To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

2014–15 EuroLeague Women

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2014–15 EuroLeague Women
LeagueEuroLeague Women
SportBasketball
DurationNovember 2014 – April 2015
Regular Season
Season championsDynamo Kursk (Group A)
Fenerbahçe (Group B)
Season MVPAlba Torrens (Ekaterinburg)
Top scorerNneka Ogwumike (Kursk)
Final Four
ChampionsCzech Republic ZVVZ USK Praha
  Runners-upRussia Ekaterinburg
Finals MVPKia Vaughn
EuroLeague Women seasons

The 2014–15 EuroLeague Women season was the 19th edition of EuroLeague Women under its current name. Including the playoffs, the season ran from 11 November 2014 until 12 April 2015. Fifteen teams across eight countries were divided into two groups, with the top four from each group advancing to the postseason. Dynamo Kursk won Group A with a 10–2 record, while Fenerbahçe won Group B with an 11–3 record.

In the best-of-three quarterfinals, Dynamo Kursk beat CJM Bourges Basket, UMMC Ekaterinburg beat Nadezhda Orenburg, ZVVZ USK Praha knocked off CB Avenida, and Fenerbahçe beat Galatasaray OdeaBank. In the first semi-final, Praha upset Fenerbahçe 62–49. Ekaterinburg beat Dynamo Kurst 81–70 in the second semi-final, avenging two previous losses to Kurst on the season.

Praha, which hosted the Final Four, got off to a quick start in the final and led 17–12 after the first quarter. Ekaterinburg fought back in the final minutes of the second quarter, narrowing the lead to 32–28 at the half. Praha started the third quarter strong and held a double-digit lead through much of the quarter, ending it with 50–40 advantage. Ekaterinburg made multiple runs in the fourth quarter, narrowing the deficit to as few as four points. However, a basket by Danielle Robinson with 2:23 left extended the lead to 11. A furious comeback effort in the final minute cut the margin to two points with 6 seconds remaining before Jana Veselá hit two foul shots to provide the final margin of 72–68. In the third-place game, Kurst defeated Fenerbahçe, 67–58.

Format

For the 2014–15 season, fifteen teams took part in the regular season. Participants were divided into two groups – one with eight teams and one with seven teams. The regular season began on 11 November 2014 and ended on 18 February 2015.[1]

The top four teams of each group during the regular season advanced to the quarterfinal playoffs, which were played in a best-of-three format from 3 March until 11 March. The winners advanced to the Final Four, which were single elimination, with games taking place on 10 April and 12 April.[2]

Teams

Fifteen clubs entered the draw at Munich's Kempinski hotel on 6 July 2014. A potential 16th club could have been added with 24 hours, but was not.[3][4][5]

Two countries had three clubs each (Russia and Turkey) and three countries had two teams each (Czech Republic, France, and Poland). The draw was structured such that Russia had two teams in one group and Turkey two teams in the other. The other multi-team countries had one team in each group.

Seed 1 Seed 2 Seed 3 Seed 4 Seed 5 Seed 6 Seed 7 Seed 8
Group A Russia UMMC Ekaterinburg Turkey Galatasaray Odeabank Slovakia Good Angels Košice Czech Republic ZVVZ USK Praha Russia Dynamo Kursk Poland Wisła Can-Pack Kraków France Basket Lattes
Group B Turkey Fenerbahçe France CJM Bourges Basket Italy PF Schio Turkey Abdullah Gül Üniversitesi Russia Nadezhda Orenburg Spain CB Avenida Czech Republic BK Brno Poland Energa Toruń

Regular season

When teams had the same record at the end of the regular season, tiebreakers were applied in the following order:[6]

  1. Head-to-head record of teams still tied.
  2. Head-to-head point differential.
  3. Point differential during the regular season.
  4. Points scored during the regular season.
  5. Sum of quotients of points scored and points allowed in each regular-season match.

Group A

Dynamo Kursk won Group A over fellow Russian team UMMC Ekaterinburg on a tiebreaker after both teams finished with a 10–2 record. USK Prague finished third with a 6–6 record. Galatasaray claimed the final playoff spot on the basis of a 2–0 record against Wisła Can-Pack after both clubs finished with a 5–7 record. Wisła's season, while disappointing overall, included a victory against Dynamo Kursk. Basket Lattes won three of their first four games, but recorded just one win the rest of the season to finish at 4–8. Lattes finished dead last in rebounding in the EuroLeague, but had the highest field-goal percentage and lowest points allowed of any team to miss the playoffs. Good Angels Košice finished last in the group with a 2–10 record. The team struggled to score, but did manage to sweep defending champion Galatasaray.[7][8]

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts KUR EKA PRA GAL KRA LAT KOS
1 Russia Dynamo Kursk 12 10 2 926 844 +82 22[a] 74–73 70–65 72–68 92–68 77–59 66–52
2 Russia UMMC Ekaterinburg 12 10 2 924 769 +155 22[b] 77–78 84–74 77–67 106–63 77–69 75–52
3 Czech Republic ZVVZ USK Praha 12 6 6 854 853 +1 18 83–87 71–77 43–72 67–66 80–69 76–57
4 Turkey Galatasaray OdeaBank 12 5 7 759 757 +2 17[c] 91–87 56–67 43–72 63–45 59–66 67–68
5 Poland Wisła Can-Pack Kraków 12 5 7 790 839 −49 17[d] 77–62 56–66 86–72 53–64 76–70 70–50
6 France Basket Lattes 12 4 8 775 820 −45 16 61–69 58–74 72–77 48–59 72–62 65–60
7 Slovakia Good Angels Košice 12 2 10 694 840 −146 14 70–92 51–71 70–74 59–50 55–68 50–66
Source:[citation needed]
Notes:
  1. ^ Tiebreaker: 2–0
  2. ^ Tiebreaker: 0–2
  3. ^ Tiebreaker: 2–0
  4. ^ Tiebreaker: 0–2

Group B

Fenerbahçe won Group B with an 11–3 record. Nadezhda Orenburg finished in second place with a 10–4 record, winning the tiebreaker over Avenida on the basis of head-to-head point differential. Bourges Basket took the final playoff spot with a 9–5 record. Abdullah Gül Üniversitesi got off to a slow start, winning just one of their first five games. They finished strong, but a late loss to Nadezhda left them outside the playoffs with a final record of 7–7. Employing an aggressive style of play, the team finished first in most fouls drawn. BF Schio lost star player Chiney Ogwumike early in the year to injury, but still managed some impressive wins. The team scored 72.9 points per game, but also gave up the third most points per game in the league. In their inaugural EuroLeague season Toruń had three wins on the year, but were 1–9 in their last ten. They finished first in the league in steals, but gave up the second-most points per game. Brno did not win a single game on the season, and only kept the final margin in single digits once. They had the league's worst defense.[7][8]

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts FEN NAD AVE BOU AGU SCH TOR BRN
1 Turkey Fenerbahçe 14 11 3 1004 857 +147 25 65–54 66–63 75–50 73–57 68–63 76–63 79–54
2 Russia Nadezhda Orenburg 14 10 4 956 825 +131 24[a] 64–56 66–50 78–68 49–53 84–74 65–63 88–55
3 Spain CB Avenida 14 10 4 973 859 +114 24[b] 66–60 61–50 59–48 71–64 75–58 70–64 73–42
4 France CJM Bourges Basket 14 9 5 981 875 +106 23 67–61 58–50 73–55 79–71 79–67 72–54 88–38
5 Turkey Abdullah Gül Üniversitesi 14 7 7 1004 995 +9 21 78–84 64–71 71–63 77–73 75–82 96–76 64–53
6 Italy PF Schio 14 6 8 1021 1007 +14 20 59–75 58–77 65–90 79–59 74–80 93–61 87–58
7 Poland Energa Toruń 14 3 11 940 1102 −162 17 67–81 50–82 77–89 63–88 83–78 58–79 79–71
8 Czech Republic BK Brno 14 0 14 770 1129 −359 14 52–85 50–78 55–88 48–79 64–76 68–83 62–82
Source:[citation needed]
Notes:
  1. ^ Tiebreaker: 1–1 (+5)
  2. ^ Tiebreaker: 1–1 (−5)

Quarter-finals

Team no. 1 Agg. Team no. 2 Game 1 Game 2 Game 3
1. Dynamo Kursk Russia 2 – 1 France CJM Bourges Basket 75–62 62–64 88–72
2. UMMC Ekaterinburg Russia 2 – 0 Russia Nadezhda Orenburg 81–54 86–75
3. CB Avenida Spain 0 – 2 Czech Republic ZVVZ USK Praha 48–50 43–72
4. Fenerbahçe Turkey 2 – 1 Turkey Galatasaray OdeaBank 58–56 57–59 63–52

Notes:

  • † Despite Nadezhda finishing second in Group B, according to the EuroLeague Women Regulations Article 14, Note 1:
    "If there are three (3) clubs from the same country qualified for the Quarter-Final Play-Offs and two (2) of these clubs are scheduled to play each other according to the system of competition, no changes are required.
    If none of the three (3) clubs are scheduled to play each other according to the system of competition, then they will be ranked according to their results from the Regular Season. The 2nd ranked club will then play against the 3rd ranked club."
  • † Taking into consideration the above regulation, CB Avenida (8–4) have the home court advantage over fellow third-placed team ZVVZ USK Prague (6–6) on account of their superior win–loss ratio.[9]

Final four

 
Semi-finals
10 April
Final
12 April
 
      
 
 
 
 
Turkey Fenerbahçe 49
 
 
 
Czech Republic ZVVZ USK Praha 62
 
Czech Republic ZVVZ USK Praha 72
 
 
 
Russia UMMC Ekaterinburg 68
 
Russia Dynamo Kursk 70
 
 
Russia UMMC Ekaterinburg 81
 
Third place
 
 
 
 
 
Turkey Fenerbahçe 58
 
 
Russia Dynamo Kursk 67

Bids to host the 2015 Final Four were accepted until 19 February. On 9 March, it was announced that USK Prague had held selected as the host club. It was the first time the club ever hosted the event, but not the first time it was held in the Czech Republic – Brno has hosted the tournament three times (1999, 2006, and 2008).[10]

Semi-final 1

10 April 2015
18:00
Turkey Fenerbahçe 49–62 Czech Republic ZVVZ USK Praha
Scoring by quarter: 18–17, 10–10, 14–18, 7–17
Pts: T. Charles – 14
Rebs: T. Charles, Q. Hollingsworth – 8
Asts: T. Charles, B. Demirmen – 2
Pts: K. Vaughn – 15
Rebs: K. Vaughn – 12
Asts: L. Palau – 7
Královka Arena
Attendance: 2,500
Referees: Jasmina Juras (SRB), Susana Gomez Lopez (ESP), Carole Delauné (FRA)

Semi-final 2

10 April 2015
15:00
Dynamo Kursk Russia 70–81 Russia UMMC Ekaterinburg
Scoring by quarter: 13–26, 9–20, 27–16, 21–19
Pts: I. Alben – 15
Rebs: S. Augustus – 8
Asts: E. Prince – 5
Pts: S. Gruda – 20
Rebs: C. Parker – 15
Asts: C. Parker – 4
Královka Arena
Attendance: 2,100
Referees: Anne Panther (GER), Fabiana Martinescu (ROU), Maka Kupatadze (GEO)

Third-place game

12 April
15:00
Russia Dynamo Kursk 67–58 Fenerbahçe Turkey
Scoring by quarter: 18–12, 12–14, 18–16, 19–16
Pts: N. Ogwumike – 21
Rebs: N. Ogwumike – 14
Asts: S. Augustus – 4
Pts: T. Charles – 23
Rebs: Q. Hollingsworth – 11
Asts: B. Demirmen – 2
Královka Arena
Attendance: 2,100
Referees: Anne Panther (GER), Carole Delauné (FRA), Sonia Teixeira (POR)

Final

The starting five for UMMC Ekaterinburg were Kristi Toliver, Deanna Nolan, Alba Torrens, Candace Parker, and Sandrine Gruda. USK Prague started Laia Palau, Danielle Robinson, Jana Veselá, Sonja Petrovic, and Kia Vaughn.[11] Although the game was held in Prague, Ekaterinburg was considered the favorite.[12]

Praha used a series of fast breaks and efficient three-point shooting to get off to an early 17–10 lead.[11][13] A layup by Silvia Dominguez made the score 17–12 at the end of the first quarter.[11]

In the second quarter, Prague quickly extended its lead to nine points.[11] After a basket by Veselá again put Prague up by nine, 27–18, with 3:27 left in the quarter, Ekaterinburg scored the next six points to get within three. The final 1:40 of the quarter saw several scores by both teams, ending with two free throws by Toliver that made the score 32–28 in favor of Prague at the halftime break.[12] Gruda led all players with 11 points, while Parker led with 6 rebounds. Veselá led Prague with 9 points. Ekaterinburg won the rebounding battle 23–16, but failed to make a three-pointer (0/7). Prague was 4/6 on three-point attempts.[11]

Efficient offensive by Prague, and especially Robinson who scored 10 points in the third quarter, allowed Prague to build a double-digit lead.[11][13] Prague's defense was also good in the period, not allowing a single fast-break point. At the end of the quarter, the score was Prague 50–40.[11]

The "beautiful" fourth quarter saw a comeback effort by Ekaterinburg led by Parker and Gruda.[11] With six minutes to go, a Parker basket and subsequent foul shot cut the lead to four. However, two quick baskets by Prague pushed the lead back to nine. A Veselá steal and layup, described by FIBA as the game's most crucial play, and a basket by Robinson with 2:23 to play gave Prague a 67–56 lead and seemingly put the game out of reach.[12] However, a furious comeback effort by Ekaterinburg ensued. Parker made back-to-back baskets while drawing fouls. She missed the free throw on the second one, but got the rebound and a basket, resulting in 7 total points between the two possessions. Prague missed several foul shots, leaving the door partially open for Ekaterinburg. A steal and basket by Nolan with six seconds left cut the gap to two points.[11] However, Veselá hit two foul shots to seal the victory and provide the final 72–68 margin.[12]

Vaughn scored 18 points (12 in the second half) and grabbed 12 rebounds. She was named MVP of the Final Four thanks in part to a strong semi-final performance. Robinson scored a team-high 24, while also recording 4 rebounds and 3 assists. Parker led all players with 27 points and 14 rebounds in a losing effort. Gruda added 19 points and 9 rebounds, and Torrens scored 12. The rest of the team scored just 10 points on 4/24 shooting. As a team, Ekaterinburg was just 1/16 on three-pointers compared to 5/9 for Prague.[11]

The win gave Natália Hejková her fifth Euroleague title as a coach and made her the first coach to lead three different clubs to a title. She previously coached Ružomberok to the title in 1999 and 2000 and Spartak Moscow to the title in 2007 and 2008.[11] She has never lost a final game.[12] Veselá claimed her third title as a player, all with different teams, becoming the sixth player to win at least three Euroleague Women titles.[11]

12 April 2015
18:00
ZVVZ USK Praha Czech Republic 72–68 Russia UMMC Ekaterinburg
Scoring by quarter: 17–12, 15–16, 18–12, 22–28
Pts: D. Robinson – 24
Rebs: K. Vaughn – 12
Asts: L. Palau – 6
Pts: C. Parker – 27
Rebs: C. Parker – 14
Asts: D. Nolan – 4
Sportovni Hala Kralovka (Prague)
Attendance: 2,500
Referees: Jasmina Juras (SRB), Fabiana Martinescu (ROU), Maka Kupatadze (GEO)

Statistical leaders

Alba Torrens of UMMC Ekaterinburg was named Player of the Year.[13]

Statistical leaders include the postseason are sorted on a per game basis.

Points

Rk Name Team Games Points PPG
1 United States Nneka Ogwumike Russia Dynamo Kursk 17 331 19.5
2 United States Diana Taurasi Russia UMMC Ekaterinburg 14 236 16.9
3 United States Jantel Lavender Poland Wisła Can-Pack Kraków 12 202 16.8
4 United States DeWanna Bonner Russia Nadezhda Orenburg 15 251 16.7
5 United States Candace Parker Russia UMMC Ekaterinburg 16 254 15.9

Source: FIBA Europe[14]

Rebounds

Rk Name Team Games Rebounds RPG
1 United States Candace Parker Russia UMMC Ekaterinburg 16 176 11.0
1 United States Nneka Ogwumike Russia Dynamo Kursk 17 182 10.7
3 United States Jenna Smith Czech Republic BK Brno 14 144 10.3
4 United States Angelica Robinson Spain CB Avenida 16 164 10.3
5 United States Jantel Lavender Poland Wisła Can-Pack Kraków 12 122 10.2

Source: FIBA Europe[15]

Assists

Rk Name Team Games Assists APG
1 Spain Laia Palau Czech Republic ZVVZ USK Praha 16 114 7.1
2 United States Diana Taurasi Russia UMMC Ekaterinburg 14 83 5.9
3 Russia Epiphanny Prince Russia Dynamo Kursk 17 87 5.1
5 United States Courtney Vandersloot Poland Wisła Can-Pack Kraków 12 53 4.4
5 Spain Nuria Martínez Turkey Galatasaray OdeaBank 15 64 4.3

Source: FIBA Europe[16]

See also

References

  1. ^ EuroLeague Women Season 2014–15 Drawn FIBA Europe; 6 July 2014
  2. ^ EuroLeague Women 2014–15 changes format; FIBA Europe; 5 July 2013
  3. ^ EuroLeague Women Draw Seedings FIBA Europe; 4 July 2014
  4. ^ Alba Iulia Joins EuroLeague Women FIBA Europe; 5 July 2014
  5. ^ Alba Iulia Withdraw From EuroLeague Women FIBA Europe; 16 September 2014
  6. ^ "Euroleague Regulations 2014–2015" (PDF). Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  7. ^ a b "Regular Season Week 14 Review". FIBA Europe. 19 February 2015. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  8. ^ a b "Scoreboard: First Round". FIBA Europe. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  9. ^ Quarter-Final Play-Off Pairings Decided FIBA Europe; 19 February 2015
  10. ^ "Prague to Host Final Four". FIBA Europe. 9 March 2015.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Laia Palau, campeona de Euroliga con USK Prague". en Cancha (in Spanish). 12 April 2015. Archived from the original on 13 April 2015. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  12. ^ a b c d e "UMMC Ekaterinburg 68–72 ZVVZ USK Praha". FIBA Europe. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  13. ^ a b c "Czech team USK Prague win FIBA EuroLeague Women title". Anadolu Agency. 12 April 2015. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  14. ^ "Statistical Leaders: Points Per Game". Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  15. ^ "Statistical Leaders: Total Rebounds". Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  16. ^ "Statistical Leaders: Assists". Retrieved 13 April 2015.

External links

This page was last edited on 2 July 2023, at 14:18
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.