This week’s selection brought together strong playoff production and high-value regular-season performances across different contexts. The common thread was clear: players who combined efficiency with real impact when their teams needed it most.
Rookie Team of the Week
- RASHEED BELLO – Giants Antwerp (BNXT) – 30 pts, 4/6 2P, 5/7 3P, 7/8 FT, 5 rbs, 3 ass – 32 index
- JAKE O’NEIL – Hapoel Beer Sheva (ISR) – 22 pts, 4/5 2P, 4/8 3P, 9 rbs, 2 stl – 27 index
- SEAN MOORE – BC Orbi (GEO) – 19 pts, 6/8 2P, 10 rbs, 8 ass, 2 stl – 31 index
- TYLAN POPE – Kirchheim Knights (GER) – 27 pts, 9/15 2P, 2/4 3P, 11 rbs – 28 index
- BRANDON HUNTLEY-HATFIELD – Keravnos (CYP) – 29 pts, 13/15 2P, 3/4 FT, 8 rbs, 5 frv – 38 index
- NOAH REYNOLDS – BC Prievidza (SVK) – 26 pts, 7/12 2P, 3/8 3P, 4 rbs, 6 ass, 4 stl – 32 index
Beyond the Boxscore
Brandon Huntley-Hatfield offers the clearest starting point after a dominant Game-3 performance in the semifinals, setting the tone for the week through physical finishing, rebounding presence, and constant pressure around the rim. His scoring came with very little waste, and that same ability to turn touches into immediate value also shaped Sean Moore’s all-around playoff line, as he blended scoring, rebounding, playmaking, and defensive activity in a game that demanded completeness. Noah Reynolds completed that postseason layer with another strong offensive outing, even if his production ultimately came in a losing effort.
That playoff weight gave the week one kind of meaning, but the regular season also produced several performances with direct consequences in the standings. Rasheed Bello continued to reinforce his value inside one of the strongest team settings in this selection, pairing scoring efficiency with the kind of offensive control expected from a lead guard on a top-level BNXT team. Jake O’Neil and Tylan Pope both delivered wins with clear playoff implications, the former through perimeter accuracy and added rebounding, the latter through scoring volume and physical presence around the glass.
HONORABLE MENTION: Payton Sparks (Pully Lausanne) kept the series alive with a double-double of 15 points and 11 rebounds in Game 3. A brief line, but another reminder of his value as a reliable interior big in meaningful playoff context.
Scouting Radar
The ENBL Final Four offered the clearest possible test: high-leverage games, limited margin for error, and immediate consequences. This week’s radar focuses on four names who used that stage to confirm their value in different ways.
Landrius Horton | Dziki Warszawa | 6’4 – 193 cm
Tournament MVP and one of the clearest symbols of Dziki’s title run, he combined scoring, rebounding, and composure in the biggest games of the season. His Final Four case was built on timing, physicality, and mature two-way impact rather than raw volume alone.
Our Take: Experienced rather than developmental, but exactly the kind of winning guard-wing profile that keeps strong market value in ambitious European contexts.
Tahlik Chavez | Dziki Warszawa | 6’4 – 193 cm
Already productive earlier in the ENBL season, he closed the loop by earning All-Star Five recognition after a Final Four in which his shot-making and energy repeatedly shifted momentum. His semifinal was especially telling, with 21 points and 4/4 from 3-PT in the win that pushed Dziki into the final.
Our Take: Shooting guard whose role continues to translate when the level rises, with enough shot-making and competitiveness to remain firmly on the radar.
Max Jones | Manchester Basketball | 6’6 – 198 cm
Manchester did not win the title, but Jones came out of the Final Four as the strongest individual performer outside the champions. After entering the event as the competition’s leading scorer, he exploded for 36 points in the final, matching the Final Four scoring record and reinforcing his offensive value on a bigger stage.
Our Take: High-level scoring wing who confirmed his offensive profile in the biggest games, even without the trophy to complete the run.
Solomon Young | CSO Voluntari | 6’8 – 203 cm
Not a breakout name, but the Final Four again confirmed how useful he remains in serious European settings. Physicality, interior scoring, and frontcourt reliability kept his value clear even without the headline spotlight.
Our Take: Established frontcourt profile whose experience and functional production still make him a credible option for clubs seeking immediate value.
Ahead of the Final Four, our ENBL coverage also focused on the competition’s top rookie profiles.
Stay Ahead, Every Week
Our subscribers get the complete picture of European basketball before everyone else. Every month, we deliver:
– 20+ Scouting Reports on emerging and available players
– The Weekly Update with top performers and in-depth analysis
– Watchlists on NCAA and international prospects
– One detailed League Breakdown with metrics and trend insights
All designed for clubs that want to anticipate, not react, to the market.
