European Hoops: EuroBasket 2025 Quarterfinals Preview

The EuroBasket 2025 quarterfinals are here, and the stakes couldn’t be higher. In this episode of the European Hoops Podcast, we break down all four massive matchups:

  • Can Sengun carry Turkey to a medal?
  • Will Lithuania’s size and grit be enough to slow Giannis and Greece?
  • Is this the moment Markkanen makes history for Finland, or will Georgia’s bruising frontline shut him down?
  • And finally, the showdown everyone’s waiting for: Luka Doncic trying to topple unbeaten Germany.

We dig into the tactics, key matchups, and storylines shaping the road to the semifinals.

This episode of the European Hoops Podcast is presented by FanDuel!

Follow the podcast for more EuroBasket previews and European basketball coverage!

Subscribe and rate on Apple and Spotify, and follow @EthosEuroleague on Twitter and Instagram for Euroleague men and Women, FIBA, and Olympics updates all season long!

Follow our team: André Lemos (@andmlemos) and Tiago Cordeiro (@tiagoalex2000).

Fantasy NBA Today: Players to Avoid & Target…

Rick Kamla and Dr. A dive into the Atlantic Division, going team by team to break down which players you should target and which ones to avoid in your Fantasy Basketball drafts.

Plus, they continue the FanDuel Win Totals series with a deep look at the Oklahoma City Thunder and their lofty over/under of 62.5 wins.

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Punt Intended: ELITE Dynasty Mock Draft Review!


In this episode, Mark C breaks down his own draft in a 12-team, 18-round dynasty mock draft he conducted with various dynasty industry experts! You’ll get insights on where to select hyped rookies, how to build out your dynasty squad, and why selecting talent over fit is paramount in dynasty start-up drafts. Dynasty managers won’t want to miss this episode for all the tips, tricks, and player breakdowns!

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EuroBasket Day 11: Round of 16, Second Day

Quarterfinals are set and if there’s a through-line from a wild round of 16, it’s survival of the toughest. Poland, Georgia, Slovenia and Greece all punched their tickets on Sunday, but none of them did it cleanly and that’s exactly what makes knockout basketball so compelling. From Luka Dončić putting up another entry for the EuroBasket record books, to Georgia’s fairytale march past France, to Giannis bulldozing his way through Israel, every game came with its own cocktail of drama, grit and momentum swings.

Poland’s grind-it-out win over Bosnia & Herzegovina set the tone early, ugly stretches, momentum bursts and a captain in Mateusz Ponitka who did all the dirty work. Georgia stunned France with poise beyond their years, Slovenia nearly collapsed after a Luka masterclass opening and Greece needed every ounce of Giannis dominance to cover for shaky shooting. The margins were thin, the adjustments mattered and one key injury or hot hand swung entire games. In the end, four very different paths all led to the same place: the quarterfinals.

 

Poland 80, Bosnia & Herzegovina 72

Poland punched their ticket to the quarterfinals with a gritty 80-72 win over Bosnia & Herzegovina, a game that tested their patience, discipline and resilience.

Bosnia struck first with a 13-2 burst, powered by Jusuf Nurkić’s presence inside and John Roberson’s shot-making. They shared the ball beautifully in the first quarter, piling up seven assists while Poland looked flat and disorganized. Mateusz Ponitka tried to spark life with a couple of steals, but Poland trailed 23-14 after 10 minutes.

Adjustments slowly shifted the tide. Poland tightened their pick-and-roll defense by pushing handlers to the weak hand, while on offense they found flow with veer actions, turning ball screens into quick pin-downs. Still, the scoring load rested heavily on Jordan Loyd and Ponitka, who combined for 28 of Poland’s 40 points in the first half. Bosnia, meanwhile, leaned on Roberson’s creation whenever Nurkić sat, his floaters and threes keeping them up 44-40 at the break.

The third quarter turned into a battle of runs. Nurkić went repeatedly to work on the left block, but Poland’s faster tempo and sharper rotations helped them claw back. Ponitka’s relentless rim pressure fueled Poland’s surge, scoring 7 of 9 points in a key run that gave them their first real momentum. By the end of the period, they had flipped the game, 62-61.

Bosnia briefly regained the lead with offensive rebounds early in the fourth, but everything changed when Roberson left with a hamstring injury. Without their guard creator, Bosnia’s offense stagnated, and even Nurkić couldn’t carry them alone. Poland doubled down on smart defensive gambles, closing short against Bosnia’s weaker shooters and daring them to hesitate. The hesitation came, and with it, turnovers.

In crunch time, Ponitka and Loyd put the game away. The captain a true “Polish Army Knife,” finished with 19 points, 9 rebounds, 3 steals and endless hustle. Loyd shouldered the scoring load, hitting tough shots late, including the midrange dagger that iced it with under a minute to go. His 28 points gave Poland the steady scoring hand they had lacked earlier.

Bosnia will rue missed chances, just 55% at the free throw line (11/20) and no double-digit scorers beyond Nurkić (20) and Roberson (19). Poland, on the other hand, showed the grit that has made them dangerous in knockout play, owning the glass with 17 offensive rebounds and turning extra possessions into 16 second-chance points.

It wasn’t perfect, but Poland found a way through, leaning on their stars, rebounding and defensive adjustments to outlast a dangerous Bosnia side.

 

Georgia 80, France 70

Georgia’s magical EuroBasket run added another chapter in Riga as they stunned France to reach the quarterfinals for the first time in history. It wasn’t about overwhelming firepower, but about poise, patience and making the right plays when the game hung in the balance.

From the opening minutes, Georgia set the tone defensively by packing the paint and forcing France into difficult halfcourt possessions. The French length and athleticism were neutralized by Georgia’s ball movement and discipline, as they consistently worked for clean looks. Yabusele had an early burst with 10 points in the first quarter, but his scoring dried up, and France struggled to find rhythm outside of transition and offensive rebounds. Georgia’s 5-of-10 three-point shooting in the first half proved critical in offsetting France’s 11–2 transition edge, and they carried a 38–37 lead into halftime with Goga Bitadze still scoreless.

The second half became a grind. Georgia deliberately looked to get Bitadze going, but neither side found easy baskets. With under four minutes left, Elie Okobo’s drive on Bitadze tied the game at 68, setting up a tense finish. Out of a timeout, Georgia executed perfectly, springing Tornike Shengelia for a clutch three that gave them back the lead. Moments later, Bitadze erased a French attempt at the rim with a massive block and Kamar Baldwin followed by drawing a foul on a three-point attempt. His free throws pushed the margin to six with just over a minute left. Bitadze then punctuated the night with a thunderous dunk to seal an unforgettable 80–70 victory.

The stat line told the story of Georgia’s composure: they controlled the tempo, led for nearly 32 minutes and knocked down 55.6% of their threes (10-of-18). France, by contrast, misfired all night from deep at just 16.7% (6-of-36). Baldwin and Shengelia carried the offensive load with 24 points each, while Georgia’s collective execution ensured they stayed steady even when France rallied late.

For France, transition bursts and second-chance points kept them in it, but without consistency in the halfcourt and no answers for Georgia’s shotmaking under pressure, their tournament came to a sudden end.

Georgia, already giant-killers after beating Spain on opening day, now add France to their list. In only their sixth EuroBasket appearance, they’ve reached the last eight and they did it with toughness, unity and a fearless approach. The chants of “Sakartvelo!” from the stands told the rest of the story: this team believes and the dream lives on against Finland in the quarterfinals.

Slovenia 84, Italy 77

Slovenia are through to the quarterfinals, but it was far from routine. What looked like an early rout turned into a grind, before Luka Dončić once again put the team on his back.

Slovenia came out flying after Italy’s first two possessions ended in turnovers. Dončić scored 22 in the opening quarter, ripping apart switches and forcing Italy into sloppy play (six turnovers in the frame). With their switching scheme leaving him favorable matchups almost every trip, it was simply the Luka show. Slovenia led 29-11 after ten minutes.

Pozzecco’s side finally showed their bite in the second quarter, ratcheting up full-court pressure and “weaking” most pick-and-rolls while hard-hedging Dončić. Fontecchio fueled the response with 11 points in the quarter in a variety of roles, from spot-ups to on-ball creation. Italy cut it to 10 at the break, 50-40.

Slovenia regained control in the third. They worked Dončić into the post off cross-screens and when he sat, Prepelic delivered two big threes. Alen Omić’s energy was massive, grabbing three straight offensive rebounds that turned into five points in a key stretch. By the end of the third, the lead was back to 16 (72-56).

Italy wouldn’t go away. Niang and Gallinari spearheaded a furious rally to open the fourth, getting downhill, drawing fouls, and living at the line. They combined for 13 of Italy’s 16 points in just over five minutes, cutting the gap to one. Slovenia, meanwhile, sputtered, turnovers, rushed shots and a 3-of-12 mark from the field in the quarter.

In the final minutes, Slovenia went small with Muric at the five after Krampelj fouled out, trying to survive on switching defense. Niang fouled out with 1:40 left, and despite Gallo pushing until the end, Dončić iced it at the free-throw line.

Dončić finished with 42 points, 10 rebounds and 3 steals, five points shy of his EuroBasket record from 2022, cementing one of the all-time knockout game performances. Prepelic added 11, Omić chipped in with hustle plays and Slovenia owned the glass with 15 offensive boards. Italy’s Fontecchio led them with 22, while Niang and Gallinari both hit double figures in the rally.

Slovenia bent, but with Luka in this form, they did not break.

Greece 84, Israel 79

Greece booked their spot in the quarterfinals with a hard-fought win over Israel, leaning heavily on Giannis Antetokounmpo’s dominance inside to overcome shaky perimeter shooting.

Israel opened with Itay Segev in the lineup to match Giannis physically, but it made little difference. From the start Greece sent wave after wave of rim pressure, while defensively they collapsed hard on Deni Avdija, daring Israel’s supporting cast to hit shots. Kostas Papanikolaou set the tone early with physical defense on Avdija, and Giannis powered his way to 21 first-half points. By contrast, Israel’s only consistent bright spot in the opening quarter was Tomer Ginat, who found success attacking Mitoglou. Still, Greece’s transition game was rolling (11 fast-break points in the first) and they led 28-22 after 10 minutes.

Carrington’s offense from the bench and a short stint in a 2-3 matchup zone helped Israel stay connected in the second, but their late double-teams on Giannis came far too late. He kept bullying his way to deep seals and easy finishes. Greece shot just 44% from the free-throw line in the half, which kept the margin at 50-41.

The third quarter turned scrappy, with both teams piling up turnovers (10 combined). Israel briefly cut the gap to two (60-58), but a quick burst from the Greek bench, Sloukas, Samodurov and Kostas Antetokounmpo, restored an 8-point cushion heading into the final period.

Greece then started the fourth with three offensive rebounds in two minutes, keeping Israel at arm’s length. Israel’s traps and late-game pressure forced some miscues, but they never fully committed to fouling despite Greece’s struggles at the line. That hesitation proved costly: an offensive rebound and putback in the final minute sealed it, pushing the lead back to eight.

Giannis finished with 37 points on 18-of-23 shooting and 10 rebounds, utterly unstoppable around the rim. Greece shot just 16% from deep and 50% at the line, but their 45–30 rebounding edge (18 offensive boards) and 58 points in the paint outweighed those issues. Giannis’s counterpart for Israel was Avdija, who fought to 22 points, with Ginat and Sorkin chipping in 15 apiece.

Israel had their chances but never found an answer for Giannis, who carried Greece into a quarterfinal clash with Lithuania.

 

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!

Fantasy MLB Today: Bradish Fiction (September 9 streams)

Anthony Kates hosts the latest episode of Fantasy MLB Today, “Bradish Fiction.” With only three weeks remaining and a busy Tuesday ahead, he was able to find three arms he trusts to stream early in your matchups. Listen in to find out who they are!

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Fantasy MLB Today: Orange Bergert (September 8 streams)

Paul Williamson dives into his three recommended streams for Monday. He goes back to the well and recommends two familiar names and another name sitting at just 10% rostered in Yahoo leagues. He then dives into two names that he is watching closely in September to see how they finish to determine their 2026 draft value.

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WarriorsCast: The Kuminga Stalemate

Sam Orlik is back to break down the Kuminga saga with just a month before training camp kicks off!

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EuroBasket Day 10: Round of 16, First Day

Turkey 85, Sweden 79

Sweden came into this Round of 16 clash with clarity and confidence, executing their offense with discipline in the first half. They attacked the rim, shared the ball and found good looks, while also limiting Alperen Sengun’s playmaking opportunities by crowding the paint. Cedi Osman carried Turkey early with 11 points in under 9 minutes, but foul trouble kept him on the bench. Sweden’s deliberate approach, led by Simon Birgander’s interior presence and Pelle Larsson’s steady guard play, earned them a 42–37 halftime lead.

Turkey came out of the locker room with urgency, but their offense was initially rushed and stagnant. The shift came when they cranked up the defensive pressure, forcing Sweden into turnovers and disrupting their rhythm. A key tactical adjustment, using Ercan Osmani as a passer to feed the post, helped free Sengun from Sweden’s traps. That opened the door for a 14-0 surge that flipped the game, capped by an Osmani corner three that put Turkey in front. By the end of the third, Sengun had fully grown into the role of offensive hub, controlling the glass and creating second-chance opportunities.

The fourth quarter was a battle. Sweden’s cutting and ball movement kept producing easy looks, Hakanson and Larsson hit timely shots to tie the game multiple times. Birgander, even while managing foul trouble, was immense with blocks, rebounds and effort plays. But Sengun answered every challenge, tipping in misses, drawing attention in the post and even delivering a late block that turned into a transition score. With Shane Larkin steady in the closing possessions adding key free throws, Turkey finally held off Sweden’s push.

Sengun was the difference, finishing with 24 points, 16 rebounds, and 6 assists in 35 minutes, showing both endurance and poise. Turkey’s rebounding edge (45–33, including 18 offensive boards) and 16 second-chance points were decisive against a Swedish team that shared the ball beautifully (22 assists) but couldn’t overcome foul trouble and lapses under pressure.

Sweden left the tournament with their style on full display, five players in double figures, constant movement and a fearless approach, but it was Turkey’s interior strength and Sengun’s takeover that pushed them back into the EuroBasket Quarter-Finals for the first time since 2009.

Germany 85, Portugal 58

Portugal came out fearless, opening on a 7–2 run as Neemias Queta stepped out to drain a three and the team pushed the pace in transition. Germany’s plan was clear: stretch the floor with Daniel Theis to pull Queta out of the paint. But with both teams starting ice cold from deep (1-for-10 apiece), the game quickly became a grind.

Portugal looked the sharper side early, stringing together a 12–4 run through stagger actions and disciplined defense, while Germany’s wings were too much of a mismatch for the smaller Portuguese perimeter. Queta anchored things inside and by halftime Germany was stuck at just 31 points, shooting 1-for-17 from three. Portugal’s second unit carried their weight as well, outscoring Germany’s bench 17–5 by the end of the third quarter.

Germany tried to crank up the pressure with high hedges in pick-and-roll coverage, but Portugal’s guards consistently found Queta on the roll or via lob. It wasn’t until the fourth that the tide turned. Maodo Lo finally broke Germany’s drought with back-to-back threes, sparking a run Portugal couldn’t answer. Fatigue and lack of shot creation showed for the underdogs, as they shot just 3-for-17 in the final quarter and committed a rash of turnovers.

Germany, still cold from deep overall (10-for-36), leaned on their size, defense and late shot-making. Lo’s threes opened the floodgates, Franz Wagner brought steady all-around impact, as the bench finally came alive with 25 points late in the second half after being invisible for three quarters.

Queta’s 18 points and 11 rebounds highlighted Portugal’s fight and their defensive switching ability kept them in the game until late. But Germany’s depth, physicality and ability to finally string together outside shots proved decisive, as the reigning world champions turned a scare into a comfortable win to reach their third straight EuroBasket Quarterfinal.

Lithuania 88, Latvia 79

The Baltic derby delivered the intensity everyone expected, but Lithuania were sharper from the opening tip and never trailed on their way to the Quarter-Finals. Both teams came out firing, Lithuania hit their first three threes, Latvia knocked down two of their first three, but Lithuania’s defensive scheme on Kristaps Porziņģis set the tone. By switching everything onto him, they disrupted his rhythm early and with Jonas Valančiūnas starting the game on the bench, Lithuania kept their coverages mobile. When rotations broke down, Porziņģis did find looks, but overall Latvia were pushed into late-clock situations and poor two-point shooting (2-for-8 in the first quarter).

On the other end, Lithuania leaned on Arnas Velička to fill Rokas Jokubaitis’ role, and he delivered with rim pressure, playmaking, and composure. Deividas Sirvydis brought energy defensively and timely shooting, helping Lithuania hold their edge while Latvia opened the second quarter with a 6-0 burst. Still, Latvia’s offense never flowed the way it usually does, their trademark off-ball movement was absent, largely due to Lithuania’s physical defense.

Valančiūnas was used in short, targeted stretches, bringing power inside when Lithuania needed it. By the end of the third, he had only nine minutes but provided a momentum play with an and-one at the shot clock buzzer that pushed the gap back into double digits. Latvia, meanwhile, leaned heavily on Porziņģis, who carried their scoring load but often stood alone in terms of energy and efficiency.

The fourth quarter brought heavy pressure. Lithuania went 0-for-5 from deep, while Latvia cranked up a full-court 2-2-1 zone press before switching to intense half-court man-to-man defense to force mistakes. The hosts clawed back within seven with three minutes left, but lapses, including a turnover immediately after a drawn-up sideline play, undercut their push. Lithuania’s discipline inside proved decisive, with 40 points in the paint compared to Latvia’s 28, while Velička and Ažuolas Tubelis made big late buckets to close it out.

Porziņģis’ 34 points and 19 rebounds gave hope to Latvia, but Lithuania’s balance and defensive edge carried them through. Velička’s 21 points, 12 assists and 5 rebounds made him the game’s quiet star, seamlessly stepping into Jokubaitis’ shoes and guiding Lithuania back to the EuroBasket Quarter-Finals for the first time since 2015.

 

Finland 92, Serbia 86

Finland delivered the shock of the Round of 16 by outlasting Serbia, and they did it their way, fast, fearless and firing from deep. The Susijengi opened with six threes in the first quarter, using the mobility of Lauri Markkanen and Mikael Jantunen to pull Serbia’s frontcourt into space. Serbia switched nearly everything, but those switches only created mismatches Finland was happy to hunt.

The second quarter swung the other way. Finland’s defense slipped, their shot selection leaned too heavily on threes, and they went scoreless for stretches. Serbia’s size with Nikola Milutinov and Nikola Jokić began to tell, racking up paint points. Finland struggled most in the minutes without Little, when their lack of a true playmaking guard showed. A Jokić technical briefly gave Finland a spark, and with turnovers feeding their transition game, Markkanen began to take over, already up to 14 points by halftime despite Serbia’s edge inside.

Serbia’s adjustments out of the break put the ball more often in Nikola Jović’s hands, and he made them pay with perimeter shot-making. But when Jokić picked up his third foul early, Finland smelled opportunity. They pressed, ran, and threw bodies at Jokić to force him away from his comfort zones. Sasu Salin found his rhythm from three and the Finns leaned into a simple formula: defend hard, shoot threes, foul Jokić if necessary. Jokić spent plenty of time at the free-throw line, though he missed several, keeping alive the idea of fouling him if necessary.

The fourth quarter brought both drama and resilience. Markkanen took a knock to his knee and wasn’t at full capacity, forcing others to step forward. Miro Muuriinen sparked Finland with energy, and Elias Valtonen, who Serbia had stashed Jokić on defensively, turned that matchup into gold. Exploiting Jokić’s slow closeouts, Valtonen came up huge in crunch time, attacking off the dribble and knocking down two big threes along with a pair of layups.

While Serbia relied almost exclusively on Jokić (33 points) and Jović (20), their late-game execution faltered. Instead of riding Jokić inside, possessions drifted to secondary creators. Marko Gudurić couldn’t deliver and without Bogdan Bogdanović, Serbia lacked a perimeter closer.

Finland, meanwhile, leaned on their depth and hustle, 20 offensive rebounds, transition pressure, and just enough timely shot-making. Markkanen’s 29 points set the tone, but it was Valtonen’s clutch buckets and Finland’s collective commitment to make Jokić work alone that sealed one of EuroBasket’s biggest upsets in years.

 

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!

Fantasy MLB Today: Sproat Goat (September 7 streams)

Anthony Kates hosts the latest episode of Fantasy MLB Today, “Sproat Goat.” Sundays are busy busy baseball days and this Sunday is not different. Anthony was able to find three pitching streams for this Sunday, a trio of rookies, including one making his big league debut.

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EuroBasket 2025 Group Stage Surprises, Disappointments & Round…

In this episode of the European Hoops Podcast, hosts André Lemos and Tiago Cordeiro break down all the action from the EuroBasket 2025 group stage. From Portugal’s historic qualification and Germany unstoppable group stage performance, to Lithuania’s exciting style of play and Bosnia’s rise, we highlight the biggest surprises and disappointments across Groups A–D.

We also dive into key storylines shaping the knockout rounds:

  • Can Serbia survive without Bogdanovic?
  • Is Turkey a real title contender?
  • Which teams were overrated or underrated in our power rankings?
  • How much will injuries to stars like Jokubaitis impact the tournament?

Finally, we preview the Round of 16 matchups, update our bracket predictions, and discuss who might be on track for the quarterfinals, semifinals, and medals.

This episode of the European Hoops Podcast is presented by FanDuel!

Follow the podcast for more EuroBasket previews and European basketball coverage!

Subscribe and rate on Apple and Spotify, and follow @EthosEuroleague on Twitter and Instagram for Euroleague men and Women, FIBA, and Olympics updates all season long!

Follow our team: André Lemos (@andmlemos) and Tiago Cordeiro (@tiagoalex2000).

Fantasy NBA Today: Players to Avoid & Target…

Rick Kamla and Dr. A dive into the Atlantic Division, going team by team to break down which players you should target and which ones to avoid in your Fantasy Basketball drafts.

Plus, they continue the FanDuel Win Totals series with a deep look at the Oklahoma City Thunder and their lofty over/under of 62.5 wins.

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Fantasy MLB Today: Let Me See that Tong…

Paul Williamson delivers three pitcher streaming recommendations for Saturday, including one arm that is just 6% rostered in Yahoo leagues. He then continues to look ahead to 2026 as he dives into two bats that have had down 2025s but should be in for a bounce back in 2026.

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EuroBasket Day 9: The Good, The Bad and…

The group stage is officially in the books, and it went out with a bang. On the final day of Groups C and D, we saw Luka Dončić do Luka Dončić things, jaw-dropping stepbacks, no-look passes, the works, but the bigger story might be what unfolded around him. Greece quietly handled business against the defending champs, signaling they’re more than just a supporting cast in this tournament. Meanwhile, Bosnia & Herzegovina reminded us what unselfish, flowing team basketball looks like, and France? Well, France reminded everyone why they’re still the team to beat, imposing their will on both ends of the floor. In short, it was a day of clarity: individual brilliance, tactical mastery and a few statement games that might reshape the knockout picture.

 

Bosnia & Herzegovina 84, Georgia 76

Bosnia & Herzegovina came out sharp, drilling three of their first four from deep accounting for 9 out of their first 10 points in the game, leaning on Nurkić as a pick-and-pop hub. That early efficiency built a 20–15 lead after the first quarter. Georgia, meanwhile, ran nearly everything through Toko Shengelia, but outside of the occasional Spain pick-and-roll they struggled to find balance, while lapses in focus, like a wasted transition three late in the quarter and an unnecessary take foul, undercut their start.

Bosnia’s offensive rhythm carried into the second. A slick ATO sequence (DHO into Spain action) produced a layup and sparked a 9–2 run, stretching the lead to double digits. Georgia’s over-helping and slow rotations were repeatedly punished, as Bosnia’s ball movement piled up 14 first-half assists and shooting numbers of 52% from the field and 44% from three. Mamukelashvili had only four attempts in the half, while Shengelia forced tough looks. At the break, Bosnia & Herzegovina led 47–35.

Georgia responded with urgency out of halftime, tightening the defense to generate four steals and six turnovers in the third quarter. That energy fueled their best stretch, cutting the deficit all the way down to two (67–65) heading into the fourth, largely by attacking switches and posting up Shengelia against guards.

The fourth quarter, though, belonged to Bosnia & Herzegovina. Baldwin briefly pushed Georgia ahead with a quick burst, but Nurkić reasserted himself inside with scoring and rebounding, while Roberson and Lazić buried timely threes to flip the momentum back. Georgia’s offense again bogged down into static isolations and poor spacing, and a Roberson jumper out of a baseline set effectively sealed the win.

Bosnia’s balance was decisive: 26 assists, 21 bench points to Georgia’s four, and a 14-7 edge in made threes. Nurkić posted 15 and 12, Roberson added 15 with four triples, and the supporting cast all chipped in. Georgia’s trio of Mamukelashvili (20), Baldwin (18), and Bitadze (16) combined for 53, but Shengelia never found rhythm (2/11 FG). Bosnia’s win not only showcased execution and depth, it secured their first trip to the EuroBasket knockout stage since 1993.

 

France 114, Iceland 74

France came out with complete authority, blitzing Iceland 36–9 in the first quarter and never letting the game drift from their control. Their pressure defense forced turnovers, they ran off every miss and by the time the first frame closed it already felt decided.

Iceland did manage to find some offense in the second quarter, but France kept scoring with ease, stretching the margin to 66–34 by halftime. The pattern held after the break, France’s size and athleticism allowed them to dominate the paint, punish Iceland on the glass, and generate easy buckets from live-ball turnovers.

By the end of the third, the gap had only grown wider. The only moment Iceland had to savor came in the final period, when they outscored France 28–24, giving their fans in Katowice something to cheer in an otherwise one-sided affair.

France’s control was total. They owned the interior, overwhelmed Iceland with waves of bench production, and turned defense into offense all night long. Eight different players hit double figures, with Zaccharie Risacher standing out in limited minutes.

For France, it was less about the scoreline than about sharpening their identity, relentless defense, unselfish offense and depth that few teams can match. For Iceland, it was the end of a winless campaign, but not without pride, their effort and tempo won the admiration of the crowd, even against an opponent operating at full throttle.

 

Slovenia 106, Israel 96

Israel opened by putting Zoosman on Dončić, denying catches and doubling him in pick-and-rolls, while Avdija drove their offense with repeated attacks on the paint (11 of Israel’s 22 first-quarter points). Slovenia answered by running every chance they got, piling up nine fast-break points in the opening frame. They adjusted smartly when Luka was doubled, moving the ball and even using him as a screener to roll into post-ups. Offensive rebounding (5 OReb, 8 second-chance points) gave Slovenia an edge and they led 26–22 after one.

In the second, Israel tried to disrupt rhythm with a Box-and-1 on Luka, but Slovenia’s response was sharp. Dončić knocked down his first three after four misses and Slovenia strung together a 6–1 run out of timeout. Their defense tightened, forcing misses and holding Israel scoreless for long stretches. Luka was already up to 24/6/6 at the half, with Slovenia hitting 12/15 inside the arc and their bench chipping in 14 points. Israel’s 13 offensive rebounds were their lifeline, led by Avdija’s 19 first-half points, but they trailed 56–43.

Israel threw a curveball to start the third, giving Palatin more minutes than he had been getting in the tournament and tasking him with hounding Luka, while also knocking down two threes. They also flattened their pick-and-roll coverage, keeping the big at the level. Luka’s foul trouble (two quick ones, reaching four with 5:38 left) changed the quarter, but Slovenia leaned on Nikolić, who scored eight and stabilized them. Even with Luka on the bench late, Slovenia won those minutes 8–4 and entered the fourth up 79–65.

The game tightened in the fourth when Slovenia missed their first three triples and Israel ripped off a 13–4 run cutting the margin to five with Luka still out. As soon as he checked back in, he orchestrated everything: scoring, assisting and controlling tempo. Israel tried to pressure full-court and trap in the half-court, even targeting Luka to draw a fifth foul, but he held firm and baited Avdija into tough shots. A quick 5–0 burst after a timeout restored control, and Luka’s dagger in the final minutes closed it out.

Slovenia finished with 28 assists and five players in double figures, but the story was Luka: 37 points, 11 boards, 9 assists, one dime shy of making EuroBasket history with a second triple-double. Israel’s fight was anchored by Avdija’s 34 and 9, plus a relentless 21 offensive rebounds, but their inefficiency around the rim and at the line kept them from pulling the upset. Slovenia’s third straight win secured third place in Group D, while Israel settled for fourth.

 

Italy 89, Cyprus 54

Italy closed out the group stage in complete control, never allowing the hosts a real chance to make it a contest. After Cyprus scored the game’s opening basket, Italy immediately ripped off a 19–2 run and set the tone with a 24–6 first quarter. From there, the Azzurri managed the game, never loosening their grip.

The second quarter was the only stretch where Cyprus could stabilize, holding Italy to 16 points, but it was more about Italy easing up than any real momentum shift. Once the teams came out of halftime, Italy reasserted themselves, using their ball movement and depth to push the lead further, before finishing with another decisive fourth quarter.

Italy’s performance wasn’t built on hot shooting, they hit just 29% from three, but on balance, execution, and effort. They owned the glass (48–30), punished Cyprus with second-chance points, and shared the ball selflessly (26 assists to just 6 turnovers). Cyprus, by contrast, struggled to create much offensively, finishing with only 11 assists all game.

It was another display of Italy’s collective identity. Even without lights-out shooting, their defense, rebounding, and playmaking carried them to a fourth straight win. For Cyprus, it was the end of a historic first EuroBasket appearance, one where the results didn’t go their way but the energy and commitment left a positive mark on their home crowd.

Italy now head to Riga with confidence, looking like a team that has found its rhythm at the right time.

 

Greece 90, Spain 86

From the start, Greece turned Spain’s defensive plan on its head. Spain collapsed two and even three defenders onto Giannis in the paint, but that left the perimeter wide open. Greece punished it immediately, 8-for-10 from deep in the first quarter, with Tyler Dorsey hitting four threes on his way to 14 points. Spain, meanwhile, barely looked at the arc (only three attempts in the quarter) and couldn’t generate stops, trailing 30–18 after one.

The second quarter was a story of runs. López-Arostegui provided an important spark off the bench, helping Spain trim the deficit. But when Greece’s starters returned, the barrage resumed. Giannis shifted into playmaker mode, picking apart traps with six first-half assists, and Greece closed the half shooting 10-for-15 from deep to lead 50–36. Spain’s missed free throws (7-for-14 in the half) added to their frustration.

Spain regrouped after halftime with urgency, tightening up defensively and winning the third quarter 28–18. By midway through the fourth, the comeback was complete, tying it at 71, then briefly taking leads at 73–72 and 82–81. But each time Greece steadied. Giannis delivered in crunch time, scoring key baskets and controlling the glass, while Dorsey added timely shooting. Spain’s free throw woes haunted them in the final minute, Juancho Hernangómez missed three at the line with his team down four, sealing their fate.

Greece finished at 48% from deep and 53% overall, with Giannis on the edge of a triple-double (25 points, 14 boards, 9 assists) and Dorsey supplying 22 on 6-of-9 from three. Spain stayed alive with elite ball security (only 7 turnovers) but couldn’t overcome their 21-for-37 night at the stripe.

The result knocked out the reigning champions and sent Greece through as Group C winners. It was a performance built on a blistering start, unselfish ball movement and their stars rising when it mattered most.

 

Belgium 70, Poland 69

Belgium closed their EuroBasket campaign on a high, beathing the hosts Poland in a nail-biter decided by Emmanuel Lecomte’s poise in the final seconds.

Poland had the better start, taking the first quarter 17–16, but Belgium responded in the second. Their defense tightened up, their ball movement created rhythm and a 23–16 period gave them a 39–33 lead at the break.

The hosts found their footing after halftime, using a 25–19 third quarter to erase the gap and tie the game at 58 heading into the final frame. From there, it turned into a grind: neither side able to get separation, both trading stops and missed chances.

With just seconds left, it was Lecomte who made the difference. His mid-range game had been on all night, and with 3 seconds to play he calmly rose up and hit the decisive jumper to seal it. He finished with 19 points, giving Belgium the offensive punch they needed.

The Lions’ defense and Poland’s cold perimeter shooting proved just as crucial. Belgium held their opponents to 38% from the field and just 4-of-25 from deep. Jordan Loyd never found his rhythm, finishing with only 7 points, while Mateusz Ponitka once again carried the load (16 points, 9 boards, 5 assists). Poland’s advantage inside (36–14 points in the paint) wasn’t enough to overcome the shooting disparity, as Belgium hit 11 threes at over 40%.

For Belgium, it was a night to show pride and spirit even with elimination already confirmed. For Poland, it was a stumble that didn’t change their path, they still advance to the Round of 16 as the No. 2 seed from Group D, but with some lingering questions after this flat performance.

 

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!

HawksCast: Talking EuroBasket 2025 With Kevin Chouinard

In this episode, Kevin Chouinard — Hawks.com writer and host of the ATL and 29 podcast — joins Tim to discuss the three Atlanta Hawks players competing in EuroBasket 2025. They also break down what they’ve seen from Kristaps Porziņģis and Zaccharie Risacher during the tournament, and what to expect from them in the upcoming season.

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Fantasy NBA Today: Players to Avoid & Target…

Rick Kamla and Dr. A are here with the latest news from around the NBA and its fantasy impact. They also continue their new series on fantasy draft strategy, focusing on the Southeast Division. They’ll go team by team, breaking down who you should target and who you should avoid at their current ADP.

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