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The EuroLeague Women Final Six begins on April 15, featuring top teams in a single-elimination format over five days. The quarterfinal winners will face Fenerbahçe Opet and Galatasaray ĂaÄdaĆ Faktoring in the semifinals, with the championship game set for April 19.
Gabby Williams of Fenerbahce Opet and Laura Quevedo of Spar Girona.
The top womenâs basketball competition in Europe has reached its apex.
The EuroLeague Women playoffs, also known as the âFinal Six,â tip-off this Wednesday, April 15, and as one would expect, only the very best teams will be playing for the championship.
The format of the Final Six is quick and ruthless: Itâs three rounds of single-elimination basketball played over the course of five days. The winners of Wednesdayâs quarterfinals will advance to the semifinals on Friday, where the top-two seeded teams, Fenerbahçe Opet and Galatasaray ĂaÄdaĆ Faktoring, await. Finally, the championship and third-place games will be played on Sunday, April 19, when weâll find out who the best team in Europe truly is.
Who will come out on top? Thereâs only one way to find out, and itâs on FIBAâs EuroLeague Women YouTube channel. The games will be streamed live and for free, just as they have all season, so thereâs no excuse not to miss them. Now, letâs meet the teams who will be competing in this highly-anticipated international basketball event!
Landes has been one of this seasonâs most pleasant surprises. The French club may not have as many instantly-recognizable names on its roster as others do, but a strong performance in group play has put both the players and the club itself on the map.
On the surface, Landes doesnât match up well statistically with most of the other clubs competing in the Final Six, but the results speak for themselves. Landes finished first in Group D during the first phase of group play, most notably defeating a talented ĂBK Mersin team twice and ousting them from the competition earlier than anyone predicted. They kept rolling in the second phase, finishing in second place in Group F and having the unique honor of being the only team this season to knock off the mighty Fenerbahçe Opet, and gave Galatasaray ĂaÄdaĆ Faktoring all they could handle in the play-ins.
To put it simply, Landes has won enough games against supposedly superior teams to tell us that weâre the ones who have been sleeping on them, and theyâre just that good. Landes goes 10 to 11 players deep in most games, which allows them to keep up their defensive pressure for a full 40 minutes. It goes without saying that a team featuring LeĂŻla Lacan is going to be a pain to score against, but sheâs just one of six Landes players who are averaging over a steal per game. Weâll see if that defense is enough to keep things even against EuroLeague Womenâs very best.
Itâs fitting that Zaragoza is having the most successful EuroLeague Women season in club history, because theyâll have one key advantage in the Final Six: Theyâll be hosting the entire event.
To be clear, Zaragoza has a bit more going for them than just their home crowd. In Mariona Ortiz and Helena Pueyo, they have arguably the most disruptive defensive backcourt in the competition, and as a team they average 10.8 steals per game. They also have one of the leagueâs most aggressive downhill attackers in Carla Leite, who is shooting 44-for-48 (91.7 percent) on free throws and can single-handedly buoy her teamâs offensive efficiency from the free throw line.
Like Landes, Zaragoza has also shown a flair for the dramatic. Who could forget their 20-point second-half comeback against Valencia Basket Club, or their two-game play-in sweep of reigning EuroLeague champs ZVVZ USK Praha that resulted in one of the most wholesome crowd celebrations youâll ever see? On paper, thereâs not much of a statistical case for Zaragoza to win it all, but they do seem to have an air of destiny about them.
Fenerbahçe are once again the hands-down favorites to win it all, with a stacked roster and remarkable chemistry that has produced some incredible results. The Turkish giants cruised through group play at 11-1 and are at or near the top of the leaderboards in most statistical categories: Fenerbahçe leads EuroLeague Women in points per game (83.1), field goal percentage (51.4 percent), assists per game (25.5), steals per game (11) and free throw percentage (83.9 percent), and they had by far the largest cumulative point differential at +258.
All one has to do is glance at Fenerbahçeâs roster to understand how this is possible. Itâs a whoâs-who of some of the worldâs best players, with three-time EuroLeague Women MVP Emma Meesseman and Iliana Rupert bringing unmatched levels of shooting in the frontcourt, Gabby Williams wreaking havoc on the wing and Julie Allemand orchestrating everything at point guard. And although the club will not benefit from Kayla McBride providing her usual 3-point marksmanship, as a damaged eardrum has prevented her from re-joining the team, Breanna Stewart is set to join Fenerbahçe for the Final Six. Theyâll be widely expected to win their third championship in the past four seasons.
Galatasaray has gone through a rebirth of sorts, returning to the EuroLeague Women playoffs for the first time since 2021. Perhaps best-known among casual fans for being Fenerbahçeâs biggest rivals, Galatasaray womenâs basketball has a storied history, enjoying a dominant run in the Turkish Basketball Super League during the 1990s and winning a EuroLeague Women championship in 2014. This season is the best shape Galatasaray has been in since then, and while a lot would have to go right for them to completely reclaim their former glory, itâs not totally out of the question, either.
With a frontcourt trio of Dorka JuhĂĄsz, Awak Kuier and Elizabeth Williams, Galtasarayâs biggest strength lies in their ability to control the paint. Of the remaining teams in the competition, Galatasaray ranks first in rebounds per game (40.9) and blocks per game (4.3), and theyâve recorded a league-best 11 double-doubles over the course of the season. If theyâre going to win it all, it will be on the shoulders of their bigs.
That doesnât mean Galatasaray is a one-dimensional team, though. With the wizardry of Marine JohannĂšs and the efficiency of Kamiah Smalls, they also have guards who are more than capable of taking over a basketball game. The question will be if Galatasaray can get all of their big names clicking at the same time; if they do, they can beat anyone in the league.
Girona started the season red-hot, finishing ahead of well-known clubs like Tango Bourges Basket and reigning champions ZVVZ USK Praha in the first round of group play, and for a while it looked like they might challenge Galatasaray for the top seed in Group E in the second round. An untimely injury to the leagueâs leading scorer, Mariam Coulibaly, dashed those hopes, but Girona nonetheless finished 8-4 and earned a direct trip to the Final Six.
Coulibaly is back now, and thatâs great news for Girona. Everything they do depends on her rebound the ball and score efficiently in the paint; Girona does lead the remaining teams in 3-point attempts per game (24.7), but those arenât going to be quality looks without a strong frontcourt presence to set them up. They also have one of the more talented young playmakers in the competition in JustÄ JocytÄ, though her own scoring has been inconsistent over the course of the season. Weâll see if Girona can find its early-season form and surprise some people.
Venezia made their way to the Final Six with a thrilling play-in series win over fellow Italian club Beretta Famila Schio, and though there isnât as much buzz surrounding them as their peers, they have the weapons to make things interesting no matter who they play. With Kaila Charles, Joyner Holmes, Stephanie Mavunga and Lorela Cubaj, Venezia is long and athletic, and they have several players who can hit tough shots against set defenses.
The main issue for Venezia is that they donât truly excel in any one area. Theyâre the second-worst scoring team in the Final Six (68.7 points per game) and while they shoot a lot of 3-pointers, they donât often hit them (28.6 percent). Defensively, Venezia is able to make a good amount of plays, averaging 2.8 blocks and 9.0 steals per game, but those still arenât areas that Venezia can lean on to win against the competitionâs top teams. As basic as it sounds, the clearest way for them to advance is for them to simply hit their outside jumpshots at an acceptable clip.
The EuroLeague Women Final Six features a single-elimination format consisting of three rounds played over five days.
The semifinals will take place on Friday, April 17, following the quarterfinals on April 15.
The top two seeded teams in the EuroLeague Women Final Six are Fenerbahçe Opet and Galatasaray ĂaÄdaĆ Faktoring.
The championship game of the EuroLeague Women Final Six is scheduled for Sunday, April 19.
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