East Asia Super League

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East Asia Super League
Upcoming season or competition:
Current sports event 2022–23 East Asia Super League
File:East Asia Super League logo.jpg
SportBasketball
Founded2016
Inaugural season2017
MottoThe Hub for Basketball in East Asia.
No. of teams12
CountryVarious
ContinentFIBA Asia (Asia)
Most recent
champion(s)
China Liaoning Flying Leopards
Most titlesJapan Chiba Jets
China Guangzhou Long Lions
Japan Ryukyu Golden Kings
China Liaoning Flying Leopards
(1 title each)
Official websiteeasl.basketball
East Asia Super League
Traditional Chinese東亞超級聯賽
Simplified Chinese东亚超级联赛

The East Asia Super League (Simplified Chinese:东亚超级联赛; Traditional Chinese: 東亞超級聯賽; Korean: 동아시아 슈퍼리그; Japanese: 東アジアスーパーリーグ), abbreviated as EASL, is a basketball league featuring clubs in mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan, South Korea and the Philippines.

From 2017 to 2019, four pre-season tournaments (The Super 8 and later The Terrific 12) were organized by EASL, featuring clubs from select professional basketball leagues in the region. With official backing from FIBA Asia, EASL will transition toward a full-fledged league. The first season of this new EASL will be held in 2022–23 and will feature eight teams.

EASL matches will be integrated into the schedules of participating professional leagues.

History

The East Asia Super League was co-founded by Matt Beyer and Henry Kerins[1] as the Asia League as a response to what the founders deem as a lack of high-level international tournaments featuring basketball clubs in the region[2] also taking into account the population in the region, about 2 billion, which could be a potential market for a regional inter-club tournament. The Asia League was envisioned to be East Asian counterpart of the NBA's Las Vegas Summer League where professional teams from Asia could compete against each other with minimal conflict with their mother league's schedules.[3]

Their stated mission is to be able to organized basketball tournaments featuring club sides from top Asian leagues with the organizers naming the CBA (China), B.League (Japan), KBL (South Korea), PBA (Philippines), SBL (Chinese Taipei), and the ABL (Southeast Asia, China, and Taiwan).[4]

Preseason tournaments era (2017–2020)

The Super 8

The first tournament by EASL, then called the Asia League, was the Super 8: Macau Basketball Invitational,[5] involving eight teams in September 2017 at the Studio City Event Centre in Macau.[6] The competing teams in attendance were the Zhejiang Guangsha Lions, Shenzhen Aviators (formerly Shenzhen Leopards), Goyang Orions, Seoul Samsung Thunders, Fubon Braves, Pauian Archiland, Chiba Jets and Ryukyu Golden Kings.

Organizers initially dubbed the tournament as the "Asia League," but this led to a legal dispute with FIBA over the name of the league when FIBA deemed the tournament's branding and marketing to be in conflict with its own FIBA Asia Champions Cup. The dispute led to the renaming of the competition to "Super 8,"[5] and the tournament was then officially recognized by FIBA after the league organizers sought legal assistance of Quinn Emanuel's Thomas Werlen, who has represented FIFA in investigations of the U.S. Department of Justice.[2]

The inaugural Super 8 tournament was won by the Chiba Jets of the Japanese B. League,[7] with the Zhejiang Guangsha Lions placing second and the Goyang Orions taking third place. The event garnered 21 million views worldwide.

A second edition of the tournament, dubbed the Summer Super 8, followed in July 2018 at the Macau East Asian Games Dome,[8] and featured the introduction of two professional club teams from the PBA, the NLEX Road Warriors and Blackwater Elite. The eight competing teams in attendance were the Guangzhou Loong Lions, Xinjiang Flying Tigers, Seoul Samsung Thunders, Incheon Electroland Elephants, NLEX Road Warriors, Blackwater Elite, Rizing Zephyr Fukuoka and Formosa Dreamers. The Guangzhou Loong Lions won first place, while the Seoul Samsung Thunders took second place and the Incheon Electroland Elephants placed third.

The Terrific 12

File:The Terrific 12 Logo v1.png
Logo of The Terrific 12 tournament.

In 2018, the Super 8 tournament was expanded into a larger tournament format called The Terrific 12, featuring 12 teams instead of eight. The Terrific 12 (2018) tournament was organized in collaboration with and supported by the Sports Bureau of Macau SAR government and hosted at the Studio City Event Centre.

The competing teams were the Shandong Heroes (formerly Shandong Golden Stars), Zhejiang Guangsha Lions, Xinjiang Flying Tigers, Ulsan Hyundai Mobis Phoebus, Seoul Samsung Thunders, Fubon Braves, Yulon Luxgen Dinos, Nagoya Diamond Dolphins, Ryukyu Golden Kings and Chiba Jets. The Ryukyu Golden Kings won first place, while the Guangzhou Loong Lions placed second and the Seoul Samsung Thunders took third place.

In 2019, Asia League rebranded to the "East Asia Super League," and it hosted the second iteration of The Terrific 12 at the Tap Seac Multi-Sports Pavilion in Macau from September 17–22. The competing teams were the Liaoning Flying Leopards, Shenzhen Aviators, Zhejiang Guangsha Lions, Chiba Jets, Niigata Albirex BB, Ryukyu Golden Kings, Utsonomiya BREX, Jeonju KCC Egis, Seoul SK Knights, Blackwater Elite, TNT KaTropa and San Miguel Beermen.

Terrific 12 (2019) also featured the EASL debut of former NBA player and CBA import Lance Stephenson, who earned MVP awards for his 34-point outburst in the Terrific 12 (2019) championship finals, a close 83–82 finish for the Liaoning Flying Leopards over the Seoul SK Knights. The Zhejiang Guangsha Lions won second place and the San Miguel Beermen took home third in the event.

Plans for a 2020 iteration of The Terrific 12 tournament on September[9] have been cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[10]

2022 league plans

In August 2020,[11] EASL and FIBA entered into a multi-year agreement granting EASL FIBA's recognition to hold a full-fledged in-season league featuring clubs from greater China, Japan, South Korea and the Philippines.[12] The inaugural season will feature 8 teams. The teams will play home-and-away games against each other with the top four teams advancing to a Final Four event.[13] It marks the first integrated club-to-club championship league for the East Asia region.[14] However the planned inaugural season was postponed by a year.[15]

For representation of mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan, a franchise was formed for the EASL which includes players from the Chinese Basketball Association. The P. League+ also agreed to send a team.[15] While initially foregoing from joining due to the COVID-19 pandemic,[16] the Philippine Basketball Association agreed to participate in the EASL and will be sending two teams within the top four of a select conference.[17] The also had concluded discussion with a league from South Korea.[16]

The Raine Group along with former NBA stars such as Metta Sandiford-Artest, Baron Davis and Shane Battier in December 2021 reportedly invested in the EASL.[18]

Future plans

The EASL plans to accommodate 16 teams by the third season as well as include more representation from other domestic leagues.[19]

Leagues represented

The planned 2022–23 East Asia Super League will be represented by teams from select domestic leagues. In addition to teams from regular leagues, a franchise team was formed for the EASL. Under the agreement with the Hong Kong Basketball Association and Chun Yu Basketball Club, the Bay Area Chun Yu Phoenixes were formed to participate as a franchise team in the EASL.[20] The league considers the franchise team and the P. League+ championship team of Taiwan as representatives of "Greater China".[21]

League Country or Region Berths
EASL (franchise team)  Hong Kong 1
P. League+  Chinese Taipei 1
B.League  Japan 2
Korean Basketball League  South Korea 2
Philippine Basketball Association  Philippines 2

Seasonal tournaments

The following leagues were represented in the EASL's preseason tournaments from 2017 to 2020.

Country or Region League
 China Chinese Basketball Association
 Chinese Taipei Super Basketball League
 Japan B.League
 South Korea Korean Basketball League
 Philippines Philippine Basketball Association
None (Selection team)

Tournament champions

Summary

Super 8 (2017–2018)

Season Finalists Semifinalists
Country Champions Result Country Runners-up Country Semifinalist Result Country Semifinalist
2017  Japan Chiba Jets 83–73  China Zhejiang Guangsha Lions  South Korea Goyang Orions 88–71  Japan Ryukyu Golden Kings
2018  China Guangzhou Long-Lions 78–72  South Korea Seoul Samsung Thunders  South Korea Incheon Electroland Elephants 67–62  Philippines NLEX Road Warriors

The Terrific 12 (2018–2019)

Season Finalists Semifinalists
Country Champions Result Country Runners-up Country Semifinalist Result Country Semifinalist
2018  Japan Ryukyu Golden Kings 85–76  China Guangzhou Long-Lions  South Korea Seoul Samsung Thunders 105–92  Japan Nagoya Diamond Dolphins
2019  China Liaoning Flying Leopards 83–82  South Korea Seoul SK Knights  China Zhejiang Lions 91–89  Philippines San Miguel Beermen
2020 Canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic

East Asia Super League (2022—present)

Season Final Four hosts Finalists Semifinalists
Country Champions Country Runners-up Country Semifinalist Country Semifinalist
2022–23  Philippines To be determined

Medal table

Preseason tournaments era (2017–2020)

Country  Gold  Silver  Bronze Total
 China 2 2 1 5
 Japan 2 0 0 2
 South Korea 0 2 3 5

See also

References

  1. ^ "Building Asian basketball's first 'Champions League'". South China Morning Post. 25 June 2020. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
  2. ^ a b Deveney, Sean. "How To Start A Major New Asian Basketball League In The Age Of Coronavirus". Forbes. Retrieved 2 September 2020.
  3. ^ Lintag, Paul (21 July 2018). "BASKETBALL SUPER 8: Inside the Asia League's grand basketball plans for the region". ABS-CBN Sports. Archived from the original on 15 September 2018. Retrieved 15 September 2018.
  4. ^ "About Asia League". Asia League. Archived from the original on 15 March 2019. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  5. ^ a b Atkin, Nicolas (11 August 2017). "The battle for basketball in Asia: upstart Macau tournament ruffles Fiba feathers". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 15 September 2018.
  6. ^ Odeven, Ed (14 September 2017). "Jets, Kings set for inaugural Super 8 tourney". Retrieved 15 September 2018.
  7. ^ Lintag, Paul (25 July 2018). "Two Pinoy teams to see action in new Macau joust". ABS-CBN Sports. Archived from the original on 16 September 2018. Retrieved 15 September 2018.
  8. ^ "Asia League Summer Super 8 begins in Macau". Asia League. 6 August 2018. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  9. ^ Dy, Rchard (10 June 2020). "EASL head hopes for PBA participation in Terrific 12 in September". ESPN5. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  10. ^ "East Asia Super League basketball competition to debut in 2021". newsd. Newsd Media Pvt Ltd. 7 July 2020. Retrieved 7 July 2020. Unfortunately, the 2020 tournament, scheduled to be held in Macao in September, was canceled earlier this month due to travel restrictions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
  11. ^ "FIBA and East Asia Super League enter multi-year agreement to elevate club basketball in region". FIBA.basketball. Retrieved 30 November 2021.
  12. ^ "East Asia Super League basketball competition to debut in 2021". newsd. Newsd Media Pvt Ltd. 7 July 2020. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
  13. ^ Taljaard, Tobie (7 July 2020). "East Asia Super League basketball competition to debut in 2021". www.xinhuanet.com. Xinhua. Archived from the original on 18 August 2020. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
  14. ^ "EASL 2021". East Asia Super League – EASL. Retrieved 2 September 2020.
  15. ^ a b Henson, Joaquin (3 September 2021). "EASL moving forward". The Philippine Star. Retrieved 3 September 2021.
  16. ^ a b Henson, Joaquin. "Door still open for EASL". Philstar.com. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
  17. ^ Beltran, Nelson (5 November 2021). "PBA officially joins EASL". The Philippine Star. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  18. ^ "Ex-NBA stars and Hong Kong firm join forces to launch new league in Asia". South China Morning Post. 1 December 2021. Retrieved 2 December 2021.
  19. ^ "East Asia Super League Debuts Season 1 of Premier Home-and-Away Pan-Regional League in 2022". East Asia Super League. Archived from the original on 22 February 2022. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
  20. ^ "East Asia Super League wants to bring professional basketball team to Hong Kong". South China Morning Post. 1 December 2021. Retrieved 2 December 2021.
  21. ^ "East Asia Super League Debuts Season 1 of Premier Home-and-Away Pan-Regional League in 2022". East Asia Super League. Archived from the original on 22 February 2022. Retrieved 22 February 2022. The newly formed Bay Area Chun Yu Phoenixes and the championship team from Chinese Taipei’s P.LEAGUE+, will be the Greater China representatives.