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Buy tickets for Real Madrid vs Hapoel Tel-Aviv - EuroLeague Buy tickets for Real Madrid vs Hapoel Tel-Aviv - EuroLeague

EuroLeague (PLAYOFFS)
30. April 2026. 20:00h
Real Madrid vs Hapoel Tel-Aviv
WiZink Center, Madrid, ES
2026
30
April
Tickets for Real Madrid - Hapoel Tel-Aviv EuroLeague Playoffs in Madrid and a crucial opening clash of the series
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar/ arhiva (vlastita)

Tickets for Real Madrid - Hapoel Tel-Aviv EuroLeague Playoffs in Madrid and a crucial opening clash of the series

Looking for tickets for Real Madrid - Hapoel Tel-Aviv in the EuroLeague playoffs? Here you can explore ticket options and plan your purchase for the Madrid quarterfinal opener, where Real leans on its dominant home form and Hapoel arrives with momentum and belief for a major away result in a tense, high-stakes series battle

Real Madrid and Hapoel Tel-Aviv open a series that smells of a long battle

Real Madrid enters this matchup as the third team of the regular season, and Hapoel Tel-Aviv as the sixth, which means that in Madrid they are not playing only for the first victory but also for the tone of the entire quarterfinal series. The EuroLeague has set a format of three wins for this stage, so the game in the arena on Avenida de Felipe II carries greater weight than a single date on the schedule suggests. Real finished the regular season with a 24-14 record, Hapoel with 23-15, and the difference between them is not huge either on paper or on the court.

For a fan coming to Madrid, that means one thing: tough, competitive, and very serious basketball is expected from the opening minute. Real has been extremely reliable at home throughout the season, with an 18-1 record in home European games, while Hapoel has shown that it knows how to survive on the road as well because it was 10-9 away from home. That is not the profile of an underdog coming to get through the evening, but of a team that believes it can take the game even on one of the toughest European courts. Tickets for this game have been in demand among fans.

What is at stake for both teams

Real Madrid finished the regular season in the upper part of the standings, but without the comfort that would have given it an easier opponent. Third place brought home-court advantage, and in a season in which the team in Madrid has been almost untouchable, that is enormous capital. In a pairing like this, Real cannot count on a relaxed start to the series, but must impose rhythm and physical superiority immediately in the first home game. If Hapoel were to take one game in Madrid, the entire series would very quickly turn into a problem for the home side.

Hapoel Tel-Aviv has a different, but equally strong motive. A few days ago, the club officially reached its first-ever EuroLeague playoff qualification, which in itself is already a big step for Dimitris Itoudis's team. But the story does not stop here with a historic entry among the top eight. Hapoel finished the regular season only one win behind Real and throughout the season it knocked down serious opponents, so it is not coming to Madrid as a tourist. It is worth securing tickets in time.

Form ahead of the trip to Madrid

Real Madrid handled the end of the regular season at a 7-3 pace in its last ten European games. It is not a perfect sprint, but it is a stable enough run to confirm that the team enters the playoffs with faith in its own system. The home context is especially important: 18 wins and only one defeat in front of its own fans says that Real controls the tempo, rebounding, and defensive identity better in Madrid than away from home.Hapoel was 6-4 in its last ten European appearances, with an end to the season in which it secured the playoffs and remained competitive against the strongest teams. That form may not be as dazzling as Real's home run, but it says enough about the depth of the roster and the way Itoudis builds games. Hapoel has guards who can take over possessions, big men who can finish from the paint, and enough outside shooting to punish any excessive help on defense.

An additional layer to this story is provided by the head-to-head meetings from the regular season. Real won 92-83 in Madrid on March 24, and in the first meeting of this season in November it won narrowly 75-74. That means Real has won both head-to-head matchups this season, but also that Hapoel has already shown that it can create problems for it in a low-scoring game, as well as in a more open rhythm when the offense works at a higher number of possessions.

Who decides the game on the court

Real Madrid still relies on several recognizable European pillars. Facundo Campazzo leads the team in assists with an average of 5.1 per game and remains the engine of organization, pressure on the ball, and pace control. Edy Tavares leads Real in rebounding with 6.8 boards per game and in blocks with 1.9, which says enough about how much he changes the picture in the paint. Mario Hezonja and Trey Lyles carry a large part of the scoring burden, and Lyles was precisely the team's top scorer in the regular season with 13.3 points per game, just ahead of Hezonja at 13.2.

Campazzo's value in a game like this is not only in the assists but in the fact that he can speed the game up when Real wants to run, but also slow it down when it needs to bring the ball under the basket. Tavares, meanwhile, is the point around which the entire interior defense is shaped. If he closes the paint and forces Hapoel into difficult shots over a hand, Real gets the kind of game it likes - firm, controlled, and with a clear hierarchy at the end of possessions.

On the other side, Hapoel has perhaps the most interesting combination of backcourt creation and athleticism among the teams from the lower part of the playoff bracket. Elijah Bryant was the team's top scorer in the European season with around 16 points per game and is a player who can score from isolation, in transition, and from spot-up situations. Daniel Oturu holds the inside line with 5.45 rebounds and 1.32 blocks per game, while Vasilije Micic provides an additional level of organization with 4.22 assists per game.That gives Hapoel several different paths to points. Bryant can create an advantage from the perimeter, Micic can punish switches and slow the game down when needed, and Oturu can attack Real's depth under the basket if the ball is brought into the paint quickly enough. For fans in the stands, that means that almost every away possession will have a clear idea behind it and that Real will not be able to survive on name and home court alone.


  • Real Madrid: Facundo Campazzo - game organization, pressure on the ball, and rhythm; Edy Tavares - paint protection and rebounding; Mario Hezonja and Trey Lyles - points from the second and third phases of the offense.

  • Hapoel Tel-Aviv: Elijah Bryant - the main offensive pillar; Daniel Oturu - finishing around the rim and blocks; Vasilije Micic - creation from the pick and roll and composure in key possessions.



Tactical picture of the game

In games like this, Real Madrid most often wants to establish two things: dominance on the boards and control of court depth. When Campazzo dictates the rhythm and Tavares closes the rim, Real can live off defense, second-chance offense, and short runs with which it breaks the opponent. The problem for Hapoel arises if it loses balance in transition defense and allows Campazzo to open transition early, because then Real gets energy from the arena and the game very quickly shifts to the home side in every sense.

Hapoel will therefore probably try to spread the floor and force Real's big men into lateral movement. Itoudis's teams traditionally like to have several solutions from the same possession, and that means an extra pass, an attack from the weak side, and patience until Bryant or the interior line opens up. If Hapoel manages to pull Tavares away from his ideal position under the basket and force Real into defensive rotations, the away side can get exactly the kind of game that gives it a chance for a break.

It is also not unimportant that both head-to-head games this season offered a different scenario. One went to a low total of points and ended in a single possession, the other was more open and ended with 175 total points. That suggests the series will not be decided by one single style, but by adaptation during the 40 minutes. That is precisely why this game looks more like chess at high speed than like an evening in which one side will lead the same game from start to finish.

Coaches and bench

On Hapoel's bench is Dimitris Itoudis, a coach with two European titles and a man who knows how series are played when every possession carries weight. His value to Hapoel is not only in his reputation but also in the discipline he brings to a team that has quite a lot of individual quality. When a playoff game starts to be decided by details, a coach with this kind of experience becomes almost as important as the starting point guard.

At Real, the situation is interesting because the official European pages for the team currently list Sergio Scariolo as coach, and throughout the season Chus Mateo has also appeared in European announcements and club texts. Since the sources in that place are not completely aligned, it is safer to focus on what is seen on the court: Real has a recognizable offensive skeleton, a deep rotation, and enough experience to open the series without panicked solutions. Translated, a fan coming to the arena can expect a team that will seek control, not chaos.

Movistar Arena, the address many still call WiZink Center

The arena at the address Av. de Felipe II, s/n in the Salamanca district today bears the name Movistar Arena, although many fans still out of habit call it WiZink Center. It is located in the Goya zone, in one of the best-connected parts of Madrid, which is good news for everyone coming to the game by public transport or wanting to combine basketball with an evening walk through the city. The arena's official information emphasizes precisely that advantage: a central location, plenty of content in the surroundings, and several underground parking garages in the immediate vicinity.

Capacity varies by type of event, and the official pages of the complex state that the central court can receive up to 17,400 people. For basketball, the configuration is different, but still large enough to create real European pressure when the game enters the closing stages. Seats in the stands disappear quickly.


  • Address: Av. de Felipe II, s/n, Salamanca, Madrid

  • Arena name: Movistar Arena, formerly WiZink Center

  • Location in the city: Goya zone, in the central part of Madrid

  • Transport: the arena is well connected by metro, buses, and pedestrian access from surrounding streets

  • Parking: there are underground garages in the surroundings, but official information recommends public transport on days of high attendance

What a fan should know before arriving

If you are coming to this game from another part of Madrid or from outside the city, the most practical option is to set off earlier and aim to arrive in the Goya district well before the start. The arena's official pages emphasize that this is a very busy part of the city and that public transport on days of high attendance is usually faster than a car. That is especially important for a playoff night, when a larger number of people naturally gathers around the arena and when entering garages can take longer than it seems on the map.

I did not find the exact opening time of the entrances for this game in publicly available announcements up to April 20, so it is safest to count on arriving earlier and to follow organizational announcements closer to the day of the game. In practice, for evenings like this it is reasonable to be in the arena zone early enough to pass security control without rushing, especially if you want to catch the warm-up and the moment when the arena fills up. Ticket sales for this game are in progress.

What kind of atmosphere can be expected

Real's home season in Europe speaks loudly enough for itself: 18-1 is not just a statistic but also a signal of how games in Madrid are usually played. The home side here very often looks firmer, calmer, and more confident than away from home, and the stands further raise the energy when Campazzo links defense and transition or when Tavares closes the paint with two consecutive defensive actions. Those are the situations in which the arena does not need much introduction - the game itself creates the noise.

Hapoel, on the other hand, has not shown fear of big stages this season. A team that secured its first playoff in this competition will not come to Madrid only to defend. It has enough individual class to strike back when Real goes up by ten, and that is usually what creates the best atmosphere in the arena: when the favorite has to keep confirming its status, and the visitor refuses to disappear from the game.

For the neutral viewer, this is a very rewarding pairing. For a Real fan, it is an evening in which confirmation of home power is desired. For a Hapoel fan, it is a trip to a game that can change the entire series. That is why this clash is not just another date on the playoff schedule, but an evening in which every possession can change the direction of the next few days.Sources:
- Euroleague Basketball - playoff schedule, official standings, results of head-to-head games Real Madrid - Hapoel Tel Aviv, team and coach profiles
- RealGM - statistical leaders of both teams and a review of form in the final stage of the season
- Movistar Arena - arena location, complex capacity, access, parking, and arrival recommendations
- Hapoel IBI Tel Aviv BC - away team roster for confirmation of key names

Everything you need to know about tickets for Real Madrid vs Hapoel Tel-Aviv

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2 hours ago, Author: Sports desk

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