• EuroBasket quarterfinals are where the noise starts to separate from the signal. Teams that rode hot shooting streaks or one-off matchups tend to fall away; the ones with identity, depth and a star who bends the game hold firm. On Tuesday night, Turkey and Greece checked all of those boxes. Both walked out not just with wins, but with performances that felt like punctuation marks in their national team stories.

    For Turkey, Alperen Sengun’s historic triple-double wrapped in bruising physicality, relentless activity and contributions from every corner of the rotation. For Greece, it was Giannis Antetokounmpo doing what Giannis does: bending a game until it breaks and this time with enough help around him to break a decade-and-a-half-long semifinal drought. The results: Turkey over Poland, Greece over Lithuania, set up a semifinal clash dripping with subplots, from Sengun’s orchestration to Giannis’s inevitability, with both nations just one win away from a medal.

    Turkey 91, Poland 77

    Turkey booked just their second-ever EuroBasket semifinal appearance with a convincing win over Poland, built on Alperen Sengun’s historic triple-double and a collective effort that kept the game under control after halftime.

    Turkey made a small adjustment to start, slotting Hazer into the lineup to match with Jordan Loyd, while Poland opened by running their “Spanoulis action” to free Mateusz Ponitka. Early on, Turkey’s plan was clear: hard hedge Ponitka and Loyd in ball screens, swarm the paint, and let Sengun orchestrate. The big man drew so much attention that he racked up three quick assists, while Poland leaned on Dziewa’s 11 first-half points to keep pace. The opening frame ended level at 19–19, but Turkey quickly tightened the screws. Their physicality frustrated Loyd, Poland began settling for tough looks, and turnovers mounted. Behind a 27–13 second quarter and Sengun’s all-around dominance (10/6/6 by halftime), Turkey surged to a 46–32 lead at the break.

    The third quarter brought more of the same. Sengun, used repeatedly in short-roll situations, carved up Poland’s defense with passes that generated open corner threes, and the lead ballooned to 21 midway through the frame. Poland briefly clawed back with an 8–0 run when Sengun sat, but they simply couldn’t find enough consistent offense outside Ponitka and Loyd. By the end of the quarter, Turkey still held a comfortable 65–50 cushion.

    Poland tried pressing and later top-locking Larkin to disrupt rhythm and a late push cut the margin to 10 with just over five minutes left. But Larkin responded with timely buckets and back-to-back threes inside the final minutes iced the game. Ponitka and Loyd both finished with 19, but their efforts weren’t enough to close the gap.

    Turkey’s control was rooted in the little things: a 25–5 advantage in points off turnovers, a 13–6 edge on the offensive glass and 36–26 in the paint. Sengun finished with 19 points, 12 rebounds, and 10 assists, the youngest player ever to record a EuroBasket triple-double, while six other Turkish players also scored in double figures, a testament to their balance.

    For Poland, it was another quarterfinal run but not quite the magical finish of 2022. For Turkey, it was history: their seventh straight win and a semifinal ticket that puts them one win away from a medal.

    Greece 87, Lithuania 76

    Greece booked their first EuroBasket Semi-Final appearance since 2009 behind a commanding two-way effort from Giannis Antetokounmpo.

    From the opening tip, Lithuania looked to establish Jonas Valanciunas inside, while Greece leaned on Giannis to set the tone. Valanciunas had 11 early points, but Giannis matched him with 11 of his own in the first quarter as the physical battle in the paint defined the game’s rhythm.

    In the second quarter, Greece’s shooting helped create separation. A trio of threes keyed an 11-2 run as they built a double-digit cushion, stretching the lead to 37-27 with under five minutes before halftime. Lithuania responded briefly through Valanciunas, who carried them with 15 points and 5 rebounds by the break, but Greece controlled the tempo. Turnovers and transition defense hurt Lithuania badly, they allowed 13 fast break points in the first half alone while managing just 2 themselves.

    The third quarter saw foul trouble for Dinos Mitoglou, but Greece found a lift from Kostas Antetokounmpo, who provided rim protection and energy off the bench. Giannis continued to impose his will, pushing Greece ahead 64-52 after 30 minutes. While Valanciunas kept Lithuania afloat (20 points, 9 rebounds through three quarters), their lack of perimeter shooting (just 4/13 from deep during the first 30 minutes) made it hard to close the gap against Greece’s more balanced attack.

    Lithuania made a late push, trimming the deficit to eight with just over a minute to play, but Greece calmly broke the press and sealed the game. In the end, Greece’s defensive activity and transition game proved decisive, they forced 9 steals, scored 20 fast break points and consistently capitalized on Lithuanian mistakes.

    Giannis finished with 29 points, 6 rebounds, 4 steals and a block in another dominant performance. Valanciunas was outstanding in defeat with 24 points and 15 rebounds. Vasileios Toliopoulos provided crucial spacing for Greece with 17 points on 6-of-8 shooting (3-of-4 from three), while Kostas Antetokounmpo added 4 blocks in an energetic cameo.

    With the win, Greece snapped a 16-year drought and advanced to face Türkiye in the Semi-Finals, moving within two games of their first EuroBasket crown since 2005.

    This article was written by the European Hoops team: Tiago Cordeiro, João Caeiro, Diogo Valente and André Lemos. Make sure you give us a follow on Twitter at @EthosEuroleague!