2018–19 Basketball Champions League

The 2018–19 Basketball Champions League was the third season of the Basketball Champions League (BCL), a European-wide professional basketball competition for clubs, that was launched by FIBA. The competition began in September 2018, with the qualifying rounds, and concluded in May 2019.

Basketball Champions League
The Sportpaleis in Antwerp hosted the Final Four
Competition details
Season 2018–19
Teams 55
Dates 20 September 2018 – 5 May 2019
Final positions
Champions Segafredo Virtus Bologna (1st title)
Runners-up Iberostar Tenerife
Third place Telenet Antwerp Giants
Fourth place Brose Bamberg
Awards
MVP Tyrese Rice
Final Four MVP Kevin Punter
Statistical leaders
Index Rating Vince Hunter
22.8
Points Vince Hunter
18.0
Rebounds Babacar Touré
10.1
Assists Kamil Łączyński
7.8
Records
Biggest home win Tenerife 97–38 Opava
(30 January 2019)
Highest attendance 17,289
Tenerife 70–54 Antwerp Giants
(3 May 2019)

The Final Four was held in the Sportpaleis in Antwerp on 3 and 5 May 2019.

Virtus Bologna won its first BCL championship. As such, the team qualified for the 2020 FIBA Intercontinental Cup.

Eligibility of players

In 2017, FIBA agreed to adopt eligibility rules, forcing the clubs to have at least 5 home-grown players in rosters of 11 or 12 players, or at least four, if the team has got fewer players.

Team allocation

A total of 56 teams (19 of which are champions) from 28 countries will participate in the 2018–19 Basketball Champions League.[1] On July 11, 2018, Kalev/Cramo was replaced by Z-Mobile Prishtina. On July 12, 2018, Eskişehir announced their withdrawal from the competition, leaving an open spot in group C[2] that would be occupied by Lietkabelis.[3]

Teams

League positions after eventual playoffs of the previous season shown in parentheses (TH: Champions League title holders; FEC: FIBA Europe Cup title holders).

Regular season
Le Mans Sarthe (1st) Promitheas (4th) Iberostar Tenerife (8th) Beşiktaş Sompo Japan (5th)
SIG Strasbourg (3rd) AEKTH (5th) Montakit Fuenlabrada (9th) Filou Oostende (1st)
JDA Dijon (5th) Umana Reyer VeneziaFEC (3rd) Hapoel Unet Holon (2nd) Ventspils (1st)
MHP Riesen Ludwigsburg (3rd) Sidigas Avellino (5th) Hapoel Bank Yahav Jerusalem (3rd) Anwil Włocławek (1st)
Brose Bamberg (4th) Segafredo Virtus Bologna (9th) Neptūnas (3rd) Petrol Olimpija (1st)
Telekom Baskets Bonn (5th) ČEZ Nymburk (1st) Lietkabelis (4th)
PAOK (3rd) Opava (2nd) Banvit (4th)
Third qualifying round
JIP Pardubice (3rd) Nanterre 92 (7th) Sakarya Büyükşehir (8th)
UCAM Murcia (10th) medi Bayreuth (6th)
First qualifying round
Telenet Giants Antwerp (2nd) Petrolina AEK Larnaca (1st) Aris (9th) Donar (1st)
Spirou (3rd) Bakken Bears (1st) Szolnoki Olaj (1st) Polski Cukier Toruń (3rd)
Avtodor (6th) Movistar Estudiantes (11th) Hapoel SP Tel Aviv (4th) Porto (2nd)
Nizhny Novgorod (7th) Karhu (1st) Red October Cantù (7th) Oradea (1st)
Tsmoki-Minsk (1st) Leicester Riders (1st) Z-Mobile Prishtina (2nd) Norrköping Dolphins (1st)
Levski Lukoil (1st) Dinamo Tbilisi (1st) Šiauliai (5th) Fribourg Olympic (1st)

Round and draw dates

The schedule of the competition is as follows (all draws are held at the FIBA headquarters in Mies, Switzerland, unless stated otherwise):[4]

Phase Round Draw date First leg Second leg
Qualifying rounds First qualifying round 11 July 2018 20–21 September 2018 22–24 September 2018
Second qualifying round 25–26 September 2018 27–29 September 2018
Third qualifying round 1 October 2018 4 October 2018
Regular season Matchday 1 9–10 October 2018
Matchday 2 16–17 October 2018
Matchday 3 23–24 October 2018
Matchday 4 30–31 October 2018
Matchday 5 6–7 November 2018
Matchday 6 13–14 November 2018
Matchday 7 20-21 November 2018
Matchday 8 11–12 December 2018
Matchday 9 18–19 December 2018
Matchday 10 8–9 January 2019
Matchday 11 15–16 January 2019
Matchday 12 22–23 January 2019
Matchday 13 29–30 January 2019
Matchday 14 5–6 February 2019
Play-offs Round of 16 8 February 2019 5–6 March 2019 12–13 March 2019
Quarter-finals 26–27 March 2019 2–3 April 2019
Final Four Semi-finals 11 April 2019 3 May 2019
Final 5 May 2019

Qualifying rounds

The first qualifying rounds were held on 20–21 September and 22–24 September 2018. The second round was held on 25–26 September and 27–29 September 2018. The third round was played on 30 September and 2 October 2018.[5] The losers of all the rounds entered the 2018–19 FIBA Europe Cup regular season.

Draw

The 24 teams that entered in the first round were divided into four pots. Teams of pot A would play against teams from pot D in games 1 to 6, and pot B teams will face the ones of the pot C.[6] Teams from pots A and B would play the second leg at home.

In the second round, teams from games 7 to 12 would play the first leg at home.

Pot A
Telenet Giants Antwerp
Bakken Bears
Aris
Oradea
Avtodor
Movistar Estudiantes
Pot B
Tsmoki-Minsk
Spirou
Lukoil Levski
Szolnoki Olaj
Donar
Nizhny Novgorod
Pot C
Hapoel SP Tel Aviv
Red October Cantù
Z-Mobile Prishtina
Šiauliai
Polski Cukier Toruń
Porto
Pot D
Petrolina AEK Larnaca
Karhu
Dinamo Tbilisi
Leicester Riders
Norrköping Dolphins
Fribourg Olympic

First qualifying round

A total of 24 teams will play in the first qualifying round. The first legs were played on 20 and 21 September, while the second legs were played on 22 and 24 September 2018.

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Leicester Riders 161–193 Bakken Bears 77–90 84–103
Fribourg Olympic 167–165 Avtodor 89–89 78–76
Petrolina AEK Larnaca 128–159 Telenet Giants Antwerp 74–83 54–76
Dinamo Tbilisi 118–182 Aris 64–90 54–92
Norrköping Dolphins 133–143 Movistar Estudiantes 62–74 71–69
Karhu 167–158 Oradea 87–84 80–74
Red October Cantù 159–139 Szolnoki Olaj 69–68 90–71
Hapoel SP Tel Aviv 135–146 Spirou 76–73 59–73
Šiauliai 144–170 Lukoil Levski 79–91 65–79
Polski Cukier Toruń 160–151 Tsmoki-Minsk 87–61 73–90
Porto 134–178 Nizhny Novgorod 85–86 49–92
Z-Mobile Prishtina 139–144 Donar 84–64 55–80

Second qualifying round

The twelve winners of the first qualifying round will play the second round. The first legs were played on 25 and 26 September, while the second legs were played on 27 and 29 September 2018.

After the retirement of Eskişehir, the winner of the series between Red October Cantù and Telenet Giants Antwerp joined directly the regular season.

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Red October Cantù 170–184 Telenet Giants Antwerp 76–84 94–100
Polski Cukier Toruń 144–137 Movistar Estudiantes 60–68 84–69
Lukoil Levski 167–181 Karhu 88–93 79–88
Spirou 133–130 Bakken Bears 59–61 74–69
Nizhny Novgorod 125–116 Aris 63–65 62–51
Donar 144–151 Fribourg Olympic 67–72 77–79

Third qualifying round

After the retirement of Eskişehir, a total of 10 teams will play in the third qualifying round: five teams which enter in this round, and five of the six winners of the second qualifying round. Winners of game 13 will directly qualify to the regular season without playing this round. The first legs were played on 1 October, while the second legs were played on 4 October 2018.

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Fribourg Olympic 163–137 Sakarya Büyükşehir 87–85 76–52
Karhu 112–182 Nanterre 92 54–91 58–91
Spirou 144–149 UCAM Murcia 62–71 82–78
Nizhny Novgorod 177–141 JIP Pardubice 92–84 85–57
Polski Cukier Toruń 146–159 medi Bayreuth 73–73 73–86

Regular season

Location of teams of the 2018–19 Basketball Champions League regular season.
Red: Group A; Green: Group B; Blue: Group C; Yellow: Group D.

The 32 teams are drawn into four groups of eight, with the restriction that teams from the same country cannot be drawn against each other. In each group, teams play against each other home-and-away, in a round-robin format. The group winners, runners-up, third-placed teams and fourth-placed teams, advance to the round of 16, while the fifth-placed teams and sixth-placed teams enter the 2018–19 FIBA Europe Cup playoffs.

A total of 32 teams play in the regular season: 26 teams which enter in this stage, and the 6 winners of the third qualifying round. The regular season will start on 9 October 2018 and end 6 February 2019.[5]

Draw

Teams were divided into two pots according to the club ranking published by the organization. Twelve teams were named seeded teams while the rest would be unseeded teams.[6]

Seeded teams
AEKTH MHP Riesen Ludwigsburg
Banvit Neptūnas
Beşiktaş Sompo Japan PAOK
Brose Bamberg[lower-alpha 1] Sidigas Avellino
ČEZ Nymburk SIG Strasbourg
Iberostar Tenerife Umana Reyer Venezia
  1. Despite not participating in previous editions, Brose Bamberg was considered as seeded team as the team played in the 2017–18 EuroLeague.

Group A

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Qualification MUR BAN NIZ MSB AVE VEN ANW LUD
1 UCAM Murcia 14 13 1 1080 945 +135 27 Advance to round of 16 86–71 94–90 74–62 72–69 91–85 78–70 73–47
2 Banvit 14 9 5 1149 1073 +76 23 62–63 78–60 96–67 96–88 78–63 75–68 89–76
3 Nizhny Novgorod 14 7 7 1117 1077 +40 21 51–72 72–75 85–71 93–100 82–73 86–62 74–76
4 Le Mans Sarthe 14 7 7 1057 1066 9 21 71–80 85–71 89–74 74–77 91–76 88–79 64–54
5 Sidigas Avellino 14 7 7 1160 1177 17 21 Transfer to FIBA Europe Cup 57–63 99–95 71–92 68–81 74–88 106–102 82–76
6 Ventspils 14 6 8 1142 1178 36 20 61–67 86–80 75–80 88–77 106–102 78–99 93–92
7 Anwil Włocławek 14 4 10 1103 1164 61 18 68–87 84–95 82–93 76–64 62–72 84–71 74–87
8 MHP Riesen Ludwigsburg 14 3 11 1035 1163 128 17 81–80 76–88 59–85 68–73 77–96 81–99 85–93

Group B

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Qualification TFE VEN NAN PAOK HOL BONN FRI OPA
1 Iberostar Tenerife 14 12 2 1164 945 +219 26 Advance to round of 16 78–80 79–68 65–66 84–52 87–68 91–68 97–38
2 Umana Reyer Venezia 14 10 4 1170 1096 +74 24 65–72 87–99 69–59 111–104 69–73 72–62 102–81
3 Nanterre 92 14 8 6 1159 1046 +113 22 58–75 80–89 79–70 70–82 103–56 96–87 110–64
4 PAOK 14 8 6 1127 1036 +91 22 77–85 77–76 83–82 92–77 95–100 92–61 93–43
5 Hapoel Unet Holon 14 7 7 1145 1117 +28 21 Transfer to FIBA Europe Cup 77–88 69–70 62–74 72–68 94–74 93–69 88–72
6 Telekom Baskets Bonn 14 6 8 1120 1181 61 20 92–99 84–94 57–81 94–77 91–83 63–70 114–77
7 Fribourg Olympic 14 3 11 1057 1184 127 17 66–72 86–96 81–92 64–84 90–95 79–83 97–79
8 Opava 14 2 12 952 1289 337 16 70–92 72–90 74–67 69–94 64–97 73–71 76–77

Group C

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Qualification AEK JER BRO ANT LIE JDA NYM FUE
1 AEK 14 12 2 1133 1034 +99 26 Advance to round of 16 75–79 93–86 77–76 65–59 80–56 80–76 78–71
2 Hapoel Bank Yahav Jerusalem 14 12 2 1265 1093 +172 26 70–83 103–89 92–72 81–67 86–72 88–64 91–77
3 Brose Bamberg 14 9 5 1152 1136 +16 23 77–73 85–88 82–78 82–77 73–64 78–71 88–89
4 Telenet Giants Antwerp 14 7 7 1120 1099 +21 21 64–71 101–89 76–85 70–64 67–63 85–72 102–78
5 Lietkabelis 14 5 9 1073 1107 34 19 Transfer to FIBA Europe Cup 65–84 70–97 84–67 87–91 78–62 97–86 78–67
6 JDA Dijon 14 4 10 1058 1118 60 18 80–90 83–85 97–101 61–80 99–91 74–63 85–87
7 ČEZ Nymburk 14 4 10 1097 1183 86 18 93–94 80–111 78–84 82–74 78–71 78–89 104–87
8 Montakit Fuenlabrada 14 3 11 1082 1210 128 17 82–90 75–105 65–75 96–84 78–85 59–73 71–72

Group D

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Qualification BOL BJK NEP PRO SIG OST BAY OLI
1 Segafredo Virtus Bologna 14 10 4 1203 1099 +104 24 Advance to round of 16 70–71 83–78 98–91 87–81 89–60 74–67 87–84
2 Beşiktaş Sompo Japan 14 9 5 1089 1064 +25 23 90–94 77–70 96–74 71–78 80–71 74–90 94–84
3 Neptūnas 14 8 6 1166 1130 +36 22 88–85 78–63 82–83 92–83 77–79 83–73 82–74
4 Promitheas 14 8 6 1143 1150 7 22 85–95 80–72 69–82 77–64 84–88 95–83 79–77
5 SIG Strasbourg 14 8 6 1090 1085 +5 22 Transfer to FIBA Europe Cup 83–80 64–69 80–90 83–78 61–64 67–63 81–73
6 Filou Oostende 14 7 7 1071 1119 48 21 77–76 66–73 91–89 84–93 94–100 82–62 73–79
7 medi Bayreuth 14 5 9 1084 1092 8 19 83–93 70–78 102–78 70–75 76–84 87–71 82–71
8 Petrol Olimpija 14 1 13 1049 1156 107 15 61–92 75–81 88–97 76–80 71–81 69–71 67–76

Playoffs

The playoffs start on 5 March 2019 and end 3 April 2019.[5]

In the playoffs, teams play against each other over two legs on a home-and-away basis, except for the Final Four. In the playoffs draw, the group winners and the runners-up are seeded, and the third-placed teams and the fourth-placed teams are unseeded. The seeded teams are drawn against the unseeded teams, with the seeded teams hosting the second leg. Teams from the same group cannot be drawn against each other.

Bracket

 
QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal
 
                      
 
 
 
 
Nanterre 926862130
 
 
 
Beşiktaş Sompo Japan5960 119
 
Nanterre 928358141
 
 
 
Virtus Bologna7573 148
 
Le Mans Sarthe7458132
 
 
 
Virtus Bologna7481 155
 
Virtus Bologna67
 
 
 
Brose Bamberg50
 
Brose Bamberg8188169
 
 
 
Banvit7985 164
 
Brose Bamberg7167138
 
 
 
AEK 6769 136
 
PAOK7563138
 
 
 
AEK8462 146
 
Virtus Bologna 73
 
 
 
Iberostar Tenerife 61
 
Neptūnas7464138
 
 
 
Hapoel Jerusalem8684 170
 
Hapoel Jerusalem7564139
 
 
 
Iberostar Tenerife7381 154
 
Promitheas6957126
 
 
 
Iberostar Tenerife5779 136
 
Iberostar Tenerife70
 
 
 
Telenet Antwerp Giants54Third place
 
Nizhny Novgorod9566161
 
  
 
Umana Reyer Venezia7284 156
 
Nizhny Novgorod6861129 Brose Bamberg 58
 
 
 
Telenet Giants8366 149 Telenet Antwerp Giants 72
 
Telenet Giants7577152
 
 
UCAM Murcia6778 145
 

Round of 16

The first legs were played on 6–7 March, and the second legs on 13–14 March 2019.[7]

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Brose Bamberg 169–164 Banvit 81–79 88–85
Nanterre 92 130–119 Beşiktaş Sompo Japan 68–59 62–60
Neptūnas 138–170 Hapoel Bank Yavah Jerusalem 74–86 64–84
Nizhny Novgorod 161–156 Umana Reyer Venezia 95–72 66–84
PAOK 138–146 AEK 75–84 63–62
Promitheas 126–136 Iberostar Tenerife 69–57 57–79
Le Mans Sarthe 132–155 Segafredo Virtus Bologna 74–74 58–81
Telenet Giants Antwerp 152–145 UCAM Murcia 75–67 77–78

Quarterfinals

The first legs were played on 27–28 March, and the second legs were played on 3–4 April 2019.

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Hapoel Bank Yavah Jerusalem 139–154 Iberostar Tenerife 75–73 64–81
Nizhny Novgorod 129–149 Telenet Giants Antwerp 68–83 61–66
Nanterre 92 141–148 Segafredo Virtus Bologna 83–75 58–73
Brose Bamberg 138–136 AEK 71–67 67–69

Final Four

Virtus Bologna celebrating after winning the title in Antwerp

The concluding Final Four tournament will be played on 3–5 May 2019. The drawing of the pairings took place on 10 April 2019. On 5 April, the Sportpaleis in Antwerp, Belgium was announced as the venue of the 2019 Final Four.[8]

 
Final
 
      
 
3 May
 
 
Segafredo Virtus Bologna67
 
5 May
 
Brose Bamberg50
 
Segafredo Virtus Bologna73
 
3 May
 
Iberostar Tenerife61
 
Iberostar Tenerife70
 
 
Telenet Antwerp Giants54
 
Third place game
 
 
5 May
 
 
Brose Bamberg58
 
 
Telenet Antwerp Giants72

Awards

Most Valuable Player

Player Team Ref.
Tyrese Rice Brose Bamberg
[9]

Final Four MVP

Player Team Ref.
Kevin Punter Virtus Bologna
[10]

Star Lineup

First team Second team Ref.
PlayersTeams PlayersTeams
Tyrese Rice Brose Bamberg Paris Lee Telenet Giants Antwerp
[11]
Kevin Punter Segafredo Virtus Bologna James Feldeine Hapoel Jerusalem
Tim Abromaitis Iberostar Tenerife Ovie Soko UCAM Murcia
Vince Hunter AEK Athens Amath M'Baye Segafredo Virtus Bologna
Ismaël Bako Telenet Giants Antwerp Colton Iverson Iberostar Tenerife

Best Young Player

Player Team Ref.
Tamir Blatt Hapoel Jerusalem
[11]

Best Coach

Player Team Ref.
Roel Moors Telenet Giants Antwerp
[11]

Game Day MVP

After each gameday a selection of five players with the highest efficiency ratings is made by the Basketball Champions League. Afterwards, the official website decides which player is crowned Game Day MVP.

Regular season

Gameday Player Team EFF Ref.
1 Norris Cole Sidigas Avellino28[12]
2 Austin Daye Umana Reyer Venezia33[13]
3 Norris Cole (2) Sidigas Avellino33[14]
4 Vince Hunter AEK39[15]
5 James Feldeine Hapoel Jerusalem39[16]
6 Julian Gamble Nanterre 9234[17]
7 Linos Chrysikopoulos PAOK25[18]
8 Malcolm Griffin AEK34[19]
9 Paris Lee Telenet Giants Antwerp35[20]
10 Jason Rich Beşiktaş Sompo Japan27[21]
11 Marcos Knight MHP Riesen Ludwigsburg39[22]
12 Vince Hunter (2) AEK37[23]
13 Vince Hunter (3) AEK39[24]
14 Amath M'Baye Segafredo Virtus Bologna27[25]

Round of 16

Player Team EFF Ref.
Tyrese Rice Brose Bamberg
14 / 28

Quarterfinals

Player Team EFF Ref.
Tim Abromaitis Iberostar Tenerife
21 / 26

Prize money

Based on final position, teams received prize money from the BCL.[5]

Competition stage Final position Prize money (€)
Final Winners €1,000,000
Runners-up €400,000
Match for third place Third place €200,000
Fourth place €140,000
Playoffs Quarterfinalist €100,000
Round of 16 €70,000
Regular season €50,000

Sponsorship

Official partner Equipment partner

See also

References

  1. "Champions line up in battle for European glory". BasketballCL.com. 27 June 2018.
  2. "Eskisehir withdraws from Basketball Champions League and Turkish BSL League". Eurohoops. 12 July 2018. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  3. "Lietkabelis will replace Eskisehir in 2018-2019 Basketball Champions League | Eurohoops". Eurohoops. 2018-07-13. Retrieved 2018-07-14.
  4. "BCL Competition Regulations 2018-19" (PDF). BasketballCL.com. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  5. "Regulations Basketball Champions League 2018-19" (PDF). Championsleague.basketball. Retrieved 9 June 2018.
  6. "Basketball Champions League draw explained". Basketball Champions League. 10 July 2018. Retrieved 10 July 2018.
  7. "Play-Offs pairings set in Basketball Champions League". FIBA.basketball. 8 February 2019. Retrieved 23 February 2019.
  8. "Antwerp to host Basketball Champions League Final Four". Championsleague.basketball. 5 April 2019. Retrieved 11 April 2019.
  9. "Rice named MVP of the Season". ChampionsLeague.Basketball. May 4, 2019.
  10. "Final Four MVP, Kevin Punter (26 PTS, 7 REB) led Segafredo Virtus Bologna to the BCL 2018". ChampionsLeague.Basketball. May 5, 2019. Retrieved May 6, 2019.
  11. "Star Lineup revealed, Blatt Best Young Player". ChampionsLeague.Basketball. 4 May 2019. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  12. "Sidigas Avellino's Cole scoops Gameday 1 MVP honor". ChampionsLeague.Basketball. October 12, 2018.
  13. "Umana Reyer Venezia's Daye is Gameday 2 MVP". ChampionsLeague.Basketball. October 19, 2018.
  14. "Humble and hungry Norris Cole claims MVP honor again". ChampionsLeague.Basketball. October 26, 2018.
  15. "AEK's Hunter elevates play, claims Gameday 4 MVP honor". ChampionsLeague.Basketball. November 2, 2018.
  16. "Fabulous Feldeine named Gameday 5 MVP". ChampionsLeague.Basketball. November 9, 2018.
  17. "Big Gamble pays off for Nanterre". ChampionsLeague.Basketball. November 16, 2018.
  18. "PAOK's Chrysikopoulos claims Gameday 7 MVP honor after shooting down Iberostar Tenerife". ChampionsLeague.Basketball. November 23, 2018.
  19. "Griffin claims MVP of the Week honor". ChampionsLeague.Basketball. December 14, 2018.
  20. "Paris Lee claims Gameday 9 MVP honor". ChampionsLeague.Basketball. December 21, 2018.
  21. "Rich dividend - Besiktas star claims MVP of the Week honor". ChampionsLeague.Basketball. January 11, 2019.
  22. "MHP Riesen Ludwigsburg's Knight scoops MVP of Week honor after stunning debut". ChampionsLeague.Basketball. 18 January 2019. Retrieved 1 February 2019.
  23. "AEK's Mr InVince-able once again is MVP of the Week". ChampionsLeague.Basketball. 25 January 2019. Retrieved 1 February 2019.
  24. "Hunter claims yet another MVP of the Week honor". ChampionsLeague.Basketball. 1 February 2019. Retrieved 2 February 2019.
  25. "Mr Putback Jam M'Baye claims MVP of the Week honor". ChampionsLeague.Basketball. 8 February 2019. Retrieved 9 February 2019.
  26. "The Greatest Showman, Round of 16 MVP Tyrese Rice, is more importantly a winner". ChampionsLeague.Basketball. 15 March 2019. Retrieved 21 March 2019.
  27. "Iberostar Tenerife's Abromaitis name MVP of the Quarterfinals". ChampionsLeague.Basketball. 29 March 2019. Retrieved 21 April 2019.
  28. "PEAK Sport Official Partner FIBA Basketball Champions League". Peak-sport.nl. 2017-04-29. Retrieved 2018-06-10.
  29. "Final Four Official Molten Ball unveiled". Championsleague.basketball. Retrieved 2018-06-10.
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