2015 Italian Basketball Cup

The 2015 Italian Basketball Cup, known as the Beko Final Eight for sponsorship reasons, was the 47th edition of the Italian Basketball Cup, the cup competition organised by Lega Basket for Lega Basket Serie A club. The tournament was held from 20 to 22 February at the PalaDesio in Desio.

Italian Basketball Cup
Teams8
Games played7
Dates20 – 22 February 2015
Final positions
ChampionsDinamo Banco di Sardegna Sassari
(2nd title)
Runners-upEA7 Emporio Armani Milano
SemifinalistsEnel Brindisi
Grissin Bon Reggio Emilia
Awards
MVP David Logan
2014
2016

Dinamo Banco di Sardegna Sassari won its second successive title by beating EA7 Emporio Armani Milano 101–94 in the final. David Logan was named the Cup final MVP.

Participants

Eight teams qualified for the final eight as the best ranked teams at the end of the first stage of the 2014-15 Serie A.[1]

Road to the final

In the quarterfinals, Milano earned a close 68-60 win over Avellino on the back of Samardo Samuels' 19 points and 12 rebounds, Reggio Emilia edged Dolomiti Energia Trento 80-77 with 16 points and 9 assists from Andrea Cinciarini, Brindisi downed Venezia 80-70 thanks to 27 points (on 6-of-8 three point shooting) from Jacob Pullen whilst holders Sassari bested Cremona 74-63 with contributions from Édgar Sosa (14 points and 4 assists) and Jeff Brooks (11 points and 7 rebounds).[2]

The semifinals saw Milano undo Brindisi 76-65, having led the first quarter 24-4 before a Brindisi upsurge in the next quarter conceded the lead, Milano retook it before half-time and resisted Brindisi's forays until the end, Marshon Brooks' 14 points made him one of five Milan players with 10 points or more. In the other contest, Sassari progressed past Reggio Emilia thanks to a third quarter run that took the game from a tie to a 57-46 Sassari lead, with Reggio Emilia not finding a way back into the game despite Rimantas Kaukėnas' 21 points, the winners had a number of players in double figure scoring including David Logan and Jerome Dyson (16 and 15 points respectively).[3]

Bracket

Quarter-finals Semifinals Final
         
1 EA7 Emporio Armani Milano 60
8 Sidigas Avellino 58
1 EA7 Emporio Armani Milano 76
5 Enel Brindisi 65
4 Umana Reyer Venezia 70
5 Enel Brindisi 80
1 EA7 Emporio Armani Milano 94
2 Dinamo Banco di Sardegna Sassari 101
3 Grissin Bon Reggio Emilia 80
6 Dolomiti Energia Trento 77
3 Grissin Bon Reggio Emilia 65
2 Dinamo Banco di Sardegna Sassari 77
2 Dinamo Banco di Sardegna Sassari 74
7 Vanoli Cremona 63

Final

Milano were seen as the favourites going into the final against defending champions Sassari, however it was the Sardinians that raced into a 33-15 lead after only eight minutes, league-leaders Milano fought back to reduce the lead to 49-47 before half-time but an excellent start to the third quarter enabled Sassari to accrue a determinant lead and repeat their 2014 Cup win. Game MVP Logan had 25 points as Dyson paced the winners with 27 points, Joe Ragland and Brooks contributed 21 and 18 points respectively to Milano's losing effort.[4]

22 February 2015
19:00 UTC+1
EA7 Emporio Armani Milano 94101 Dinamo Banco di Sardegna Sassari
Scoring by quarter: 21–33, 26–18, 19–26, 28–24
Pts: Ragland 21
Rebs: Kleiza, Hacket 9
Asts: Hackett 6
Pts: Dyson 27
Rebs: Sanders 7
Asts: Sosa 4
PalaDesio, Desio
Referees:
  • Luigi Lamonica
  • Guido Federico Di Francesco
  • Gianluca Sardella
Milano
Sassari
MVP
David Logan
Game rules
Game played under FIBA rules.
2015 Italian Cup Winners
Dinamo Banco di Sardegna Sassari
(1st title)

References

  1. "Beko Final Eight: la Sidigas e' ottava. Ecco gli accoppiamenti" [Beko Final Eight: Sidigas is eighth. Here are the pairings]. LegaBasket.it (in Italian). 11 January 2015. Retrieved 30 August 2015.
  2. "National cups roundup: Friday - Italy: EA7 Milan, Reggio Emilia, Dinamo Sassari win quarterfinals". Euroleague.net. 20 February 2015. Retrieved 30 August 2015.
  3. "National cups roundup: Saturday - Italy: Sassari and EA7 Milan to meet in the finals". Euroleague.net. 21 February 2015. Retrieved 30 August 2015.
  4. "Roundup: Strasbourg end ten-year wait". FIBAEurope.com. 23 February 2015. Retrieved 30 August 2015.
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