The EuroLeague Game Changers

13/Nov/18 17:45 December 16, 2018

John Rammas

13/Nov/18 17:45

Eurohoops.net

You don’t see them on the court at the beginning of the game, but when they come off the bench you can’t miss them. With their impact, they make you notice them. They are the Game Changers. Eurohoops presents the best of them from the first six rounds of the Turkish Airlines EuroLeague.

By John Rammas/ irammas@eurohoops.net

The game is about to start, the EuroLeague theme song “I Feel Devotion” fills up the arena, and the camera passes in front of the two teams’ starting lineups. Behind the cameras, somewhere on the bench, others await their own opportunity.

Eurohoops presents the players that don’t pass up on that opportunity.

Here are the Top Game Changers in the first six rounds of the regular season:

THANASIS ANTETOKOUNMPO
Panathinaikos OPAP Athens
Forward | July 18, 1992 | Greece
6.8 pts | 1.5 reb | 0.2 ast | 1.3 stl | 0.2 blk | 0.5 tov | 11:40 min | 7.2 PIR

Sometimes, Thanasis Antetokounmpo is in the starting lineup (twice), and sometimes not. But he’s always the special ops man for Panathinaikos. His defensive skills make him the right match for a rival scorer, while he’s not afraid to go up against players that are bigger than him, either in terms of mass or height. Sometimes he cashes in on his great defensive energy with an open-court or above-the-rim score. He turned the game around against Olympiacos Piraeus (93-80) recently at the Olympic Sports Center Athens with a performance that almost equaled his career high of 13 points.

JAYCEE CARROLL
Real Madrid
Guard | April 16, 1983 | USA
11.2 pts | 1 reb | 0.5 ast | 0.8 stl | 0 blk | 0.3 tov | 17:51 | 8.5 PIR

Jaycee Carroll has come off the bench in all six of Real Madrid‘s games, but his skill in execution secure him roughly 18 minutes on the court on average. Usually, he only needs a few seconds to make his presence felt, sometimes without even a dribble, because as soon as he gets the ball in his hands, he has already dispatched it into the rival team’s basket. The most recent example was his 14 consecutive points in the second quarter against Maccabi FOX Tel Aviv (66-87), a solo 0-14 run from 21-27 to 21-41 that was enough for Madrid to leave with the win from the Menora Mivtachim Arena. His performance in the 2015 championship game (16 points on 4-for-5 three-pointers) is the most unforgettable of them all.

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