2019 CEBL season: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
Line 109: | Line 109: | ||
}} |
}} |
||
==== |
====Final==== |
||
{{Basketballbox|bg=#eee |date=August 25 |time=4:00 pm |place=[[SaskTel Centre]], [[Saskatoon, Saskatchewan]] |TV=[[CBC Sports|CBC]], CEBL.TV |
|||
{{NHLPlayoffs |
|||
|team1 |
|team1=[[Hamilton Honey Badgers]] |score1= |
||
|team2 |
|team2=[[Saskatchewan Rattlers]] |score2= |
||
|report=[ Box score] |
|||
|stadium1 = [[SaskTel Centre]] |
|||
| |
|Q1= |Q2= |Q3= |Q4= |
||
|points1= |points2= |
|||
|score1 = 4:00 pm |
|||
|rebounds1= |rebounds2= |
|||
|recap1 = |
|||
|assist1= |assist2= |
|||
|won1 = |
|||
|attendance= |
|||
|referee= |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
Revision as of 08:11, 25 August 2019
2019 CEBL season | |
---|---|
League | Canadian Elite Basketball League |
Sport | Basketball |
Duration | Season: May 9 – August 15 Playoffs: August 24–25 |
Number of games | 20 |
Number of teams | 6 |
Draft | |
Top draft pick | Joel Friesen |
Picked by | Fraser Valley Bandits |
Regular season | |
Top seed | Niagara River Lions |
Season MVP | Xavier Moon |
Top scorer | Tavrion Dawson |
Playoffs | |
champions | Hamilton Honey Badgers |
champions | Saskatchewan Rattlers |
Finals |
The 2019 CEBL season is the inaugural season of the Canadian Elite Basketball League. It included 6 teams, Saskatchewan, Fraser Valley, Edmonton, Hamilton, Niagara, and Guelph. The regular season will run from May 9, 2019 to August 15, 2019, and will have a Championship Weekend, August 23, 2019 to August 25, 2019. On May 21, 2019 it was announced Saskatoon, Saskatchewan would be the league's first host of the tournament.[1]
Regular season
2019 Championship weekend
Semifinals August 24 | Finals August 25 | ||||||||
1 | Niagara | 103 | |||||||
4 | Hamilton | 104 | |||||||
4 | Hamilton | 0 | |||||||
3 | Saskatchewan | 0 | |||||||
2 | Edmonton | 83 | |||||||
3 | Saskatchewan | 85 |
Semi-Finals
CBC, CEBL.TV
|
August 24
1:00 pm |
Edmonton Stingers 83, Saskatchewan Rattlers 85 | ||
Scoring by quarter: 17–20, 32–21, 19–17, 17–25 | ||
Pts: Grandy Glaze 17 Rebs: Travis Daniels 13 Asts: Moon, Baker, Glaze 5 each |
Pts: Marlon Johnson 17 Rebs: Posthumus, Keith 8 each Asts: Alex Campbell 4 |
SaskTel Centre, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
Attendance: 2,163 Referees: Frank Rizzuti, Tanner Cervo, Greg Spagnoli |
CBC, CEBL.TV
|
August 24
3:30 pm |
Niagara River Lions 103, Hamilton Honey Badgers 104 | ||
Scoring by quarter: 34–34, 20–21, 27-25, 22–24 | ||
Pts: Ryan Anderson 26 Rebs: Yohanny Dalembert 11 Asts: Pinson, Johnson 5 each |
Pts: Xavier Raythan-Mayes 28 Rebs: Mike Fraser 13 Asts: Raythan-Mayes 11 |
SaskTel Centre, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
Attendance: 2,163 Referees: Karen Lasiuk, Neil Donnelly, Troy Turnbull |
Final
End of season awards
Source: [2]
- Player of the year: Xavier Moon, Edmonton Stingers
- Canadian Player of the Year: Guillaume Boucard, Niagara River Lions
- U sports developmental player of the year: Brody Clarke, Edmonton Stingers
- Defensive Player of the Year: Samuel Muldrow, Niagara River Lions
- Refree award: David hersche
- 6 community ambassadors awards: Abednego Lufile, Guelph Nighthawks, Jelane Pryce, Saskatchewan Rattlers, Xavier Moon, Edmonton Stingers, Ryan Anderson, Niagara River Lions, Matt Marshall Hamilton Honey Badgers, Marek Klassen Fraser Valley Bandits
- Coach of the Year: Victor Raso Niagara River Lions
all star teams
First Team[3] | Pos. | Second Team | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Player | Team | Player | Team | |
Samuel Muldrow | Niagara River Lions | C | Marlon Johnson | Saskatchewan Rattlers |
Guillaume Boucard | Niagara River Lions | F | Jordan Baker | Edmonton Stingers |
Travis Daniels | Edmonton Stingers | F | Travion Dawson | Saskatchewan Rattlers |
Ricky Tarrant.jr | Hamilton Honey Badgers | G | Marek Klassen | Fraser Valley Bandits |
Xavier Moon | Edmonton Stingers | G | Trae Bell-Haynes | Niagara River Lions |