NBA Europe Notes: Alba Berlin, PSG, Barcelona, Italian Teams

The NBA is moving forward on laying the groundwork for its European league, with an eye on launching in October 2027, and Germany’s Alba Berlin appears likely to be a major part of that new league, writes The Athletic’s Joe Vardon.

According to Vardon, one of the reasons this weekend’s Grizzlies/Magic games in Berlin and London were so important is that those two cities are being eyed as possible anchor teams for the NBA’s European league, with Alba Berlin expected to be the representative for the German capital.

To me, they are an exemplar of how a top-tier club should be run and organized,” NBA commissioner Adam Silver said. “[With] their tremendous youth programs, they have deep fan support. They’ve created enormous enthusiasm around the game. Look no further than the Wagner brothers, who were developed, as part of the Alba Berlin ecosystem. So, they are the model of the type of club that we would like to see in a potential European league.”

While Alba Berlin doesn’t have rich parent organizations like Barcelona, it’s considered to have one of the most impressive farm systems of any team in the world, Vardon writes, with a network of coaches and employees around the city who are ready to train anyone who picks up a basketball.

The German club also has a cleaner path to joining the NBA’s league than many, given that it no longer has an agreement in place with the EuroLeague.

EuroLeague is not financially sustainable for the licensed clubs, and especially for the non-licensed clubs,” said owner Axel Schweitzer. “I’m not saying it’s good or bad (for everyone), but for us, with the NBA and the potential to tap into the market … we feel it’s possible to achieve much more than what’s been in reach.”

We have more updates on teams linked to NBA Europe:

  • Silver is hopeful that a partnership can be struck with French soccer powerhouse Paris Saint-Germain, writes Javier Molero of EuroHoops. “They play at the highest level of competition (in soccer), and they have the know-how to operate a basketball club at the highest level, if they’re interested,” Silver said. “Yes, it’s a club we’re talking to.” NBA deputy commissioner Mark Tatum expanded on the league’s interest in the club. “There’s their ability to create a brand, a culture, their association with the Jordan Brand, which is linked to basketball,” Tatum said. “We’re looking for the right partners for our project, and PSG brings a very interesting level of expertise in terms of marketing, promotion, and building a global brand.”
  • FC Barcelona is looking less likely to join the ground floor of the NBA’s European league, Alex Molina reports for Eurohoops. Molina notes that Barcelona is expected to formally approve a 10-year commitment to EuroLeague at the end of this week, though he adds that this decision would not fully eliminate the possibility of Barcelona eventually joining the NBA’s venture should it prove to be a stable, long-term alternative.
  • Silver and the NBA are also hoping to land an Italian team. They have meetings scheduled with Olimpia Milano and AC Milan on Monday, per Kevin Martorano of Sportando. Inter Milan will not attend the meeting, indicating that they are less likely to consider joining the nascent league. According to Martorano, the meeting will allow the NBA to illustrate what such a partnership would look like, economically and in terms of managing franchises within the league.

Latest On NBA’s Potential European League

Speaking to the media in Berlin, Germany ahead of Thursday’s Grizzlies-Magic game, commissioner Adam Silver confirmed the NBA is pressing ahead with its plans for a new league in Europe, writes Tim Reynolds of The Associated Press.

I would just say we continue to be enormously excited about it,” Silver said about the notion of an NBA Europe. “We’ve been meeting with clubs that are interested in participating in our league. We’ve been in discussions with other potential stakeholders, including media companies that would like to cover it, potential media partners and traditional sponsors who want to work with us on the league. We’re looking at the opportunity to grow the arena infrastructure, not just here in Germany but throughout the continent. It’s something that we’re enormously excited about.”

The NBA recently received a letter of potential legal action from the EuroLeague if the NBA contacts teams the EuroLeague says are under contract, a source confirmed to Ben Horney of Front Office Sports. According to Horney, a person familiar with the NBA’s thinking says it has “engaged with all parties in a lawful and appropriate manner,” and has “not engaged with anyone about any opportunity that they are not free to discuss.”

Silver discussed the notice on Thursday, saying, “I send the legal letters to my lawyers, so I’ll let them handle that,” per Joe Vardon and Mike Vorkunov of The Athletic.

I don’t think by any means it’s inevitable that there is a clash (between the NBA, FIBA, and EuroLeague),” Silver said. “I think there’s opportunity here to grow European basketball. And frankly, I’m much more focused on the competitive landscape, not just with other sports in Europe, but with other entertainment options. That’s how we view the NBA. We don’t think of ourselves, even in the United States, as necessarily competing against other basketball organizations or other sports organizations. We’re competing for people’s attention.

And if I thought that the ceiling was the existing EuroLeague and their fan interest, we wouldn’t be spending the kind of time and attention we are on this project.”

There are rumors that Spanish powerhouse Real Madrid — the most successful EuroLeague team in history — is leaning toward joining the NBA’s proposed league, which doesn’t have a formal name or official start date. Several of the permanent EuroLeague teams have signed 10-year contracts, but those deals include out clauses, including a €10 million early exit fee and additional damages that would be determined based on the situation, a source tells Horney.

Although the EuroLeague has reservations about the NBA’s European project, there’s still a possibility that the two sides could collaborate in some fashion in the future, according to Horney.

Silver reiterated on Thursday that the NBA will determine by the end of this year whether it will expand its own 30-team league, Reynolds notes.

To me, honestly, the real heavy lift would be creating a new league in Europe,” Silver said. “As I said, that’s an enormous undertaking, which is why we’ve been moving one step at a time and being very careful and cautious and making sure we’re covering all our bases.”

And-Ones: Fields, OTE, NBA Europe, 2026 Draft, More

Former Hawks general manager Landry Fields has a new job, having been hired by Overtime Elite (OTE) as its president of league operations, writes Alex Schiffer of Front Office Sports.

The nine-team league, which launched in 2021 and is made up of prospects between the ages of 16 and 20, has several notable alumni, including recent NBA lottery picks like Alex Sarr, Amen Thompson, and Ausar Thompson. Fields will look for ways to continue growing OTE while overseeing all competitive, development, and operational aspects of the league, Schiffer writes.

“He’s got four unique parts of his career that touch everything we do,” Overtime CEO Dan Porter explained to Schiffer. “He was a player so he understands that ecosystem. And he’s a young guy. He knows what social media is. He deeply understands college. He played four years at Stanford. At the Spurs he really did player development and scouting and clearly our league is driven by talent. And at the Hawks, he dealt with all of the business side.

“None of (our other staff) have gone all the way up and down. We haven’t had someone who touches NBA, college, who was a player and touches all of those things.”

Here are several more odds and ends from around the basketball world:

  • The NBA is aiming for franchise valuations of up to $1 billion as it prepares to pitch investors on its new European league, according to Giles Turner and Jake Rudnitsky of Bloomberg (subscription required). With NBA commissioner Adam Silver overseas this week for games in Berlin and London, the league is expected to hold meetings this week with potential investors and teams for NBA Europe.
  • The EuroLeague is seeking 10-year commitments from its A-license teams as it looks to avoid losing clubs to NBA Europe. According to Aris Barkas of Eurohoops, the EuroLeague has set this coming Friday as a deadline for those decisions and has threatened potential legal action against the NBA if it tries to recruit clubs that have committed to the EuroLeague.
  • ESPN’s Jeremy Woo has updated his 2026 mock draft, which features Kansas star Darryn Peterson in the No. 1 spot on Houston point guard Kingston Flemings sneaking into the top five.
  • Looking back at past transaction cycles, Zach Kram of ESPN analyzes 14 blockbuster trades completed since 2013 to determine what we can learn from them, while The Athletic’s NBA writers identify one trade that each of the NBA’s franchises would like to be able to undo.
  • Michael Pina of The Ringer identifies his seven “least improved” players of the 2025/26 season so far, ranging from stars like Ja Morant and Evan Mobley to young role players like Rob Dillingham and Ochai Agbaji.

International Notes: Dinwiddie, Silva, De Colo, NBA Europe

Veteran NBA guard Spencer Dinwiddie has officially parted ways with Bayern Munich, the German team announced in a press release.

According to Bayern, which competes in both the Basketball Bundesliga (BBL) and the EuroLeague, Dinwiddie’s contract was terminated in a mutual agreement. The 32-year-old was granted permission to travel to the United States prior to Christmas because a family member is dealing with a serious illness.

I would like to thank the organization, the team, and the fans. Despite the recent challenging phase of the season, I felt very comfortable in Munich. Unfortunately, I am currently not in a position to play,” Dinwiddie said in a statement.

An 11-year NBA veteran, Dinwiddie signed a one-year, minimum-salary contract with Charlotte in July. Although the deal was fully guaranteed, he became the victim of a preseason roster crunch for the Hornets, who waived him on October 16. He signed with Bayern, his first international team, a week later.

Here are a few more international items of interest:

  • Former NBA big man Chris Silva is moving from AEK Athens to Fenerbahce, as first reported by Turkish journalist Yağız Sabuncuoğlu (via Twitter) and confirmed by Semih Tuna of Eurohoops.net and Domantas Urbonas of BasketNews.com. The 29-year-old forward/center was thriving with the Greek team and reportedly received interest from multiple EuroLeague clubs before deciding to sign with Turkey’s Fenerbahce, which won the EuroLeague championship last season.
  • Fenerbahce will also be adding ex-NBA guard Nando De Colo, who has parted ways with LDLC ASVEL Villeurbanne, according to an announcement from the French team (hat tip to Tuna of Eurohoops). “Approached by the Turkish club, Nando was keen to seize this opportunity, to which LDLC ASVEL did not object, wishing to respect the player’s wishes,” ASVEL said in a statement. “The entire club thanks Nando for his integrity and professionalism throughout these years spent at LDLC ASVEL and wishes him the maximum joy and trophies for the rest of his career.”
  • Some European politicians have raised objections about the NBA’s proposed European league, according to Johnny Askounis of Eurohoops. January will be an important month for the new venture and for the EuroLeague, which is waiting to hear back from four teams — including Fenerbahce and ASVEL — about whether or not they will stay in the league in 2026/27, per Aris Barkas of Eurohoops.

Windhorst/Bontemps’ Latest: Giannis, Trade Deadline, LeBron, More

A number of league insiders who spoke to ESPN’s Brian Windhorst and Tim Bontemps about what will happen in the NBA in 2026 believe that this will be the year the Giannis Antetokounmpo saga in Milwaukee reaches an inflection point, according to Bontemps.

“The rubber is going to finally hit the road, one way or the other,” one Western Conference executive said.

However, several of those sources believe the situation will carry over into the offseason, with one Eastern Conference scout suggesting that the Bucks star would have “maximum leverage” if he waits until the summer to request a trade.

“They aren’t trading him in-season,” a Western scout predicted.

In fact, many of the executives surveyed by Bontemps are anticipating a relatively quiet trade deadline, with resolutions on players like Antetokounmpo, Anthony Davis, Zach LaVine, and Trae Young potentially not coming until June or July (or later). One Eastern Conference exec suggested that a “crazy summer” could be on tap if February’s deadline ends up being somewhat uneventful.

“All these guys are going to be stuck where they are (at the trade deadline),” another Western Conference exec said. “I don’t think it will be as busy as people think, and I don’t think the available players will be that good.”

Here’s more from Windhorst and Bontemps:

  • According to Windhorst, league executives believe there will be three paths available to LeBron James after this season: Re-sign with the Lakers at a reduced salary, join another team in free agency, or retire. In other words, they don’t expect Los Angeles to continue paying the four-time MVP maximum or near-max money. While James is no longer performing at his peak level, he would continue to be a coveted player if he decides not to retire, one head coach said: “LeBron is still averaging 20 points and shooting 50%. You just have to find the right situation.”
  • The NBA is reportedly weighing rule changes to further disincentivize tanking, and ESPN’s sources expect the outcry for changes to grow as the season progresses, Windhorst writes. “This is only going to get louder,” an Eastern Conference executive said. “By the spring, I think one out of every three games we’re going to play is going to be against a team that’s tanking.”
  • While commissioner Adam Silver has said the NBA will make a decision on expansion in 2026, stakeholders who have been working with the league on possible domestic expansion and a new European league are skeptical that the NBA would be able to move forward on both endeavors simultaneously, says Windhorst. The NBA reportedly hopes to launch its European league in the fall of 2027, so perhaps the NBA would aim to expand a year or two after that.

And-Ones: European League, Morant, FIBA Hall Of Fame, Lewis

The NBA and FIBA will begin talking to prospective teams and ownership groups in January in their next move toward forming a new European basketball league, according to Aris Barkas of Eurohoops. The organizations issued a press release Monday morning announcing their intentions.

Along with permanent spots in the league, teams are being promised “a merit-based pathway” to qualify on an annual basis either through FIBA’s Basketball Champions League or an end-of-season qualifying tournament. The league plans to align its schedule with domestic league and national team schedules, allowing players to appear in international tournaments without conflict.

The release also promises that the NBA and FIBA will devote financial support to the development of “Europe’s basketball ecosystem.” That includes domestic leagues, club team academies and the existing programs operated by the NBA and FIBA to develop players, coaches and game officials.

“Our conversations with various stakeholders in Europe have reinforced our belief that an enormous opportunity exists around the creation of a new league on the continent,” NBA commissioner Adam Silver said. “Together with FIBA, we look forward to engaging prospective clubs and ownership groups that share our vision for the game’s potential in Europe.”

Here are more odds and ends from around the basketball world:

  • Grizzlies guard Ja Morant is investing in European basketball through his Catch 12 company, according to Michele Nespoli of Sportando. Morant has purchased a stake in EuroStep Ventures, a holding company that controls the Levallois Metropolitans. The French team received tremendous international exposure due to Victor Wembanyama before he entered the NBA draft.
  • Mavericks legend Dirk Nowitzki is part of FIBA’s 2026 Hall of Fame class, which includes seven players and one coach, Eurohoops relays. Hedo Turkoglu and Wang Zhizhi are other members of the class with NBA ties, while Sue Bird was a star in the WNBA. The induction ceremony will take place April 21 in Berlin, Germany.
  • Referee Eric Lewis was reinstated this week as a G League official, possibly giving him a path back to the NBA, per Marc J. Spears of ESPN. Lewis retired suddenly in 2023 after violating the NBA’s social media policy by having a Twitter burner account. The account, which was deleted, frequently responded to negative posts about Lewis and other officials. “I got chill bumps right now thinking about it,” Lewis said. “I’m excited about earning people’s trust back, getting back to the work and getting back to the game. What was always the plan when this came about was trying to get back to the NBA.”

And-Ones: Front Offices, I. Mobley, NBA Europe, Quaintance

The Thunder are coming off a championship and are just the third team in NBA history to open a season with at least 23 wins in their first 24 games, so it comes as no surprise that general manager Sam Presti came out on top in The Athletic’s annual poll on the league’s best front offices.

A group of The Athletic’s NBA writers asked 36 executives around the NBA to rank their top five front offices, and Oklahoma City received an overwhelming 31 first-place votes.

The rest of the top five wasn’t simply made up of the teams at the top of the NBA’s standings. Brad Stevens and the Celtics placed second, followed by Rafael Stone and the Rockets at No. 3, Pat Riley and the Heat fourth, and Kevin Pritchard and the Pacers rounding out the top five. Each of those front offices received at least one first-place vote.

The Cavaliers, Timberwolves, Knicks, Spurs, and Warriors finished in the top 10, with another 15 teams cited at least once, either as a top-five front office or as a group considered to be “on the rise” and earning an honorable mention. According to The Athletic, the five clubs not to be mentioned at all were the Mavericks, Kings, Pelicans, Suns, and Bulls.

Here are more odds and ends from around the basketball world:

  • Isaiah Mobley, the older brother of reigning NBA Defensive Player of the Year Evan Mobley, is in the process of finalizing an agreement with Hapoel Jerusalem, sources tell Donatas Urbonas of BasketNews.com (Twitter link). Mobley, a 2022 second-round pick who spent parts of three seasons in the NBA with Cleveland and Philadelphia from 2022-25, has been playing this fall with Manisa Basket in Turkey.
  • The fall of 2027 continues to be viewed as a “realistic target” for the launch of the NBA’s European league, according to FIBA secretary general Andreas Zagklis. Joe Vardon of The Athletic passes along some of the other comments Zagklis made about the prospective league during a news conference on Tuesday, including the fact that the goal is to give more teams across Europe a pathway to qualifying for the NBA’s league than can currently qualify for the EuroLeague.
  • Kentucky’s Jayden Quaintance has cracked the top five in the latest 2026 NBA mock draft from Jonathan Wasserman of Bleacher Report, behind the usual suspects at the top. The 6’10” sophomore forward is making his way back from an ACL tear he sustained while playing for Arizona State last season.

Latest On Plans For NBA Europe

Appearing at the Sports Business Journal Dealmakers conference, NBA deputy commissioner Mark Tatum spoke in more details about plans for the NBA’s European league, according to Mike Vorkunov of The Athletic and Tom Friend of Sports Business Journal.

Confirming previous comments from NBA Europe managing director George Aivazoglou, Tatum said the league expects to have permanent franchises based in France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Turkey and Greece. He also named some specific existing clubs that the NBA views as candidates to join the league, including Real Madrid, Barcelona, Bayern Munich, and LDLC ASVEL.

“There’s nothing definitive yet,” Tatum told Vorkunov. “We’re having conversations with lots of potential investors in the ecosystem. Those were examples of potential teams. As I said, I think the mix will be an example of existing teams in the current top-tier league, some soccer teams that don’t have a basketball club and some teams from whole cloth.”

Tatum described the NBA’s vision as “almost like the Champions League of basketball in Europe,” per Friend.

“So brands like Real and Barca and Man City and PSG and AC Milan playing basketball,” Tatum said. “That’s pretty compelling. Not only premium live sports content that’s relevant in Europe, but it’s relevant globally. It’s relevant in Asia, it’s relevant in the United States and North America because some of the brands that we’re talking to have tremendous global followings.”

Tatum believes that many top European teams will have their licenses with the EuroLeague expire after the 2025/26 season, opening the door for those clubs to join the NBA’s league.

“My understanding is that those licenses are up at the end of next year,” he said, per Vorkunov. “As you know, I think, because it’s been reported, several teams have not signed that license (extension). So the ones that have, again, I’m not going to speak to their ability to get out of that license, but I know that there are several teams that have not signed that license. And so, I think as I understand it, when those licenses are up, they’re free to go play in whatever league they want to play in.”

NBA owners still haven’t formally approved plans for the European league, but it sounds like that’s viewed as a formality at this point — Tatum suggested that bidding for NBA Europe teams is expected to begin in the first quarter of 2026, as long as the league can get “everything signed off on by our owners and by FIBA.”

Here’s more from Tatum on the NBA Europe plans:

  • While there’s momentum toward launching the league in the fall of 2027, that first season would likely feature fewer teams and would function as a “play-in” year, according to Vorkunov, with the first year of the full league occurring in 2028/29. “If you’re in Lithuania, if you’re in Serbia, if you’re in Croatia, other clubs in those markets, we want every team to have an opportunity to play into that top tier league,” Tatum said of the play-in process, per Friend.
  • The NBA is hopeful that the new league will help slow down the trend of top European prospects coming to the U.S. to play college basketball, Tatum said, since it will give them the opportunity to develop their games and make good money closer to home.
  • Tatum added that the clear goal for NBA Europe is to be the second-best league in the world. “It will be the best basketball in Europe,” he said, per Friend. “… If the NBA is players one through 450, [NBA] Europe is 451 through 900.”
  • The league envisions NBA teams and NBA Europe clubs playing one another in preseason exhibitions, with the opportunity for the top European clubs to get involved in the in-season NBA Cup down the road. “In the immediate short term, you could see a competition, think about it as a preseason cup, where NBA teams go over and play against European league teams,” Tatum said. “And you’d create a little tournament around that, where the Knicks and the Lakers and the Bulls go over and play PSG, Real, and Man City. So that we could do year one, and I think that would be an exciting proposition. You award a cup at the end of that. Medium term – and I mean, you know, five to 10 years down the road – you could see a situation where the winners of the top two finishers in the European league, for example, get entered into the NBA Cup tournament. So now all of a sudden, you are having AC Milan and Barcelona playing in the NBA Cup tournament.”
  • In the longer term, the NBA’s European league could open the door for European expansion teams in the NBA itself, Tatum suggested: “You saw the article about the supersonic travel. At some point – and again, I’m talking long term down the road – you could see a scenario where the quality of the basketball continues to rise. Where you now have world-class infrastructure in these major world-class cities, and where supersonic travel becomes a reality, you could see a situation down the road where there’s a division of the NBA.”

And-Ones: NBA Europe, Oladipo, Contract Year All-Stars, More

The NBA is targeting October 2027 for the launch of its new European league, according to NBA Europe managing director George Aivazoglou, who recently spoke at a conference in Milan about the league’s plans.

As Daniella Matar and Tim Reynolds of The Associated Press write, while the NBA envisions a 16-team league, it’s possible that not all of those slots will be filled during the first season. The tentative plan is for NBA Europe to feature 12 permanent teams, with the other four slots rotating based on the results of FIBA’s Basketball Champions League or certain European domestic leagues.

While no agreements with specific teams have been announced so far, the NBA has a number of countries and cities on its radar, per Aivazoglou, including Britain (London and Manchester), France (Paris and Lyon), Spain (Madrid and Barcelona), Italy (Rome and Milan), Germany (Berlin and Munich), Greece (Athens), and Turkey (Istanbul).

Matar and Reynolds speculate that there could be a more concrete update from the NBA in January, when a pair of regular season games are scheduled to be played in London and Berlin.

Here are a few more odds and ends from around the basketball world:

And-Ones: International Players, NBA Europe, Taxpayers, More

Highlighting some of the storylines and potential milestones to watch as the 2025/26 NBA season gets underway, Tim Reynolds of The Associated Press observes that the league is setting a series of records related to international players this fall.

According to Reynolds, there are a record 135 players born outside of the U.S. on the league’s 30 opening night rosters. Of those 135 players, 71 are from Europe, which also represents a new high watermark. In total, 43 non-U.S. countries are represented on NBA rosters, tying a league record, Reynolds writes, and each team has at least one international players on its roster.

The rising level of talent from Europe and elsewhere around the world is one reason why the NBA has been moving forward on plans to launch a new professional league based in Europe. According to Aris Barkas of Eurohoops, NBA deputy commissioner Mark Tatum told reporters this week that the goal is to get NBA Europe off the ground within the next couple years. Tatum also specifically identified seven countries the league is eyeing for permanent franchises in that league.

“In phase one, our plan is Spain, U.K., France, Italy, Germany, maybe Turkey, and maybe Greece,” Tatum said. “But there will be some open spots in the ecosystem, so in the early phase, (others) will be able to qualify.”

We have more odds and ends from around the basketball world:

  • Fourteen of the NBA’s 30 teams will open the season as projected taxpayers, according to ESPN’s Bobby Marks (Twitter link), though he acknowledges that number will certainly change in the coming months. The Raptors (over the luxury tax line by just $772K), Nuggets ($402K), and Suns ($274K) are among the prime candidates to duck out of tax territory by February’s trade deadline.
  • Keith Smith of Spotrac also takes look at teams’ cap situations around the NBA, identifying where every club is operating relative to the aprons, tax line, and salary cap.
  • In an extensive preview of the 2025/26 season, a panel of ESPN writers ranked all 30 teams entering the year, from the Thunder at No. 1 to the Wizards at No. 30.
  • Within the past year, several NBA stars have taken on general manager or assistant GM roles with their alma maters, including Stephen Curry at Davidson, Trae Young at Oklahoma, and Damian Lillard at Weber State. Lindsay Schenll of The Athletic explores that trend, noting that the titles are mostly ceremonial but that those stars are willing to help fundraise, recruit, or do whatever else the program might ask of them. “I may not talk to every recruit, but if there is a high-level recruit, you best believe I’m gonna talk to the kid,” Young said. “If there’s a kid I feel like we’re not going after hard enough, I might bring it to their attention. … I’m not gonna overstep. But there’s definitely opinions I’m gonna mention.”
  • Sovereign wealth funds based in Abu Dhabi and elsewhere in the Middle East have become increasingly involved in the NBA as investors in recent years. ESPN’s Brian Windhorst explores how this partnership between the league and those investors came about and where it’s headed in the future.
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