Euroleague Finals Blog: Olympiacos Wins Title Behind 42 From Spanoulis and Law

2 Comments

Kyle Hines, OlympiacosGo ahead and grab a lead in a Euroleague final against Olympiacos.  Go on.  I dare you.

Pages: 1 2

Where Are They Now? Visiting the 2013 Euroleague Playoffs

2 Comments

800px-Juan_Carlos_Navarro_by_Augustas_DidzgalvisWelcome everyone to another edition of Sheridan Hoops presents Where Are  They Now?

This week, we will look at the former NBA and NCAA players that are taking part in the 2013 Euroleague Playoffs. With two teams having advanced and four attempting to join them, there’s no shortage of players making waves overseas.

As outlined by Nick Gibson of Sheridan Hoops, Barcelona of Spain will play Panathinaikos of Greece and Olympiacos of Greece will square off with Anadolu Efes of Turkey on Thursday, April 25. Real Madrid of Spain and CSKA Moscow of Russia have already advanced and await the winners of those games.

So which memorable names are taking part in the postseason festivities?

Pages: 1 2

Euroleague Power Rankings: Mirotic Sets Record, Barca Back On Top

Leave a comment

Nikola Mirotic’s 31 points and 11 rebounds in Real Madrid’s 105-104 overtime win at Zalgiris were career highs.  His performance from the free throw line was an all-time Euroleague best: 18-for-18.

Pages: 1 2

Euroleague Power Rankings: Week 9

3 Comments

For every Blazer fan who asked Who? when his team traded Raymond Felton and Kurt Thomas to the Knicks for Kostas Papanikolaou and Georgios Printezis, it’s officially time to be OK with that.

Pages: 1 2

Euroleague Update: Papanikolaou Struggling; Jordan Farmar for MVP

4 Comments

Olympiacos had gone 210 days without losing a Euroleague game. After picking up their first loss of the season in week two, the Reds’ next unbeaten streak lasted just six days.

And the defending champions haven’t just been losing; they’ve been getting waxed.  This week, it was Zalgiris Kaunas doing the waxing, 79-61.

In the team’s first loss it was Jordan Farmar—who we’ll get to in a minute—and Anadolu Efes putting the hurt on Olympiacos 98-72.

During that loss to Efes, the Reds shot under 40 percent as a team, turned it over 14 times and shot just 14 free throws to Efes’ 32.  It wasn’t close early, it wasn’t close late and at no point in between did Olympiacos appear competitive.

But this is not cause for organizational upheaval, even if it did drop them from first to fifth in the power rankings.  Olympiacos would brush themselves off, head home to Piraeus, Greece and await the arrival of Zalgiris Kaunas, a collection of Lithuanian veterans, recycled Americans and a pair of Croats that were off to one of the EL’s more surprising 2-0 starts.

Olympiacos went into halftime with a 39-33 lead on the Lithuanians in Peace and Friendship Arena, and the champs seemed to be peeling themselves off the mat nicely.  What happened next was neither peaceful nor friendly.

Croatian guard Marko Popovic hit three 3-pointers in the third quarter and Zalgiris went from down six to up ten by the start of the fourth.  Twenty more points in the final period made it a 79-61 final (46-22 in the second half), and shoved Zalgiris’ record up to a perfect 3-0.

Knicks draft pick Kostas Papanikolaou, whose rights were dealt to Portland, was perfect in last season’s championship game, going 5-of-5 with 18 points, but this season he’s barely made an impact offensively, going 5-of-12 for 13 points.

The 22-year-old small forward had just three in the loss to Zalgiris, which will surely elicit Told ya so’s from the same fans that booed New York’s 48th overall pick roundly on draft night.

Even though Olympiacos returned 10 pieces from its championship run—Papanikolaou among them—it was Zalgiris and its eight new faces that were playing the more cohesive, fluid basketball.  Almost like they had played together before.  Almost like they were brothers.

They have.  And well, two of them are.

Pages: 1 2 3