Valencia - Real Madrid: Spanish derby for the European final
Valencia Basket and Real Madrid come to Athens for a EuroLeague semifinal with clear weight: the winner goes to the final in the OAKA Olympic Hall, while the defeated side ends its journey without a third-place game. The match is played on May 22 at 20:00, in the arena that from May 22 to 24 will be the center of European club basketball. Tickets for this match are in demand among fans because it is a Spanish derby in which one side is seeking the greatest leap in the club's history, and the other the continuation of a decade of almost constant presence at final tournaments.
Valencia reached Athens through the most dramatic possible scenario. Against Panathinaikos, it lost the first two games of the series at home, then won two games in Athens and celebrated 81-64 in the fifth meeting. With that, it secured the first Final Four in the club's history. Even more important for the psychology of the team: that series was not a random shooting explosion, but a combination of defense, rebounding and calmness in the moments when the pressure was highest.
Real Madrid comes to Athens with a different kind of weight. The club that in the newer era has been used to playing final stages passed Hapoel IBI Tel Aviv by an overall score of 3-1, and won the fourth game 87-81. Madrid also had to change the plan on the fly because problems under the rim became the main topic before the semifinal. For fans, that means one thing: not only a clash of two Spanish clubs is expected, but a clash of Valencia's energy and Real's ability to survive when the rotation is not ideal.
What is at stake
For Valencia Basket, this is a game that can change the perception of the entire season. Pedro Martínez's team has already made a historic step by qualifying for the final tournament, but the semifinal against Real Madrid carries additional value: the chance for the first Final Four episode not to stop at merely arriving. Valencia showed in the quarterfinals that it can survive a series in which everything seemed lost, and such a team can be extremely unpleasant in one game.
For Real Madrid, the stakes are different. At the Madrid club, the semifinal is not treated as a surprise, but as a space in which the standard is confirmed. Real is a European giant, but it comes to Athens without the comfort usually given by the dominance of big men. That is why the game will be a test for Sergio Scariolo: how long Real can control the rhythm without the classic inner security brought by Walter Tavares and Alex Len.
In the shortest terms, Valencia is chasing the continuation of the fairy tale, and Real Madrid is chasing another confirmation that experience and the depth of the system can compensate even for serious roster problems. Seats in the stands disappear quickly when the historic leap of one club and the reputation of another come together.
Valencia's road to Athens
Against Panathinaikos, Valencia did what rarely happens in this format: it came back from 0-2 in the series. In the fifth game, in front of a packed Roig Arena, it won 81-64 and closed the series with three consecutive victories. Spanish media especially emphasized that the team remained faithful to its plan - solid defense, rebounding and patiently seeking solutions, instead of running wild in attack.
Pedro Martínez has a team that does not depend only on one name. Jean Montero carries a large part of the creation and rhythm, Brancou Badio was important in the decisive victory over Panathinaikos, and players such as Sergio de Larrea, Matt Costello, Nate Reuvers, Kameron Taylor and Braxton Key provide the width that allows Valencia to change tempo. It is not a team that has to finish every attack in the same way, which is important against Real Madrid, which will try to break the opponent with defensive changes.
In the final part of the series against Panathinaikos, Valencia also gained something that is not visible only in statistics: the feeling that it can win in a hostile environment. Two victories in Athens, in the opponent's arena, are great capital before returning to the same city for the neutral final tournament.
- Valencia defeated Panathinaikos 81-64 in the fifth game of the quarterfinals.
- It won the series 3-2 after an initial 0-2 deficit.
- Qualification for Athens is the first Final Four in the history of Valencia Basket.
- Pedro Martínez leads a team that relies on defense, rebounding and a wide rotation.
- Jean Montero and Brancou Badio arrive as important leaders of the backcourt.
Real Madrid and the problem that changes the game
Real Madrid finished the quarterfinal against Hapoel with an 87-81 victory in the fourth game and 3-1 overall. In that series, the depth of Madrid's roster was seen again: when absences disrupted the plan, other players took responsibility. Usman Garuba is especially important in this story because in the closing part of the series he had to take on the role that usually belongs to bigger and more classic centers.
The biggest news ahead of Athens is not the form of the guards, but the situation under the basket. Walter Tavares injured a knee ligament in the first game of the quarterfinals, and Alex Len has a problem with the plantar fascia of his left foot. Spanish sources state that both should not be available for the Final Four. This changes the geometry of Real Madrid's game: there is less classic rim protection, fewer secure minutes with a tall center and more responsibility for Garuba, Trey Lyles and possibly smaller lineups.
On the other hand, Real still has outside quality that can break the game in a few minutes. Facundo Campazzo controls the rhythm and pressure on the ball, Mario Hezonja brings points from isolation and transition, Théo Maledon provides additional creation, and Sergio Llull can still change the energy of the match with one run. Valencia must not allow Real easy points after turnovers because Madrid builds its most dangerous runs precisely from such sequences.
- Real Madrid eliminated Hapoel IBI Tel Aviv with a 3-1 score in the series.
- It won the fourth game 87-81.
- Walter Tavares is out of action due to a knee injury.
- Alex Len has a problem with the plantar fascia of his left foot.
- Usman Garuba becomes crucial for defending the paint and switching on the perimeter.
Tactical key: tempo, rebounding and zone
This semifinal could be decided in the battle for rhythm. Valencia will probably try to keep the game in a zone in which it is not played only on the individual quality of Real's outside players. That means controlled offense, good transition defense and aggressive rebounding. If Valencia allows Campazzo to speed up the match, Real will hide its height problems more easily because it will shift the game to running, early-offense decisions and shots by open players.
Real Madrid could use more zones and changes of defensive setups, similarly to some recent games against Valencia. In the April duel in the ACB league, Real won 96-82 at Roig Arena, and an important segment was the defensive adjustment that slowed Valencia's offense. At that time, Hezonja, Campazzo, Tavares and Lyles had important offensive roles, but now the context is different because Tavares and Len are not part of the expected picture for Athens.
Valencia therefore has to attack the rim smartly, not only bravely. Without Tavares and Len, Real loses height, but it does not lose athleticism. Garuba can defend wide spaces, step out high and disrupt passing lines. For Valencia, it will be important to force him into personal fouls, push him into contact and attack the offensive glass with several players, not only with centers.
The other important zone is the three-point line. Real Madrid often lives from the moment in which Hezonja, Campazzo or someone from the second unit hits two or three outside shots in a row. Valencia must survive such periods without panic. In the quarterfinals it showed that it can come back after blows, but a semifinal in one game does not give much time for corrections.
Key players for fans to watch
For Valencia, Jean Montero is the player around whom the offensive pulse is often built. When he gets into the middle, defenses collapse, and then corner shots and passes to big men open up. Brancou Badio brings energy and defensive pressure, and Sergio de Larrea can give important minutes when the rhythm needs to be changed. Matt Costello and Nate Reuvers will be important in the battle with Real's adjusted interior lines.
For Real, the first player to watch is Facundo Campazzo. He is the organizer, the provocateur of rhythm and the player who constantly tests the concentration of the defense. Mario Hezonja is most dangerous when the game becomes nervous and when a shot over a hand is needed. Usman Garuba, because of the injuries to Tavares and Len, is perhaps Real Madrid's most important player for the very structure of the match. If he stays out of foul trouble, Real has a more stable defense. If Valencia burdens him early, Scariolo will have to look for improvisations.
A special story is psychological pressure. Valencia is playing such a match for the first time, but it comes on the wave of a historic comeback. Real Madrid has experience, but also the burden of expectations. In such games, details that do not enter the preview often decide: one turnover after a time-out, one offensive rebound, one defense without a foul in the last five seconds of the possession.
OAKA Olympic Hall and Athens as host
The game is played in the OAKA Olympic Hall, at the address Leof. Olimpionikou Spirou Loui in Athens, that is, in the sports complex in Marousi. The arena was opened in 1995 and today is used for basketball, concerts and major events. After rebranding, it is also known as Telekom Center Athens, and the capacity for basketball is listed as more than 19,000 spectators. For such a Final Four, that means a very loud, dense and visually powerful backdrop, especially because it is played in a city that lives basketball.
OAKA has a specific character: it is not a small, tight arena, but a large Olympic facility. That changes the impression for spectators. Seats and sectors should be reached earlier, and entrances and checks may take time when semifinals are played on the same day. It is worth securing tickets on time and planning arrival without relying on the last moment.
Athens is practical for fans because it offers plenty of accommodation, restaurants and public transport, but match day requires discipline. OAKA is not in the tourist center itself near the Acropolis, but farther north, in Marousi. This is important for everyone coming from the city center: count time for the metro, entry into the complex and moving through the area around the arena.
- Location: OAKA complex, Marousi, northern part of Athens.
- Nearest metro options: Eirini and Neratziotissa stations on line M1.
- OAKA also lists access via suburban railway and bus lines along Kifissias Avenue.
- For arrival by car, it is better to set off earlier because of congestion around the complex.
- The arena is a large Olympic facility, so enough time should be left for security checks and finding the sector.
Atmosphere in the stands
An interesting mix can be expected in the stands. Valencia will have fans coming to the first Final Four in the club's history, which carries a special kind of energy. Real Madrid has a fan base used to big European nights, but also aware that the team comes to Athens without its standard interior power. Because of that, the atmosphere could be tense from the first minutes, not only in the closing stages.
Neutral Greek spectators can also influence the impression of the evening. Panathinaikos was eliminated precisely by Valencia, so part of the crowd will not be indifferent toward the Spanish club that celebrated in their arena during the quarterfinal series. Real Madrid, on the other hand, always provokes a reaction in Athens because of its reputation and history. Ticket sales for this game are underway, and the interest is understandable because it is a semifinal that combines a historic story and a major basketball brand.
For a fan going to the arena, the most important thing is to arrive early enough. Semifinal day is not an ordinary league evening: there are more visiting fan groups, more security checks, more media and more people entering that sector for the first time. If you are planning to arrive by public transport, the metro is the simplest option. If you are going by taxi or car, leave room for a traffic jam near the complex.
Practical guide for match day
The smartest plan is to head toward the arena earlier than you would for an ordinary game. The semifinal starts at 20:00, but crowds form before that, especially if fans remain in central Athens. Marousi is well connected, but the distance from the tourist core means that traffic delays are not unusual. Metro line M1 toward Eirini or Neratziotissa stations is the cleanest choice for most visitors.
If you are arriving from outside Athens, the most important thing is not to plan the trip as if you are going to a small arena next to the center. OAKA is a large complex with several sports facilities, so upon arrival you need to orient yourself toward the entrance for the basketball arena. Bring only what you really need because security checks at such events can slow entry.
Food and drink in the surroundings depend on the zone in which you move, so it is better not to count on a long meal right before the start of the match. It is more practical to eat earlier in the city, then head toward the arena and leave enough time for entry. It is worth securing tickets on time, and on match day the focus should be on arrival, the sector and the return after the end.
How the game can go one way or the other
Valencia wins if it turns the game into a physical, patient and rebounding duel. It has to attack Real's thinned-out interior line, but without rushing. If Montero and Badio manage to break the first line of defense, and Costello, Reuvers and the other big men open space, Real will have to help from the corners. Then Valencia gets shots that can change the game.
Real Madrid wins if it hides the lack of height with tempo, ball pressure and smart distribution of Garuba's minutes. Campazzo has to dictate when to run and when to calm things down. Hezonja has to be a threat from the first touch, not only from isolation. Lyles can be important if Scariolo starts with smaller lineups that spread the floor and force Valencia's centers far from the rim.
The game could have periods in which one team looks completely more ready, and then the picture changes in two minutes. That is the nature of the final tournament: there is no series for correction, no home court, no time for major adjustments. Whoever better controls turnovers and the defensive rebound will have an enormous part of the job in their hands.
What a fan needs to know before entering the arena
This is not a game that should be viewed only through the balance of power on paper. Valencia has already overturned a scenario in which it had been written off after 0-2. Real Madrid has already shown that it can survive without an ideal roster. That is why the first quarter will be important for the tone, but it does not have to decide anything. If Valencia enters bravely, Real will have to immediately find solutions under the basket. If Real imposes the rhythm early and hits outside shots, the pressure shifts to the team playing such a final tournament for the first time.
For spectators, the most attractive thing is precisely that the game has several clear stories: Valencia's historic run, Real's search for another final, Garuba's new role, Campazzo's control of the rhythm and Montero as the face of a brave team that no longer has anything to prove, but has something to win. In the OAKA arena, such games usually do not stay quiet for long.
Sources:
- EuroLeague Basketball - data on the Final Four schedule, standings, playoff context and official game results were used.
- RTVE - details were used on Valencia Basket's 81-64 victory against Panathinaikos, the historic first qualification for the Final Four and the comeback from 0-2 in the series.
- AS - data were used on the semifinal pairings, the Valencia - Real Madrid time slot and the injuries to Walter Tavares and Alex Len.
- Eurohoops - data were used on Real's progress against Hapoel IBI Tel Aviv, the 87-81 victory and the role of Usman Garuba.
- Cadena SER - context was used on Real's absences, Garuba's role and the last head-to-head ACB meeting between Valencia and Real Madrid.
- OAKA and Telekom Center Athens - data were used on the arena, capacity, location, public transport and access to the complex.