroeidis 7 2 0
C 24 Greece Vassilis Kavvadas DNP
Head coach:
Serbia Dragan Šakota

References

  1. "Competition system". Championsleague.basketball. Retrieved 28 March 2018.
  2. "Athens to host Basketball Champions League Final Four". Championsleague.basketball. 5 April 2018. Retrieved 5 April 2018.
  3. "Banvit win second leg but Robinson fires Monaco into Final Four". Chamionsleague.basketball. 3 April 2018. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  4. "Sears leads MHP Riesen Ludwigsburg to Final Four with Leg 2 win in Bayreuth". Chamionsleague.basketball. 4 April 2018. Retrieved 5 April 2018.
  5. "AEK Athens advance to Final Four as they hold off SIG Strasbourg". Chamionsleague.basketball. 4 April 2018. Retrieved 5 April 2018.
  6. "Murcia lower the boom in fourth quarter to beat Pinar Karsiyaka and advance". Chamionsleague.basketball. 4 April 2018. Retrieved 5 April 2018.
  7. Harris named MVP of the season
  8. Boxscore Riesen - Monaco
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