2013–14 Euroleague

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The 2013–14 Turkish Airlines Euroleague was the 14th season of the modern era of Euroleague Basketball and the fourth under the title sponsorship of the Turkish Airlines. Including the competition's previous incarnation as the FIBA Europe Champions Cup, this was the 57th season of the premier competition for European men's clubs.

Euroleague
Scene of the Mediolanum Forum in Milan during the Final Four
Season2013–14
Duration1 October 2013 – 18 May 2014
Games played248
Teams24
Regular season
Season MVPSpain Sergio Rodríguez
Finals
ChampionsIsrael Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv
6th title
  Runners-upSpain Real Madrid
Third placeSpain FC Barcelona
Fourth placeRussia CSKA Moscow
Final Four MVPMontenegro Tyrese Rice
Awards
Coach of the YearIsrael David Blatt
Rising StarSerbia Bogdan Bogdanović
Best DefenderUnited States Bryant Dunston
Statistical leaders
Points United States Keith Langford 17.6
Rebounds France Joffrey Lauvergne 8.6
Assists Greece Dimitris Diamantidis 6.2
Index Rating United States Keith Langford 17.7
Records
Average attendance8,130 Increase
All statistics correct as of 7 September 2014.

Euroleague Basketball Company, in its annual meeting in Barcelona, determined the site of the season's Euroleague Final Four venue. London was originally supposed to host the Final Four, but it was decided that the 2014 Euroleague Final Four be held at the Mediolanum Forum, in Milan. In the championship final game, Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv defeated the previous season's runners-up, Real Madrid, by a score of 98-86 after overtime, and won its sixth Euroleague title in the club's history.

Allocation

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There were three routes to participation in the Euroleague:

  • The 14 teams with an A-Licence from the 2012–13 Euroleague, based on their Euroleague Club Ranking.[1]
  • The 2012–13 Eurocup winner was given a C-Licence.
  • 14 places were allocated from a list of 30 teams given a B-Licence ranked according to their European national basketball league rankings over the last year. 14 teams were given both an A-Licence or C-Licence and a B-Licence. When a country ranking spot had already been assigned to an A-Licence team, the assignation jumped to the next country appearing in the ranking, and their league was not granted an additional place in the competition. The first 8 of the remaining 16 teams were given places in the regular-season, and the next 6 were given places in the qualifying competition.
  • If the Eurocup champion was qualified by receiving a B license, or some team with it resigned from the competition, a wild card had to be given by the Euroleague.

The Euroleague had the right to cancel an A license for one of the following reasons:[2]

  • The club had the lowest ranking of all clubs with an A Licence according to the Club Ranking.
  • The club had ranked among the clubs placed in the bottom half of the national championship final standings.
  • The club had financial problems.
  • In the ACB (Spain), when the champion and/or the runner-up of the league were teams without an A license. In that case, the A license club with the lowest position would play Eurocup in the next season. If that happened three times in five years, the A license of the club would be cancelled.

Euroleague allocation criteria

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A licenses

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Classification after the 2012–13 season, including also the 2010–11 and the 2011–12 seasons.[3]

Rank Team Points
1.   FC Barcelona 144
2.   Olympiacos 138
3.   Panathinaikos 136
4.   Real Madrid 128
5.   Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv 128
6.   CSKA Moscow 119
7.   Montepaschi Siena 118
   
Rank Team Points
8.   Anadolu Efes 98
9.   Laboral Kutxa 94
10.   Unicaja 87
11.   Fenerbahçe Ülker 87
12.   Žalgiris 86
13.   EA7 Milano 52
14.   Asseco Prokom 35
Notes
  • EA7 Milano had a two-year A license, awarded in June 2012.[4]
  • Asseco Prokom lost its A license, as it was the last qualified in the A licensed team tanking. The license was converted into a wildcard.

B licenses

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B licenses could be given to every team without an A license. If in the allocation appeared a team with an A license, the next team in the criteria would receive the B license, which qualified directly to the Regular Season.[5]

Key to colors
     A licensed teams
     B licensed teams
     WC teams
     Teams qualified for the Qualifying Round
Team League Pos.
1.   Real Madrid ACB 1st
2.   CSKA Moscow VTB and PBL 1st
3.   Montepaschi Siena Serie A 1st
4.   Galatasaray TBL 1st
5.   Žalgiris LKL 1st
6.   Panathinaikos GBL 1st
7.   Nanterre LNB Pro A 1st
8.   Brose Bamberg BBL 1st
9.   Partizan ABA 1st
10.   Stelmet Zielona Góra PLK 1st
11.   Crvena Zvezda ABA 2nd
12.   FC Barcelona ACB 2nd
13.   Lokomotiv Kuban VTB and PBL 2nd
14.   Acea RomaWithdrew[6] Serie A 2nd
   
Team League Pos.
15.   Banvit TBL 2nd
16.   Lietuvos Rytas LKL 2nd
17.   Olympiacos GBL 2nd
18.   StrasbourgWC LNB Pro A 2nd
19.   Oldenburg BBL 2nd
20.   IgokeaWithdrew ABA 3rd
21.   Telenet Oostende BLB 1st
22.   ČEZ Nymburk NBL 1st
23.   BudivelnykWC UBL 1st
24.   Maccabi HaifaWithdrew BSL 1st
25.   Lukoil AcademicWithdrew NBL 1st
26.   ZZ LeidenWithdrew DBL 1st
27.   VEF Rīga LBL 1st
28.   Turów Zgorzelec PLK 2nd
Notes
  • Adriatic: the places were awarded to the top teams in the Regular Season. If the third or fourth qualified won the Final Four, it would be granted with the first spot, moving the champion and the runner-up of the Regular Season to the second and third spots. In February 2012, Euroleague Basketball clarified the situation of the Adriatic League spots, saying the three first teams in the Adriatic League Final Four would qualify.[7] Due to the different interpretation of both associations, Euroleague and Liga ABA negotiated a solution to be applied only for the 2012–13 season.

Finally, both organizations agreed that if the team that was in the first position after the Regular Season met all of the B-licence minimum requirements, it would qualify to Euroleague. In that case, Igokea did not meet the required criteria, so Euroleague Basketball applied the 2012–13 Euroleague Bylaws, by which the 2013 ABA Final Four champion and the runner-up, would take the first two Adriatic positions in that order, whilst the next highest regular season team would take the final Adriatic position.[8][9][10]

C licenses and wild cards

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To the Regular Season

Vacant C license of Lokomotiv Kuban (2012–13 Eurocup champion), qualified with a B license, Asseco Prokom's lost A license, and the B license rejected by Acea Roma converted to a wild card:

To the Qualification Rounds

Competition format changes

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As new, for this Euroleague season, the eliminated teams in the Regular Season, were dropped to the Eurocup.[13]

Teams

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The labels in the parentheses show how each team qualified for the place of its starting round (TH: Euroleague title holders):

Regular season
  Real Madrid (A)   Galatasaray (1st)   CSKA Moscow (A)   Partizan (1st)
  FC Barcelona (A)   Anadolu Efes (A)   Lokomotiv Kuban (EC)   Crvena zvezda (2nd)
  Laboral Kutxa (A)   Fenerbahçe (A)   Brose Bamberg (1st)   Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv (A)
  Unicaja (A)   Nanterre (1st)   Bayern Munich (WC)   Stelmet Zielona Góra (1st)
  Panathinaikos (A)   SIG Strasbourg (WC)   Montepaschi Siena (A)   Budivelnyk (WC)
  OlympiacosTH (A)   Žalgiris (A)   EA7 Emporio Armani Milano (A)
Qualifying rounds
  Banvit (2nd)   Lietuvos rytas (2nd)   EWE Oldenburg (2nd)   Telenet Oostende (1st)
  ČEZ Nymburk (1st)   VEF Rīga (1st)   Khimki (WC)   Cimberio Varese (WC)

Qualifying rounds

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The eight teams participated in a single-venue tournament format, from October 1 until October 4, 2013. All games were played in the Siemens Arena in Vilnius, Lithuania.

First round Second round Third round
         
  Cimberio Varèse 74
  EWE Baskets Oldenburg 79
  EWE Baskets Oldenburg 87
  Lietuvos rytas 99
  Lietuvos rytas 80
  VEF Rīga 71
  Lietuvos rytas 75
  Telenet Oostende 66
  ČEZ Nymburk 78
  Banvit 87
  Banvit 80
  Telenet Oostende 82
  Khimki 79
  Telenet Oostende 90

Draw

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The draws for the 2013–14 Turkish Airlines Euroleague were held on Thursday, 4 July. Teams were seeded into six pots of four teams in accordance with the Club Ranking, based on their performance in European competitions during a three-year period.

Two teams from the same country could not be drawn together in the same Regular Season group.

Pot 1 Pot 2 Pot 3 Pot 4 Pot 5 Pot 6

  FC Barcelona
  Olympiacos
  Panathinaikos
  Real Madrid

  Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv
  CSKA Moscow
  Montepaschi Siena
  Anadolu Efes

  Laboral Kutxa
  Unicaja
  Fenerbahçe Ülker
  Žalgiris

  Galatasaray
  Lokomotiv Kuban
  Budivelnyk
  Brose Bamberg

  EA7 Milano
  Partizan
  Crvena Zvezda
  Stelmet Zielona Góra

  Bayern Munich
  Nanterre
  Strasbourg
  Lietuvos Rytas (q)

Regular season

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The regular season was played between October 17 and December 20.

If teams were level on record at the end of the Regular Season, tiebreakers were applied in the following order:

  1. Head-to-head record.
  2. Head-to-head point differential.
  3. Point differential during the Regular Season.
  4. Points scored during the regular season.
  5. Sum of quotients of points scored and points allowed in each Regular Season match.
Key to colors
     Top four places in each group advanced to Top 16
     Bottom two teams in each group entered 2013–14 Eurocup Basketball Last 32 round

Group A

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Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Tie
1   Fenerbahçe Ülker 10 8 2 849 749 100  
2   CSKA Moscow 10 7 3 732 676 56 1–1 ( 5)
3   FC Barcelona 10 7 3 786 729 57 1–1 (–5)
4   Partizan 10 3 7 668 715 −47 1–1 ( 29)
5   Nanterre 10 3 7 682 753 −71 1–1 (–29)
6   Budivelnyk 10 2 8 737 832 −95  

Group B

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Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Tie
1   Real Madrid 10 10 0 889 652 237  
2   EA7 Milano 10 5 5 742 762 −20 1–1 ( 5)
3   Žalgiris 10 5 5 743 768 −25 1–1 (–5)
4   Anadolu Efes 10 4 6 741 767 −26  
5   Brose Bamberg 10 3 7 756 829 −73 1–1 ( 3)
6   Strasbourg 10 3 7 705 798 −93 1–1 (–3)

Group C

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Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Tie
1   Olympiacos 10 10 0 812 734 78  
2   Galatasaray 10 6 4 700 725 −25  
3   Unicaja 10 5 5 756 712 44  
4   Bayern Munich 10 4 6 818 791 27  
5   Montepaschi Siena 10 3 7 674 706 −32  
6   Stelmet Zielona Góra 10 2 8 707 799 −92  

Group D

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Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Tie
1   Maccabi Tel Aviv 10 8 2 764 711 53  
2   Laboral Kutxa 10 6 4 767 754 13 1–1 ( 12)
3   Lokomotiv Kuban 10 6 4 740 729 11 1–1 (–12)
4   Panathinaikos 10 5 5 768 736 32  
5   Crvena Zvezda 10 4 6 804 779 25  
6   Lietuvos Rytas 10 1 9 686 820 −134  

Top 16

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Regular season game between Nanterre and CSKA Moscow

The Top 16 began on January 2 and ended on April 11, 2014.

If teams were level on record at the end of the Top 16, tiebreakers were applied in the following order:

  1. Head-to-head record.
  2. Head-to-head record between teams still tied.
  3. Head-to-head point differential.
  4. Point differential during the Top 16.
  5. Points scored during the Top 16.
  6. Sum of quotients of points scored and points allowed in each Top 16 match.
Key to colors
     Top four places in each group advanced to Playoffs
     Eliminated

See the detailed group stage page for tiebreakers if two or more teams were equal on points.

Group E

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Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD
1   FC Barcelona 14 12 2 1109 1009 100
2   EA7 Milano 14 10 4 1093 1011 82
3   Olympiacos 14 8 6 1058 996 62
4   Panathinaikos 14 7 7 961 958 3
5   Unicaja 14 6 8 1032 1063 −31
6   Fenerbahçe Ülker 14 6 8 1078 1101 −23
7   Laboral Kutxa 14 5 9 1061 1125 −64
8   Anadolu Efes 14 2 12 967 1096 −129

Group F

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Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD
1   CSKA Moscow 14 12 2 1167 1035 132
2   Real Madrid 14 11 3 1190 1047 143
3   Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv 14 8 6 1115 1090 25
4   Galatasaray 14 7 7 1072 1065 7
5   Lokomotiv Kuban 14 7 7 1081 1098 −17
6   Bayern Munich 14 5 9 1040 1102 −62
7   Partizan 14 4 10 953 1069 −116
8   Žalgiris 14 2 12 1062 1174 −112

Quarterfinals

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Team 1 hosted Games 1 and 2, plus Game 5 if necessary. Team 2 hosted Game 3, and Game 4 if necessary.

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg 3rd leg 4th leg 5th leg
FC Barcelona   3–0   Galatasaray 88–61 84–63 78–75
Real Madrid   3–2   Olympiacos 88–71 82–77 76–78 62–71 83–69
CSKA Moscow   3–2   Panathinaikos 77–74 77–51 59–65 72–73 74–44
EA7 Milano   1–3   Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv 99–101 91–77 63–75 66–86

Final Four

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Scene of the championship game at the Mediolanum Forum on 18 May

The Final Four was the last phase of the season and was held over a weekend. The semifinal games were played on 16 May, while the third place game and championship game were played on 18 May. The Final Four was held at the Mediolanum Forum in Milan, Italy.

 
Semifinals
16 May
Championship game
18 May
 
      
 
 
 
 
  CSKA Moscow 67
 
 
 
  Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv 68
 
  Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv 98
 
 
 
  Real Madrid 86
 
  FC Barcelona 62
 
 
  Real Madrid100
 
Third place game
 
 
 
 
 
  CSKA Moscow 78
 
 
  FC Barcelona 93

Attendances

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Top 10

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Round Game Home team Visitor Attendance Sources
1 Top 16 1   Partizan   Real Madrid 21,374
2 Regular Season 1   Crvena Zvezda   Lokomotiv Kuban 19,000
3 Top 16 5   Panathinaikos   FC Barcelona 18,500
4 Top 16 11   Panathinaikos   Fenerbahçe Ülker 17,500
5 Top 16 7   Panathinaikos   Olympiacos 17,500
6 Top 16 3   Partizan   CSKA Moscow 16,523
7 Top 16 5   Partizan   Lokomotiv Kuban 15,565
8 Regular Season 8   Partizan   Budivelnyk 15,200
9 Quarter-finals 4   Panathinaikos   CSKA Moscow 14,750
10 Regular season 7   Laboral Kutxa   Panathinaikos 14,196

Average home attendances

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Pos Team GP Total High Low Average
1   Partizan 12 150,931 21,374 7,500 12,578
2   Panathinaikos 14 168,842 18,500 5,192 12,060
3   Fenerbahçe Ülker 12 137,753 12,968 3,230 11,313
4   Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv 14 154,580 11,060 10,800 11,041
5   Laboral Kutxa 12 128,106 14,196 8,246 10,676
6   Real Madrid 15 155,528 13,192 6,899 10,369
7   Žalgiris 12 118,433 12,000 8,150 9,869
8   Crvena Zvezda 5 48,500 19,000 7,000 9,700
9   Olympiacos 13 [14] 125,074 11,500 5,500 9,656
10   EA7 Milano 14 125,264 12,331 4,630 8,947
11   Galatasaray 13 114,809 11,470 3,829 8,831
12   Brose 5 34,000 6,800 6,800 6,800
13   Unicaja 12 73,604 10,600 3,512 6,134
14   Lietuvos Rytas 5 30,350 8,450 3,350 6,070
15   Bayern Munich 12 72,445 6,700 5,011 6,037
16   Lokomotiv Kuban 12 70,481 7,470 4,274 5,873
17   Montepaschi Siena 5 27,549 6,755 4,020 5,510
18   FC Barcelona 14 71,620 6,938 3,134 5,116
19   CSKA Moscow 15 70,674 5,293 4,201 4,712
20   Anadolu Efes 12 55,311 8,078 2,080 4,609
21   Strasbourg 5 22,715 6,150 3,340 4,543
22   JSF Nanterre 5 21,000 4,500 3,000 4,200
23   Stelmet Zielona Góra 5 20,859 4,853 3,251 4,172
24   Budivelnyk 5 19,800 5,600 1,500 3,960
  • Updated to reflect games played through 25 April 2014

Source: Euroleague Basketball

Individual statistics

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Rating

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Rank Name Team Games Rating PIR
1.   Keith Langford   EA7 Milano 25 442 17.68
2.   Malcolm Delaney   Bayern Munich 24 418 17.42
3.   Rudy Fernández   Real Madrid 31 534 17.23

Points

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Rank Name Team Games Points PPG
1.   Keith Langford   EA7 Milano 25 439 17.56
2.   Justin Dentmon   Žalgiris 24 403 16.79
3.   Vassilis Spanoulis   Olympiacos 26 392 15.08

Rebounds

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Rank Name Team Games Rebounds RPG
1.   Joffrey Lauvergne   Partizan 24 207 8.63
2.   Richard Hendrix   Lokomotiv Kuban 23 167 7.26
3.   Andrés Nocioni   Laboral Kutxa 21 138 6.57

Assists

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Rank Name Team Games Assists APG
1.   Dimitris Diamantidis   Panathinaikos 29 180 6.21
2.   Carlos Arroyo   Galatasaray 25 138 5.52
3.   Thomas Heurtel   Laboral Kutxa 21 111 5.29

Other statistics

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Alex Tyus
Category Name Team Games Stat
Steals per game   Jamon Gordon   Anadolu Efes 21 2.00
Blocks per game   Bryant Dunston   Olympiacos 29 1.31
Turnovers per game   Justin Dentmon   Žalgiris 24 3.71
Fouls drawn per game   Keith Langford   EA7 Milano 25 6.52
Minutes per game   Joffrey Lauvergne   Partizan 24 32:19
2FG%   Alex Tyus   Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv 27 0.723
3FG%   Valery Likhodey   Lokomotiv Kuban 21 0.546
FT%   Milko Bjelica   Laboral Kutxa
  Anadolu Efes
22 0.931

Game highs

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Category Name Team Stat
Rating   Darjuš Lavrinovič   Budivelnyk 44
Points   Andrés Nocioni   Laboral Kutxa 37
Rebounds   Pops Mensah-Bonsu   Galatasaray 16
  Furkan Aldemir
Assists 7 occasions 11
Steals   Ricky Minard   Budivelnyk 6
Blocks 3 occasions 6
Turnovers 4 occasions 8
Fouls Drawn   Keith Langford   EA7 Milano 13

Awards

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2013–14 Euroleague MVP

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2013–14 Euroleague Final Four MVP

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All-Euroleague Team 2013–14

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[17]

All-Euroleague First Team Club Team All-Euroleague Second Team Club Team
  Sergio Rodríguez   Real Madrid   Ricky Hickman   Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv
  Keith Langford   EA7 Milano   Vassilis Spanoulis   Olympiacos
  Rudy Fernández   Real Madrid   Victor Khryapa   CSKA Moscow
  Sonny Weems   CSKA Moscow   Nikola Mirotić   Real Madrid
  Ante Tomić   FC Barcelona   Stéphane Lasme   Panathinaikos

Best Defender

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Rising Star

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Coach of the Year (Alexander Gomelsky Award)

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MVP Weekly

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Regular season

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Game Player Team PIR
1   Nikola Mirotić   Real Madrid 27
2   Nik Caner-Medley   Unicaja 29
3   Bryant Dunston   Olympiacos 33
4   DeMarcus Nelson   Crvena Zvezda 31
5   Justin Dentmon   Žalgiris 32
6   Vladimir Dragičević   Stelmet Zielona Góra 32
7   Boštjan Nachbar   FC Barcelona 31
8   Vassilis Spanoulis   Olympiacos 29
9   Darjuš Lavrinovič   Budivelnyk 44
10   Boban Marjanović   Crvena Zvezda 33

Top 16

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Game Player Team PIR
1   Vassilis Spanoulis (2)   Olympiacos 39
2   Marcelinho Huertas   FC Barcelona 30
3   Rudy Fernández   Real Madrid 30
4   Krunoslav Simon   Lokomotiv Kuban 35
5   Miloš Teodosić   CSKA Moscow 31
6   Justin Dentmon (2)   Žalgiris 33
7   Ante Tomić   FC Barcelona 36
8   Ante Tomić (2)   FC Barcelona 40
9   Zoran Dragić   Unicaja 30
10   Malcolm Delaney   Bayern Munich 24
11   Rudy Fernández (2)   Real Madrid 33
12   Derrick Brown   Lokomotiv Kuban 34
13   Dimitris Diamantidis   Panathinaikos 31
14   Justin Dentmon (3)   Žalgiris 40

Quarter-finals

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Game Player Team PIR
1   Ricky Hickman   Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv 36
2   Ioannis Bourousis   Real Madrid 24
  Curtis Jerrells   EA7 Milano
3   Bryant Dunston (2)   Olympiacos 32
4   Bryant Dunston (3)   Olympiacos 25
5   Sasha Kaun   CSKA Moscow 29

MVP of the Month

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Month Player Team
October 2013   Nikola Mirotić   Real Madrid
November 2013   Derrick Brown   Lokomotiv Kuban
December 2013   Stratos Perperoglou   Olympiacos
January 2014   Nenad Krstić   CSKA Moscow
February 2014   Ante Tomić   FC Barcelona
March 2014   Ante Tomić (2)   FC Barcelona
April 2014   Alex Tyus   Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "In-The-Game.org Euroleague three-year-ranking". Archived from the original on 2012-10-01. Retrieved 2012-10-04.
  2. ^ 2012–13 Euroleague bylaws
  3. ^ Euroleague three-year-ranking Archived 2012-10-01 at the Wayback Machine In-the-game.
  4. ^ Euroleague board awards two-year Turkish Airlines Euroleague license to EA7 Emporio Armani Milan Euroleague.net 20 June 2012
  5. ^ ECA Shareholders Meeting prepares to ring in the 2012-13 season Euroleague.net, July 5, 2012
  6. ^ Rome announces it will not play in Turkish Airlines Euroleague
  7. ^ ABA League – Clarification Regarding Clubs Participating in the 2013-14 Euroleague Euroleague.net 25 February 2013
  8. ^ Euroleague Basketball - ABA League Agreement on Access to the 2013-14 Euroleague Euroleague 5 March 2013
  9. ^ Red Star makes Euroleague
  10. ^ Partizan books ticket for next Euroleague
  11. ^ "Euroleague agrees to VTB United League proposal". Archived from the original on 2013-06-13. Retrieved 2013-04-27.
  12. ^ Евролига-2013/14: "Химкам" осталась надежда только на wild card
  13. ^ Eurocup changes format, expands to 48 teams for 2013-14 season; EurocupBasketball.com, 14 June 2013
  14. ^ Not included one closed-door game
  15. ^ Euroleague.net Rodríguez voted bwin MVP of the 2013-14 Turkish Airlines Euroleague.
  16. ^ Euroleague.net Rice is bwin MVP of 2014 Final Four.
  17. ^ 2012–13 All-Euroleague First and Second teams announced. Euroleague.net. Retrieved on 2013-05-06.
  18. ^ Euroleague.net Alphonso Ford Top Scorer Trophy goes to Keith Langford, EA7 Emporio Armani Milan.
  19. ^ Euroleague.net Coaches vote Bryant Dunston of Olympiacos this season's Best Defender.
  20. ^ Euroleague.net Euroleague coaches choose Partizan's Bogdanovic for Rising Star Trophy.
  21. ^ "David Blatt voted Alexander Gomelskiy Coach of the Year". 3 October 2024.