Sports season
The 2022–23 BNXT League was the second season of the BNXT League , the highest professional basketball league in Belgium and the Netherlands . ZZ Leiden was the defending champion.
The season began on 30 September 2022.[ 1]
The league consisted of different stages with national championships and a common BeNeLeague championship.[ 2]
Teams entering in this round
National regular season (20 teams) 30.09.2022–18.02.2023
10 Belgian teams
10 Dutch teams
All teams play each other home and away (18 games)
Elite Gold (10 teams) 03.03.2023–28.04.2023
Best 5 Dutch teams
Best 5 Belgian teams
Teams play 10 games
Elite Silver (10 teams) 03.03.2023–28.04.2023
Bottom-5 Dutch teams
Bottom-5 Belgian teams
Teams play 10 games
National play-offs (6 teams) Schedule: 03.05.2023–29.05.2023
Top two Gold teams from each country go directly to semifinals
Three other Gold teams play in quarter-finals
Best Silver team joins the quarter-finals
BNXT League play-offs (20 teams) Schedule: 03.05.2023–13.06.2023
BNXT playoffs R1: Elite Silver playoff (8 teams)
BNXT playoffs R2: 4 Winners Elite Silver Playoff vs. 4 national PO . quarter-finalists dropping out
BNXT playoffs R3: Winners BNXT PO1 vs. losing semi-finalists national PO
BNXT playoffs R4: BNXT PO2 winners compete against each other
BNXT Quarter-finals: Winners BNXT PO3 vs. losing finalists national PO
BNXT Semi-finals: Winners BNXT PO4 vs. champions national PO
BNXT Finals: Winners BNXT PO5 will compete for the title of BNXT League Champion.
Teams
On 20 June 2022, the league announced 20 teams obtained a club license.[ 3] The Hague Royals were not granted a license.
Phoenix Brussels changed their name to Circus Brussels Basketball after they signed a new sponsorship deal.[ 4]
Arenas and locations
Location of teams in the BNXT League
Note: Table lists in alphabetical order.
Club
Location
Venue
Capacity
Netherlands
Apollo Amsterdam
Amsterdam
Apollohal
1,500
Aris Leeuwarden
Leeuwarden
Kalverdijkje
1,700
BAL
Weert
Sporthal Boshoven
1,000
Den Helder Suns
Den Helder
Sporthal Sportlaan
1,000
Donar
Groningen
MartiniPlaza
4,350
Feyenoord
Rotterdam
Topsportcentrum Rotterdam
2,500
Heroes Den Bosch
's-Hertogenbosch
Maaspoort
2,800
Landstede Hammers
Zwolle
Landstede Sportcentrum
1,200
Yoast United
Bemmel
De Kooi
650
ZZ Leiden
Leiden
Vijf Meihal
2,000
Belgium
Antwerp Giants
Antwerp
Lotto Arena
5,218
Brussels Basketball
Brussels
Sports Complex Neder-Over-Heembeek
1,200
Kangoeroes Mechelen
Mechelen
Winketkaai
1,500
Leuven Bears
Leuven
Sportoase
3,400
Liège Basket
Liège
Country Hall
5,000
Limburg United
Hasselt
Alverberg Sporthal
1,730
Mons-Hainaut
Mons
Mons Arena
4,000
Okapi Aalst
Aalst
Okapi Forum
2,800
Oostende
Ostend
Coretec Dôme
5,000
Spirou
Charleroi
Spiroudome
6,200
Coaching changes
National Round
Netherlands
Standings
Updated to match(es) played on completed. Source:
BNXT League
Results
Updated to match(es) played on completed. Source:
BNXT League Legend: Blue = home team win; Red = away team win.
Belgium
Standings
Updated to match(es) played on completed. Source:
BNXT League
Results
Updated to match(es) played on completed. Source:
BNXT League Legend: Blue = home team win; Red = away team win.
International Round
Elite Gold
Standings
Results
Source:
BNXT League Legend: Blue = home team win; Red = away team win.
Elite Silver
Standings
Results
Source:
BNXT League Legend: Blue = home team win; Red = away team win.
National Playoffs
In the national playoffs, quarterfinals will be played best-of-three format (1–1–1), semifinals and finals will be played in a best-of-five format (1–1–1–1–1).
Netherlands
Bracket
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Finals
Team 1
Series
Team 2
Game 1
Game 2
Game 3
Game 4
Game 5
ZZ Leiden
3–2
Donar
91–94
68–65
55–64
68–45
82–81
Belgium
Bracket
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Finals
BNXT Playoffs
The highest ranked team before the start of the playoffs always has the home court advantage. This means that they always play the last game of a playoff series or a home and away matchup at home.
First round
Second round
Third round
Fourth round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Finals
Individual awards
The winner of individual awards were announced on April 25, 2023.[ 13]
Statistics
The following were the statistical leaders in the 2022–23 regular season.[ 17]
Individual statistic leaders
References
In European competitions
External links
Seasons Playoffs
BNXT Finals Netherlands Belgium
Clubs
Belgium Netherlands Former teams
Awards Associated competitions
2022 –
23 in European men's basketball
Domestic leagues Regional leagues Domestic cups Supercups Continental competitions International competitions