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August 11, 2025, 2:54 am
With EuroBasket 2025 tipping off, this is your one-stop destination for in-depth previews of all 24 national teams heading into Europe’s premier basketball tournament. Whether you’re tracking MVP candidates, X’s-and-O’s brilliance, or just figuring out who might crash the medal party, our Power Rankings and team-by-team breakdowns will keep you ahead of the curve.
Italy: Dangerous When It Clicks
Group C – EuroBasket 2025 Preview
Italy enters EuroBasket 2025 with momentum and intrigue. Their qualifying path wasn’t spotless — they dropped surprising games to Hungary and Iceland — but both came under depleted conditions. At full strength, this is a fast, skilled, and well-coached group that’s trending up. With key reinforcements set to join, Italy is shaping up to be one of the tournament’s most enticing dark horses.
Best Players: Nicolò Melli was a stabilizer during qualifiers (16 EFF, 9 rebounds per game), while Spagnolo showed real go-to scoring chops at just 21. Pajola ran the offense with poise, averaging 7 assists and doing the dirty work defensively. That core alone is solid — but it’s the additions that shift the ceiling.
Roster Shake-Up and New Dynamics: Originally, Italy had penciled in NBA swingman Donte DiVincenzo as a marquee addition — a versatile two-way piece who could’ve unlocked another level with his defense, spacing, and shot-making. Unfortunately, DiVincenzo has announced he’s still recovering from injury and won’t be available. It’s a significant blow: Italy loses an elite perimeter defender, a high-level floor spacer (career 3PT threat), and a proven competitor who elevates teammates.
In his place, Italy will turn to naturalized guard Darius Thompson. While not a like-for-like replacement, Thompson offers intriguing value as a pass-first ball handler with excellent feel and pace. His presence adds a new layer to Italy’s creation game — especially useful when Pajola is off the floor or facing pressure. Where Pajola sometimes struggles with rim pressure, Thompson excels, giving Italy a secondary driver who can collapse defenses and keep the ball moving.
Path: 4–2. Italy handled Turkey with ease in both meetings and bounced back to dominate Hungary and Iceland in the return legs. Losses came in shorthanded games — no Melli vs Hungary, no Pajola or Spagnolo vs Iceland — which makes the overall record look shakier than it was.
Strengths: This team cuts hard, moves the ball well (especially in two-big actions with Ricci and Melli), and shoots it at 38% from deep — albeit on modest volume. They have positional athleticism, off-ball fluidity, and an unselfish style that’s hard to guard when shots are falling. Thompson’s ball-handling fits nicely into this free-flowing offense.
Weaknesses: The big-man rotation lacks real interior bite. They have no true rim protector, and when shots aren’t dropping, they can become too reliant on guards and secondary creation. Losing DiVincenzo also hurts their defensive ceiling and spacing — both areas he could’ve boosted significantly. Transition defense and discipline in rotations remain question marks.
Bottom Line: Italy is still built to surprise. The loss of DiVincenzo stings — there’s no sugarcoating that — but Thompson’s addition is not without value. With Fontecchio healthy and Gallinari potentially spacing the floor, this is still a clever, well-drilled group that can hang with almost anyone. They’ll need to shoot it well and stay connected defensively, but if they do, they’ll be a problem.
Expectation: The Smart, Slippery Contender
Dark horse status isn’t a cliché here. Even without DiVincenzo, this team is legit — just in a slightly different way.
This article was co-written by the hosts of the European Hoops podcast, Tiago Cordeiro and André Lemos. Subscribe to the podcast and follow European Hoops on Twitter: @EthosEuroleague.