football

Could This Be The Best Pro A Season Ever For The EPG Baskets Koblenz? Why Not?

It is no secret that the last 2 seasons of the EPG Baskets Koblenz were nothing to brag about. In fact they were quite poor as both seasons ended with the club ending on the 16th position. Despite the non-success, the organization has always been ambitious. It is also no secret that the long term goal of the club is to play in the easyCredit BBL. Sport director Thomas Klein loves his team and will do anything to bring success. The last 2 seasons featured 2 coaches with Pat Elzie and Marco Van Den Berg that were able to bring in talented individual players, but that doesn´t guarantee winning. One hopes that one learns from it´s past mistakes. Thomas Klein´s first good mood was bringing in the success coaching duo from Rhondorf with Stephan Dohrn and KJ Sherril. My feeling that this season´s club could be a good one grew with every new signing that happened through out the summer. It seems like this time the club has learned from it´s past mistakes and have brought in the right mix from the guard position to the center position. My feeling that this could be a good season continues to be there as the team continues to grow in pre season. The team has individual talent, character and heart. “Almost every new player wants to prove themselves. They are all high character guys. They want prove themselves not with their ego´s, but as team players. They all want to play together”, warned EPG Baskets sport director Thomas Klein. This is thought was heightened simply by the type of players they have brought in. One can never be sure about the Americans, but with Calvin Wishart (188-G-1999, college: UCSB)t, Tim Smith Jr and Aleksa Kovacevic, the team has 3 winners. I will be bold and proclaim that this will be the best season ever for the EPG Baskets Koblenz. Ok one can only get better from landing on the 16th place the last 2 seasons, but still the Pro A is fiercely competitive where any team can beat any team on any night. The only place is up with this team and they will be better than 16th place. “I´m really looking forward to the season and have 100% a good feeling. I think the team is very homogeneous and we are stronger than the last 2 seasons. We are above average at the guard position. I think the team has shown that in pre season”, stressed Thomas Klein.

A big problem the last 2 seasons was the defense of the EPG Baskets Koblenz. At least last year they tried to focus and defend better and at times it worked, but as usual they never could truly establish a real defensive identity and 1-1 defense often hurt them most. In both seasons, they had the talent to score a lot, but still scored a lot less than what was expected. A big problem last season was the terrible three point shooting percentage. This season, the club wants to be able to combine offense and defense and be more consistent. If the formula worked once before in Rhondorf where Dohrn led the team to the Pro B title, why not do it again in Koblenz. “It’s pretty much the same concept here in Koblenz. With Stephan, he puts emphasis on defense. So we want that to be our identity, not just an offensive team. We know we can score, but we want to have consecutive defensive stops. That’s what wins games”, warned KJ Sherrill.. This season the club has really powerful guards with Wishart, Kovacevic, Hicks, and Buck, but also have very skilled big men who are very experienced. In the last years, the big men play wasn´t as focused on scoring. Will that change this season? “Our bigs maybe won’t be our outstanding scorers, but their presence under the basketball is what we need. Rebounding and being physical down low. Controlling the paint and setting good screens. With their experience, they are able to contribute to the game a whole lot and we are happy to have them with us”, stated KJ Sherrill. “We are very big especially at the positions 3-5, but even big at the position 2. We are very versatile and will play fast and be aggressive on defense”, warned Thomas Klein.

The clubs 2 best signings were most likely Calvin Wishartt and Aleksa Kovacevic. With Wishart, you have a motivated guard who showed last season that he was a top guard in the Pro B. He knows how to lead a team and is more than just a great offensive player, but gives all on defense. He could be a MVP candidate. Aleksa Kovacevic has BBL experience and is ready to have a great Pro A season so he can get back to the BBL. He played many years for Crailsheim and practiced on a daily basis with top BBL guards TJ Shorts, Trae Bell-Haynes and Dwayne Russell and learned from NBA coach Tuomas Iisalo. The Serbian is so hungry. He will rock the Pro A. Badu Buck has had his ups and downs as a pro, but had success with Dohrn in Rhondorf and will give important offensive qualities to the team, but most importantly leadership skills. Garrett Hicks comes to Koblenz after a strong rookie season in Georgia. Don´t let his Damian Lillard scoring fool you. He is more than that, but a guy who will do anything to help the team win. The team kept young guard Jacob Hanzalek from last season. He had trouble last season getting minutes and it won´t be easier this season, but he is a point guard that plays controlled that can hit the three pointer as well as make the big play on defense.

The team has a talented rotation at the forward position with 2 Germans and 2 Americans. Tim Smith Jr comes from the Dragons Rhondorf and has a great rookie season and wants to make the next step in the Pro A. He has shown in the pre-season that he can do that. He is a scorer and tenacious rebounder that is also an impact defender. He doesn´t talk much on the court, but leads by example. He most likely won´t have the Pro B stats, but will be consistent in the minutes he gets. He could be a glue guy type of player. DJ Jeffries came late to the team and is hungry for his pro break through. It is his first season overseas and he is more than motivated to have success after a very disappointing season in the G-League. His middle name could be Mr versatile as he fills the stat sheet with ease, but most importantly is a good defender that can guard many positions. He wants to be the next successful DJ in Koblenz. The team also brought in experienced Jonas Niedermanner. He like others on the team is very versatile and can shoot the three. The fan of Tadas Sedekerskis has 6 seasons of Pro A experience as well as BBL experience. Perhaps the most interesting signing was young 22 year old German Jannis Sonnefeld. After paying his dues in the Bamberg and Trier organizations, he had his Pro A break through in Paderborn last season averaging 9/7. He is also versatile and likes to shoot the three pointer. When describing the 2 centers Marko Bacak and Alex Moeller, all one can say is experienced. Bacak has 6 Pro A season experience and 4 BBL seasons with Oldenburg and was even teammates with BBL legend Rickey Paulding while Moeller proved in 5 Pro B seasons that he was a top center and during his 4 Pro A seasons was a solid role player. Bacak is another versatile big man that plays like Johannes Voigtmann while Moeller is the classic banger under the basket.

So what kind of a season will the EPG Baskets Koblenz have this season and where will they land? When looking at the schedule, one can´t say that they have an easy start. They have to face BG Goettingen and Crailsheim in the first 3 games. At least those games are at home. A good start would be ideal for the team. The club knows that you can´t look forward, but simply take it game by game in the Pro A. This should be a club that will average somewhere between 80-85 points. They also should be a strong rebounding team. They also should be a better three point shooting team after their horrible shooting season in 2024-2025. Scoring won´t be the problem, but can they be a well rounded defensive team? The club definitely have the versatility and good defensive players. It will be the job of the coaching staff to develop an identity quickly and then continue to develop it. “When you play fast and aggressive, you give the opponent more possessions. We will see more high scoring games than last season. Everybody thinks that coach Dohrn only concentrates on offense, but he is a very skilled defensive coach as well. I like how he really goes into detail”, warned Thomas Klein. I see this club having the potential of landing somewhere between 9-15. “I see us being somewhere between 10-12 this season”, added Thomas Klein. If they can develop through the season and refrain from getting injuries then they will have their best Pro A season ever.

In Klaus Perwas We Trust As Could This Be The Season Where The Skyliners Finally Make The BBL Playoffs Again?

Foto: Dmitrij Zibart | ZIBART.DE

It feels like an eternity since the last time the Skyliners made the easyCredit BBL playoffs. The last time the 2000 BBL cup winner reached the promised land not including the Covid season, they were led by the historic Gordon Herbert. Even if a guy like Gunnar Wobke surely could of predicted some things in the future when regarding Herbert, I’m sure nobody would ever have thought that the Canadian would be very responsible for the German national team having so much success. When the Skyliners bowed out to FC Bayern Munich in the spring of 2018, Franz Wagner was still a NBBL player, Isaac Bonga wasn’t even drafted by the NBA yet and Luka Doncic was still with Real Madrid. The Skyliners in the last 7 years have been an organization that have really struggled. It was even that bad, that the club had to play a season in the Pro A. The 2023-2024 was successful in that they moved right back to the BBL as that is definitely a feat. Teams like Bremerhaven, Giessen and Trier have stayed in the Pro A for years showing you can build yourself a rut in the Pro A.. Having enough money in the budget has always been a problem for the Skyliners. Often one reels in young Americans with little experience and just hope for the best. The best news story going into the 2025-2026 season is that they finally have Klaus Perwas as head coach. Perwas had always been the faithful assistant coach and once in a while even was interim head coach, but having the main responsibility was never his cup of tea. Somehow Wobke was able to persuade him to do the head coach job. Perwas is a coach that had been responsible for helping developing so many young Germans over the years and if there is 1 player that knows if Perwas can handle the head coaching job then it Skyliner legend Quantez Robertson who played there form 2009-2023. ‘ He was always cool and focused as an assistant coach. Now as head coach, we can see how he does everything his way. His defensive principles were always the same as Gordie Herbert. Now we will see how his offense will work. He has always been known as a defensive coach, but now we will see how the Skyliners offense works’, warned Quantez Robertson. With Perwas as head coach and a face lift with the roster, could this finally be the season again where the Skyliners make the playoffs?

You never really know what to expect when a club produces a fine house cleaning as they reeled in 7 new players. From the new players, the club have added a healthy mix of young and experience. But they also kept a healthy core from last year. Important is having that solid duo at the big positions with Lorenz Brenneke and Jacob Knauf. Both have experienced highs and lows over the years. Brenneke will bang inside while Knauf likes to sparkle form outside while also helping inside. The team added 2 really talented bigs with BBL experienced versatile Till Pape who played the last 2 years in Bonn and newcomer Ryan Hawkins who played in France and Italy the last 2 seasons and also sparkled with his versatile game while he shot 45% from outside in his last 2 seasons in the NCAA 2. The team also reeled in Radii Caisin and Jaedon LeDee for the forward positions. Casin played parts of 4 seasons in the BBL with 3 teams and played 96 BBL games, but never averaged more than 3,3ppg in a season. After 2 successful seasons with BC Raiffeisen Flyers Wels (Austria-BSL) where he averaged 18.8ppg, 7.6rpg, 3.1apg, 1.6spg, FGP: 57.6%, 3PT: 34.9%, FT: 82.2% last season, he is hungry for his BBL break through this season. With LeDee, the Skyliners could have a guy that will be one of their consistent scorers in the season while also grabbing many rebounds. He played his rookie season in the G-League and reached the NCAA final in 2023 with San Diego State University.

The Skyliners are also very deep and talented at the guard position. Going into the season, they have 3 players with BBL experience with Garai Zeeb, Will Christmas and Marcus Domask. Zeeb is going into his 7th season with Frankfurt and has 147 BBL games under his belt. He is a great team player that will give effective minutes form the bench. Christmas is like a mini Cinderella story. He began in the Pro B and via Luxemburg reached the BBL and became a solid player player. He fills the stats sheet and is a consistent scorer while Domask already had a short tour of duty last season with Frankfurt. He is another versatile player that has G-League experience and showed last season that he needs no adjustment time to the BBL. The club also added 3 more guards with 2 with no experience overseas with Logan Johnson and Isaiah Swope and Nahiem Alleyne who has experience in Greece and Poland and played at 3 NCAA schools including UConn and Virginia Tech. Johnson is probably one of the more interesting signings as he is the point guard and will run the team. His dunking and athleticism may stand out, but he knows how to lead a team a she showed as a rookie with the Oklahoma City Blue averaging 10.7ppg, 3.4rpg, 4.7apg, 1.0spg, FGP: 50.0%, 3PT: 25.6%, FT: 76.1%. Isaiah Swope is a rookie and showed at 3 schools in the NCAA that he could adapt to any coach averaging 16/3/3 in his last 3 years. He is quick and gets to the hoop well. This could be Malik Parsons’s 2,0. Alleyne is a great shooter that averaged 38% from down town in 3 years at Virginia Tech. But as a rookie overseas had growing pains. The gritty defender is hungry for his overseas break through in Frankfurt. The Skyliners also have 2 talented young Germans with Ivan Crnjak and Jamie Edoka who had solid Pro B seasons in 2024-2025 and are planned for the main BBL rotation. However this Skyliners roster is talented and deep. The question is will they anything besides garbage time minutes this season?

So what will be the fate of the Skyliners this season. The excitement is massive simply because Klaus Perwas is the head coach from day 1 of a season. He has been known for being a coach who prides his team to play defense. One saw that philosophy under Gordon Herbert and with Denis Wucherer in the Pro A. It will be interesting to see how he wheels and deals with the offense. The club definitely have offensive weapons and should score much on a consistent level and it will be interesting to see how well the players are able to identify and accept their roles. The team has valuable shooting players but a team also with big men who finish at the paint. One can only hope they become more than just a shooting team. With the athleticism, the team should play fast as well. The team should be an above average rebounding team and sky is the limit at the defensive end. The club has many hungry players that will want to produce and have to not only execute on the offensive end. The Skyliners aren’t the only club with many new players, but there are so many other teams with the same scenario with new players. The question is always how well can these new guys get integrated to the easyCredit BBL and how well can the coach develop that correct team chemistry. The Skyliners have many guys with LeDee, Swope and Johnson where the potential to be successful is great. That is one of the exciting aspects to every season. Can some of these BBL newcomers break out or will they be flops. The Skyliners schedule in the first month is difficult to evaluate as it is hard to rate how well an Oldenburg and Ludwigsburg will play as they have many new faces. However MBC and Braunschweig are teams that have had success recently and won’t be cake walks. A good start to a season is always beneficial. Predicting where the Skyliners will finish is never easy. However I will bold enough to say that they won’t be 17th or 16th in May 2026. I see this team being a club that could be one on of the surprise teams this season, if many things go right and they aren’t hit by the injury bug. I see them somewhere from 8-14. It is finally time again for the faithful Skyliners fans to have joy again. The suffering in the last years simply has been to long There is that famous phrase on the US 1 $. In God we trust. Skyliner fans should etch ‘In Klaus Perwas we trust’.

American Guys Like Joe Asberry Elijah Allen And Omari Knox Are Just As Much Responsible For Helping German Basketball Development With Their Training Of German Kids

Joe Asberry is a legend. He is an American ex professional basketball player that really has seen it all from crime to drugs, but also played against legends like David Robinson (215-C-65, college: Navy), Gary Payton, Jason Kidd and Brian Shaw and was teammates with German legendary player Christian Welp. He had a 11 year professional career that saw him toil around in the minor leagues of Germany, but he belonged to the best in his day at that level. Since retiring from the game, he has been a spokesperson for young kids and drug prevention, guest speaker, worked in the Alba Berlin organization, been a master of ceremonies for UBC Hannover and been a mentor for young Americans coming overseas trying to live the dream of being a professional basketball player.Currently he is in his second season with the Artland Dragons organization coaching girls U-14 and U-16 and boys U-18. A big focus in his basketball life in Germany has been working with kids. Not only keeping them out of trouble and being an excellent role model, but also teaching them the game. He sees joy in a young German kid having success on the court just as much as he does seeing Steph Curry bury a three pointer for his home town team Golden State Warriors. There is probably no other American in Germany now that has worked as long with kids as he has. He has been following and been involved with the rise of German basketball just as much as German coaches who have worked endless hours helping kids develop. But all in all, it isn´t only Germans and Joe Asberry who have contributed to the youth development but so many other Americans. How often do you see an American from the BBL to the Oberliga help coach youth teams? It is everywhere especially with lower level teams where Americans have so much free time on their hands, why not give a hand with guiding the kids? “Guys like Elijah Allen (194-PF-1989, college: NW Missouri St.), Omari Knox, Levi Levine, Ronny Weihmann, Andrew Jones, Coach Omar Sylla (just to name a few) have been training youth here for YEARS! Teaching them how to be shifty,and play like PRO´S, instead of ROBOTS, who CAN´T create their own shot. My guy Misan Nikagbate, (yes,the same beast who played for the National Team) has been training kids daily since 2017! Everytime I call Misan,I say,”Can I speak to the Gentleman, that Dunked on Yao Ming Please”? So yes, I saw this coming, that Germans were on the Road to Success”, laughed Joe Asberry.

Of course Joe Asberry followed the magical run of Germany the last weeks and even if he will always root for his home land USA, he is proud of the success of German basketball.

“As an American, I´m thrilled that Germany won the Euro Chip. It means more kids will fall in love with the sport. I´ll give myself credit for helping a Gang of kids here in Germany, fall in Love with Basketball. When the National Team wins ANY American,doing basketball business in Germany WINS”, warned Joe Asberry.

Joe Asberry has seen his share of titles in USA and Europe and has a very special connection to Germany´s surprising win in 1993 over Russia.

Back in 1993, I got a shot at Pro Basketball in the Second Division in Finland. So when my dawg,Big Chris Welp won his chip, it was a special feeling. I was so happy for him. When he played for the Golden State Warriors he gave me money to take back to my hood in the Bay to get everyone hammered, and that´s exactly what I did. I flew from Tampere to San Francisco, and told my dawgs, the big fella won a chip, CHEERS! “, stressed Joe Asberry.

Would it have been crazy to have predicted a Gold medal before the tournament started? With the success of German basketball in the last years, would it have been Ok to predict a Gold or been more unrealistic?

“I´m sure all German Fan´s thought their Team was going to win Gold. Dennis Schroeder is a Beast! Mo and Franz Wagner are REAL LIVE Dogs. Daniel Theis plays basketball like a Grown ass Man! Bonga was the X factor. He doesn´t get enough credit for his Defense. With that wingspan, he can guard 1 thru 5. Those are the stars, but that team is Stacked”, said Joe Asberry.

It was the 2 best teams in the tournament with Germany and Turkey at 8-0. Was this the top final compared to the 1993 final vs Russia and 2023 final vs Serbia?

“1993 has special meaning for me, because of my Boy,Big Welp, but this Team is unreal. On that last shot, I knew Schroeder would get to his spot and cook, he is so quick and shifty, at that moment, he would have cooked,ANYBODY,in the WORLD”, warned Joe Asberry. Big words from him, but Asberry has seen it all and Schroeder would even have cookeda Victor Wembanyama. And why not his killer instinct would have also gotten him over that tree of a player.

The final game was a real dog fight with Turkey leading by as much as 11 points and being very strong. Germany´s key to winning the chip was one that every team dreams of having.

“Germany won that Gold Medal because of their Team Chemistry! They put away their ego´s to WIN together”, added Joe Asberry.

There has always been talk about the intense mentality, great team character and togetherness of Germany the last years. How does one keep developing it and not losing it over time?

“The best way to keep that Chemistry, is to keep them all together, now they just have to add one more piece, my Boy,Kevin Yebo, another Real Live Dog”, stressed Joe Asberry. The love for Kevin Yebo will always be there from Asberry. Asberry discovered him and watched him move from the Regionalliga to the Euroleague.

There was a time in the 80s and 90s where you said in German football and after 90 minutes Germany always wins. I feel like there is this mentality now in German basketball. I personally was never fearing a loss in the fourth quarter even when Turkey was up by 6 points.

“Osman and Bona are Elite. Sengun is on his way to becoming a Superstar. Shane Larkin is ELITE ELITE. I was just praying Schroeder and Wagner save the day, and Schroeder saved the day”, smiled Joe Asberry.

What was key down the stretch that Germany could win the game. How much of a factor was the deep bench of Germany?

Germany´s bench is deep, but to me the key down the stretch was Schroeder and Wagner. Dennis Schroeder just looks so comfortable with that ball in his hands, and he won´t just chunk up a wild shot to be a hero, he makes the winning plays for his Team”, stated Joe Asberry. I would always give Larry Bird the ball any day and for Germany it´s simply Dennis Schroeder. That´s a fact.

But not only was Dennis Schroeder a massive factor for the success, but also Franz Wagner. The Berlin native was already incredible 2 years ago in the World Cup win, but he is on his way to becoming extra special.

“Franz Wagner is unreal. At that size,with his skillset,the sky is the Limit. When you learn hoops from a Legend like Juwan Howard, you CAN´T GO WRONG! He´s already a star in Orlando, and he is getting better by the minute. Humble Superstar”, warned Joe Asberry.

Joe Asberry dunking back in the day!

Isaac Bonga continues to grow as a player since coming back from the NBA? Shouldn´t a tournament like this and especially how his game has developed the last 3 years give him another NBA opportunity?

“Issac Bonga is qualified to play on ANY NBA ROSTER! That man is a BEAST”, added Joe Asberry. I´m sure he will be in the NBA in 2026 and latest in 2027 when He and Germany win the Gold Medal at the Olympics.

You either like or dislike Dennis Schroeder, but he came up big in the second half after being closed down well in the first half. How does one explain his unbelievable ability to be able to turn around the lever and play like a winner when his team needs it most?

Dennis Schroeder is one of the best players in the World! With success comes Hate. People judge that Man, and they have ZERO Clue who he is. They have never had a conversation with him. I have inside info though. My man Big Dia, my boy Dami,Ant Watkins, Yebo, all told me he is a good dude. Last but not Least, Coach Livio Calin, (who let me get 1000 makes in,when everyone else was afraid of me, and calling me crazy) gave Schroeder a chance in Braunschweig, and believed in him. Coach Livio told me DS is a good dude, so DS,is a GOOD DUDE! So I´m one of the Fans that LOVES HIM TOO”, warned Joe Asberry.

I have never understood that despite showing the last years what an incredible leader he is for Germany, he gets overlooked by NBA teams and has been a journeyman? Do NBA bosses have the wrong perception of him?

Yes, NBA bosses have this perception that he´s arrogant. I heard that from a reliable source. The thing is, when they cut you, or trade you, its all good. But when Dennis Schroeder turned down the Laker deal, they all probably got in their feelings. What they DON´T UNDERSTAND is that Schroeder can NEVER LOSE! He represents Alte Waage! Nobody wants to talk about the Racism he went through in that town. Again, THANK YOU COACH LIVIO”, stressed Joe Asberry. Braunschweig will always be home for Dennis Schroeder and he is giving back by helping the Basketball Lowen Braunschweig continue to make strides as an organization.

Dirk Nowitzki has been the GOAT of German basketball for more than 15 years. With the World and Euro won, Is Dennis Schroeder at Nowitzki´s level in terms of being in the same category as him?

“You can´t compare Dirk Nowitzki and Dennis Schroeder, they´re two different breeds of beasts! It´s always a matter of Opinion. Big Dirk is my Goat, but I´m biased. I´ve had conversations with him, and I´ve never met a guy who was at one time, the best basketball player in the World, and can yet be so nice, and so Humble. He put a NBA Team on his back, and won a Chip. 7 Footer with a Sweet Jay, and we all know that the World has copied his fadeaway off one leg. When my WNBA All star Big Leni masters the “Fall Away Dirky” she will be the next superstar in Germany, no pressure though! LOL”, laughed Joe Asberry.

One of the big winners for Germany and the tournament was Alan Ibrahimagic who went from assistant coach to Euro head coach winner. Even if he allowed a winning combination bunch of guys play their game, he still had to make key decisions on the sideline.

Salute to Coach Alan. It´s not easy to deal with basketball stars, and their ego´s so to get them all on the same page, is the sign of a Great Coach”, commented Joe Asberry.

There were some nice plays in the final like Isaac Bonga´s dunk or Franz Wagner´s mega block. It was no surprise to me what Joe Asberry´s favorite play was.

“My favorite play was Dennis Schroeders Dagger Middy. I made a living off of Dunks and Middy´s so I was thrilled, watching that sweet jay, splash through the net”, said Joe Asberry.

“Can one compare Germany´s success now with Spain from 2006-2011 where it won a World Cup and 2 Euro championships. Does Germany have a dynasty?

“German Basketball is HOT! If they beat the Americans and win a Gold Medal in the Olympics, I`ll cry and Dive head first into the Rhine River, please, Pray for me Miles LOL”, stressed Joe Asberry. I definitely will pray for you, but I wouldn´t mind seeing you jump into the Rhine River. It definitely is cleaner than 30 years ago.

Will the dynasty go on. The future still looks good with a nucleus of the Wagner brothers, Tristan Da Silva, Andi Obst, Isaac Bonga and Isaiah Hartenstein plus the new wave of guys like Ivan Kharchenkov, Hannes Steinbach, Johan Grunloh, Christian Anderson and others. Does Germany have the mentality to keep it going with the new wave of players that you have seen the last years?

Germany has the chance to keep getting better, if the young guys continue to put in the Work”, warned Joe Asberry.

You coach young men and are right there seeing the work and effort. Often now adays the talk is young players aren´t as hungry as back in the day. In other words players today aren´t challenged enough with too many outside influences. What makes young German players different than young players from other countries in this generation? Does the typical German discipline play a role?

“I think the biggest challenge for young German players is Gym time. If a Club doesn´t have constant access to the Gym, then the players will spend way too much time, playing with their phones, instead of Hooping. I can´t speak for other country´s but I know for a fact, American players have access to a Gym,24/7 All of my guys who are Coaches and Trainers stateside, hold all of their players accountable, if they don´t LISTEN, they get CUT”, warned Joe Asberrys.

Is there perhaps a different mentality in Germany? USA always have talented young kids, but how do you see the general mentality and hunger of young American players in 2025?

“The Mentality of American players is different a lot of times, because of the Conditions. That dawg Mentality comes from not having anything, and you want something out of your life, so Basketball becomes the ticket, to have a better life. That´s not something you can Coach. That gives players a slight advantage for sure. On the other hand, kids growing up here in Germany also have an advantage. They can focus on hoops, without a lot of the extra shenanigens in their neighborhoods. It´s just different”, warned Joe Asberry.

So does this Euro title scare team USA? I guess the big showdown will be in 2027 at the Olympics. Germany will be looking to win, but USA will have different players than at the 2024 Olympics. Will Team USA win their next Gold medal?

I´m sure that Team USA will win Gold Again. There are just too many Elite athletes,

with size, incredible skillsets, dawgs, I could go on and on. Then again, I`m a Proud American, who balled in the Michael Jordan era, if Team USA loses, they should all be cut from their teams, and have to start their Career´s over in Helsinki Finland, so they can learn to appreciate NBA Basketball. Shout out to Helsinki though, I loved it,but then again, I`m a Pro Hoop Misfit, who´s claim to fame, is DUNKS, and saving kids LIVES! LOL! I appreciate you Miles”, stressed Joe Asberry. Well I´m sure Finland would love to have some NBA stars in Finland, but honestly the Olympics is USA´s cup of tea. They won´t allow Germany to spoil their party.

Being An Actor Like His Dad Was Never On Nicolas Kodjoe´s(FC Bayern Munich 2) Menu As Being An Athlete Was Simply His Calling

nicolas with dad Boris at the U-19 World cup in 2025

Having Hollywood actors and Actresses have their offspring follow in their foot steps is nothing unusual. It definitely happens. From the top of my head, it doesn´t get any better than the father son duo of Kirk Douglas and Michael Douglas who´s careers have spanned more than 80 years. But there are others as well like the family trio of legendary actor Martin Sheen and his sons Charlie and Emilio Estevez who have been gracing the big screens since the 80´s. Some other father and son and daughter duo´s include Sean Connery and Jason and Don Johnson and Dakota. But not all sons and daughters follow in the foot steps of their parents. For example last season Dragons Rhondorf fan Arne Westor told me a real scoop about one of FC Bayern Munich 2 talents Nicolas Kodjoe (198-F/G-2006). I love knowing these fine tidbits for my basketball play by play. He had mentioned to me that his dad Boris was a well known Hollywood actor best known for the TV series Seattle fire fighters. But not only dad Boris is in show business, but also wife and mother of Nicolas Nicole Ali Parker is an actress who played in the 1997 movie Boogie Nights with Mark Wahlberg. But Nicolas didn´t do what Charlie Sheen or Michael Douglas did and take the acting route. Nicolas´s love became basketball. “ I never wanted to act or be a model, It just never appealed to me more than being an athlete”, stressed Nicolas Kodjoe.

Pic credit: FCB Bayern Basketball

Nicolas Kodjoe who spent quality time with family in New York this summer and lists current Boston Celtic Jordan Walsh as his toughest opponent so far was born on Halloween 2006. He grew up in Los Angeles and played at Southern California academy. He has the German citizenship, on account of his dad having a German mother. He began palying for German youth national teams starting in 2022 and right away picked up a Gold medal at the U-16 Euro averaging 4.1ppg, 2.0rpg, 1.3apg, 1.1spg. “There are so many great memories from that tournament. The celebration after winning was pretty great. My role then was to be mainly a defensive player, my role now was to be 3 and D, with the ability to catch and drive”, stated Nicolas Kodjoe. In 2024, he won 2 medals first at the Albert Schweitzer Tournament in Germany (Unofficial World Championship U18) winning the Bronze playing 7 games averaging 1.4ppg, 2.7rpg and a few months later won the Gold at the FIBA U18 EuroBasket in Tampere (Finland) averaging 4.8ppg, 2.2rpg. Winning 2 Golds in a span of 2 years was a massive achievement for him. “It was super gratifying to win back to back golds with the same group of guys”, remembered Nicolas Kodjoe. He spent 2 summers in Germany winning Gold medals, but wasn´t the only guy flying in from the States. His teammate Christian Anderson of Texas Tech was also doing it. Despite only being with the squad for a short time during the summers, a bond still was able to form. “After our first win back in 2022, everyone stayed in great contact with each other. Even though everyone went their separate ways, we still remained close. So the last tournament we were a very very close family”, warned Nicolas Kodjoe.

Pic credit: FIBA

The athletic forward who lists Lebron, Jordan, Kobe, and Magic on his personal NBA Mount Rushmore decided to come overseas and played the 2024-2025 season with the FC Munich 2 team that competes in the Pro B and also played with the NBBL (U-19) team. He definitely has learned how to win with the youth national teams and also did with FC Bayern Munich U-19 team. After 3 tries, FC Bayern Munich finally captured the title, the first since 2019. “ The guys had told me about the year before and their final 4 exit. It was a great feeling to help bring a title to Munich”, said Nicolas Kodjoe. He was mainly an energizer short of player from the bench, but stepped up big from the bench scoring 11 points over Vechta. He also had a very solid first Pro B season averaging 4,4ppg, 2,8rpg and 1,1apg. He did his best in the minutes he got always trying to make an impact in any way at both ends of the court. “This year showed me what works and what doesn’t. Especially against grown men. My physicality and aggression is my biggest growing point”, said Nicolas Kodjoe. He couldn´t name 1 player who had the biggest impact on him. All were crucial in him being able to make the adjustment smoother. “Everyone had a unique impact on me, it wouldn’t be right to say just one person. Everyone was crucial to making me feel at home and welcome. But in a way, he has to have a special relationship with roommate Ivan Kharchenkov who is balling at Arizona (NCAA) this season. Did his killer instinct rub off on him? “The most important lesson I learned from Ivan is to not shy away from who you are, play your game, and make everyone see you”, said Nicolas Kodjoe. He didn´t decide to go the NCAA route like so many, but will return back to FC Munich to keep developing in Bavaria. “My biggest goal this year is to help bring this team to the playoffs. My aggression and downhill attack will be on a higher level this year”, warned Nicolas Kodjoe.

Pic credit: FIBA

After winning the NBBL (U-19) title, his winning ways didn´t end in 2025 as in less than 2 months, he helped the German U-19 team win the Silver medal at the World Cup. “This year was a great year of growth for me”, added Nicolas Kodjoe. Germany had some start problems against Slovenia, but then played with discipline at both ends reaching the final. “With every game we played we grew much more disciplined and in control. Maintaining control was one of our keys to winning with each game we played. Maintaining control under any circumstances”, remembered Nicolas Kodjoe. It must have been very enriching for the team being able to play so consistent as a team against so many different countries. “It just proved how much chemistry and balance we have as a team. Our history together really showed in those moments”, expressed Nicolas Kodjoe. Germany had to battle the aggressive and annoying USA and held their own for a half, but then fell apart in the second half. He definitely knew what he was up against as he had played against some of them and trained with them. The athleticism of USA was simply too much for Germany. “The depth that USA had was tough to compete with, their athleticism was brought out because of how rested everyone on their team stayed”, remembered Nicolas Kodjoe. The talent level of Germany was high, but the talent level of USA was maybe a tick higher as there were future NBA draft picks with Dybantsa, Peat and Brown. One of these 3 had the biggest impact on him. “Koa Peat was super fundamental and composed throughout all 4 quarters”, stated Nicolas Kodjoe. With all the medals that he has won, where does the Silver one rank? “This silver ranks 2nd in level of importance”, said Nicolas Kodjoe.

2025 NBBL in Berlin

The forward who names Lebron James as his GOAT has been playing with the same guys now for 3 summers and he has seen them develop and now exactly where the path of Christian Anderson will go. “Chris has an amazing work ethic, skill, and loves to compete. He’s played and will continue to play on the biggest stages if he keeps improving. I believe he will be an NBA player within the next couple of years”, warned Nicolas Kodjoe. Watching big man double double monster Hannes Steinbach do his thing was enriching and he will have to watch from afar as the ex Wurzburg player will be playing for Washington (NCAA) this season. “Hannes’ size and touch around the rim already put him in a very high position. His fight and competitiveness is what puts him even higher”, added Nicolas Kodjoe. He also saw the incredible leadership skills of Alba Berlin guard Jack Kayil flourish. “Jack is a very unselfish guard, he knows where to find you. It’s very fun to play with someone like that”, said Nicolas Kodjoe. Despite only playing 4 games at the U-19 World Cup and 11 minutes less than in the Pro B, his professionalism is huge. Guys like Janne Muller, Tom Stoiber and him had to fight for minutes. His mindset and discipline is already at a high rate. I “I love to play, I want to play, but at the end of the day it is the coaches decision, and I have to live with that”, stressed Nicolas Kodjoe. Even if he didn´t play heavy minutes, the whole experience on and off the court was enriching for him at the U-19 World Cup. He experienced a lot including seeing Dirk Nowitzki in the crowd. “My coolest moment off court was just having downtime with the team, either playing ping pong, or just hanging with the guys. Dirk has been a friend of my father since before I was born, he’s a great person to be around”, warned Nicolas Kodjoe. But nothing will be more special than having that unique brotherhood with 7 guys that began to win at the first tournament in 2022.” No doubt, we will definitely be brothers for years and years to come”, stressed Nicolas Kodjoe.

Florian Flabb Believes That Dirk Nowitzki Built The Foundation And Dennis Schroeder Led The Group That Climbed To The Very Top Of The Mountain

Pic credit: FIBA

Florian Flabb is a German coach who currently is coaching Pro B team Orange Academy and the ratiopharm Ulm NBBL team He began his coaching career as an assistant with the Art Giants and then was a head coach with the NBBL and Pro A team. He also has been an assistant coach with the German U-18 and U-20 teams. He spoke to germanhoops.com about the success of German basketball.

Thanks Florian for talking to germanhoops.com Germany is Euro Champion 2025. What kind of a feeling does this give you involved with German basketball?

It’s an incredible and historic moment for German basketball. Winning the World Cup in 2023 was already a milestone, but becoming EuroBasket champions in 2025 cements Germany’s place among Europe’s elite. This achievement reflects how far the program has come – from simply aiming to reach the knockout stages to now competing with and defeating traditional powerhouses. The team’s success is built on leadership from Dennis Schröder, the versatility of the Wagner brothers, and a remarkable team chemistry. I hope this title will inspire a new generation of players and spark a true basketball boom in Germany.

Is it crazy to have predicted a Gold medal before the tournament started? If you had to guess how many German basketball fans out of 10 would have predicted the Gold before the tournament how many would it have been under your estimation?

It wasn’t crazy, but definitely bold to predict gold before the tournament. Germany entered as World Champion, yet with strong rivals like Greece with Giannis Antetokounmpo, Turkey with Alperen Sengün, Slovenia with Luka Doncic, and Serbia with Nikola Jokic. If I had to estimate, I’d say about 3 out of 10 German basketball fans would have confidently predicted a gold medal beforehand. Most probably expected a podium finish – silver or bronze – while seeing a second consecutive major title as more of a dream than a realistic expectation.

It was the 2 best teams in the tournament with Germany and Turkey at 8-0. Was this the top final compared to the 1993 final vs Russia and 2023 final vs Serbia?

Wow, that’s a really tough question — mostly because I was only two years old at the time! My memory from back then is mostly bottles and nap times, so I can’t give you a first-hand comparison. But looking at the numbers and highlights, Germany and Turkey both coming in 8- 0 made it feel like a true clash of titans. Compared to the legendary 1993 win over Russia and the 2023 World Cup final vs. Serbia, this one was probably the highest level basketball Germany has ever played — even if toddler-me had no idea it was happening!

How did you experience the final. The game was a real dog fight with Turkey leading by as much as 11 points and being very strong. What got Germany the Gold medal after 40 minutes.

Looking back now, that final was nothing short of epic. It was a real dogfight right from the tip-off. Turkey came out incredibly strong, using their size and physicality to set the tone, and at one point they were up by 11 points. Their half-court execution and rebounding really had Germany struggling to find their rhythm early on. What ultimately won Germany the gold medal was the depth and balance of their roster. While Turkey leaned heavily on a few star players, Germany kept coming in waves. No matter who was on the floor, the energy and intensity never dropped. This allowed them to maintain their blistering pace, wearing Turkey down as the game went on. By the fourth quarter, you could see the difference: Turkey’s legs were heavy, while Germany was still flying up and down the court, moving the ball quickly and finding open looks. Their team chemistry and collective belief turned the tide. Over the final minutes, Germany’s depth overwhelmed Turkey, and that relentless team effort sealed one of the most hard-fought victories in German basketball history.

There has always been talk about the intense mentality, great team character and togetherness of Germany the last years. How does one keep developing it and not losing it over time?

It all comes down to culture and leadership. Veterans and coaches have to live those values every single day, setting the tone for all players. Dennis Schröder, as team captain, embodies that role perfectly — he’s the emotional leader and sets the standard with his work ethic and competitiveness. When someone like Tristan da Silva, a young NBA player, joins the squad, he immediately sees that environment and understands that no one is bigger than the team. This clarity makes it easy for new players to buy into the system. The group has created such a positive atmosphere that even established NBA stars describe the national team as a “Klassenfahrt” — a school trip — because they genuinely enjoy spending time together. It’s become a place where everyone wants to be in the summer, which is rare at the international level and a huge reason for Germany’s continued success.

There was a time in the 80s and 90s where you said in German football and after 90 minutes Germany always wins. I feel like there is this mentality now in German basketball. I was never fearing a los in the fourth quarter even when Turkey was up by 6 points.

Back in the 80s and 90s, people said in football, “Am Ende gewinnen immer die Deutschen” — in the end, Germany always wins. Today, that same winning mentality defines German basketball. Even when Turkey led by six points in the fourth quarter of the EuroBasket 2025 final, there was no panic — just trust and belief. Germany’s strength lies in having so many players who can step up, always putting the team’s success over individual performances. Back-to-back titles have built a calm, relentless confidence that Germany will always find a way to win.

What was key down the stretch that Germany could win the game. How much of a factor was the deep bench of Germany?

Down the stretch, the key was Germany’s depth and relentless pace. While Turkey relied heavily on a few stars, Germany kept sending out fresh lineups without losing quality or energy. That constant wave of players allowed them to push the tempo, forcing Turkey to defend at full speed while their own legs started to tire. In the final five minutes, this depth really showed. Germany could switch lineups, keep the defensive intensity high, and still find players ready to make big plays — not for personal glory, but to execute perfectly as a group. The bench wasn’t just a factor — it was the decisive advantage. It allowed Germany to stay aggressive, wear Turkey down, and ultimately close the game with the same speed and precision they had started with. That’s why, when it mattered most, Germany looked fresher and more composed, sealing another historic gold medal.

How valuable was Franz Wagner for this tournament. How is he a better player now than in 2023 despite 2 years of more experience?

Franz Wagner was invaluable to Germany’s EuroBasket 2025 run. He wasn’t just a scorer — he was the engine that kept the team’s fast-paced style running smoothly. His versatility allowed Germany to play position less basketball at times, switching seamlessly between roles on offense and defense. Compared to 2023, Franz is now a more complete player. Two more years in the NBA gave him sharper decision-making and a deeper understanding of when to take over and when to facilitate. Back in 2023, he was already a rising star, but at EuroBasket 2025 he played like a true leader, reading the game perfectly and elevating his teammates. What makes him special is that his growth hasn’t been just about individual stats — it’s about making Germany’s team game stronger. His improved defense, court vision, and maturity turned him into the ultimate connector, the kind of player who makes everyone around him better while staying completely committed to the group’s success.

Isaac Bonga continues to grow as a player since coming back from the NBA? Shouldn´t a tournament like this and especially how his game has developed the last 3 years give him another NBA opportunity?

Absolutely. Isaac Bonga has been one of the quiet success stories of German basketball over the last few years. Since returning from the NBA, he’s transformed his game — becoming more confident offensively while still being that versatile defender who can guard multiple positions. At EuroBasket 2025, his impact was huge, even if it didn’t always show up in the box score. He brought defensive stability, length, and energy, and his improved shooting and playmaking gave Germany even more lineup flexibility. He’s exactly the type of glue guy every coach loves — someone who makes winning plays without needing the spotlight. Given how his game has evolved over the past three years, it’s hard to imagine NBA teams not taking notice. A tournament like this proves he can thrive at the highest international level, and with his skill set and size, he definitely deserves another shot in the league — this time as a more mature and complete player.

You either like or dislike Dennis Schroeder, but he came up big in the second half after being closed down well in the first half. How do explain his unbelievable ability to be able to turn around the level and play like a winner when his team needs it most?

Dennis Schröder is one of those players who thrives under pressure. You either love his style or you don’t, but you can’t deny his impact. In the EuroBasket 2025 final, Turkey came in with a clear game plan — they double-teamed him constantly, cutting off his driving lanes and trying to frustrate him. Instead of forcing bad shots, Dennis showed his maturity and leadership. He focused on getting his teammates involved, using the extra attention on him to create open looks for others. This unselfish approach kept Germany’s offense balanced and wore Turkey’s defense down. Then, in the second half, when the game was on the line, he flipped that winner’s switch. With Turkey tiring, he started picking his spots, pushing the pace, and attacking when the moment was right. His ability to read the game, stay patient, and then take over when needed is what separates him from most players. Dennis Schröder has shown over the last few years what an incredible leader he is for Germany. The key isn’t just his talent, but how brilliantly the German coaching staffs has used him. They’ve built a system that maximizes his strengths — his speed, playmaking, and competitive fire — while surrounding him with players who perfectly complement his game. What really stands out is how the entire team has bought in. Every player accepts their role and trusts Dennis as their leader. Whether he’s being double-teamed and creating for others, or taking over in crunch time, the group follows his lead without ego or hesitation. That level of acceptance and togetherness is rare at the international level. It’s why Germany has been able to play as such a unified, unstoppable unit, turning individual talent into collective success — and why they’ve built a golden era for German basketball.

Dirk Nowitzki has been the GOAT of German basketball for more than 15 years. With the World and Euro won, Is Dennis Schroeder at Nowitzki´s level in terms of being in the same category as him?

Dirk Nowitzki will always be a legend, not just in Germany but globally. For more than 15 years, he carried German basketball on his shoulders, inspiring a whole generation and showing that a German player could be a true NBA superstar. His impact went far beyond medals — he changed the game and the perception of German basketball forever. Dennis Schröder’s path is very different. He hasn’t had Dirk’s NBA dominance, but on the international stage, his résumé now speaks for itself: World Champion in 2023 and EuroBasket Champion in 2025, both as the unquestioned leader of the team. So while Dirk remains the GOAT, Dennis has earned a place right beside him in the national team’s history. Dirk was the trailblazer, the icon. Dennis is the floor general who turned Germany’s potential into historic team success. You could say Dirk built the foundation — and Dennis led the group that climbed to the very top of the mountain. They’re different types of legends, but they now share the same elite category in German basketball.

One of the big winners was your colleague Alan Ibrahimagic went from assistant coach to Euro head coach winner. How valuable was his input? What do you believe could he still give a team that already had all the pieces of being a winning team?

Alan Ibrahimagic’s rise has been one of the great stories of this tournament. Going from assistant coach to leading Germany to a EuroBasket title is an incredible achievement, but it’s not just about winning — it’s about how he handled everything around him. In a brutal, high-pressure atmosphere, where scrutiny and second-guessing are constant, Alan never made it about himself. He kept everything regarding his own role quiet, shielding the team from outside noise. His selflessness and humility allowed the players to stay locked in on what truly mattered — playing their game and chasing gold. Germany already had the talent and depth to be a championship team, but Alan provided the calm and focus to bring it all together. He managed personalities perfectly, emphasized speed and ball movement, and created an environment where every player felt valued. By filling his role perfectly, without ego or drama, he gave the team exactly what it needed: a steady hand and a clear vision. That approach was crucial, especially when Germany fell behind by 11 points in the final against Turkey. His leadership kept the group composed, and ultimately, it helped turn talent into a historic championship run.

There were some nice plays in the final like Isaac Bonga´s dunk or Franz Wagner´s mega block. What was your favorite play of the final?

Oh, there were so many unforgettable moments — Bonga’s dunk that brought the bench to its feet, Franz Wagner’s monster block that completely shifted the momentum — but my favorite play was actually a lot less flashy. It came late in the fourth quarter when Germany was up by just two points. Turkey tried to trap Dennis Schröder near half court, but instead of forcing the action, he calmly swung the ball. Within seconds, it touched four different players’ hands, ending with a wide-open three from the corner. It was the perfect example of Germany’s unselfishness, depth, and speed — five guys moving as one unit, trusting each other completely. That play summed up why Germany won gold. It wasn’t about one hero moment, but about a team working in perfect harmony, making the right basketball play at the most important time.

Can one compare Germany´s success now with Spain from 2006-2011 where it won a World Cup and 2 Euro championships. Does Germany have a dynasty?

It’s a very fair comparison. Spain’s golden era from 2006 to 2011, when they won a World Cup and back-to-back EuroBasket titles, was built on incredible talent, depth, and a shared identity. What Germany has achieved now — World Champion in 2023 and EuroBasket Champion in 2025 — is starting to look a lot like the beginning of a similar dynasty. The ingredients are there: a deep roster with multiple NBA players, incredible chemistry, and a winning culture where everyone buys into their role. What makes Germany especially dangerous is that so many of their key players — like Franz Wagner and Tristan da Silva — are still very young, while experienced leaders like Dennis Schröder and Daniel Theis are setting the tone. To truly match Spain’s run, Germany will need to sustain this level through the 2027 World Cup and EuroBasket 2029. But right now, they’ve created an environment where every summer feels like a “Klassenfahrt” — a place where top players want to come back, compete, and win together. This dynasty should go on.

The future still looks good with a nucleus of the Wagner brothers, Tristan Da Silva, Andi Obst, Isaac Bonga and Isaiah Hartenstein plus the new wave of guys like Ivan Kharchenkov, Hannes Steinbach, Johan Grunloh, Christian Anderson and others. Does Germany have the mentality to keep it going with the new wave of players that you have seen the last years?

Germany has laid the foundation for something truly special. Winning the 2023 World Cup and the 2025 EuroBasket has put them at the very top of international basketball, but the real challenge now is staying there consistently. The current core — Franz and Moritz Wagner, Tristan da Silva, Andi Obst, Isaac Bonga— has proven what it takes to win: a group built on selflessness and unity, where no one plays for individual glory. They’ve created a place where players genuinely want to return each summer. The next wave is coming fast, with young talents like Ivan Kharchenkov, Hannes Steinbach, Johan Grünloh, and Christian Anderson ready to join the program. But you can’t predict how these big talents will develop over the next few years. It takes more than skill — injuries, mindset, role acceptance, and team chemistry all have to come together to keep this incredible level of success going. If the core group manages to pass down their winning mentality and the young players embrace the culture, Germany has every chance to remain among the world’s elite. It’s not a dynasty yet, but the pieces are in place — now it’s about sustaining the hunger and making sure the next generation carries the torch forward.

You coach young men and are right there seeing the work and effort. Often now adays the talk is young players aren´t as hungry as back in the day. In other words players today aren´t challenged enough with too many outside influences. What makes young German players different than young players from other countries in this generation?

That’s a very tough question. It’s easy to say that today’s young players aren’t as hungry or as challenged as they were “back in the day,” with so many outside influences and distractions, but I think the situation in Germany is a bit different. Over the last decade, Germany has invested heavily in the entire ecosystem around basketball — not just facilities and gyms, but also coaching, youth development programs, and sports science. Young players are surrounded by an environment that teaches them professionalism early on and gives them the tools to grow, both on and off the court. We’re starting to see the results now. Players coming through the system understand what it takes to compete at the highest level, and they have role models like Dennis Schröder, Franz Wagner, and Isaac Bonga showing them the path. Of course, you can never fully predict how young talent will develop, but these investments have created a culture where the hunger to succeed is nurtured, and the focus stays on the team and the game itself, rather than the distractions around it.

Thanks Florian for the chat.

Robert Allen (Reale Mutua Basket Torino) Took The Words Show Them What You Want To Be Known For And Ran With It

Robert Allen (206-F-2000, college: N.Texas, agency: Elevate Sports Alliance) is a 25 year old 206cm forward from Orlando, Florida playing his second professional season and first with Reale Mutua Basket Torino (Italy-Serie A2). Last season he played his rookie season with Unger Steel Gunners Oberwart (Austria-BSL) averaging (21.3), RPG-1 (11.2), 2.1apg, SPG-5 (1.7), FGP: 55.0%, 3PT-2 (41.6%), FT: 72.2%. He began his basketball career at Edgewater high school and then played 2 seasons at Samford University (NCAA) averaging 9.9ppg, 8.3rpg, 1.5apg, FGP: 56.7%, 3PT: 27.7%, FT: 65.5% and 14.1ppg, 7.0rpg, 1.4apg, 1.1spg, 1.3bpg, FGP: 48.4%, 3PT: 28.8%, FT: 65.0%. He then played 3 seasons at the The University of Mississippi (NCAA) and then latched on a season at the University of North Texas (NCAA) averaging 7.7ppg, 6.8rpg, 1.1apg, FGP: 55.9%, FT: 66.3%. He spoke to germanhoops.com about basketball.

Thanks Robert for talking to germanhoops.com. Your playing your first season with Reale Mutua Basket Torino (Italy-Serie A2) and your second overseas. What kind of an experience has Italy been for you?
Italy has been an amazing experience so far. The city as well as Italy as a whole is such a beautiful place. My team has been more than welcoming since my arrival. There are always things that you have to adjust to when you are an American coming into a new country and a player coming from a new team but that is something that comes with life and is very normal. It’s a totally different environment from Oberwart, and it’s truly everything I prayed for. I have been enjoying my stay here so far and have been able to explore the city a little

How blessed are you to be living in a city like Torino. Is a big culture shock to Orlando where you come from?
I am more than blessed for the opportunity to live in Torino. God has placed me in a city that has so much history behind it as well as its city like but not too crowded in a sense. There are a number of things that are different between Orlando and Torino but nothing that is a true culture shock. Mostly because Europe as a whole is different from Orlando. If I had to pick anything I would say their rules and roads when it comes to driving a car has been a little difficult but I am getting the hang of it.

You had a great rookie season in Austria and now are playing in one if not the top second league in Europe. How confident are you that your game can translate to the A-2 league?
I am highly confident that my skills will be able to translate in this highly ranked league. I believe I was placed here by God and If he made this one of my stops on this journey then I am meant to be here. I work hard, I love learning the game and I push myself to the max and that helps me to keep elevating my game. Lastly, I play with fire in me and a drive like no other and I think that separates me from others.

Your teammates with skilled American Macio Teague. What has it been like being his teammate? Could you 2 guys be that 1-2 punch that will carry the team to success?

Macio is a great player and an even better teammate, it has been great playing with someone who works as hard or even harder than me. On the court we need everyone in order to do big things in this league, that’s why basketball is a team sport. I can say that our present will be impactful to our team’s success.

Let’s talk about your game. You’re a 206cm forward. If you had to compare your game to an NBA player who would best fit the description?
I do not really watch the NBA so I do not have a comparison for you.

You’re a guy that can fill the stat sheet well. Have you always had that versatility in you or was that developed at the many NCAA schools that you played at?

I think it was always in me but it took me time to truly embrace it. There are often times coaches will put you in a box and only pull your strongest ability out of you that will help the team win. Throughout my college career that was the case but it was a blessing in disguise. Everyone wants to score the ball but it showed me there are other important things that impact winning other than putting the ball in the basket. It allowed me to strengthen my abilities in those categories. Which now has led to be me being like you said a person who can fill a stat sheet

You shot a lot of three’s at Samford, but then little at Ole Miss and N Texas and then a lot in Austria again. Was it tough not shooting many three’s for some years and then doing it again last season? How would you describe the development of your outside shot?

It was a hard transition for me. Going from a coach who wanted me to shoot at Samford to coaches who did not want me to shoot at Ole Miss and north Texas. It can be a tough mental battle when you know you can do something on the court but you’re being held back by your coach. Most coaches would label it as the way they created their teams. Therefore, they had players who were better three point shooters than me, which was true. At the time it wasn’t my strongest ability but it could be done. I let that motivate me honestly to keep working everyday on my own time. Just because I was not using my shot at the time, I knew it was a skill I could add to my game to make me a better player. Before I left for Austria a Vet pro player told me ‘ this is your chance to reinvent yourself, they don’t care what you did in college, that is what got you there. Go out there and show them what you want to be known for’. I took those words and ran with it, it was my chance to break out of the box. I kept working on my shot and different aspects of my game on my own time and when it was my time to shine. I didn’t hold back

Talk a little about the development of your defensive game. How would you describe your game now and what kind of a defender do you still want to become?

Defense was different from offense for me. It was something that came to me naturally. Being able to read the plays and understand how to defend the basket was naturally easier for me to understand. Un-like offense, I had to work day and night to get where I am now. I know that I am a good defender but there is always room for improvement. I want to become an ELITE defender, one who can do any coverage no matter the team or level of competition. A player who can defend all positions making more of a valuable and versatile player

On what areas of your game are you working on most now so you can continue to improve your game?

I work on all parts of my game because I want to become an all around player, that is what is going to allow me to stand out and continue to elevate in my career. If I had to pick a few, it would be finishing around the basket. My wide post game and my shot 2s and 3s. As well as reading the court better on defense.

Last season you played your rookie season with the Unger Steel Gunners Oberwart (Austria-BSL) averaging (21.3), RPG-1 (11.2), 2.1apg, SPG-5 (1.7), FGP: 55.0%, 3PT-2 (41.6%), FT: 72.2%. What do you remember being your wake up call to being a rookie overseas where you knew that you were far away from home?

I don’t know if I understand your question exactly but i will answer it to the best of my ability.
I do not think there was ever just a wake up call when I was a rookie that was like wow I’m far from home. When I got on that plane and left America I knew what I was coming to Austria to do. I understood and accepted all the sacrifices that came with the Job. My goals were already set and the fight began on the first day of practice. Now did I know I was going to play as well as I did NO but everyday I woke up I prayed to God for strength in order to keep chasing my vision he places on my heart.

You won the double in Austria and beat BBC Nord in the final. What was so special about this team last season?

I think we were just all focused on the same goal and that is what made us different from everyone else. No matter what was going on we all knew we wanted to win the championship. That was going to be the only way the season ended. It was a long season for sure and we did not want to waste any time at all. Therefore we all knew that in order to get as much rest and end the season the right way we had to win every series 3-0 and that’s what we did.

How special was teammate Quincy Diggs for you? That guy has it seen it all. Was he like a mentor for you?

Quincy is such a cool dude man, his presence on that team was a game changer, he is the type of dude that brings a team together and that is exactly what he did for us. When we needed it the most.

You began your NCAA career at Samford (NCAA) in 2018 and played 2 seasons averaging 9.9ppg, 8.3rpg, 1.5apg, FGP: 56.7%, 3PT: 27.7%, FT: 65.5% and 14.1ppg, 7.0rpg, 1.4apg, 1.1spg, 1.3bpg, FGP: 48.4%, 3PT: 28.8%, FT: 65.0%. How valuable were these 2 seasons in your basketball development? How did your game grow there?

Honestly I feel like those seasons were more valuable mentally for me than it was to my game itself. It was like a wake up call , when I actually believed that I could play pro if I took basketball seriously. Those seasons ignited the first step of me truly believing in my basketball abilities. During my time at Samford I was just having fun with life. I was grateful to get out of Orlando and had the opportunity for basketball to be a way for me to get my college paid for.

You had many great games at Samford like scoring 23 points against VMI. What was your fondest moment at Samford?

My fondest moments at Samford weren’t even on the court. It was the time I got to spend with my teammates. Our team was like a family, we did everything together. That was the first time I really experienced something like that. Therefore just being able to play with them and enjoy the entire journey was my fondest moment. From the long bus rides to the hard losses. I enjoyed every second of it.

You then played at the University of Mississippi (NCAA) from 2020-2023 reaching the NIT Sweet 16. How tough was it going from playing a lot at Samford to having a lesser role? What did you learn from this experience?
It was a big challenge for me. I didn’t really understand the overall thought process of basketball because before I was just playing for fun and free education. It took me some time to understand everything but I was not going to give up. I found a way to get on the court my first year at Ole Miss and started playing more. My mind set at the time was to make sure I was prepared because my time was going to come and I knew I was going to be ready for it and did. My second year I was understanding it a lot more than my first year at Ole Miss. When I felt like I had finally got the ins and outs of the system I got injured. I tore my acl mcl and post lateral corner. Therefore throughout my years at Ole miss iIwent through a lot but I’m grateful for every step of the way. It made me who I am now. Throughout that journey I learned who Robert Allen really is and who he wants to be in life. I learned the amount of sacrifice it will take to fulfill the dreams I desire. I learned how to listen to my body more. Lastly for me that was the beginning of my rebuilding my relationship with God.


You then finished at the University of North Texas (NCAA) averaging 7.7ppg, 6.8rpg, 1.1apg, FGP: 55.9%, FT: 66.3%. You reached the NIT Sweet 16. What memories do you have of that run? You scored 13 points against Tulane.

Not much at all for real, I just remember that my college career was coming to an end and I was going to play as hard as I could these last few games

Who won a 1-1 in practice you or Moullaye Sissoko

Of course I did lol

Who was the toughest player that you ever faced in the NCAA that reached the NBA?

I can’t remember

Please name your 5 best teammates of all-time?

Thats a hard question but Josh Sharkey ( samford) Anferene Simons ( Edgewater high school ) Matthew Murrel ( Ole Miss) Tye Fagan ( Ole Miss) Ziggy Reid ( Gunners)

Please list your personal NBA Mount Rushmore (5 best players ever)?

Michael Jordan , Steph ‘Curry, Lebron , Dennis Rodman , Giannis

Who is your GOAT?

Giannis

Did you see the sequel to the classic Coming To America? Shouldn’t they have left it alone?

I did not see it.

Thanks Robert for the chat.

Quantzez Robertson Googled Slim Jesus Right Away And Will Never Forget Kimmo Muurinen´s No Legs Plea For Help

I always knew that my interview sessions would never end with Quantez Robertson (188-SG-1984, college: Auburn, agency: Interperformances)n even almost 2,5 years after he retired. It is 2025 and I´m still interviewing him. This is my 76th interview/article since his rookie season in 2009. My love for him and his game is still there. And why not there are always interesting basketball topics to talk about. However never in a million years did I ever think that I would be preparing a few questions about his ex teammate Kimmo Muurinen who was his teammate seemingly ages ago in 2010-2011. I mean Kimmo was a very skilled player, but Finnish and more taciturn. It would be more fitting and logical to talk about guys like Jordan Theodore, Mike Morrison or Gordie Herbert who he had more dealings with during his Skyliner years. Muurinen who remembers nailing 50 free throws in a row and having Jordan and Magic as his childhood idols was one of those players that wasn´t flashy, but did what ever the team needed to win and was a great shooter as he shot 44% from the parking lot in his only easyCredit BBL season with Frankfurt. He was the kind of player that didn´t shy away from pulling a Larry Bird on the court and concentrated more on rebounding and defense and didn´t have to score consistently. “I think a hidden strength in my game is my dirty work like diving for loose balls that doesn’t get noticed as much”, said Kimmo Muurinen in 2011. When I told Quantez Robterson about slim Jesus, the first answer was Huh? Then I explained to him that Miikka Muurinen was producing a massive splash at the 2025 Euro especially with the dunk that went viral against England and seemed to pop up on everyone´s phone from Helsinki to Sydney, Australia. Miikka was 3,5 years old when he arrived in Frankfurt with dad Kimmo in late summer of 2010. “I remember his little son. Man that makes me feel old. Time shows that everyone has been growing over the years and kids then are showing their talent as players now”, chuckled Quantez Robertsonn. Tez as everyone calls him also remembers a funny experience with Kimmo Muurinen during training camp in 2010. “I think we were in the Czech Republic. I remember he was playing defense and was so tired. Some guy made a move on him and Kimmo just fell to the ground. He just said oh no no more legs. Gordon Herbert and Klaus Perwas were laughing”, remembered Quantez Robertson.

Quantez Robertson at Halloween in USA

I felt it was time to catch up with Quantez Robertsonn again after last talking to him shortly before Christmas 2024 when he was celebrating his 40th birthday and went down memory lane once again with me. I reach Quantez Robertsonn on a Saturday night as all I hear around him are kids and noises. Tez apologies saying he is at a volley ball game of his daughter. The ex Auburn guard who was a freak athlete during his playing days retired in 2023 and like every other ex baller has gotten used to not playing anymore or has he? “I would like to say retirement has gotten easier, but it´s still tough. Believe me if I could, I would love to jump on the court right away again, but I did retire because of injury”, stressed Quantez Robertsonn. It is never easy for retired players to keep their shape that they had when they were professional athletes. Often they will gain weight while others will really ballon in weight like guys Like Shawn Kemp, Shaq and Magic Johnson have. Tez has had a hinderance with his foot. “I don´t have the weight that I had as a player. I had surgery on my foot and that kept me doing a lot of physical activity. My foot is healed. I do a lot with my kids”, said Quantez Robertsonn. The last time we checked in with him he was coaching basketball at Tennessee Valley Community Christian, but since then he has found a new job in life. “I have stepped away from teaching kids for the time being. If the opportunity ever presents itself again, I might do it again. At the moment, I´m a warehouse manager at Alabama A& M”, stated Quantez Robertsonn. Of course he is very active supporting his 2 kids with their sports. His daughter plays volleyball, softball and basketball while his son plays baseball and football.

Miles Schmidt-Scheuber and Tez Robertson

No interview with Quantez Robertsonn can happen without Skyliner talk. Once again the Skyliners have reeled in many new faces for the 2025-2026 season, but one thing hasn´t changed. Klaus Perwas is still there and for the first time in his career the head coach from the start of a season. That has to be a good omen for the season. “Yes it is. He was always cool and focused as an assistant coach. Now as head coach, we can see how he does everything his way. His defensive principles were always the same as Gordie Herbert. Now we will see how his offense will work. He has always been known as a defensive coach, but now we will see how the Skyliners offense works”, commented Quantez Robertsonn. One thing that we will never know is how the Skyliners history would have evolved from 2019 until now had Perwas became head coach in 2019 after Herbert had left. “I think that Klaus would have been able to have kept the tradition of reaching the playoffs alive. I mean it is always tough with personal and injuries, but I feel the history would have been different”, expressed Quantez Robertsonn. Since Tez´s departure, the club is still looking for an identity figure. Maybe it could be Garai Zeeb, but Tez had one guy in mind who left after 2 seasons. “I think that David Muenkat would have been a good choice. He was a beast at both ends and had many dunks. He got big blocks and was able to get the fans to their feet”, remembered Quantez Robertsonn. So after playing 14 seasons with the Skyliners organization and having hundreds of teammates, with what guys did he have contact with just in the last week? “I talked with Mike Morrison, Jordan Theodore and Aaron Dornekamp”, smiled Quantez Robertsonn. It is only logical that a Fiba winning team from 2016 never loses contact.

Miles Schmidt-Scheuber and Tez Robertson in Frankfurt in 2024

Another topic that I have to share with Tez is the current 2025 European championships where Germany is seemingly marching to their next medal. They won a hard fought quarterfinal game against Slovenia. Despite a 39/10 game by Luka Doncic, Germany prevailed with a strong last quarter after not playing particularly well in the first 30 minutes. To have your 2 best players with Dennis Schroeder and Franz Wagner combine for only 11/37 and still win with 8 points shows just how many other weapons Germany has. It is amazing how incredible Germany´s track record is in the last 3 years with a Bronze at the Euro, Gold at the World Cup and a fourth place finish at the Olympics. “Germany has so much talent now with all their NBA and Euroleague players. They have so much experience. They are so tough now. Before this success, they didn´t get their top guys, now they have all their best players. They are able to show their real talent now”, warned Quantez Robertsonn. In German basketball one talks about guys like Detlef Schrempf, and Dirk Nowitzki as people who were very important for the sport. But in the last years, one has to put a Gordon Herbert with these names. “Gordie changed the culture and showed how to win. He brought a different demeanor and coaching style. Players simply love to play for him. He gets the best out of every player”, stressed Quantez Robertsonn. Tez is really proud to have been teammates with current German national players Isaac Bonga and Leon Kratzer. Was he like a mentor for Bonga? “I was a mentor for all the young players in Frankfurt. I showed them the ropes and tricks on the court. I didn´t work privately with any one player. I taught Isaac defensive concepts and helped his mobility and control on defense”, stated Quantez Robertsonn. He played a few seasons with Bonga and then saw him move to the NBA and Euroleague. “My fondest moment with him was when he was drafted. I told him that I wanted some adidas socks”, said Quantez Robertsonn. He also witnessed Leon Kratzer on a daily basis for 2 seasons in Frankfurt. Kratzer´s rise from then on with Bonn and Paris has been amazing. “Leon made big steps each season. He left a big impression in Frankfurt even if he made small steps on offense. He was always a problem on defense. It wasn´t easy to score on him with his rebounding and shot blocking ability”, added Quantez Roberson. In the States, the only thing that really counts in the basketball world is the NBA and Olympics. In 2027, Germany will be strong with their core of veterans along with most likely Isaiah Hartenstein and many young guys. How does he see a USA-Germany match up then? “USA will be strong. I mean we won´t have Lebron, but we will have our best players. And we have a scary young group of guys coming up. USA will still beat Germany”, smiled Quantez Robertsonn. That is still 2 years away. Now all Germany is concerned about is beating Finland in the semi´s and winning the Gold. I´m sure Tez will have his fingers crossed for Germany this weekend.

Dyami Janeck Has A New Challenge With LWD Basket Leeuwarden And Wants To Get Comfortable In The Uncomfortable And Read The Game At The Next Level

pic credit: FIBA

Dyami Janeck (185-PG-2005) is a 19 year old 185cm guard playing his first season in Holland with Leeuwarden. He began his career with ROTH Energie Basketball-Akademie Giessen (NBBL) and then played the last 3 seasons with the Dragons Rhondorf NBBL and Pro B teams. He played a total of 27 Pro B games and last season averaged 3,5ppg. He spoke to germanhoops.com about basketball.

Thanks Dyami for talking to germanhoops.com. Congrats on signing with Leeuwarden. It will be your first time playing in Holland. How big is your relation to Holland?


Thanks for having me! The Netherlands has been my second home country. My mother is Dutch and my brother and I have the Dutch Nationality as well since we were children. Furthermore the rest of my family lives in the Netherlands and I always visited them when I was young. Therefore it really feels like a second home in the Netherlands additionally to Germany.

Was going to college in the States ever an option for you? Why did you decide to go to Holland? It is obviously a big new challenge for you.

Firstly I just finished my school this summer, after that I had great tryout experiences and interest in Germany. Then my focus was on the Dutch U20 National Team, which I got selected again this year and after the Eurobasket in Armenia, BNXT clubs showed interest. So there was no time to think about college, but it is for sure in my mind and let’s see what the future brings. Now I feel myself on a really good journey here in Leeuwarden and I am thankful for this great new challenge.

How did you see your development with the Dragons in the last 2 years? Did you feel like you couldn’t do it as well as now with Leeuwarden?
At the Dragons I had a great developing time with the coach Stephan Dohrn. There were inspiring teammates, wonderful fans and good individual trainings by the Telekom Baskets Bonn. The last 4 months after Stephan Dohrn left, it was a bit more difficult for me, also due to the fact that I had an injury. Since 2022 I was at the TABU school in Bonn. They have a great support for athletes, which allowed me to have my focus completely on Basketball. This gave me the optimal possibility to finish my Abitur and have a strong basketball development with the Dragons the last two years. Now I know that Leeuwarden is the best place for me to make my next steps in my basketball career.

What were the main reasons for signing with Leeuwarden? The club was founded in 2004 and until now only reached the final in Holland once?
I am very much in the moment. With the coach Vincent Van Sliedregt, and with all the players, which I get to know now every day a little more, it feels really good for me to grow and develop here in Leeuwarden at the BNXT Level.

How did the talks go with head coach Vincent Van Sliedregt? What did you like about his basketball philosophy the most?
We had a very open and sympathetic exchange in which I could express my sport desires and goals. Now that we worked already some weeks together I can say that I really like his character and mindset.

You are playing in the first division called BNXT. This is levels above the Pro B. What kind of expectations do you have?
I want to improve every day, which means working hard and learning a lot in practice. This way the performance in the game will improve. Matching and surpassing the energy and physicality is the most important thing right now.

What is your goal with your game this season? On what areas do you want to make the next steps?
For sure the main area is shaping myself authentic as a Ball handler. I want to get comfortable in the uncomfortable and read the game on the next level.

You played 2 seasons with the Dragons Rhoendorf. What was your other nicest experience besides winning the Pro B title in 2024?
Winning the Pro B title in 2024 is an experience I will never forget. Besides that I really enjoyed playing for the fans and seeing them go crazy in a packed Dragon Dome. Interacting with the fans and seeing the happy faces from the kids when you high five them was for sure one of the nicest experiences in the two seasons for the Dragons.

Your minutes in the Pro B went from 4 to 10 in the last 2 seasons. How did your game grow?
I would say the key words are consistency and confidence. Knowing in what areas your strengths are and learning how to use them really helped me and this way I got more opportunities to play more minutes. I always kept working hard and the rest concerning minutes was not in my hands.

You always gave instant energy from the bench. Did you always have that high energy in your game or was that mostly developed in Rhoendorf?
That energy has always been a big part in my game due to the fact that I am a very energetic and motivated person. Basketball gives me the space to let this out.

You had many great teammates in Rhoendorf. Which player had the biggest impact on you in the last 2 seasons?
Kelvin Omojola. He was my Captain for the last 2 Seasons in Rhoendorf. He is a great leader but also having that matchup in practice really had a big impact on me. Every time when I had questions he didn’t hesitate to answer, I really learned a lot from him.

Last season you had 3 very good scoring games against the Lowen, Wurzburg and Speyer. What was your best Pro B game last season?
Every game gives me something to learn from. I just keep working. If I had to choose one of the three you mentioned it would be Speyer, because I really liked how I played Defense in that game.

Who wins a 1-1 in practice you or Janne Muller?
It has always been a pleasure to practice with Janne. But my main mindset is to bet on yourself.

You played at the U-20 European championships averaging 5.3ppg, 2.1rpg, 1.4apg, FGP: 45.5%, 3PT: 30.0%, FT: 76.5%. What kind of an experience was this for you?

Last year in 2024 was my first experience at the Dutch U20 National Team, the long selection of 6 weeks and the whole European Championship made a big impression on me. This year at the European championship in 2025, I was grateful to have been selected again and could grow even more. Playing in a different environment like that really helps to improve, be more consistent and adapting yourself.

How is the state of Dutch basketball in general? How do you see the future?
I feel like the Dutch Basketball is improving every year and there is a lot of talent.
In addition the BNXT is a great League for all the people in this area to enjoy, emphasize and get a closer connection to Basketball.

What Dutch players are up and coming? Would you include the Slingerland brothers?

There are a lot of good Dutch players that are playing in college and other very respected leagues.
With Noah Slingerland I played two summers together at the National Team and he is a great person. I have a very good relationship with him and I enjoyed having him as my teammate a lot. Noah now plays in the BNXT League, but he also played a year for Oldenburg in Germany and his brother Yanu is at the moment in Ulm. I would for sure include the Slingerland brothers, both are great Players.

Who are your 4 best players of all-time in the NBA euroleague and from Germany?

NBA: Lebron James, MJ, Kobe Bryant, Shaq
Euroleague: Vassilis Spanoulis, Kostas Sloukas, Mike James, Luka Doncic
Germany: Dirk Nowitzki, Dennis Schroeder, Franz Wagner, Andi Obst

Who is your GOAT?

If it is between MJ and Lebron, I take Lebron. But personally Kyrie Irving is my favorite player.

Thanks Dyami for the chat.

Justin Edler-Davis Has Shown Consistency His Whole Pro Career And Believes His Defensive Versatility Is Underrated

Justin Edler-Davis (193-G/F-1998, college: CSUB) is a 27 year old 193cm guard from San Diego, California playing his fourth professional season and first with the Veolia Towers Hamburg. Last season he played with CSO Voluntari (Romania-Liga Nationala) averaging 14.0ppg, 5.5rpg, 1.1apg, FGP: 56.3%, 3PT: 48.2%, FT-3 (91.6%); and in the ENBL averaged 14.3ppg, 5.8rpg, 1.8apg, FGP: 74.5%, 3PT: 46.7%, FT: 90.7%. In the 2023-2024 season he played with KB Peja (Kosovo-Superliga) averaging 17.4ppg, Reb-3 (9.2rpg), 2.0apg, Steals-2 (2.0spg), FGP: 53.5%, 3PT: 33.3%, FT: 78.8%. He played his rookie season with S.C. Lusitania EXPERT (Portugal-Liga Betclic) averaging 15.8ppg, Reb-3 (8.5rpg), 1.9apg, 1.4spg, FGP: 58.0%, 3PT: 30.7%, FT-3 (90.0%). He began his career at Morse high school and then played at California State University Bakersfield (NCAA) from 2017-2022 playing a total of 147 games. He spoke to germanhoops.com about basketball.

Thanks Justin for talking to germanhoops.com. After stints in Portugal, Kosovo and Romaina, you now

will play in Germany for BBL team Hamburg Towers. How blessed do you feel?

I am extremely happy and thankful any time a club gives me an opportunity to represent them. I

am excited to get things going with the Towers.


You have proven in every league that you can be a top scorer and rebounder. How confident are you

that your consistency will continue in Germany?

I am confident that I can continue the consistency into any league I play in because of the work I

put into my game. I feel as though my work is translatable and I can make the necessary changes to

be productive in Germany.

What do you know in general about the country Germany and it´s basketball?

From an outside perspective I have only heard positive things about the country of Germany as a

whole. The BBL is a league that I have followed since I have become a professional and somewhere

that I have wanted to play because it is a high level league and is seen all over the world.


Have you had any friends or former teammates or opponents play in Germany besides Justin McCall?

Off the top of my head Deandre Lansdowne is a guy that comes to mind. He trains in my

hometown during the offseason and he was my opponent in the FIBA Europe Cup when I was in

Kosovo.


You will play for BBL team Hamburg Towers. Was playing Eurocup one of major reasons why you

signed there?

Playing in the EuroCup was a major factor because it is a level that I believe I should be on and

pairing that with playing in the BBL was something that became difficult to refuse.

How did the talks go with head coach Benka Barloschky. What did you appreciate right away from his

basketball philosophy?

Talks with Benka went well starting from our first conversation, we connected well and he showed

that he was intrigued with me as a player. I appreciate that he’s a coach that likes to play with

tempo because I believe that it is an attractive brand of basketball and one that suits my game

well.


Let´s talk about your game. You’re a 193cm guard. If you had to compare your game to an NBA

player who would best fit the description?

I have always tried to model my game after Kawhi Leonard even though I’m not as tall as him. His

versatility on both sides of the floor is what I have always aspired to have. Mid-range pull ups

offensively, defensive switch ability. Things like that are what I have tried to incorporate into my

game.


You score the ball really well and are an excellent rebounder for your height. What other strengths

does your game have?


Another strength is that I am switchable defensively and guard 1-4 maybe even 1-5 depending on

the matchups. I believe my defensive versatility is underrated.


You’re a really good rebounder. How do you explain this and do you have a particular rebounding

guard that you like to watch?

My rebounding comes from when I was playing position 4 throughout my college career and

learning how to get the ball off the rim as well as positioning. I always watched PJ Tucker

specifically when he was on the Rockets and he was their starting center. We are the same height

& weight so it was natural to watch him.

You were always an ok three point shooter but last season in Romania shot 48% and in the ENBL shot

46%. How do you explain this crazy rise last season?

My shooting became an emphasis the summer before this past season and it was something that I

dedicated a lot of time into. Those shooting percentages are products of fixing slight form issues

that I had in my shot and I also improved my shot selection which helped my percentages.

How would you describe yourself at the moment as a defender? Where would you like to take your

defensive game to?


Like I said earlier I believe I am quite versatile defensively the biggest thing I would have to

become better at is when I am a help-side defender.


On what areas of your game are you working on most so you be best prepared for Germany?


I am dedicating a lot of my time to my ball handling and being able to create for myself off the

dribble I think those would be things other teams would put on my scouting report.


Last season you played for CSO Voluntari (Romania-Liga Nationala) averaging 14.0ppg, 5.5rpg, 1.1apg, FGP: 56.3%, 3PT: 48.2%, FT-3 (91.6%); and in the ENBL averaged 14.3ppg, 5.8rpg, 1.8apg, FGP: 74.5%, 3PT: 46.7%,

FT: 90.7%;. You had a long post season playing 14 games. You lost a tough playoff series to Valcea.

What will you always remember from that series most?

What I will remember most from that series is us fighting back to get the series to a

fifth game. It would have been easy for us to be ready to be done especially in a third

place series but we showed character and continued to play.


How special will this season always be? You won the ENBL title as well as Cup. What made

this team so special?


For me it is one of the more special seasons I have had in my career, winning 2

trophies in one season is really hard to do. What made our team so special was how

together we were, everyone in the club from the owners all the way to our chefs &

custodians were great people and it contributed to us having a successful season.

What was it like being teammates with Mike Caffey? That guy has seen it all including the

Ukraine war in 2022.

Mike is a great guy off the court as well as a great teammate, he put us in a lot of

positions to not only score because he was one of the leaders in assists but he was

the engine for our season and one of the main reasons we were successful.

You played your second pro season with KB Peja (Kosovo-Superliga) averaging 17.4ppg, Reb-

3 (9.2rpg), 2.0apg, Steals-2 (2.0spg), FGP: 53.5%, 3PT: 33.3%, FT: 78.8%; FIBA Europe Cup

averaged 15.8ppg, 9.7rpg, 3.3apg, 3.0spg, FGP: 49.2%, 3PT: 28.0%, FT: 85.7%; Balkan League

averaged20.8ppg), Reb-2 (10.0rpg), 2.5apg, Steals-2 (1.6spg), FGP: 56.8%, 3PT: 29.3%, FT-2 (88.6%). You were so consistent. Was this your best season as a pro?

I wouldn’t say it was my best season as a pro because we fell short in winning trophies, we were

expected to win and didn’t so that was a bit disappointing not winning a single trophy or even getting to a final.


You played your rookie season with S.C. Lusitania EXPERT (Portugal-Liga Betclic) averaging 15.8ppg, Reb-

3 (8.5rpg), 1.9apg, 1.4spg, FGP: 58.0%, 3PT: 30.7%, FT-3 (90.0%). What do you remember being your wake up call to being a rookie where you knew that you were far away from home?

The wake up call for me was the way of life, especially being on an island. Being from California it was

completely different than what I was used to but I think that I adjusted well.

You had many great games including against top teams FC Porto and Benfica. What was your nicest

memory in Portugal that season?

I would say the nicest moment for me was making it to the cup final four that season, even though

we didn’t win it was special for Lusitania because they aren’t the biggest club so it was nice to

represent them in that way.

You played at the California State University Bakersfield from 2017-2022. You never averaged over 10,0ppg. What kind of role did you have and how did your game grow in these 5 years?

My position in college was mainly the small ball 4 so my role consisted of getting my offense out of being the screener in pick and pops and rebounding which is why I feel like I’ve become a decent rebounder.

You had so many great games there like sinking a buzzer beater at Idaho. What was your fondest moment there?


I played against a lot of bigger schools like Arizona, Gonzaga, Arkansas, UCLA, USC I would say being

able to compete on that level and in those facilities are something that I will always remember.

How did head coach Rod Barnes groom and prepare you best for a pro career?

Coach Barnes taught me how to have a proper work ethic in terms of getting in the weight room,

extra shots, etc and learning that is the reason why I am in the position I am now.

Who won a 1-1 in practice you or Travis Henson?


We didn’t play much 1-1 from what I remember but if we do play it would be close for sure

because he’s a great player but obviously I think I will win.

Who is the toughest player that you ever played against that reached the NBA or Euroleague?

Toughest player I’ve ever played against was Demar Derozan in the Drew League which is a

summer pro-am league based in Los Angeles. I was guarding him the entire game and thought I was

playing good defense until I looked at the stats after the game and he had 30 points.

Please name your 5 best teammates of all-time?


This is tough. I’d say the 5 best teammates I’ve had since being a pro are:

Derek Jackson, Trey Moses, Mike Caffey, Lee Skinner and Jay Jay Chandler

Please list your NBA, Euroleague and German Mount Rushmore? That means your 5 best players?


NBA: LeBron James,Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, Kareem Abdul Jabbar

EuroLeague: Mike James, Vassilis Spanoulis, Kyle Hines, Vasislje Micic, Sergio Llull

German: Dirk Nowitzki, Detlef Schrempf, Dennis Schroder, (those are the only Germans I know)

Who is your GOAT


LeBron James the only correct answer.

Did you see the sequel to the classic Coming To America? Shouldn´t they have left it alone?


I am believer in never having sequels because they are never as good as the first movie!


Thanks Justin for the chat.

KJ Sherril Knows That The EPG Baskets Can Score But Defense Will Be The Staple Since That Wins Games

KJ Sherrill (203-F/C-1991, college: Augusta) is a 34 year old 203cm forward that enjoyed a 8 year pro playing career overseas. He played with the Bona Baskets Limburg, the SG Luetzel-Post Koblenz (Germany-Regionalliga), Dragons Rhondorf, Telekom Baskets Bonn 2 team, Herten and the Cuxhaven BasCats (Germany-ProA). He played college ball at Charlotte (NCAA) from 2009-2012 playing 75 NCAA games and also played a season at Augusta University (NCAA2). He was an assistant coach with the Dragons Rhondorf from 2023-2025 and now is an assistant with Pro A team EPG Guardians Koblenz. He spoke to germanhoops.com about his new coaching gig with the EPG Baskets Koblenz.

How refreshing is it for you to be reunited with Stephan Dohrn. Is the work more challenging at the Pro A level than at the Pro B level?

It’s a pleasure to be alongside Stephan and Kai once again. I’m learning a lot from these guys along the way. The work load is a bit more in Pro A than Pro B, I’d say everyday is a challenge for me just because I’m still in my learning phase as a coach.

The team looks really good this season. The club has little Americans and more Germans and experience. How is your feeling about this team especially after beating one of the top Pro A teams Giessen?

I think we have a great group of guys but of course we still need lots of work. It’s still early in preseason but we’re making the right steps in the direction we want to go. Improving day by day in practice so that we have better executions in games with our good roster. The win against Giessen was a confidence booster for us, but we don’t want to settle and we want to continue building from there.

Is the philosophy this season correct with hard nosed defense and free on the offensive end? That isn’t much different than what we saw in Rhondorf?

Yes it’s pretty much the same concept here in Koblenz. With Stephan, he puts emphasis on defense. So we want that to be our identity, not just an offensive team. We know we can score, but we want to have consecutive defensive stops. That’s what wins games.

The team had good bigs last season, but this season with Bacak, Moeller and Sonnefeld real experience. It seems like the bigs weren’t as fully involved scoring wise last season. Could there be a change this season?

Our bigs maybe won’t be our outstanding scorers, but their presence under the basketball is what we need. Rebounding and being physical down low. Controlling the paint and setting good screens. With their experience, they are able to contribute to the game a whole lot and we are happy to have them with us.

How fortunate is it for Jannis Sonnefeld to play with big veterans Bacak and Moeller? Could he be one of the big surprises this season?

Sonnefeld is young but I would say he plays just as hard as the experienced guys. He will be a big factor for us this season and he has the perfect group of experienced guys to help lead him along the way.

I believe Calvin Wishart was the best signing? I heard MVP chants from someone during RheinStars game when he scored 8 points in 1 minute. Is he MVP material?

With Calvin’s scoring ability, I think it’s possible that he could become MVP in the future, but all he wants to do is win and contribute to his team. So regardless MVP or not, he will be one of our main guys.

I really love the game of Aleksa Kovacevic. He was the team’s second best signing. Do you feel like he is on a mission to show all that he ‘deserves to be a BBL player with a great pro A season?

Aleksa could potentially be one of the best guards in Pro A. He’s capable of being a huge threat offensively and defensively despite his size. I love his aggressiveness and hard nosed defense. But offensively, I see him being very successful for us.

Badu Buck is a guy you know well from Rhondorf. He had some growing pains before Rhondorf but was reborn there. What kind of a role do you see him having in a stacked team this season something he adjusted well to in Rhondorf?

Badu’s biggest role is that he is a leader. He may be the most vocal guy on the court and his experience helps make the game easier for others simply because he has such high IQ. He puts players in the right positions, the young guys especially look up to him and he does a great job leading them. In my eyes, maybe the best addition to the team. He’s our captain for a reason.

Tim Smith Jr is the other guy you know well from Rhondorf. Is he going to be this team’s version of the guy doing the dirty work especially under the glass?

Tim is our slim reaper, similar to Kevin Durant. Tim may be one of the best shooters in the league, from inside and outside. He can score in so many different ways. His game is great to watch and I think he will have a major role on this team.

Garrett Hicks is a very special player. How lucky is the team to have him who can do it all on the court and can score in bunches?

We were very pleased to sign Garrett. His abilities on the court for his size is like no other. Not only can he shoot from deep, his ability to attack the rim is very nice! He is for sure the most athletic on the team. Even though he hasn’t played many years in Europe, he is very professional and we are beyond happy that he is with us.

Do you have any added duties as assistant coach this season besides working with the bigs?

Yes I have a bit more responsibilities than I had in Rhondorf. I am the skill development coach as well, so I’m in charge of all the group/individual workouts with all players, not just Big’s.

Are you like a mentor for Kai Schallenberg? What is it like working with him again?

I really enjoy working with Kai. He’s very enthusiastic and his love for the game says it all. I would honestly say we learn from each other and being that Kai is more experienced than me when it comes to coaching, I learn from him as well. We both are young and hungry to become better coaches and I think we have the perfect example to learn from, Stephan. I think I couldn’t ask for a better coaching staff to be a part of!

Who wins a 1-1 in practice you or Tim Smith Jr?

Well being that Tim is a light weight compared to me, I think it wouldn’t even be fair if we played 1-1. I’d treat him like a baby, he’s too little. Love you Tim but it’s the truth!

Thanks KJ for the chat.