By Antonis Stroggylakis/ info@eurohoops.net
Eurohoops presents the Top 100 EuroLeague Players ahead of the 2020-21 season. A list of players compiled with some specific criteria with the purpose of tracing and ranking those hoopers who are expected to define the upcoming EuroLeague season.
This Top 100 is unlike anything else before it for an obvious reason: The cancellation of the 2019-2020 EuroLeague season due to the coronavirus pandemic. In previous lists, some of the most important factors were the amount of a player’s contribution to club success or failing to help the team achieve its goals. This time – without a champion and not even the playoffs being held – this criterion is out of the picture but the overall run of the team up to the cancellation is still taken into account.
While there are some objective and factual elements/data that were taken into consideration when choosing the 100 players and then ranking them, the final result is, inevitably, subjective.
As always, there was a calculated risk with EuroLeague newcomers, especially those who are completely unfamiliar with European basketball. Hence why some players who will now take their first steps in EuroLeague have been omitted from the list or where placed in lower positions in comparison with “rookies” that already have considerable experience at a competitive level of European basketball. Experience in this level and type of game matters since we’ve seen no few quality players, even established NBAers, immensely struggle in their new surroundings simply because of their unfamiliarity with everything that European basketball encompasses.
A player of a team that is a title or Final Four contender automatically got a relative priority over another with possibly similar or equal, maybe even superior individual strengths. The higher the team’s projection for the upcoming season, the more boost a player got when it comes to his ranking and this is why you will find that there is an increased number of players from well-known powerhouses. Of course, there’s also the fact that these teams acquire top talent.
The list was compiled based on the rosters and moves as are presented on the official EuroLeague website. It goes without saying that injuries (length of absence, seriousness) also played a part in picking and ranking the players, with a notable example being the complete absence of Maccabi Tel Aviv star Omri Casspi. While a healthy Casspi with numbers like the ones he had at the start of the previous season would probably make the Top 20, the fact that he is still rehabilitating (he’s not registered in EuroLeague’s website) after last playing in November 2019, has left him out.
There are a few cases where a player’s overall value and proven capacity to deliver big, counterbalanced numbers and stats as well as age, that otherwise wouldn’t justify his position. Preseason/ early domestic competition games were also taken into account if they hinted towards an obvious significant positive shift in a player’s role and/or performance.
It should be noted that the place an “x player” gets in the list doesn’t necessarily mean that he is overall “better” than another player since there’s a multitude of factors that determine the ranking.
The most important ones are the following:
1) The individual quality of each player in combination with the prospect he carries for 2020-2021, plus the role and playing time we anticipate he will get with his team.
2) The strength of the club the player belongs to. The players of the teams that are usually playoff staples and are considered among the title contenders always have the edge because they combine individual quality with the club’s high aspirations.
3) Prior experience in EuroLeague/European basketball.
4) Numbers. How the player performed in 2019-2020.
A note regarding positions 51 to 100: Sometimes there’s a small or no real difference in the player’s positions. Especially the ranking of the spots between 51 to 100 is, more or less, typical and the differences between players can be negligible. Here are the players ranked between 100 to 76, 75 to 51, 50-41, 40 – 31 and 30-21.
20. Jan Vesely (Fenerbahce Beko)
Year of birth: 1990
Position: Forward/Center
Height: 2.13 m.
2019-2020 stats: 8.6 points, 4.2 rebounds and 1.6 assists in 25:22 minutes over 18 EuroLeague games
2020-2021 expectations: Return to form. The points and rebounds you see above were Vesely‘s lows during his six-year run with Fenerbahce. It was a mediocre season for standards the former MVP – usually a staple in the Top 10 – who also had to fight some knee issues. The expectation ahead of 2020-2021 is for him to rediscover the motor that made him one of the most feared big men in the competition and push Fener close to the top again.
19. Giorgos Printezis (Olympiacos Piraeus)
Year of birth: 1985
Position: Forward
Height: 2.05 m.
2019-2020 stats: 11.8 points, 4.3 rebounds and 1.5 assists in 25:02 minutes over 25 EuroLeague games
2020-2021 expectations: Giorgos Printezis’ numbers in the previous season got a bump in comparison with 2018-2019 so the logical expectation is to remain at least as consistent, if not even better. An artist of the low post, the two-time EuroLeague champion, and one of the most skilled and dangerous forwards in the continent will also have some new company to make some plays with, in the familiar face of Kostas Sloukas.
18. Malcolm Delaney (Olimpia Milano)
Year of birth: 1989
Position: Guard
Height: 1.91 m.
2019-2020 stats: 10.2 points, 2.2 rebounds and 4.8 assists in 22:28 minutes over 26 EuroLeague games
2020-2021 expectations: Milano has all the fine ingredients for success and some five-star cooking can happen depending on how successful all the team’s stars will gel together. And that’s the expectation also from Delaney: To build strong chemistry with the rest of his backcourt buddies, especially Sergio Rodriguez, for the creation of a mighty unit. Delaney is a flexible player who can easily click with any squad, and then contribute with either his scoring prowess or by handling playmaking. Maybe even take some MVPs home.
17. Cory Higgins (Barcelona)
Year of birth: 1989
Position: Guard
Height: 1.95 m.
2019-2020 stats: 12.4 points, 2.1 rebounds and 2.7 assists in 26:35 minutes over 23 EuroLeague games
2020-2021 expectations: Buckets…. and that clutch gene. Higgins packs the full arsenal of a superscorer: The deadly jumper from all spots and in any given situation, the lightning-fast drive to the basket, the strong finish and the ability to find balance mid-air to pull off tough ones. Finding his way to the hoop since he reads the defense extremely well to identify even the tiniest fault that will allow him to do damage.
16. Will Clyburn (CSKA Moscow)
Year of birth: 1990
Position: Forward
Height: 2.01 m.
2019-2020 stats: 12.5 points and 5.3 rebounds in 19:17 minutes over four EuroLeague games
2020-2021 expectations: In a survey conducted by EuroLeague Basketball among team captains, 27.8% of them voted Clyburn as the player who will come back hungrier than everyone else. That’s exactly our expectation for the 2019 Final Four MVP who suffered a season-ending injury just four games into 2019-2020. CSKA surely missed their ultra-versatile dynamo and his massive impact on both ends of the floor and now they have him back once more.
15. Edy Tavares (Real Madrid)
Year of birth: 1992
Position: Center
Height: 2.20 m.
2019-2020 stats: 7.2 points, 7.1 rebounds and 2.2 blocks in 22:55 minutes over 28 EuroLeague games
2020-2021 expectations: Make another DPOY run. The “Nightmare at 7 ft. 3 in.” Tavares was the favorite to win his second consecutive “Best Defender” award but we all know how the season (not) ended. The rate he was blocking shots was, once more, imposing with a career-high average of 2.1 that made for 3.8 per 40 minutes. All these while fiercely patrolling his territory with a Talos-like dedication, closing all gaps on his team’s rear and discouraging his opponents from even trying to step inside the paint.
14. Sergio Rodriguez (Olimpia Milano)
Year of birth: 1986
Position: Guard
Height: 1.91 m.
2019-2020 stats: 13.0 points, 2.3 rebounds and 5.4 assists in 25:38 minutes over 28 EuroLeague games
2020-2021 expectations: What else to expect from Chacho other than basically do his thing(s) and be the main brainpower of the new and, possibly very improved, edition of Milano. His role as a scorer may be reduced with all these firebreathers arriving at the Forum over the summer, but the opportunities to send out dimes should be increased. Rodriguez will look to exploit the opposing defenses’ weak spots and create situations for his teammates and himself with his top-class facilitating.