2013–14 British Basketball League season





































































2013–14 BBL season
League British Basketball League
Sport Basketball
Duration 27 September 2013 – 20 April 2014
25 April 2014 – 11 May 2014 (Playoffs)
Number of games 33
Number of teams 12
Regular Season
Top seed Newcastle Eagles
Season MVP

Zaire Taylor (Worcester Wolves)
Top scorer
Victor Moses (Cheshire Phoenix)
BBL Tournaments

BBL Playoffs champions
Worcester Wolves
  BBL Playoffs runners-up Newcastle Eagles

BBL Cup champions
Leicester Riders
  BBL Cup runners-up Newcastle Eagles

BBL Trophy champions
Worcester Wolves
  BBL Trophy runners-up Glasgow Rocks
BBL seasons

← 2012–13

2014–15 →


The 2013–14 season was the 27th campaign of the British Basketball League since the league's establishment in 1987. The season featured 12 teams from across England and Scotland, including new entrant Birmingham Knights. East London Royals and Essex Leopards were both due to become the 13th and 14th League members respectively, but after deferring their original entries from the 2012–13 season for a season, both franchises withdrew their applications to join the BBL due to financial constraints.[1]


On 12 July it was officially announced that the Mersey Tigers franchise had been withdrawn from the up-coming season by the League due to financial trouble that had plagued the club throughout the previous season, which resulted in the Tigers becoming the first club to complete an entire season without a single victory.[2]


The season started on 27 September 2013 and ended on 11 May 2014 with the Play-off Final at Wembley Arena. Newcastle Eagles claimed a record 6th regular season title but were defeated in the Play-off Final by a dominant Worcester Wolves team who were also victorious in the BBL Trophy, beating Glasgow Rocks on their home court in the Final. Leicester Riders were crowned as the BBL Cup winners, defeating Newcastle in the Final at the National Indoor Arena.




Contents






  • 1 Teams


  • 2 Notable occurrences


  • 3 BBL Championship (Tier 1)


    • 3.1 Final standings


    • 3.2 The Play-offs


      • 3.2.1 Quarter-finals


      • 3.2.2 Semi-finals


      • 3.2.3 Final






  • 4 EBL National League Division 1 (Tier 2)


    • 4.1 Final standings




  • 5 EBL National League Division 2 (Tier 3)


    • 5.1 Final standings




  • 6 BBL Cup


    • 6.1 1st round


    • 6.2 Quarter-finals


    • 6.3 Semi-finals


    • 6.4 Final




  • 7 BBL Trophy


    • 7.1 1st round


    • 7.2 Quarter-finals


    • 7.3 Semi-finals


    • 7.4 Final




  • 8 Statistics leaders


  • 9 Monthly awards


  • 10 Seasonal awards


  • 11 References





Teams




2013–14 British Basketball League season is located in the United Kingdom

Knights

Knights



Phoenix

Phoenix



Wildcats

Wildcats



Rocks

Rocks



Riders

Riders



Lions

Lions



Giants

Giants



Eagles

Eagles



Raiders

Raiders



Sharks

Sharks



United

United



Wolves

Wolves




Locations of the 2013–14 BBL teams






























































































Team
City
Arena
Capacity

Last season

Birmingham Knights

Birmingham
North Solihull Sports Centre
600
New

Cheshire Phoenix

Chester

Northgate Arena
1,000
11th

Durham Wildcats

Newton Aycliffe

Newton Aycliffe Leisure Centre
1,200
10th

Glasgow Rocks

Glasgow

Emirates Arena
6,500
3rd

Leicester Riders

Leicester
John Sandford Centre
800
1st

London Lions
London

Copper Box
7,000
8th

Manchester Giants

Manchester
Wright Robinson College
900
9th

Newcastle Eagles

Newcastle upon Tyne

Sport Central
3,000
2nd

Plymouth Raiders

Plymouth

Plymouth Pavilions
1,480
6th

Sheffield Sharks

Sheffield

English Institute of Sport
1,200
7th

Surrey United

Guildford

Surrey Sports Park
1,000
4th

Worcester Wolves

Worcester

Worcester Arena
2,000
5th


Notable occurrences



  • New entrant Birmingham Knights joined as the League's 13th franchise whilst East London Royals and Essex Leopards who were both due to become the 14th and 15th League members respectively, withdrew their applications to join the BBL due to financial constraints.[3]

  • Ed Percival was announced as the BBL's new Chairman on 27 June 2013, replacing the outgoing Paul Blake who stepped down after nearly a decade in the position.[4]

  • On 12 July it was officially announced that the Mersey Tigers franchise had been withdrawn from the up-coming season by the League due to financial trouble that had plagued the club throughout the previous season, bringing the number of teams back down to 12.[5]

  • Following the sale of Surrey Heat to a partnership group consisting of Surrey Sports Park and London United, the franchise was subsequently rebranded as Surrey United prior to the start of the season.[6] Due to the takeover, long-time head coach Creon Raftopolous was sacked and replaced by Jack Majewski.[7]


  • Durham Wildcats announced on 13 August that head coach Dave Elderkin had stepped down from the role after 8 years in charge. He was replaced by former Great Britain Women's Under-20 coach Lee Davie.[8]

  • On 7 September – just weeks before the start of the new season – Plymouth Raiders announced that head coach Gavin Love had been sacked following a 'vote of no confidence' from the club's Board of Directors.[9] Former Raiders player Jay Marriott was appointed as his successor.

  • The BBL announced a new television broadcasting deal with British Eurosport on 23 September,[10] to compliment the recently launched online BBL TV platform.[11]

  • A sell-out crowd saw Worcester Wolves win their first competitive game at their new venue, the Worcester Arena on 4 October, as the home side defeated reigning champions Leicester Riders 73–61.[12]

  • Worcester's 62–69 victory away to Leicester Riders on 16 November, put an end to Leicester's 34-game unbeaten home winning streak, which spanned over three seasons.[13]

  • Controversy surrounded Surrey head coach Jack Majewski and his decision to play star player Brandon McGill in a defeat to Cheshire Phoenix on 8 December, two days after the player suffered concussion following a clash with Darius Defoe in a game against Newcastle Eagles.[14]

  • On 12 January 2014, Leicester retained the BBL Cup after beating Newcastle Eagles in the Final at the National Indoor Arena for the second year running.[15]


  • Bristol Flyers became only the second-ever lower division team to beat BBL opposition and advance to the Quarter-finals of the BBL Trophy, following their 91–75 defeat of Surrey United on 16 January.

  • Worcester Wolves claimed their first-ever BBL title with an 83–76 victory over Glasgow Rocks in the BBL Trophy Final on 30 March, in front of 5,000 people on Glasgow's home court, the Emirates Arena.[16]


  • London Lions' Joe Ikhinmwin won the annual BBL Slam Dunk Contest at Emirates Arena on 30 March.[17]

  • Leicester head coach Rob Paternostro and Sheffield Sharks head coach Atiba Lyons both reached a landmark 250th game at the helm of their respective clubs on the weekend of 5/6 April.[18]

  • The first ever competitive BBL game to be staged in Wales took place on 9 April between Cheshire Phoenix and Glasgow Rocks. The game was switched from Cheshire's usual home venue, the Northgate Arena, to the Deeside Leisure Centre in Queensferry, Flintshire due to availability issues.[19] The "home" team lost 77–90 to the visiting Glasgow Rocks.

  • Newcastle Eagles were crowned League Champions for a record sixth time following a 106–58 win away to Surrey, on 13 April.[20]

  • Durham Wildcats and the new Manchester Giants franchise (relaunched in 2012) both secured Play-off berths for the first time in their respective club history's following the conclusion of the regular season.

  • Worcester Wolves claimed their second piece of silverware for the season by beating Newcastle in the Championship Play-off Final on 12 May, with a 90–78 victory at Wembley Arena. Wolves' Zaire Taylor was named as the game's Most Valuable Player.[21]



BBL Championship (Tier 1)



Final standings












































































































Team Pts Pld W L Percentage
1. Newcastle Eagles
56 33 28 5 0.848
2. Sheffield Sharks
54 33 27 6 0.818
3. Worcester Wolves
54 33 27 6 0.818
4. Leicester Riders
46 33 23 10 0.697
5. Cheshire Phoenix
36 33 18 15 0.545
6. London Lions
32 33 16 17 0.484
7. Manchester Giants
28 33 14 19 0.424
8. Durham Wildcats
28 33 14 19 0.424
9. Plymouth Raiders
28 33 14 19 0.424
10. Glasgow Rocks
26 33 13 20 0.394
11. Surrey United
8 33 4 29 0.121
12. Birmingham Knights
0 33 0 33 0.000











= League winners

= Qualified for the Play-offs



The Play-offs





















































































































































 
Quarter-finals

Semi-finals

Final
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Newcastle Eagles
97
97

194
 

Durham Wildcats
75
82

157
 

 

Newcastle Eagles
79
83 (OT)

162
 



 
Leicester Riders
90
71

161
 


Leicester Riders
88
77

164

 
Cheshire Phoenix
76
56

133
 

 
 
Newcastle Eagles
 

 

Worcester Wolves
 
 

Sheffield Sharks
63
78

141
 

Manchester Giants
60
78

138
 

 
Sheffield Sharks
59
60

119



 

Worcester Wolves
79
67

146
 


Worcester Wolves
92
86

178

 
London Lions
78
88

166
 



Quarter-finals


(1) Newcastle Eagles vs. (8) Durham Wildcats




25 April 2014









Newcastle Eagles
97–75
Durham Wildcats



Sport Central, Newcastle upon Tyne






27 April 2014












Durham Wildcats 82–97
Newcastle Eagles
Newcastle wins on aggregate, 194–157



Newton Aycliffe Leisure Centre, Newton Aycliffe




(2) Sheffield Sharks vs. (7) Manchester Giants




26 April 2014









Manchester Giants 60–63
Sheffield Sharks


Wright Robinson College, Manchester






27 April 2013












Sheffield Sharks 78–78 Manchester Giants
Sheffield wins on aggregate, 141–138


English Institute of Sport, Sheffield




(3) Worcester Wolves vs. (6) London Lions




25 April 2014









London Lions 78–92
Worcester Wolves



Copper Box, London






27 April 2014












Worcester Wolves 86–88
London Lions
Worcester wins on aggregate, 178–166



Worcester Arena, Worcester




(4) Leicester Riders vs. (5) Cheshire Phoenix




25 April 2014









Cheshire Phoenix 76–88
Leicester Riders



Northgate Arena, Chester






27 April 2014












Leicester Riders
77–56
Cheshire Phoenix
Leicester wins on aggregate, 164–133


Sir David Wallace Centre, Loughborough





Semi-finals


(1) Newcastle Eagles vs. (4) Leicester Riders




1 May 2014









Leicester Riders
90–79
Newcastle Eagles


Sir David Wallace Centre, Loughborough






4 May 2014












Newcastle Eagles
83–71 (OT)
Leicester Riders
Newcastle wins on aggregate, 162–161



Sport Central, Newcastle upon Tyne




(2) Sheffield Sharks vs. (3) Worcester Wolves




2 May 2014









Sheffield Sharks 59–79
Worcester Wolves


English Institute of Sport, Sheffield






4 May 2014












Worcester Wolves
67–60
Sheffield Sharks
Worcester wins on aggregate, 146–119



Worcester Arena, Worcester





Final




11 May 2014
3.00pm GMT



Report














Newcastle Eagles 78–90
Worcester Wolves

Scoring by quarter: 15–29, 27–19, 10–24, 26–18

Pts: Darius Defoe, 22
Rebs: Fabulous Flournoy, 10
Asts: Four players, 3

Pts: Zaire Taylor, 30
Rebs: Will Creekmore, 14
Asts: Zaire Taylor, 9



Wembley Arena, London





EBL National League Division 1 (Tier 2)



Final standings













































































































Team Pts Pld W L
1. Reading Rockets
44 26 22 4
2. Essex Leopards
40 26 20 6
3. Hemel Storm
36 26 18 8
4. Bradford Dragons
34 26 17 9
5. Manchester Magic
32 26 16 10
6. Leeds Carnegie
30 26 15 11
7. Bristol Academy Flyers
28 26 14 12
8. Newham Neptunes
26 26 13 13
9. Tees Valley Mohawks
24 26 12 14
10. Worthing Thunder
22 26 11 15
11. Medway Park Crusaders
18 26 9 17
12. Westminster Warriors
14 26 7 19
13. Team Northumbria
12 26 6 20
14. Leicester Warriors
4 26 2 24













= League winners

= Qualified for the Play-offs



EBL National League Division 2 (Tier 3)



Final standings
























































































Team Pts Pld W L
1. Derby Trailblazers
34 20 17 3
2. Huddersfield Heat
30 20 15 5
3. Ipswich
28 20 14 6
4. Brixton TopCats
24 20 12 8
5. Loughborough Student Riders
20 20 10 10
6. Worcester Wolves B
18 20 9 11
7. Eastside Eagles London
18 20 9 11
8. Derbyshire Arrows
18 20 9 11
9. London Westside
16 20 8 12
10. London United
12 20 6 14
11. Mansfield Giants
2 20 1 19













= League winners

= Qualified for the Play-offs



BBL Cup


The winners of the four 1st Round matches were joined by Glasgow Rocks, Leicester Riders, Newcastle Eagles and Surrey United in the Quarter-finals, who received byes for finishing in the top four BBL Championship positions last season.[22] The Final was played on 12 January 2014 at the National Indoor Arena in Birmingham.



1st round




18 October 2013









Worcester Wolves
88–66
Manchester Giants



Worcester Arena, Worcester






19 October 2013









Durham Wildcats
78–75
Cheshire Phoenix



Newton Aycliffe Leisure Centre, Newton Aycliffe






19 October 2013









Birmingham Knights 72–103
Plymouth Raiders


North Solihull Sports Centre, Birmingham






1 November 2013









Sheffield Sharks
90–63
London Lions


English Institute of Sport, Sheffield





Quarter-finals




2 November 2013









Leicester Riders
74–62
Worcester Wolves


John Sandford Centre, Leicester






8 November 2013









Surrey United 57–91
Plymouth Raiders



Surrey Sports Park, Guildford






17 November 2013









Glasgow Rocks 69–81
Newcastle Eagles



Emirates Arena, Glasgow






22 November 2013









Sheffield Sharks
70–58
Durham Wildcats


English Institute of Sport, Sheffield





Semi-finals


Plymouth Raiders vs. Leicester Riders




29 November 2013









Plymouth Raiders 89–95
Leicester Riders



Plymouth Pavilions, Plymouth






7 December 2013












Leicester Riders
104–77
Plymouth Raiders
Leicester wins on aggregate, 199–166


John Sandford Centre, Leicester




Sheffield Sharks vs. Newcastle Eagles




29 November 2013









Sheffield Sharks
82–79
Newcastle Eagles


English Institute of Sport, Sheffield






13 December 2013












Newcastle Eagles
84–57
Sheffield Sharks
Newcastle wins on aggregate, 163–139



Sport Central, Newcastle upon Tyne





Final




12 January 2014
3.30pm GMT



Report














Leicester Riders
72–69
Newcastle Eagles

Scoring by quarter: 14–20, 18–17, 17–21, 23–11

Pts: Jay Cousinard, 18
Rebs: Andrew Sullivan, 10
Asts: Jay Cousinard, 4

Pts: Charles Smith, 27
Rebs: Scott Martin, 13
Asts: Andrew Lasker, 4



National Indoor Arena, Birmingham





BBL Trophy


The 12 BBL clubs were joined by Bristol Flyers, Essex Leopards, Leeds Carnegie and Reading Rockets of the English Basketball League to form a straight knock-out competition. The first two rounds featured one-off games whilst the Semi-finals took place over two legs. The Final was held at the Emirates Arena in Glasgow for the second consecutive year and saw Worcester Wolves win their first silverware since joining the BBL in 2006.



1st round




16 January 2014









Bristol Flyers
91–75
Surrey United


WISE Basketball Arena, Bristol






17 January 2014









Leeds Carnegie 48–84
Glasgow Rocks


Carnegie Sports Centre, Leeds






18 January 2014









Plymouth Raiders
90–81
Durham Wildcats



Plymouth Pavilions, Plymouth






19 January 2014









Essex Leopards 73–101
Newcastle Eagles


Brentwood Centre, Brentwood






19 January 2014









Reading Rockets 73–85
Sheffield Sharks


Rivermead Leisure Complex, Reading






19 January 2014









Manchester Giants
91–74
Birmingham Knights


Wright Robinson College, Manchester






19 January 2014









Cheshire Phoenix
86–78
Leicester Riders



Northgate Arena, Chester






2 February 2014









London Lions 73–82
Worcester Wolves



Copper Box, London





Quarter-finals




12 February 2014









Plymouth Raiders 60–74
Sheffield Sharks



Plymouth Pavilions, Plymouth






16 February 2014









Cheshire Phoenix
85–56
Bristol Flyers



Northgate Arena, Chester






21 February 2014









Newcastle Eagles 73–86
Worcester Wolves



Sport Central, Newcastle upon Tyne






23 February 2014









Manchester Giants 71–73
Glasgow Rocks


Wright Robinson College, Manchester





Semi-finals


Sheffield Sharks vs. Worcester Wolves




7 March 2014









Sheffield Sharks 60–62
Worcester Wolves


English Institute of Sport, Sheffield






12 March 2014












Worcester Wolves
84–70
Sheffield Sharks
Worcester wins on aggregate, 146–130



Worcester Arena, Worcester




Cheshire Phoenix vs. Glasgow Rocks




9 March 2014









Cheshire Phoenix
80–74
Glasgow Rocks



Northgate Arena, Chester






14 March 2014












Glasgow Rocks
98–77
Cheshire Phoenix
Glasgow wins on aggregate, 172–157



Emirates Arena, Glasgow





Final




30 March 2014
3.15pm GMT



Report














Worcester Wolves
83–76
Glasgow Rocks

Scoring by quarter: 15–25, 23–19, 20–11, 25–21

Pts: Jamal Williams, 26
Rebs: Will Creekmore, 15
Asts: Zaire Taylor, 6

Pts: Gareth Murray, 21
Rebs: Fran Urli, 12
Asts: Fran Urli, 5



Emirates Arena, Glasgow





Statistics leaders
















































Category Player Stat

Points per game

United States Victor Moses (Cheshire Phoenix)
23.2

Rebounds per game

United States Victor Moses (Cheshire Phoenix)
13.2

Assists per game

United States Zaire Taylor (Worcester Wolves)
6.9

Steals per game

United States Zaire Taylor (Worcester Wolves)
2.8

Blocks per game

United States Mike Allison (Durham Wildcats)
2.4

Field goal percentage

United States Rashad Hassan (Leicester Riders)
66.8%

Free throw percentage

United States B.J. Holmes (Sheffield Sharks)
87.1%

Three-point field goal percentage

United Kingdom David Watts (Manchester Giants)
42.8%


Monthly awards






































Month Coach of the Month Player of the Month
October
United Kingdom Paul James (Worcester Wolves)

United States Will Creekmore (Worcester Wolves)
November
United States United Kingdom Atiba Lyons (Sheffield Sharks)

United States Victor Moses (Cheshire Phoenix)
December
United Kingdom John Lavery (Cheshire Phoenix)

United States Zaire Taylor (Worcester Wolves)
January
United States Italy Rob Paternostro (Leicester Riders)

United States Victor Moses (Cheshire Phoenix)
February
United Kingdom Paul James (Worcester Wolves)

United States Victor Moses (Cheshire Phoenix)
March
United States United Kingdom Fabulous Flournoy (Newcastle Eagles)

United Kingdom Robert Marsden (Manchester Giants)


Seasonal awards




  • Molten Most Valuable Player:[23]Zaire Taylor (Worcester Wolves)


  • Molten Coach of the Year:[24]Rob Paternostro (Leicester Riders)


  • Molten Team of the Year:[25]


    • Zaire Taylor (Worcester Wolves)


    • Will Creekmore (Worcester Wolves)


    • Victor Moses (Cheshire Phoenix)


    • Reggie Middleton (Cheshire Phoenix)


    • Malik Cooke (Newcastle Eagles)




  • Molten Defensive Team of the Year:[26]


    • Zaire Taylor (Worcester Wolves)


    • Andrew Sullivan (Leicester Riders)


    • Daniel Northern (Glasgow Rocks)


    • Mike Allison (Durham Wildcats)


    • Fabulous Flournoy (Newcastle Eagles)


    • Paul Gause (Newcastle Eagles)




  • Molten British Team of the Year:[27]


    • David Aliu (Manchester Giants)


    • Robert Marsden (Manchester Giants)


    • James Jones (Manchester Giants)


    • Andrew Sullivan (Leicester Riders)


    • Darius Defoe (Newcastle Eagles)


    • Nick George (Plymouth Raiders)




For the British Team of the Year and Defensive Team of the Year, six players were announced instead of the usual five due to a deadlock in votes cast by the BBL head coaches.[28]



References





  1. ^ Mark Woods (2013). "Knights in, Royals out, others wait on BBL". MVP247.com. Retrieved 2012-06-01..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ Rob Jeffries (2013). "Mersey Tigers "disappointed" at BBL franchise withdrawal". UK American Sports Fans. Retrieved 2013-07-15.


  3. ^ Mark Woods (2013). "Knights in, Royals out, others wait on BBL". MVP247.com. Retrieved 2013-06-01.


  4. ^ Sam Neter (2013). "Paul Blake Steps Down to Make Way for New BBL Independent Chairman". HoopsFix.com. Retrieved 2014-06-03.


  5. ^ Rob Jeffries (2013). "Mersey Tigers "disappointed" at BBL franchise withdrawal". UK American Sports Fans. Retrieved 2013-07-15.


  6. ^ Richard Spiller (2013). "United we stand, says Surrey's new-look basketball club". getSurrey.co.uk. Retrieved 2014-06-03.


  7. ^ Mark Woods (2013). "Creon out amid Heat takeover". MVP247.com. Retrieved 2014-06-04.


  8. ^ Mark Woods (2013). "Davie moves over to be Durham coach". MVP247.com. Retrieved 2014-06-04.


  9. ^ Glenn Bryant (2013). "Plymouth Raiders sack coach Gavin Love". The Herald. Retrieved 2014-06-04.


  10. ^ Sam Neter (2013). "BBL Announces TV Deal with British Eurosport". HoopsFix.com. Retrieved 2014-06-03.


  11. ^ Sam Neter (2013). "BBL Launches Live & On Demand Online Player". HoopsFix.com. Retrieved 2014-06-03.


  12. ^ "Worcester Wolves 73–61 Leicester Riders". WorcesterWolves.org. 2013. Retrieved 2014-06-03.


  13. ^ Rob Jeffries (2013). "Wolves end Riders' 34-game unbeaten home run". UK American Sports Fans. Retrieved 2014-06-05.


  14. ^ Rob Jeffries (2013). "Surrey's McGill plays in defeat to Phoenix despite "concussion"". UK American Sports Fans. Retrieved 2014-06-05.


  15. ^ Joe Townsend (2014). "Leicester overcome Newcastle in tense finish". BBC Sport. Retrieved 2014-06-05.


  16. ^ Nigel Slater (2014). "Worcester Wolves hold nerve to win BBL Trophy". Worcester Observer. Archived from the original on 30 March 2014. Retrieved 2014-06-05.


  17. ^ Rob Jeffries (2014). "Joe Ikhinmwin destroys Trophy dunk contest". UK American Sports Fans. Retrieved 2014-06-05.


  18. ^ "Paternostro clocks up another big landmark with Leicester Riders". Leicester Mercury. 2014. Retrieved 2014-06-05.


  19. ^ Rob Jeffries (2014). "First ever BBL game in Wales with Nix v Rocks". UK American Sports Fans. Retrieved 2014-06-05.


  20. ^ Mark Woods (2013). "Newcastle Eagles are BBL Champions". MVP247.com. Retrieved 2014-06-04.


  21. ^ Sam Neter (2014). "Worcester Wolves claim 2014 BBL Playoff title". HoopsFix.com. Retrieved 2014-06-05.


  22. ^ "BBL Cup". BBL.org.uk. 2014. Retrieved 2014-05-25.


  23. ^ Sam Neter (2014). "Zaire Taylor Crowned BBL Player of the Year". HoopsFix.com. Retrieved 2014-05-12.


  24. ^ Paul Nilsen (2014). "Newcastle Eagles coach Fab Flournoy soaring towards more silverware". Daily Express. Retrieved 2014-05-12.


  25. ^ Jim Green (2014). "Phoenix pair named in BBL Team of the Year". Chester Chronicle. Retrieved 2014-05-12.


  26. ^ "Top team honour for Drew Sullivan". Leicester Mercury. 2014. Retrieved 2014-05-26.


  27. ^ "Plymouth Raiders' Nick George fifth in BBL British MVP vote". The Herald. 2014. Archived from the original on 26 May 2014. Retrieved 26 May 2014.


  28. ^ Paul Blake (2014). "BBL British and Defensive Teams of the Year announced". Newcastle-Eagles.com. Retrieved 2014-05-26.







Preceded by
2012–13 season

BBL seasons
2013–14
Succeeded by
2014–15 season









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