• The Game of week 21:

    Paris vs Panathinaikos

    This one opened at full throttle. Paris, as usual, was the main driver of the tempo, but Panathinaikos did not blink. They ran with them. The first quarter turned into a shot making contest, Paris lighting it up from deep, six of ten from three, while the Greens managed two of six. Beyond the arc, both offenses were sharp. Panathinaikos leaned inside, exploiting real advantages in the paint through Holmes, and for stretches that balance kept them afloat.

    Nigel Hayes Davis made his debut in green, starting at the four alongside Cedi Osman at the three. Paris pressed full court, trying to speed up the decision making of the Greek guards, but they stayed poised. Turnovers were low. Execution was solid. The difference was shot profile.

    Paris found a groove in the pick and roll, repeatedly hitting Dokossi as the roller. Six quick points came almost exclusively from that action, and just like that the lead ballooned to ten. Panathinaikos adjusted, switching instead of blitzing the coverage, but the damage had been done. By halftime, Paris was up 13, shooting the lights out at 10 of 22 from three.

    The script held in the second half. Paris kept doing Paris things. The defense was good enough in spurts, forcing Panathinaikos to grind for every touch. Then Rogkavopoulos flipped the energy. Two forced turnovers, a quick swing, and the deficit was down to eight. Momentum teased a shift. Paris answered the only way they know how, from behind the arc again.

    In the fourth, the lead stretched further, fueled in part by Panathinaikos failing to run back in transition, a dangerous habit against the fastest team in the league. Offensively, the Greens relied heavily on individual talent. The fit with Hayes Davis looked clunky for most of the night, until the final five minutes. That is when he turned aggressive, hunting shots, scoring almost 13 straight points to cut the margin to four.

    Paris began to look tight, committing too many offensive mistakes. Rogkavopoulos drilled a three with 40 seconds left to trim the lead to two. Tension everywhere. Ataman was ejected. A foul sent Paris to the line, and that was effectively the end.

    In the end, pace and shooting carried the day. Paris’ ability to stretch the floor and play fast proved too much. Still, that late surge from Hayes Davis leaves a trace of optimism. For Panathinaikos, it might be a glimpse that the best is yet to come.

     

    Key Performances of the Past Week:

    Talen Horton-Tucker vs Partizan

    Once a promising Lakers prospect, now thriving in Turkish lands, Talen Horton-Tucker looks like a player who believes the stage belongs to him. Against Partizan he delivered 29 points on a blistering 10 of 12 from the field, and in a tight game he was clearly the best player on the court when it mattered most.

    The scoring jumps off the page, but the rest of the box score fills up quickly too. Horton-Tucker has that rare build that feels almost unfair at this level. Too strong for most guards, too explosive for many forwards, he lives in the paint and lives at the line. The amount of fouls he draws is not an accident, it is a byproduct of pressure. Constant, downhill pressure.

    This is the kind of performance that makes you wonder about ceilings. MVP chatter may sound ambitious, but nights like this are how those conversations begin. When the game tightened, he did not. He closed it.

    Paris Backcourt vs Panathinaikos

    Sometimes dominance does not scream at you from the points column. Nadir Hifi, Rodions Rhoden and Justin Robinson combined for 43 points against Panathinaikos. On the surface, that might not seem outrageous. Dig a little deeper.

    They handed out 16 assists. They committed just five turnovers. That is control. That is orchestration.

    Those three bent the defense over and over again. Drives that collapsed the paint. Kicks that found shooters. Secondary actions that turned small advantages into clean looks. They created opportunities beyond their own scoring, and they appeared exactly when Paris needed them most.

    Defensively, they held up well enough to keep the structure intact. Offensively, they were the engine. Not just buckets, but decisions. Not just highlights, but command.

     

    Standings Watch:

    Does anyone remember Crvena Zvezda struggling? It feels like a different season.

    Not long ago, there were whispers that their run was over. Some bad mouths, us included, wondered if the hole had grown too deep. Fast forward to now and the picture looks very different. Zvezda has won six of its last eight games, and the climb back into relevance has been powered by an offense that has ranged from good to flat-out elite on certain nights.

    The two losses in that stretch came against Olympiacos and Maccabi, and even in those games they competed until the final possessions. There is no sense of folding. No sense of drift.

    The biggest shift shows up in the flow. The ball is moving again. The offense feels more fluid, less sticky. Decisions are quicker, advantages are shared, and the result is a unit that looks connected. The defense has been somewhat better, not dominant but sturdier, enough to give the offense room to breathe.

    This is what late-season traction looks like. A team left for dead finding rhythm, finding belief, and suddenly becoming a problem in the standings.

     

    Games to Watch Week 22:

    Olympiacos vs Panathinaikos

    This one needs no marketing campaign. Greek derby. Same city that will host this season’s Final Four. Everything else is background noise.

    In EuroLeague play, the recent trend has leaned red. The last five meetings have all gone Olympiacos’ way. That matters. Patterns matter. Especially in rivalries where every possession feels heavier than usual.

    Panathinaikos comes in walking a tightrope. Three straight losses. The two wins before that came by a single point each. Their margin of error is paper thin right now. Every defensive lapse, every empty trip, it all compounds. On the bright side, the Greens did take the last matchup in the Greek Cup Final, so there is at least recent proof that they can land a punch.

    Injuries will shape the chessboard. Olympiacos will be without Milutinov, and that absence shifts the interior equation. Rebounding, rim presence, second chances. Those details add up quickly in a derby.

    And then there is the Nigel Hayes Davis factor. We have not seen him in this matchup wearing a Panathinaikos jersey. That alone introduces intrigue. On paper, he looks like one of the more natural options to match up with Sasha on both ends, someone who can absorb the physicality defensively and test him the other way.

    Form says one thing. Rivalry says another. Add injuries, recent momentum swings, and a new piece stepping into the spotlight, and uncertainty becomes the headline.

     

    Biggest News Around EuroLeague

    McKinley Wright IV has his fingerprints all over Dubai Basketball’s perfect February.

    Four games. Four wins. One MVP of the Month award.

    Wright averaged 14 points and 5.5 assists, posting an 18.8 PIR while steering the ship with efficiency and control. The scoring came within the flow. Sixty four percent inside the arc. Sixty six point seven percent from three. Those are video game splits for a lead guard operating against high level EuroLeague defenses. Add a +14.4 average plus minus and you start to see the full picture. He was not just producing. He was tilting games.

    Dubai’s 4-0 run was not built on soft landings. They took down Olympiacos in overtime 108-98. They beat Real Madrid 93-85. They went on the road and handled EA7 Emporio Armani Milan 96-78. They closed the month with a 96-85 win over LDLC ASVEL Villeurbanne. That is a heavyweight stretch, and Wright was the constant through it all.

    What stands out is the control. The limited mistakes. The sense that the tempo bent to his will. He scored when necessary, created when the defense shifted, and never let the game speed him up.

    The standings reflect it. Dubai climbed to 11th at 15-14, just one win behind AS Monaco and Panathinaikos in the playoff chase. February did not just bring an individual award. It injected real belief into a team that now sees the postseason within reach.

     

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