The British Basketball League Cup, often shortened to the BBL Cup, was an annual cup competition for the British Basketball League (BBL). It was one of two peripheral competitions operated by the League during the regular season, with the other being the BBL Trophy. The competition was usually played as a single game knock-out tournament, and was only contested by members of the British Basketball League. The final takes place in early January at the Arena Birmingham in Birmingham.

BBL Cup
Organising bodyBritish Basketball League
Founded2003
First season2003–04
Folded2022–23
Country Great Britain
ConfederationFIBA Europe
Number of teams10
Last championsLondon Lions (3rd title)
(2022–23)
Most championshipsNewcastle Eagles (6 titles)
TV partnersSky Sports
YouTube
2022–23 BBL Cup

History

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The competition was established in 2003 following the British Basketball League's (BBL) decision to withdraw its members from the annual National Cup tournament after a disagreement regarding import-players merged with its organiser, the English Basketball Association (EBBA).[1] The EBBA had introduced a ruling that teams could field only two work-permit holders and one other non-permit-holding import in National Cup games for the 2003-04 season, which would have severely deprived the BBL teams of their better players.[2] Due to a sponsorship deal with confectionery company Haribo, the new competition was named the Haribo Cup and saw all ten BBL clubs compete in a single game knock-out format. Sheffield Sharks were crowned as the Cup's first victor's after an 83-70 win over Scottish Rocks at Birmingham's National Indoor Arena.[3] Rocks were again finalists, and Runners-up, in the 2005 edition of the Cup which had been rebranded with its current name as the BBL Cup and was won by Brighton Bears, who had been hugely successful in the predecessor competition, the National Cup, in recent years. In 2006, Newcastle Eagles claimed a historic win over London Towers as part of their "clean-sweep" of all four BBL competitions in their quadruple-winning season.

The 2007 edition of the BBL Cup Final was the closest yet and saw Guildford Heat win their first piece of silverware in franchise history, whilst Scottish Rocks finished as Runners-up for the third time in four seasons.[4] The following year saw perhaps the biggest upset in Cup Final history as underdogs Milton Keynes Lions sneaked to a 69-66 victory over favourites Newcastle. It would be the Lions' first Cup win, largely helped by their offence hitting 13 three-pointers.[5] Everton Tigers continued the new winner every year tradition by thrashing Plymouth Raiders with a blow-out score of 103-49 in the 2009 Cup Final. The 54-point gap between the two debutants is the largest winning margin in Cup history.[6]

Due to the intake of expansion franchises, the 2009–10 season saw an expanded First Round featuring 13 teams, the most teams ever competing for the BBL Cup in its history. It was also the first edition to not feature a new Champion as the Sheffield Sharks claimed their second Cup with a close 89-86 victory over Cheshire Jets in the Final. The following season saw Sheffield become the first team to successfully retain the Cup whilst their MVP winning star Steve Dagostino set a new record for the most points scored in a Final, posting 35.[7] However that record only stood for one year as in the 2012 Final, as Newcastle's Charles Smith led his team to a 115-94 victory over Plymouth with an individual points tally of 39. Smith's record is currently still standing, whilst Newcastle also recorded the highest points scored for a team in any BBL final.[8]

Leicester Riders claimed their first Cup title in the 2013 Final, with a close 85-80 victory over previous winners Newcastle Eagles. The Riders were led by MVP Jay Cousinard who posted 17 points for the first-time winners, and although dominating for much of the game, they survived a late Eagles comeback to hold on for the five-point win.[9] Riders retained their title in 2014 with a three-point victory over Eagles again, becoming only the second team to win back-to-back Finals (the first was Sheffield Sharks in 2011).[10]

Format

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The competition is a knockout tournament for the teams in the British Basketball League Championship, equating to the League Cup in soccer, with pairings drawn completely at random – there are no seeds, and a draw takes place after the majority of fixtures have been played in each round. When there are an uneven number of member clubs in the British Basketball League, some pre-selected teams will receive byes into the next round. The Cup final is played at the Arena Birmingham in Birmingham, usually in early January.[11]

Finals

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Season Winner Score Runners-up Venue Location MVP
2003–04 Sheffield Sharks 83–70 Scottish Rocks National Indoor Arena Birmingham   Lynard Stewart
2004–05 Brighton Bears 90–74 Scottish Rocks National Indoor Arena Birmingham   Andrew Alleyne
2005–06 Newcastle Eagles 83–69 London Towers National Indoor Arena Birmingham   T.J. Walker
2006–07 Guildford Heat 82–79 Scottish Rocks National Indoor Arena Birmingham   Brian Dux
2007–08 Milton Keynes Lions 69–66 Newcastle Eagles National Indoor Arena Birmingham   Kevin Griffin
2008–09 Everton Tigers 103–49 Plymouth Raiders National Indoor Arena Birmingham   Andre Smith
2009–10 Sheffield Sharks 89–86 Cheshire Jets National Indoor Arena Birmingham     James Hamilton
2010–11 Sheffield Sharks 93–66 Mersey Tigers National Indoor Arena Birmingham   Steve Dagostino
2011–12 Newcastle Eagles 115–94 Plymouth Raiders National Indoor Arena Birmingham     Charles Smith
2012–13 Leicester Riders 85–80 Newcastle Eagles National Indoor Arena Birmingham   Jay Cousinard
2013–14 Leicester Riders 72–69 Newcastle Eagles National Indoor Arena Birmingham   Andrew Sullivan
2014–15 Newcastle Eagles 84–71 Glasgow Rocks Barclaycard Arena Birmingham   Rahmon Fletcher
2015–16 Newcastle Eagles 94–82 Leicester Riders Barclaycard Arena Birmingham   Rahmon Fletcher
2016–17 Newcastle Eagles 91–83 Glasgow Rocks Barclaycard Arena Birmingham   Rahmon Fletcher
2017–18 Cheshire Phoenix 99–88 Worcester Wolves Barclaycard Arena Birmingham   Malcolm Riley
2018–19 London Lions 68–54 Glasgow Rocks Arena Birmingham Birmingham   Brandon Peel
2019–20 Worcester Wolves 67–59 Bristol Flyers Arena Birmingham Birmingham   Amir Williams
2020–21 Newcastle Eagles 84–77 London Lions Morningside Arena Leicester   Justin Gordon
2021–22 Leicester Riders 83–69 Manchester Giants Utilita Arena Birmingham Birmingham   Geno Crandall
2022–23 London Lions 79–71 Leicester Riders Utilita Arena Birmingham Birmingham   Sam Dekker

Results by team

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Results by team
Team Wins Last final won Runner-up Last final lost Total final appearances
Newcastle Eagles 6 2021 3 2014 9
Leicester Riders 3 2022 2 2023 5
London Lions 3 2023 1 2021 4
Sheffield Sharks 3 2011 0 0 3
Mersey Tigers 1 2009 1 2011 2
Cheshire Phoenix 1 2018 1 2010 2
Worcester Wolves 1 2020 1 2018 2
Guildford Heat 1 2007 0 0 1
Brighton Bears 1 2005 0 0 1
Glasgow Rocks 0 0 6 2019 6
Plymouth Raiders 0 0 2 2012 2
Bristol Flyers 0 0 1 2020 1
London Towers 0 0 1 2006 1
Manchester Giants 0 0 1 2022 1

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "BBL Cup". 2003. Archived from the original on 9 December 2000. Retrieved 11 September 2012.
  2. ^ "James slams National Cup wreckers". getReading.co.uk. 2003. Retrieved 11 September 2012.
  3. ^ "Cup joy for Sheffield". BBC Sport. 2004. Retrieved 11 September 2012.
  4. ^ "Guildford beat Rocks to claim Cup". BBC Sport. 2007. Retrieved 11 September 2012.
  5. ^ "Milton Keynes triumph in BBL Cup". BBC Sport. 2008. Retrieved 11 September 2012.
  6. ^ "Plymouth 49-103 Everton". BBC Sport. 2009. Retrieved 11 September 2012.
  7. ^ "BBL Cup Final: Mersey Tigers 66-93 Sheffield Sharks". BBC Sport. 2011. Retrieved 11 September 2012.
  8. ^ "BBL Cup Final: Newcastle Eagles 115-94 Plymouth Raiders". BBC Sport. 2011. Retrieved 11 September 2012.
  9. ^ "BBL Cup Final: Leicester Riders beat Newcastle Eagles". BBC Sport. 2013. Retrieved 14 January 2013.
  10. ^ "BBL Cup final: Leicester overcome Newcastle in tense finish". BBC Sport. 2014. Retrieved 3 June 2014.
  11. ^ "BBL Cup". BBL.org.uk. 2012. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
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  • BBL Cup on the BBL's official website.