2013–14 British Basketball League season

The 2013–14 season was the 27th campaign of the British Basketball League since the league's establishment in 1987. The season featured 12 teams from across England and Scotland, including new entrant Birmingham Knights. East London Royals and Essex Leopards were both due to become the 13th and 14th League members respectively, but after deferring their original entries from the 2012–13 season for a season, both franchises withdrew their applications to join the BBL due to financial constraints.[1]

2013–14 BBL season
LeagueBritish Basketball League
SportBasketball
Duration27 September 2013 – 20 April 2014
25 April 2014 – 11 May 2014 (Playoffs)
Number of games33
Number of teams12
Regular Season
Top seedNewcastle Eagles
Season MVPZaire Taylor (Worcester Wolves)
Top scorerVictor Moses (Cheshire Phoenix)
BBL Tournaments
BBL Playoffs championsWorcester Wolves
  BBL Playoffs runners-upNewcastle Eagles
BBL Cup championsLeicester Riders
  BBL Cup runners-upNewcastle Eagles
BBL Trophy championsWorcester Wolves
  BBL Trophy runners-upGlasgow Rocks

On 12 July it was officially announced that the Mersey Tigers franchise had been withdrawn from the up-coming season by the League due to financial trouble that had plagued the club throughout the previous season, which resulted in the Tigers becoming the first club to complete an entire season without a single victory.[2]

The season started on 27 September 2013 and ended on 11 May 2014 with the Play-off Final at Wembley Arena. Newcastle Eagles claimed a record 6th regular season title but were defeated in the Play-off Final by a dominant Worcester Wolves team who were also victorious in the BBL Trophy, beating Glasgow Rocks on their home court in the Final. Leicester Riders were crowned as the BBL Cup winners, defeating Newcastle in the Final at the National Indoor Arena.

Teams

Team City Arena Capacity Last season
Birmingham Knights Birmingham North Solihull Sports Centre 600 New
Cheshire Phoenix Chester Northgate Arena 1,000 11th
Durham Wildcats Newton Aycliffe Newton Aycliffe Leisure Centre 1,200 10th
Glasgow Rocks Glasgow Emirates Arena 6,500 3rd
Leicester Riders Leicester John Sandford Centre 800 1st
London Lions London Copper Box 7,000 8th
Manchester Giants Manchester Wright Robinson College 900 9th
Newcastle Eagles Newcastle upon Tyne Sport Central 3,000 2nd
Plymouth Raiders Plymouth Plymouth Pavilions 1,480 6th
Sheffield Sharks Sheffield English Institute of Sport 1,200 7th
Surrey United Guildford Surrey Sports Park 1,000 4th
Worcester Wolves Worcester Worcester Arena 2,000 5th

Notable occurrences

  • New entrant Birmingham Knights joined as the League's 13th franchise whilst East London Royals and Essex Leopards who were both due to become the 14th and 15th League members respectively, withdrew their applications to join the BBL due to financial constraints.[3]
  • Ed Percival was announced as the BBL's new Chairman on 27 June 2013, replacing the outgoing Paul Blake who stepped down after nearly a decade in the position.[4]
  • On 12 July it was officially announced that the Mersey Tigers franchise had been withdrawn from the up-coming season by the League due to financial trouble that had plagued the club throughout the previous season, bringing the number of teams back down to 12.[5]
  • Following the sale of Surrey Heat to a partnership group consisting of Surrey Sports Park and London United, the franchise was subsequently rebranded as Surrey United prior to the start of the season.[6] Due to the takeover, long-time head coach Creon Raftopolous was sacked and replaced by Jack Majewski.[7]
  • Durham Wildcats announced on 13 August that head coach Dave Elderkin had stepped down from the role after 8 years in charge. He was replaced by former Great Britain Women's Under-20 coach Lee Davie.[8]
  • On 7 September – just weeks before the start of the new season – Plymouth Raiders announced that head coach Gavin Love had been sacked following a 'vote of no confidence' from the club's Board of Directors.[9] Former Raiders player Jay Marriott was appointed as his successor.
  • The BBL announced a new television broadcasting deal with British Eurosport on 23 September,[10] to complement the recently launched online BBL TV platform.[11]
  • A sell-out crowd saw Worcester Wolves win their first competitive game at their new venue, the Worcester Arena on 4 October, as the home side defeated reigning champions Leicester Riders 73–61.[12]
  • Worcester's 62–69 victory away to Leicester Riders on 16 November, put an end to Leicester's 34-game unbeaten home winning streak, which spanned over three seasons.[13]
  • Controversy surrounded Surrey head coach Jack Majewski and his decision to play star player Brandon McGill in a defeat to Cheshire Phoenix on 8 December, two days after the player suffered concussion following a clash with Darius Defoe in a game against Newcastle Eagles.[14]
  • On 12 January 2014, Leicester retained the BBL Cup after beating Newcastle Eagles in the Final at the National Indoor Arena for the second year running.[15]
  • Bristol Flyers became only the second-ever lower division team to beat BBL opposition and advance to the Quarter-finals of the BBL Trophy, following their 91–75 defeat of Surrey United on 16 January.
  • Worcester Wolves claimed their first-ever BBL title with an 83–76 victory over Glasgow Rocks in the BBL Trophy Final on 30 March, in front of 5,000 people on Glasgow's home court, the Emirates Arena.[16]
  • London Lions' Joe Ikhinmwin won the annual BBL Slam Dunk Contest at Emirates Arena on 30 March.[17]
  • Leicester head coach Rob Paternostro and Sheffield Sharks head coach Atiba Lyons both reached a landmark 250th game at the helm of their respective clubs on the weekend of 5/6 April.[18]
  • The first ever competitive BBL game to be staged in Wales took place on 9 April between Cheshire Phoenix and Glasgow Rocks. The game was switched from Cheshire's usual home venue, the Northgate Arena, to the Deeside Leisure Centre in Queensferry, Flintshire due to availability issues.[19] The "home" team lost 77–90 to the visiting Glasgow Rocks.
  • Newcastle Eagles were crowned League Champions for a record sixth time following a 106–58 win away to Surrey, on 13 April.[20]
  • Durham Wildcats and the new Manchester Giants franchise (relaunched in 2012) both secured Play-off berths for the first time in their respective club history's following the conclusion of the regular season.
  • Worcester Wolves claimed their second piece of silverware for the season by beating Newcastle in the Championship Play-off Final on 12 May, with a 90–78 victory at Wembley Arena. Wolves' Zaire Taylor was named as the game's Most Valuable Player.[21]

BBL Championship (Tier 1)

Final standings

PosTeamPldWL%Pts
1Newcastle Eagles 332850.84856
2Sheffield Sharks 332760.81854
3Worcester Wolves 332760.81854
4Leicester Riders 3323100.69746
5Cheshire Phoenix 3318150.54536
6London Lions 3316170.48432
7Manchester Giants 3314190.42428
8Durham Wildcats 3314190.42428
9Plymouth Raiders 3314190.42428
10Glasgow Rocks 3313200.39426
11Surrey United 334290.1218
12Birmingham Knights 330330.0000
= League winners
= Qualified for the Play-offs

The Play-offs

  Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final
                             
Newcastle Eagles 97 97 194  
Durham Wildcats 75 82 157  
  Newcastle Eagles 79 83 (OT) 162  
  Leicester Riders 90 71 161  
Leicester Riders 88 77 164
  Cheshire Phoenix 76 56 133  
    Newcastle Eagles  
  Worcester Wolves  
  Sheffield Sharks 63 78 141  
Manchester Giants 60 78 138  
  Sheffield Sharks 59 60 119
  Worcester Wolves 79 67 146  
Worcester Wolves 92 86 178
  London Lions 78 88 166  

Quarter-finals

(1) Newcastle Eagles vs. (8) Durham Wildcats

27 April 2014
Durham Wildcats 8297 Newcastle Eagles
Newcastle wins on aggregate, 194–157

(2) Sheffield Sharks vs. (7) Manchester Giants

26 April 2014
Manchester Giants 6063 Sheffield Sharks
Wright Robinson College, Manchester
27 April 2013
Sheffield Sharks 7878 Manchester Giants
Sheffield wins on aggregate, 141–138

(3) Worcester Wolves vs. (6) London Lions

25 April 2014
London Lions 7892 Worcester Wolves
Copper Box, London
27 April 2014
Worcester Wolves 8688 London Lions
Worcester wins on aggregate, 178–166
Worcester Arena, Worcester

(4) Leicester Riders vs. (5) Cheshire Phoenix

25 April 2014
Cheshire Phoenix 7688 Leicester Riders
Northgate Arena, Chester
27 April 2014
Leicester Riders 7756 Cheshire Phoenix
Leicester wins on aggregate, 164–133
Sir David Wallace Centre, Loughborough

Semi-finals

(1) Newcastle Eagles vs. (4) Leicester Riders

1 May 2014
Leicester Riders 9079 Newcastle Eagles
Sir David Wallace Centre, Loughborough
4 May 2014
Newcastle Eagles 8371 (OT) Leicester Riders
Newcastle wins on aggregate, 162–161

(2) Sheffield Sharks vs. (3) Worcester Wolves

4 May 2014
Worcester Wolves 6760 Sheffield Sharks
Worcester wins on aggregate, 146–119
Worcester Arena, Worcester

Final

11 May 2014
3.00pm GMT
Newcastle Eagles 7890 Worcester Wolves
Scoring by quarter: 15–29, 27–19, 10–24, 26–18
Pts: Darius Defoe, 22
Rebs: Fabulous Flournoy, 10
Asts: Four players, 3
Pts: Zaire Taylor, 30
Rebs: Will Creekmore, 14
Asts: Zaire Taylor, 9

EBL National League Division 1 (Tier 2)

Final standings

PosTeamPldWL%Pts
1Reading Rockets 262240.84644
2Essex Leopards 262060.76940
3Hemel Storm 261880.69236
4Bradford Dragons 261790.65434
5Manchester Magic 2616100.61532
6Leeds Carnegie 2615110.57730
7Bristol Academy Flyers 2614120.53828
8Newham Neptunes 2613130.50026
9Tees Valley Mohawks 2612140.46224
10Worthing Thunder 2611150.42322
11Medway Park Crusaders 269170.34618
12Westminster Warriors 267190.26914
13Team Northumbria 266200.23112
14Leicester Warriors 262240.0784
= League winners
= Qualified for the Play-offs

EBL National League Division 2 (Tier 3)

Final standings

PosTeamPldWL%Pts
1Derby Trailblazers 201730.85034
2Huddersfield Heat 201550.75030
3Ipswich 201460.70028
4Brixton TopCats 201280.60024
5Loughborough University 2010100.50020
6Worcester Wolves II 209110.45018
7Eastside Eagles 209110.45018
8Derbyshire Arrows 209110.45018
9London Westside 208120.40016
10London United 206140.30012
11Mansfield Giants 201190.0502
= League winners
= Qualified for the Play-offs

BBL Cup

The winners of the four 1st Round matches were joined by Glasgow Rocks, Leicester Riders, Newcastle Eagles and Surrey United in the Quarter-finals, who received byes for finishing in the top four BBL Championship positions last season.[22] The Final was played on 12 January 2014 at the National Indoor Arena in Birmingham.

1st round

18 October 2013
Worcester Wolves 8866 Manchester Giants
Worcester Arena, Worcester
19 October 2013
Birmingham Knights 72103 Plymouth Raiders
North Solihull Sports Centre, Birmingham

Quarter-finals

2 November 2013
Leicester Riders 7462 Worcester Wolves
John Sandford Centre, Leicester
8 November 2013
Surrey United 5791 Plymouth Raiders
Surrey Sports Park, Guildford
17 November 2013
Glasgow Rocks 6981 Newcastle Eagles
Emirates Arena, Glasgow

Semi-finals

Plymouth Raiders vs. Leicester Riders

7 December 2013
Leicester Riders 10477 Plymouth Raiders
Leicester wins on aggregate, 199–166
John Sandford Centre, Leicester

Sheffield Sharks vs. Newcastle Eagles

13 December 2013
Newcastle Eagles 8457 Sheffield Sharks
Newcastle wins on aggregate, 163–139

Final

12 January 2014
3.30pm GMT
Leicester Riders 7269 Newcastle Eagles
Scoring by quarter: 14–20, 18–17, 17–21, 23–11
Pts: Jay Cousinard, 18
Rebs: Andrew Sullivan, 10
Asts: Jay Cousinard, 4
Pts: Charles Smith, 27
Rebs: Scott Martin, 13
Asts: Andrew Lasker, 4
National Indoor Arena, Birmingham

BBL Trophy

The 12 BBL clubs were joined by Bristol Flyers, Essex Leopards, Leeds Carnegie and Reading Rockets of the English Basketball League to form a straight knock-out competition. The first two rounds featured one-off games whilst the Semi-finals took place over two legs. The Final was held at the Emirates Arena in Glasgow for the second consecutive year and saw Worcester Wolves win their first silverware since joining the BBL in 2006.

1st round

16 January 2014
Bristol Flyers 9175 Surrey United
WISE Basketball Arena, Bristol
17 January 2014
Leeds Carnegie 4884 Glasgow Rocks
Carnegie Sports Centre, Leeds
19 January 2014
Essex Leopards 73101 Newcastle Eagles
Brentwood Centre, Brentwood
19 January 2014
Reading Rockets 7385 Sheffield Sharks
Rivermead Leisure Complex, Reading
19 January 2014
Manchester Giants 9174 Birmingham Knights
Wright Robinson College, Manchester
19 January 2014
Cheshire Phoenix 8678 Leicester Riders
Northgate Arena, Chester
2 February 2014
London Lions 7382 Worcester Wolves
Copper Box, London

Quarter-finals

16 February 2014
Cheshire Phoenix 8556 Bristol Flyers
Northgate Arena, Chester
23 February 2014
Manchester Giants 7173 Glasgow Rocks
Wright Robinson College, Manchester

Semi-finals

Sheffield Sharks vs. Worcester Wolves

12 March 2014
Worcester Wolves 8470 Sheffield Sharks
Worcester wins on aggregate, 146–130
Worcester Arena, Worcester

Cheshire Phoenix vs. Glasgow Rocks

9 March 2014
Cheshire Phoenix 8074 Glasgow Rocks
Northgate Arena, Chester
14 March 2014
Glasgow Rocks 9877 Cheshire Phoenix
Glasgow wins on aggregate, 172–157
Emirates Arena, Glasgow

Final

30 March 2014
3.15pm GMT
Worcester Wolves 8376 Glasgow Rocks
Scoring by quarter: 15–25, 23–19, 20–11, 25–21
Pts: Jamal Williams, 26
Rebs: Will Creekmore, 15
Asts: Zaire Taylor, 6
Pts: Gareth Murray, 21
Rebs: Fran Urli, 12
Asts: Fran Urli, 5
Emirates Arena, Glasgow

Statistics leaders

CategoryPlayerStat
Points per game Victor Moses (Cheshire Phoenix)23.2
Rebounds per game Victor Moses (Cheshire Phoenix)13.2
Assists per game Zaire Taylor (Worcester Wolves)6.9
Steals per game Zaire Taylor (Worcester Wolves)2.8
Blocks per game Mike Allison (Durham Wildcats)2.4
Field goal percentage Rashad Hassan (Leicester Riders)66.8%
Free throw percentage B.J. Holmes (Sheffield Sharks)87.1%
Three-point field goal percentage David Watts (Manchester Giants)42.8%

Monthly awards

MonthCoach of the MonthPlayer of the Month
October Paul James (Worcester Wolves) Will Creekmore (Worcester Wolves)
November Atiba Lyons (Sheffield Sharks) Victor Moses (Cheshire Phoenix)
December John Lavery (Cheshire Phoenix) Zaire Taylor (Worcester Wolves)
January Rob Paternostro (Leicester Riders) Victor Moses (Cheshire Phoenix)
February Paul James (Worcester Wolves) Victor Moses (Cheshire Phoenix)
March Fabulous Flournoy (Newcastle Eagles) Robert Marsden (Manchester Giants)

Seasonal awards

For the British Team of the Year and Defensive Team of the Year, six players were announced instead of the usual five due to a deadlock in votes cast by the BBL head coaches.[28]

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References

  1. Mark Woods (2013). "Knights in, Royals out, others wait on BBL". MVP247.com. Retrieved 1 June 2012.
  2. Rob Jeffries (2013). "Mersey Tigers "disappointed" at BBL franchise withdrawal". UK American Sports Fans. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  3. Mark Woods (2013). "Knights in, Royals out, others wait on BBL". MVP247.com. Retrieved 1 June 2013.
  4. Sam Neter (2013). "Paul Blake Steps Down to Make Way for New BBL Independent Chairman". HoopsFix.com. Retrieved 3 June 2014.
  5. Rob Jeffries (2013). "Mersey Tigers "disappointed" at BBL franchise withdrawal". UK American Sports Fans. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  6. Richard Spiller (2013). "United we stand, says Surrey's new-look basketball club". getSurrey.co.uk. Retrieved 3 June 2014.
  7. Mark Woods (2013). "Creon out amid Heat takeover". MVP247.com. Retrieved 4 June 2014.
  8. Mark Woods (2013). "Davie moves over to be Durham coach". MVP247.com. Retrieved 4 June 2014.
  9. Glenn Bryant (2013). "Plymouth Raiders sack coach Gavin Love". The Herald. Archived from the original on 13 September 2013. Retrieved 4 June 2014.
  10. Sam Neter (2013). "BBL Announces TV Deal with British Eurosport". HoopsFix.com. Retrieved 3 June 2014.
  11. Sam Neter (2013). "BBL Launches Live & On Demand Online Player". HoopsFix.com. Retrieved 3 June 2014.
  12. "Worcester Wolves 73–61 Leicester Riders". WorcesterWolves.org. 2013. Retrieved 3 June 2014.
  13. Rob Jeffries (2013). "Wolves end Riders' 34-game unbeaten home run". UK American Sports Fans. Archived from the original on 5 June 2014. Retrieved 5 June 2014.
  14. Rob Jeffries (2013). "Surrey's McGill plays in defeat to Phoenix despite "concussion"". UK American Sports Fans. Archived from the original on 5 June 2014. Retrieved 5 June 2014.
  15. Joe Townsend (2014). "Leicester overcome Newcastle in tense finish". BBC Sport. Retrieved 5 June 2014.
  16. Nigel Slater (2014). "Worcester Wolves hold nerve to win BBL Trophy". Worcester Observer. Archived from the original on 30 March 2014. Retrieved 5 June 2014.
  17. Rob Jeffries (2014). "Joe Ikhinmwin destroys Trophy dunk contest". UK American Sports Fans. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 5 June 2014.
  18. "Paternostro clocks up another big landmark with Leicester Riders". Leicester Mercury. 2014. Archived from the original on 5 June 2014. Retrieved 5 June 2014.
  19. Rob Jeffries (2014). "First ever BBL game in Wales with Nix v Rocks". UK American Sports Fans. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 5 June 2014.
  20. Mark Woods (2013). "Newcastle Eagles are BBL Champions". MVP247.com. Retrieved 4 June 2014.
  21. Sam Neter (2014). "Worcester Wolves claim 2014 BBL Playoff title". HoopsFix.com. Retrieved 5 June 2014.
  22. "BBL Cup". BBL.org.uk. 2014. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
  23. Sam Neter (2014). "Zaire Taylor Crowned BBL Player of the Year". HoopsFix.com. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  24. Paul Nilsen (2014). "Newcastle Eagles coach Fab Flournoy soaring towards more silverware". Daily Express. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  25. Jim Green (2014). "Phoenix pair named in BBL Team of the Year". Chester Chronicle. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  26. "Top team honour for Drew Sullivan". Leicester Mercury. 2014. Archived from the original on 26 May 2014. Retrieved 26 May 2014.
  27. "Plymouth Raiders' Nick George fifth in BBL British MVP vote". The Herald. 2014. Archived from the original on 26 May 2014. Retrieved 26 May 2014.
  28. Paul Blake (2014). "BBL British and Defensive Teams of the Year announced". Newcastle-Eagles.com. Retrieved 26 May 2014.
Preceded by
2012–13 season
BBL seasons
2013–14
Succeeded by
2014–15 season
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