Ten reasons – out of many – to love the new EuroLeague season!

11/Oct/18 09:45 October 11, 2018

Aris Barkas

11/Oct/18 09:45

Eurohoops.net

Five months without the Turkish Airlines EuroLeague were too many. As Europe’s premier basketball league returns to action, Eurohoops picks out some of the reasons the EuroLeague rightly fascinates us, causes us to dream with anticipation.

By Nikos Varlas/ varlas@eurohoops.net

From May 20, when Real Madrid was more than deservedly crowned European champion in Belgrade for the 10th time in club history, until Thursday evening when the curtain on the new season will be raised in the Russian capital with CSKA Moscow hosting FC Barcelona Lassa, almost five months have gone by. Five months without basketball… That’s enough! The EuroLeague is finally getting underway, one more thrilling season is upon us and basketball fans can’t wait to… take the plunge into an “orange sea of basketball,” with nonstop action at the highest level!

Here are 10 of the main reasons why we can hardly wait for the first jump-ball of the competition and why we’re going to love the EuroLeague season that is about to begin. Though, in reality, there are plenty more reasons.

Seven months of a basketball spectacle and upsets in the race for the new kings

We’re talking about the top basketball competition in Europe, which is constantly growing on every level. The most historic and successful teams, the most traditional basketball brands and the new format that will be played for a third season, are all here. And it has been amply demonstrated that the package is more satisfying and exciting than ever!

Top-level basketball, 16 teams that are ready for everything, a scorching hot regular season with 240 games, and playoffs that produce their own unique stories every single time. Above all? The race for the new kings is totally unpredictable, so everyone has the right to dream. We’ll just remind you that in the first two seasons with the new format, the teams that emerged as the European champions were ranked fifth at the end of the regular season (Fenerbahce Istanbul, Madrid) and started the playoffs without the home-court advantage and eventually triumphed by going all the way.

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