The Basketball League

The Basketball League (TBL) is a minor professional basketball league operating in North America that began play in 2018 as North American Premier Basketball (NAPB). Teams operate on a budget of $125,000 to $250,000 per season with player salaries in the $1,000 to $4,000 per month range depending on the team.[1]

The Basketball League (TBL)
Upcoming season or competition:
2021 TBL season
SportBasketball
Founded2017
Inaugural season2018
CEOEvelyn Magley
PresidentDave Magley
CommissionerCarlnel Wiley
Motto"Where the spirit of the game lives"
No. of teams35
CountriesUnited States
ContinentFIBA Americas (Americas)
Most recent
champion(s)
Albany Patroons (2019)
Official websitethebasketballleague.net

History

On July 7, 2017, Dr. Sev Hrywnak and Dave Magley announced the formation of a new professional basketball league. Magley previously served as commissioner for the National Basketball League of Canada (NBLC).[2] Dr. Sev Hrywnak was the owner of the Rochester Razorsharks. Teams are based throughout the United States and Western Canada. Over the course of two years, the league administration located cities that formerly hosted basketball teams in the defunct Continental Basketball Association, the Premier Basketball League, defunct NBA teams and other potential sports markets. The purpose of the league is to provide opportunities for community involvement particularly schools from the elementary to high school levels. Programs include players reading to younger children, hosting basketball camps for teens, and speaking in school-wide assemblies about substance abuse and staying in school.[3]

The league launched its inaugural 2018 season with eight teams: the Albany Patroons, Kansas City Tornados, Kentucky Thoroughbreds, Nevada Desert Dogs, Ohio Cardinals, Rochester Razorsharks, Vancouver Knights, and the Yakima SunKings. The Ohio Cardinals were replaced midseason by the Ohio Bootleggers, a team operated by the former ownership of the Vancouver Knights.

On February 25, 2018, Dave Magley stated that there were four more approved franchises in Bellevue, Washington, Raleigh, North Carolina, Tampa, Florida, and San Diego, California, with the goal of 16 total well-funded teams, for a 2019 season.[4]

After the first NAPB season, Magley acquired the league as sole owner, moved the headquarters to Indiana, and named Evelyn Magley - his wife - as the new CEO. On July 14, the league was rebranded as The Basketball League (TBL).[5] Paul Mokeski, head coach and general manager of the Nevada Desert Dogs during the inaugural season, was then named commissioner of the league for the 2019 season.[6] During the league changes, the Ohio Bootleggers, Rochester Razorsharks, and Vancouver Knights folded while the Bellevue team never came to fruition. The league then added the existing teams, the Jamestown Jackals and New York Court Kings, in addition to the three previously announced expansion teams, the Raleigh Firebirds, San Diego Waves, and Tampa Bay Titans. Three teams also slightly rebranded with the Kansas City Tornadoes, Mesquite Desert Dogs, and Owensboro Thoroughbreds. The 2019 season commenced with ten teams.

During the second season, there were many canceled and rescheduled games.[7] The league cut its season short, with the New York Court Kings and Kansas City Tornadoes either folding or ceasing operations for the season.[8]

Prior to the third season, the league added the Columbus Condors, Dayton Flight, Dallas Skyline, Gulf Coast Lions, Indy Express, Lewisville Yellow Jackets, and the Tri-State Admirals as expansion teams.[9][10] The San Diego Waves were replaced by expansion San Diego Armada while the Waves were being relocated, but neither team would make the 2020 schedule.[11] Due to the lack of other western teams, the Yakima SunKings and the Mesquite Desert Dogs suspended operations. The third season started in January 2020, but on March 11, 2020, the league announced the season would end prematurely due to the COVID-19 pandemic and have a four-team playoff on March 18 through 22. However, the tournament was also cancelled as most events throughout the country were closed to prevent the spread of the virus.

The league then proceeded to announce several new teams for the 2021 season, expanding from 12 teams in the curtailed 2020 season to 35 teams as of January 11, 2021. Several of the added teams came from the semi-professional American Basketball Association.[12][13][14]

Teams

Aces
Sea-Kings
Capitals
Coyotes
Hustle
Lions
Push
Express
BobKats
Lightning
Prestige
Finest
Storm
Monarchs
Eagles
Ballers
Royals
Breeze
Locations of teams in The Basketball League

2021 teams

DivisionTeamCityArenaCapacityFoundedJoinedHead coach
Eastern Conference
Northeast Albany PatroonsAlbany, New YorkWashington Avenue Armory3,600–4,3002017[lower-alpha 1]2018Derrick Rowland
Jamestown JackalsJamestown, New YorkJamestown Community College1,4002015[lower-alpha 2]2019Ken Crosby
South Shore MonarchsBoston, Massachusetts20202021Joseph Platt
Syracuse StallionsSyracuse, New York20172021Nick Perioli
Tri-State AdmiralsJersey City, New JerseyJersey City Armory20192020
Southeast Atlanta EmpireAtlanta, Georgia20202021
Charleston CoyotesCharleston, South Carolina20202021
Gulf Coast LionsSarasota, FloridaBooker High School20192020
Raleigh FirebirdsRaleigh, North CarolinaWord of God Christian Academy20182019Robert Brickey
Tampa Bay TitansNew Port Richey, FloridaPasco–Hernando State College20182019Lazarus Sims
Central Conference
Plains Enid OutlawsEnid, OklahomaStride Bank Center3,88720202021Ed Corporal
Little Rock LightningLittle Rock, Arkansas20192021Marco Cole
Midtown PrestigeWichita, KansasCharles Koch Arena10,50620202021
Omaha's FinestOmaha, NebraskaOmaha Central High School20202021Eric Behrens
Southwest Dallas SkylineAddison, TexasAlfred J. Loos Fieldhouse7,00020192020Angela Weathers
Lewisville LeopardsLewisville, TexasMacedonia C.A.R.E. Center20192020Mathis Crowder
Houston Push[15]Houston, Texas20202021Moochie Norris
Shreveport Mavericks[16]Shreveport, Louisiana2006[lower-alpha 3]2021Steve Tucker
Waco RoyalsWaco, Texas20202021Mamadou Diene
Midwest Conference
Upper Midwest Columbus CondorsWesterville, OhioOtterbein University4,0002016[lower-alpha 4]2020Darrell Miller
Dayton FlightDayton, OhioStivers School for the Arts20192020Gary Armstrong
Detroit HustleDetroit, Michigan20202021Antonio Capaldi
Flint UnitedFlint, Michigan20202021Charlie Bell
Lower Midwest Anderson AcesAnderson, Indiana20202021Phil Washington
Indy ExpressIndianapolis, IndianaThomas Howe High School20192020Andre Owens
Kokomo BobKatsKokomo, Indiana Memorial Gymnasium20202021Cliff Levingston[17]
Owensboro ThoroughbredsOwensboro, KentuckyOwensboro Sportscenter5,00020172018Mark Anderson
Western Conference
Pacific Northwest California Sea-KingsSeaside, CaliforniaMonterey Peninsula College20092021
Fresno FireFresno, California20202021Renaldo Major
Portland StormPortland, Oregon20192021Jeff Perrault
Salem CapitalsSalem, Oregon20202021Brian Stevens
SoCal San Diego GuardiansSan Diego, California20172021Brandon Cheeks
Temecula EaglesTemecula, California20202021
Vegas BallersLas Vegas, Nevada20202021
West Coast BreezeSan Marcos, California[18]20202021Bob Petty
  1. New franchise replacing the defunct team of the same name.
  2. Originally in the Premier Basketball League for 2016, joined the North American Basketball League for 2018 after the PBL ceased operations.
  3. As the Rio Grande Valley Silverados in the ABA.
  4. Originally in the Central Basketball Association in 2016, relaunched as the Ohio Bootleggers in the Premier Basketball League for 2017 and the North American Basketball League for 2018 before the Bootleggers filled in for the folded NAPB Ohio Cardinals for the remainder of the 2018 NAPB season.

Former teams

TeamCityArenaSeasonsNotes
Kansas City TornadoesKansas City, Missourimultiple2018–2019Reportedly backed out of participating in 2019 playoffs despite being second place; not listed on website after season ended.
Mesquite Desert DogsMesquite, Nevadamultiple2018–2019Withdrew prior to the 2020 season citing travel costs as the last remaining west coast team.[19]
New York Court KingsQueens, New YorkElmcor Youth and Adult Activities Center2019Joined from the ABA; apparently ceased operations during the 2019 season.
Ohio BootleggersWesterville, OhioOtterbein University Rike Center2018Owners of the Bootleggers had been operating the Vancouver Knights since sometime during the 2018 season. The Bootleggers' NABL team then replaced the folded Ohio Cardinals midseason, but were not listed by TBL as a 2019 member. The Bootleggers relaunched as the Columbus Condors in 2020.
Ohio CardinalsAkron, OhioLeBron James Arena2018Folded during the 2018 season.
Rochester RazorsharksRochester, New YorkBlue Cross Arena2018Played the 2018 NAPB season. Change of ownership and left TBL.
San Diego WavesSan Diego, CaliforniaSan Diego Mesa College2019Team's owner was stated to be relocating the team to an undecided location. San Diego Armada was announced as a replacement team for the 2020 season under new ownership.
Vancouver KnightsRichmond, British ColumbiaRichmond Olympic Oval2018The Ohio Bootleggers' ownership took over operations of the Knights during the season and the Knights became a travel team. Ownership was transferred during the 2018 season to another unidentified group once the Bootleggers took over for the Cardinals' schedule. Was not listed by TBL as a 2019 member.
Yakima SunKingsYakima, WashingtonYakima SunDome2018–2019Went on hiatus for 2020.[20]

Team timeline

Current teams in tan
Former teams in dark tan
Announced future teams in green

Syracuse StallionsShreveport MavericksSan Diego GuardiansFresno FireFlint UnitedEnid OutlawsAtlanta Empire (TBL)Tri-State AdmiralsLewisville LeopardsDallas SkylineTampa Bay TitansRaleigh FirebirdsJamestown JackalsColumbus CondorsYakima SunKingsRochester RazorsharksMesquite Desert DogsOwensboro ThoroughbredsKansas City TornadoesAlbany Patroons

Seasons

SeasonRegular season championRegular season MVPPlayoff championPlayoff runner-upPlayoff MVP
2018Yakima SunKingsEdwin Ubiles (Albany)Yakima SunKingsAlbany PatroonsRenaldo Major
2019Yakima SunKingsRobert Duncan (Yakima)Albany PatroonsYakima SunKingsShadell Millinghaus

References

  1. "The Raptors Are New to Tampa's Basketball Scene. The Titans Aren't". The New York Times. January 20, 2021. Retrieved January 21, 2021.
  2. "KU notebook: Ex-Jayhawk David Magley leaves Canada pro league for new venture in U.S." The Kansas City Star. July 2, 2017.
  3. "The North American Premier Basketball League". NAPB.
  4. "State of the NAPB: Magley shares thoughts on first half of season". NAPB. February 25, 2018.
  5. "Meet the First Black Female Owner of a Male Professional Basketball League (Not a Team, But a League!)". Black News. July 17, 2018.
  6. "Mesquite (Nevada) Desert Dogs coming back for 2019". Mesquite Local News. August 17, 2018.
  7. "GOOD AND BAD NEWS FOR DESERT DOGS". Mesquite Local News. April 12, 2019.
  8. "Patroons trying to make it work". Times Union. April 8, 2019.
  9. "DAYTON FLIGHT TAKES OFF IN OHIO". The Basketball League. Retrieved September 2, 2019.
  10. "Weekly Sports League and Franchise Report". Our Sports Central. Retrieved October 19, 2019.
  11. "Weekly Sports League and Franchise Report". Our Sports Central. Retrieved September 2, 2019.
  12. "Syracuse Stallions take it up a notch, move from ABA to 'The Basketball League'". CNY Central. May 1, 2020.
  13. "PORTLAND STORM TO BECOME FULL ABA TEAM". ABA Live Action. April 18, 2020.
  14. "San Diego Guardians Support Local Community as New Professional Basketball Team in TBL". The Basketball League. August 3, 2020.
  15. "Steve Francis Announces Ownership of New Houston-Based TBL Team". PR Newswire. December 21, 2020.
  16. "THE SHREVEPORT MAVERICKS ARE PLANNING A COMEBACK!". K945.com. July 23, 2020.
  17. "Professional minor league basketball team comes to Kokomo". Kokomo Perspective. August 11, 2020.
  18. "WEST COAST BREEZE JOIN IN EXPANDING WEST COAST DIVISION OF THE BASKETBALL LEAGUE". TBL. November 6, 2020.
  19. "Mesquite Desert Dogs November 18, 2019, Facebook post". Facebook. November 18, 2019.
  20. "SunKings will not be returning for a third season". KIMA TV. October 29, 2019.
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