LONDON — European basketball often is a hot mess of passionate fandom, heated rivalries and financial problems.
Holding some powerful fiefdoms together is the EuroLeague. It's not thrilled about the NBA's plans to create a new competition on the continent.
It's not concerned, either.
"We've only heard the plan or the fireworks of how amazing it will be, how much potential there is,'' EuroLeague CEO Paulius Motiejunas said of the NBA's proposed league. ''But having a theory is one — and making it work is two.''
''We've been here for 26 years. We know how Europe functions."
With clubs like Real Madrid and Bayern Munich, the EuroLeague is considered the best men's professional competition outside the NBA. The 20-team league is comprised of 13 ''shareholder'' clubs immune from relegation. The rest either qualify through their domestic leagues or through invitation.
The NBA, in partnership with FIBA, is eying a 16-team model with 12 permanent members — with a target start of October 2027. It has identified Athens, Istanbul, Paris, Lyon, Munich, Berlin, Rome, Milan, Madrid, Barcelona, London and Manchester as potential host cities.
Attention is currently on three EuroLeague shareholder clubs that haven't renewed their 10-year licenses — Real Madrid, Fenerbahce in Istanbul and the Tony Parker -owned ASVEL near Lyon. Parker has signaled his support for the NBA.