Valencia and Panathinaikos for one night that changes the seasonValencia Basket and Panathinaikos AKTOR Athens come to Roig Arena for the fifth game of the EuroLeague quarterfinal series, and the math is brutally simple: the winner goes to the Final Four, the loser ends the European season. The series is tied 2-2 after four games that kept going down to the final possessions. Panathinaikos took the first two in Valencia, Valencia responded with two wins in Athens, so the decision returns to where the drama began – to the new, loud, and now already European-tested Roig Arena.
Valencia earned home-court advantage in the regular season as a highly seeded team, while Panathinaikos reached the quarterfinals through the play-in route and immediately showed that its position does not say enough about the quality of the roster. In this series, there is no more room for a “second chance”. One bad quarter, a run of turnovers, or two missed free throws can decide the traveler to the final stage. Tickets for this encounter are in demand among fans.
How the series heated upThe first game at Roig Arena went to Panathinaikos 68-67. Kendrick Nunn scored 21 points, and Mathias Lessort brought strength under the rim. Valencia came up one possession short, but even then it was clear that Pedro Martínez had a plan to slow down the Athens rhythm and attack the open court as soon as Panathinaikos lost balance.
The second game was even crazier: Panathinaikos celebrated 107-105 after overtime, and Nigel Hayes-Davis hit the winning shot over Braxton Key. It was a blow that could have broken the host’s season, because losing 0-2 after two home games in a best-of-five series usually means an almost impossible task.
But Valencia refused to disappear in Athens. In the third game, it won 91-87, with important minutes from Jean Montero, Papi Badia, Kam Taylor, and Braxton Key. In the fourth, Jean Montero played the game of his career in this kind of context: 29 points, 7 rebounds, 7 assists, and 3 steals in an 89-86 win. The series returned to Spain, and Roig Arena received the first European “all or nothing” game in its young history.
Game 1: Valencia Basket – Panathinaikos AKTOR Athens 67-68
Game 2: Valencia Basket – Panathinaikos AKTOR Athens 105-107 after overtime
Game 3: Panathinaikos AKTOR Athens – Valencia Basket 87-91
Game 4: Panathinaikos AKTOR Athens – Valencia Basket 86-89
Series status before the encounter in Valencia: 2-2
Valencia: Montero is the engine, but he will not be able to do it aloneValencia grew through the season as a team that can run, defend aggressively on the perimeter, and live off the depth of its rotation. Jean Montero showed in the fourth game in Athens why he is the first man of the offense: he was not only scoring, but in the closing stretch he read double-teams and found teammates. When he accelerates through the middle, the Panathinaikos defense has to choose whether to close the drive or risk a pass to the corner.
Kam Taylor gives Valencia physical defense in the outside positions and energy in transition. Braxton Key is important because he can switch onto multiple positions and finish from the second unit of action. Matt Costello and Neal Sako must respond to contact under the rim, because Panathinaikos, with Lessort and Hayes-Davis, has bodies that do not allow easy points in the paint.
For Pedro Martínez, the key is rhythm. Valencia does not want a long game in which Panathinaikos slows down the possession, draws up a set for Nunn, and forces the host into five-on-five attacks without depth. The home side will look for early ball movement, offense before the defense is set, and aggressive punishment of every guest turnover. In Athens, it was precisely the defensive pressure that changed the tone of the series.
Panathinaikos: experience, individual class, and the pressure of the finishPanathinaikos comes to Valencia with a clear picture of what it wants: control the tempo, bring the game down into a physical duel, and put the ball in the hands of players who can create from isolation. Kendrick Nunn already showed in the first game that he can make difficult shots in an away arena. Nigel Hayes-Davis hit a shot in the second game that will be remembered all season. TJ Shorts gives extra pressure on the defense through drives and changes of rhythm.Mathias Lessort is especially important for the visitors. When Panathinaikos manages to establish contact in the paint, Lessort opens space for the outside players, attacks the rebound, and forces Valencia into switches that are not always comfortable. Cedi Osman and Juancho Hernangómez bring size on the wing, and Ergin Ataman usually does not run away from games decided in the final minutes.
The question for Panathinaikos is not quality, but freshness and availability. In the fourth game, Kostas Sloukas, Marius Grigonis, and Alexandros Samodurov did not play. If the rotation narrows again, Valencia will try to run after every defensive rebound and test the visitors’ legs already in the first quarter.
Valencia, in the closing stage of the series, lives most through Montero, Taylor, Key, Costello, and Badia.
Panathinaikos relies on Nunn, Hayes-Davis, Lessort, Shorts, Osman, and Hernangómez.
Pedro Martínez seeks speed, pressure on the ball, and early transition.
Ergin Ataman has more experience in high-pressure games and likes to slow the rhythm when his offense finds an advantage.
Defensive rebounding will be one of the key points because both squads have players who can punish a second attack.
Absences and rotations that can swing the nightIn the fourth game in Athens, Valencia did not have Josep Puerto, Xabi Lopez-Arostegui, and Yankuba Sima. Panathinaikos was without Kostas Sloukas, Marius Grigonis, and Alexandros Samodurov. That does not automatically mean the same list will apply in the fifth game, but it is important for reading the series: both teams have already had to change the distribution of minutes.
If Valencia is short at the wing and center positions, Costello and Sako will have to manage personal fouls wisely. If Panathinaikos remains without part of its outside rotation, Nunn and Shorts will have to carry a large number of possessions, and Valencia will attack them through consecutive screens and changes of defenders. In a game played after four exhausting duels, the bench can be worth as much as the starting five.
Tactical picture: who will impose their tempoValencia is most dangerous when its defense starts the attack. A steal, a long rebound, a quick pass toward Montero or Taylor – these are the situations in which Roig Arena immediately rises. Panathinaikos therefore has to watch the first passes after a rebound and must not allow Valencia to catch it in a defense that is retreating backward.
The visitors will try to attack the mismatch. If Valencia switches screens, Nunn can look for a smaller defender, or Lessort can get the ball deeper in the paint. If Valencia stays in a more classic defense, Panathinaikos will run pick and roll until it draws help from the corner. That is where the chess begins: can Valencia help from the right player without leaving an open three?
The biggest difference compared with the first two games is the host’s confidence. After 0-2, Valencia had to win twice in Athens, and it did it. Such a comeback also changes the psychology of the stands. The home fans no longer come only with hope, but with the feeling that the series has truly been turned around. Seats in the stands are disappearing quickly.
Roig Arena: Valencia’s new home and the right backdrop for a deciding gameRoig Arena is the new home arena of Valencia Basket, located at C/ del Bomber Ramon Duart, 12, in the Quatre Carreres area. It was designed as a multipurpose arena, but for basketball it is especially important because of the steep stands, proximity to the court, and capacity of about 15,600 spectators for sporting events. That is a noticeably larger and more modern setting than the old Fonteta de Sant Lluís, and this series against Panathinaikos has already given it a European identity.
The arena has a recognizable exterior ceramic façade and a roof structure with large supports, but for fans what is inside will matter more: noise, visibility, and pressure on the visiting bench. In the first game of the series, an attendance of 14,254 spectators was recorded, and in the second 14,656. For the fifth game, after two wins in Athens, an even tougher and more nervous atmosphere is expected.
Address: C/ del Bomber Ramon Duart, 12, Quatre Carreres, Valencia.
Capacity for sporting events: about 15,600 spectators.
The arena is the new home of Valencia Basket and a replacement for Fonteta de Sant Lluís.
A new public space has been developed around the arena, including a park area.
For this encounter, the most important thing is to arrive earlier because the approaches to the arena will be congested before the start.
Getting to the arena and tips for fansValencia is a city where getting to the arena can combine walking, public transport, and taxi, and the Quatre Carreres area is urban enough that it does not pay to count on arriving at the last moment. Whoever comes from the center should plan extra time for the evening traffic. Whoever comes by car should check parking availability in the wider area of the arena in advance, because a game of this rank fills the neighborhood long before tip-off.
Doors and security checks at major European games can slow entry, especially when a large number of fans arrive in the same wave. The best plan is to arrive earlier, eat something before entering, and leave enough time to find the sector. It is worth securing tickets on time.
Arrive earlier than the usual time because the deciding game attracts maximum interest.
For arrival from the center, consider public transport or a taxi, especially if you do not know the neighborhood.
If you come by car, count on congestion around parking near Roig Arena.
Check the sector and entrance before arrival so that you do not circle around the arena immediately before the start.
For fans traveling from outside Valencia, the city offers enough content for an all-day stay before the evening game.
Valencia as host: basketball, the sea, and the evening rhythm of the cityValencia is a rewarding city for traveling fans: large enough to have a strong sporting and cultural rhythm, and compact enough that the key zones can be connected in one day. Whoever arrives earlier can combine a walk through the old center, the Turia park area, and the modern part around Ciutat de les Arts i les Ciències, which is relatively close to the basketball direction toward Quatre Carreres.For Panathinaikos fans, this is an away trip with a clear charge: the Greek club has a fan base that experiences games very loudly, and in Valencia the home response will be especially strong after coming back from 0-2. For a neutral spectator, this is one of those nights in which there is no need to explain the context much – it is enough to look at the series scoreboard and know that the loser goes home.What can decide the gameThe first factor is control of turnovers. Valencia will look for every opportunity to run, and Panathinaikos must not give the host easy points. The second factor is rebounding, especially after missed threes. Both teams have enough athletes to turn a second attack into momentum that lifts the whole arena.
The third factor is a cool head in the final two minutes. This series already has a 68-67 win, a 107-105 overtime game, and two games in Athens decided in the closing stretch. That means nobody should expect a calm ending. If it again comes down to one possession, Nunn, Hayes-Davis, and Montero will be at the center of everything, but equally important can be one defensive rebound by Costello, one rotation by Key, or one fewer foul on Lessort.
The fourth factor is the crowd. Roig Arena is still building its great European memories, and the fifth encounter against Panathinaikos has everything needed for the first truly big story: a new arena, a comeback from a heavy deficit, a guest with champions and stars, and one path to the final stage that fits into 40 minutes of basketball. Ticket sales for this game are ongoing.
Sources:
– EuroLeague Basketball – official game center, schedule of the Valencia Basket – Panathinaikos AKTOR Athens game, data on the series, standings, rosters, and playoff news.
– TalkBasket – report on the fourth game, Jean Montero’s performance, and the series being tied at 2-2.
– Basketball Sphere – result of the fourth game and list of players who were not in the lineup in Game 4.
– Eurohoops – reports on the first and fourth games, key moments from Nunn, Lessort, Montero, and the closing stretch of the series.
– BasketNews – playoff pairings, best-of-five series format, and the context of the seeds in the quarterfinals.
– Roig Arena – data on the event in the arena and basic information about the venue.
– Schlaich Bergermann Partner – Roig Arena project, capacity for sporting events, structural and urban features of the arena.
– Cadena SER and El País – Spanish reports on Valencia’s win in Athens, the role of Pedro Martínez, and the development of the series.