2007–08 British Basketball League season

The 2007–08 BBL season, the 21st since the establishment of the British Basketball League, commenced on 9 September 2007, when the Plymouth Raiders succumbed to the Guildford Heat in the inaugural Cup Winners' Cup competition. The regular season started two weeks later on 21 September with 12 teams including new additions Birmingham Panthers, Everton Tigers and London Capital the later of whom stepped up from EBL Division 1 during the summer. After just one season in the top-flight, London United were forced to drop out due to the loss of its financial backer just weeks before the start of the season.[1]

2007–08 BBL season
LeagueBritish Basketball League
SportBasketball
Roll of Honour
BBL championsNewcastle Eagles
Play Off's championsGuildford Heat
BBL Cup championsMilton Keynes Lions
BBL Trophy championsGuildford Heat
British Basketball League seasons

Guildford's participation in the ULEB Cup saw a British team return to European competition for the first time since Brighton Bears' appearance in the same competition in the 2003–04 season. Out of their depth, the Heat finished their European adventure with a 0–10 record.

On the domestic scene Guildford continued their dominance, collecting the Cup Winners' Cup, BBL Trophy and the Play-off crown. Newcastle Eagles were Champions of the League's regular season campaign, whilst rookie teams Everton and London ended with respectable 7th and 9th-place finishes. The League also secured a live broadcasting contract with Setanta Sports midway through the campaign which saw one televised game a week screened on live on their network.[2]

Teams

edit
Team City/Area Arena Capacity Last season
Birmingham Panthers Birmingham &
Telford
UoW, Walsall Campus &
TCAT Arena
1,000
500
New
Cheshire Jets Chester Northgate Arena 1,000 9th
Everton Tigers Liverpool Echo Arena &
Greenbank Sports Academy
7,513
600
New
Guildford Heat Guildford Guildford Spectrum 1,100 1st
Leicester Riders Leicester John Sandford Centre 800 7th
London Capital London Capital City Academy 300 New
Milton Keynes Lions Milton Keynes Bletchley Centre 800 6th
Newcastle Eagles Newcastle upon Tyne Metro Radio Arena 6,500 3rd
Plymouth Raiders Plymouth Plymouth Pavilions 1,480 5th
Scottish Rocks Glasgow Braehead Arena 4,000 4th
Sheffield Sharks Sheffield English Institute of Sport 1,200 2nd
Worcester Wolves Worcester University of Worcester 600 10th

Notable occurrences

edit
  • The league features three new teams, the Birmingham Panthers and Everton Tigers, both start-up franchises, and London Capital, who stepped up from the English Basketball League.
  • Just two weeks before the start of the season, London United's directors announced on 5 September that they have withdrawn from all competitions for the upcoming season because of financial difficulties, leaving new team Capital as London's sole representatives.[1]
  • A new pre-season competition, the Cup Winners' Cup, a two-legged face-off between the current holders of the BBL Cup and the BBL Trophy, opened the new season, with Guildford Heat claiming a 176-168 aggregate win over Plymouth Raiders.
  • On 2 October, just days before their inaugural home game, Birmingham Panthers finally secured a deal with the University of Wolverhampton, to use their Walsall Campus as a home venue. This came after deals with two other venues had previously fallen through, and the League rejected a proposal for relocation to Telford.[3]
  • Guildford made their debut in European competition (ULEB Cup) on 6 November, just two years after they ere established. They lost 84–68 away to Bosnian team KK Bosna in Sarajevo.
  • During the early hours of 10 November, Guildford star Brian Dux was involved in a serious car accident and fell into a coma.[4] He was finally rushed to hospital over two hours after his car was found,[5] and put into immediate intensive care.
  • The BBL Cup Final took place at the National Indoor Arena, in Birmingham, on 13 January 2008. A sell-out crowd of over 6,000 people saw a valiant Milton Keynes Lions comeback over Newcastle Eagles to claim their first ever piece of silverware, with a 69–66 victory.
  • A television deal was struck on 17 February with international broadcaster Setanta Sports which began with the 2008 Trophy Final and saw one game a week shown live on Setanta Sports 2 every Wednesday.[2]
  • Despite having an earlier attempt to relocate to Telford blocked by the BBL, Birmingham Panthers played their first game at Telford's TCAT Arena on 17 February against Newcastle Eagles, who stormed to a 59–104 victory. The temporary move suggested the franchise may relocate to Telford after just one season in Birmingham.[6]
  • Guildford triumphed with their first ever BBL Trophy victory over Newcastle at the Plymouth Pavilions on 2 March. In front of a sell-out crowd and broadcast live on Setanta Sports 2, the Heat ran out 86-79 winners in the action-packed final.

BBL Championship (Tier 1)

edit

Final standings

edit
Pos Team Pld W L % Pts
1 Newcastle Eagles 33 29 4 0.879 58
2 Guildford Heat 33 24 9 0.727 48
3 Plymouth Raiders 33 24 9 0.727 48
4 Milton Keynes Lions 33 19 14 0.576 38
5 Scottish Rocks 33 18 15 0.545 36
6 Sheffield Sharks 33 17 16 0.515 34
7 Everton Tigers 33 16 17 0.485 32
8 Worcester Wolves 33 14 19 0.424 28
9 London Capital 33 12 21 0.364 24
10 Leicester Riders 33 10 23 0.303 20
11 Cheshire Jets 33 9 24 0.273 18
12 Birmingham Panthers 33 6 27 0.182 12
= League winners
= Qualified for the play-offs

Playoffs

edit
Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final
         
1 Newcastle Eagles 105
8 Worcester Wolves 96
1 Newcastle Eagles 63
4 Milton Keynes Lions 72
4 Milton Keynes Lions 105
5 Scottish Rocks 93
4 Milton Keynes Lions 88
2 Guildford Heat 100
2 Guildford Heat 81
7 Everton Tigers 72
2 Guildford Heat 81 Third place
3 Plymouth Raiders 66
3 Plymouth Raiders 91 1 Newcastle Eagles 92
6 Sheffield Sharks 73 3 Plymouth Raiders 96

Quarter-finals

edit

Semi-finals

edit

Third-place game

edit

Final

edit
4 May 2008
5.00pm GMT
Guildford Heat 100–88 Milton Keynes Lions
Scoring by quarter: 24-21, 18-20, 25-20, 33-27
Pts: Daniel Gilbert 27, Mike Martin 25, Tony Dorsey 19
Rebs: Mike Martin 10
Pts: Dru Spinks 22, Yorick Williams 13, Terrell Brown 10
Rebs: Robert Youngblood 7

National League Division 1 (Tier 2)

edit

Final standings

edit
Pos Team Pld W L % Pts
1 Manchester Magic 18 16 2 0.889 32
2 Reading Rockets 18 16 2 0.889 32
3 Worthing Thunder 18 14 4 0.778 28
4 Bristol Academy Flyers 18 10 8 0.556 20
5 London Leopards 18 9 9 0.500 18
6 Derby Trailblazers 18 8 10 0.444 16
7 City of Sheffield Arrows 18 8 10 0.444 16
8 Taunton Tigers 18 5 13 0.278 10
9 Coventry Crusaders 18 4 14 0.222 8
10 King's Lynn Fury 18 0 18 0.000 0
= League winners
= Qualified for the play-offs

National League Division 2 (Tier 3)

edit

Final standings

edit
Pos Team Pld W L % Pts
1 Tees Valley Mohawks 22 18 4 0.818 36
2 Cardiff Celts 22 18 4 0.818 36
3 Birmingham Aston Athletics 22 15 7 0.682 30
4 University of Birmingham 22 13 9 0.591 26
5 Leicester Warriors 22 13 9 0.591 26
6 Plymouth Marjon Cannons 22 12 10 0.545 24
7 Team Northumbria 22 12 10 0.545 24
8 Northampton Neptunes 22 10 12 0.455 20
9 Kent Crusaders 22 7 15 0.318 14
10 Plymouth Raiders II 22 6 16 0.273 12
11 Newi Nets 22 5 17 0.227 10
12 University of Wolverhampton 22 3 19 0.136 6
= League winners
= Qualified for the play-offs

Cup Winners' Cup

edit

The 2007–08 season saw the inauguration of the BBL's newest competition, the Cup Winners' Cup. The pre-season event between last season's winners of the BBL Cup and BBL Trophy was staged over two legs with the winner determined by the final aggregate score.

Guildford Heat claimed the upper-hand in the first leg away to Plymouth Raiders with an 83–77 victory, despite being ahead by 18-points, Raiders kept fighting and eventually clawed the game back before losing in the final minutes.

The second leg in Guildford was an equally tight affair, but Heat's strength combined with Raiders' poor free-throw shooting, gave them a 93–91 victory, tallying up to a 176–168 win on aggregate.

9 September 2007
4.00pm GMT
Plymouth Raiders 77–83 Guildford Heat
Scoring by quarter: 13-20, 16-23, 24-17, 24-23
Pts: DeAntoine Beasley, 23 Pts: Brian Dux/Mike Martin, 17
15 September 2007
7.00pm GMT
Guildford Heat 93–90 Plymouth Raiders
Scoring by quarter: 25-20, 22-21, 14-20, 32-29
Pts: Daniel Gilbert, 20
Rebs: Mike Martin, 12
Pts: Andrew Lasker, 21
Rebs: Gaylon Moore, 13
Guildford win on aggregate, 176–168

BBL Cup

edit

For the 2007–08 edition of the BBL Cup, the top three ranking teams from last season's BBL Championship – Guildford Heat, Sheffield Sharks and Newcastle Eagles – plus the Milton Keynes Lions, all received a bye into the Quarter-final, leaving the remaining eight clubs to battle it out in the First Round.

First round

edit
27 September 2007
Leicester Riders 79–73 Birmingham Panthers
John Sandford Centre, Leicester

Quarter-finals

edit
25 November 2007
London Capital 73–78 Milton Keynes Lions

Semi-finals

edit
15 December 2007
Scottish Rocks 69–75 Newcastle Eagles
K2 Arena, Crawley
15 December 2007
Milton Keynes Lions 91–80 Guildford Heat
K2 Arena, Crawley

Final

edit
13 January 2008
Milton Keynes Lions 69–66 Newcastle Eagles
Scoring by quarter: 9-13, 24-15, 24-17, 12-21
Pts: Kevin Griffin (MVP) 24, Tony Windless 22, Yorick Williams 9 Pts: Charles Smith 21, Andrew Bridge 18, Lynard Stewart 12

BBL Trophy

edit

This season's BBL Trophy was slightly reformatted from the previous edition of the tournament. The first round comprised three groups of three and one group of four. Gone were the lower league clubs for the English Basketball League and Scottish Basketball League, with the exception of the previous year's EBL Division 1 champions Worthing Thunder, who stepped in to fill the spot vacated by London United, who withdrew prior to the season opener.

Each team played each other twice, once home and once away, and after each group campaign is completed, the top team from each group advanced into the semi-finals. If teams tied on points (2 for a win, 0 for a loss), head-to-head results would come into play.

Group stage

edit

Group 1

Team Pts Pld W L Per cent
1.Cheshire Jets 8 6 4 2 0.666
2.Plymouth Raiders 8 6 4 2 0.666
3.Milton Keynes Lions 6 6 3 3 0.500
4.Leicester Riders 2 6 1 5 0.166

Group 2

Team Pts Pld W L Per cent
1.Guildford Heat 8 4 4 0 1.000
2.London Capital 4 4 2 2 0.500
3.Worthing Thunder 0 4 0 4 0.000

Group 3

Team Pts Pld W L Per cent
1.Worcester Wolves 8 4 4 0 1.000
2.Sheffield Sharks 4 4 2 2 0.500
3.Birmingham Panthers 0 4 0 4 0.000

Group 4

Team Pts Pld W L Per cent
1.Newcastle Eagles 6 4 3 1 0.750
2.Scottish Rocks 6 4 3 1 0.750
3.Everton Tigers 0 4 0 4 0.000

Semi-finals

edit

Final

edit

The Final for this season's BBL Trophy was held on 2 March 2008, at the Pavilions in Plymouth, the first time the venue has hosted a major final. It was a 'North-South' final contested between Newcastle Eagles and Guildford Heat, and was broadcast live on television, on Setanta Sports 2, and also BBC Radio Newcastle.

Newcastle had been leading 47–35 at the half, but a Guildford comeback led by Most Valuable Player E. J. Harrison and Daniel Gilbert, overhauled the Eagles for their first trophy of the season, after the league and cup double of last season. Harrison scored 10 of his 25 points in the closing quarter with Gilbert scoring 3 in the last minute to cement the trophy for the Heat. Lynard Stewart led all scorers in the match with 26 points, but this was not enough for Newcastle as Fabulous Flournoy's men went down in their second consecutive final after losing to Milton Keynes Lions in the BBL Cup final.

2 March 2008
Guildford Heat 86–79 Newcastle Eagles
Scoring by quarter: 21-20, 14-27, 30-14, 21-18
Pts: E. J. Harrison 25, Daniel Gilbert 25, Mike Martin 13 Pts: Lynard Stewart 26, Andrew Bridge 12, Olu Babalola 11

Statistics leaders

edit
Category Player Stat
Points per game   James Life (Worcester Wolves) 25.9
Rebounds per game     Shawn Myers (Cheshire Jets) 11.3
Assists per game     James Whyte (Sheffield Sharks) 7.0
Steals per game   Maurice Hampton (Scottish Rocks) 2.9
Blocks per game   Andrew Alleyne (Leicester Riders) 1.4
Field goal percentage     Lynard Stewart (Newcastle Eagles) 65.9%
Free throw percentage     Charles Smith (Newcastle Eagles) 87.0%
Three-point field goal percentage   Chris Haslam (Everton Tigers) 48.5%

Monthly awards

edit
Month Coach Player
October     Fabulous Flournoy (Newcastle Eagles)     Shawn Myers (Cheshire Jets)
November     Sterling Davis (Scottish Rocks)   Anthony Paez (Worcester Wolves)
December   Vince Macaulay-Razaq (Milton Keynes Lions)   Charles Smith (Newcastle Eagles)
January     Sterling Davis (Scottish Rocks)     Jayson Obazuaye (Cheshire Jets)
February     Fabulous Flournoy (Newcastle Eagles)     Tony Dorsey (Guildford Heat)

Seasonal awards

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b BBC London (2007). "London United Basketball Team". BBC. Retrieved 8 November 2010.
  2. ^ a b Simon Rushworth (2008). "Basketball back on the box". Sunday Sun. Retrieved 17 February 2008.
  3. ^ Collin Tattum (2007). "Panthers banned from making Telford switch". Birmingham Mail. Retrieved 2 October 2007.
  4. ^ Harold McNeil (2007). "Ex-Canisius basketball star Brian Dux injured in car crash in England". The Buffalo News. Archived from the original on 14 November 2007. Retrieved 26 November 2007.
  5. ^ Surrey Advertiser (2007). "Inquiry into 999 response while basketball pro remains in a coma". Surrey Advertiser. Retrieved 26 November 2007.
  6. ^ Colin Tattum (2008). "Panthers trounced in Telford". Birmingham Mail. Retrieved 18 February 2008.
Preceded by BBL seasons
2007–08
Succeeded by