2015–16 FIBA Europe Cup


The 2015–16 FIBA Europe Cup was the inaugural season of the newly formed basketball competition organised by FIBA. The season started on 21 October 2015 and ended on 1 May 2016.
The competition replaced the EuroChallenge and had the aim to take the place of Eurocup, as the second-tier competition in Europe.

Format

In the Regular season, 56 teams are divided into 14 groups of four teams. In the Round of 32, the first and second best teams from the Regular season play in groups of four. Starting from the Round of 16, quarter-finals will be played. The tournament will conclude with a Final Four.

Teams

The deadline to register in the competition was on July 30. The official list of teams was announced on August 3.
Numbers in bracket represent the place the team took in its 2014–15 domestic championship, representing rankings after eventual Playoffs.
;Notes

Draw

The draw was held on August 4, 2015 in Munich, Germany. The seeding was prepared on the basis of the clubs' participation and results in European Club Competition in recent years as well as the clubs' ranking in their respective domestic leagues last season.

Conference 1

Conference 2

Regular season

The regular season was played between 21 October and 2 December 2015. The top two teams of each group and the four best third-placed teams of all groups advanced to the Round of 32.
If teams in the same group finished tied on points at the end of the Regular Season, tiebreakers were applied in the following order:
  1. Head-to-head record.
  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

Group B

Group C

Group D

Group E

Group F

Group G

Group H

Group I

Group J

Group K

Group L

Group M

Group N

Ranking of third-placed teams

Conference 1

Conference 2

Round of 32

The round of 32 were played between 16 December 2015 and 3 February 2016. The two top teams of each group advanced to the Round of 16.
If teams in the same group finished tied on points at the end of the Round of 32, tiebreakers were applied in the following order:
  1. Head-to-head record.
  2. Head-to-head point differential.
  3. Point differential during the round of 32.
  4. Points scored during the round of 32.
  5. Sum of quotients of points scored and points allowed in each round of 32 match.

    Group O

Group P

Group Q

Group R

Group S

Group T

Group U

Group V

Knockout stage

Round of 16

Game 1 will be played on February 17. Game 2 will be played on February 24. Game 3, if necessary, will be played on March 2.
The eight winners of each series will qualify for the quarterfinals, while the other eight teams will be eliminated.
Team 1Team 2Game 1Game 2Game 3
ASVEL 0–2 Port of Antwerp Giants67–7478–88
Openjobmetis Varese 2–1 Royal Halı Gaziantep82–8160–7674–71
Élan Chalon 2–1 Telenet Oostende84–7180–91104–91
Energia Târgu Jiu 1–2 Khimik77–7160–7177–84
Ventspils 0–2 Maccabi Rishon LeZion73–7585–93
Fraport Skyliners 2–0 Petrolina AEK Larnaca83–6056–44
Türk Telekom 0–2 Enisey95–9668–75
Juventus 0–2 Cibona78–8384–87

Quarter-finals

Game 1 will be played on March 16. Game 2 will be played on March 23. Game 3 will be played, if necessary, on March 30. Teams with better record in the Round of 32 had the home advantage.
The four winners of each series will qualify to the Final Four, while the other four teams will be eliminated.
Team 1Team 2Game 1Game 2Game 3
Openjobmetis Varese 2–1 Port of Antwerp Giants92–8182–93105–93
Élan Chalon 2–0 Khimik115–9483–79
Fraport Skyliners 2–1 Maccabi Rishon LeZion92–5784–8891–75
Enisey 2–1 Cibona94–9269–7782–78

Final Four

On April 6, 2016, Le Colisée in Chalon-sur-Saône was announced as the venue for the Final Four.

Honours

[FIBA [Europe Cup Final Four MVP|Final Four MVP]]

Starting Five

Statistics

Individual statistic leaders

To be considered a statistical leader, players had to have played a minimum of 10 games.
CategoryPlayerTeamStatistic
Points per game Omar Krayem Borås
20.4
Rebounds per game Christian Maråker Borås
10.3
Assists per game Teemu Rannikko Kataja
10.1
Steals per game Howard Sant-Roos ČEZ Nymburk
2.3
Blocks per game Callistus Eziukwu Energia Targû Jiu
1.8
Turnovers per game Omar Krayem Borås
4.2
Fouls per game Egidijus Dimša Juventus
3.9
Minutes per game Lamayn Wilson Kataja
37.0
FG% Ante Žižić Cibona
63.4%
FT% Dušan Đorđević Telenet Oostende
94.6%
3FG% Steponas Babrauskas Pieno žvaigždės
54.2%
Double-doubles Christian Maråker Borås
6

Source:

Individual game highs

Source:
OWIKI.org. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.