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London Towers

British basketball team based in London, England


Summary

British basketball team based in London, England

FieldValue
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nameLondon Towers
logoLondonTowersLogo.png
imagesize200px
leagueBritish Basketball League
and EBL Division 3
established1984
folded2009
historyTower Hamlets
1984–1989
London Docklands
1989–1991
London Towers
1991–2009
locationLondon, Greater London
ownershipCosti Zombanakis
coloursYellow, Black and White
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and EBL Division 3 1984–1989 London Docklands 1989–1991 London Towers 1991–2009

London Towers were a professional basketball team based in London, England. They enjoyed considerable success in the 1990s and early 2000s, collecting 3 titles in the British Basketball League (BBL) as well as regularly competing in European competitions such as the Euroleague and EuroCup. They contested a fierce rivalry with fellow London team Greater London Leopards for much of this spell. After several years of decline with financial difficulties and venue issues, owner Costi Zombanakis pulled the first team from the BBL in the summer of 2006, and although the club's second team continued in the regional English Basketball League, the London Towers brand folded in 2009.

Franchise history

High risers

Established as Tower Hamlets, in the borough of the same name, the London-based team entered NBL Division 2 in 1984. By 1989 they finished eleventh, out of the eleven teams in the league and were due to be relegated. However, the Carlsberg League Division 1 was suffering a membership crisis at the time and was about to be reduced to just seven teams. With the newly built Docklands Arena available as a possible venue not too far from the team's base, the Tower Hamlets franchise was admitted to country's top professional league as London's representatives, rebranded as London Docklands for the 1989-90 season.

On the move again

The following season the Docklands team left the giant arena as they, in common with other basketball teams at the time, struggled with the cost of a big arena rent. They returned "home" to Tower Hamlets and the Newham Leisure Centre, although their first two seasons yielded just three League victories.

Towers rise

It was 1991 when the franchise which came to sit astride British basketball finally gained its most well-known label. Renamed London Towers, but still playing at Newham the club's fortunes turned around in the 1991-92 season, as they finished fourth, and a move to the Sobell Sports Centre in Islington saw them finish third in 1993.

The Wembley Days

In 1994 the Towers made the short move across North London to the prestigious Wembley Arena complex, splitting home games between the Arena itself and the adjacent Exhibition halls. It was here that they enjoyed their best seasons, winning multiple titles including the Budweiser League Championship, League Playoffs and 7-up trophy.

The 1996-97 season also saw the Towers make their European debut appearance, competing in the newly named EuroCup. After qualifying from the group stage with a 4–6 record, they exited the competition in the first knockout round losing to Avtodor Saratov of Russia by five points over two legs. The following season also saw them take part in the Eurocup, however this time they finished bottom of their group with a 1–9 record.

Heading South

With their Wembley venue proving expensive and presenting problems for European competitions, in the summer of 1998 Towers "merged" with fellow BBL team Crystal Palace. The 1998–1999 season saw games split between Wembley and Crystal Palace National Sports Centre, with the team moving full time to Crystal Palace for the following season.

Towers continued to be one of the British Basketball League's top teams, winning Southern Conference titles and the Uniball Trophy. They also regularly competed in European competitions such as the Saporta Cup, NEBL (Northern European Basketball League), and even the prestigious Euroleague for two seasons, coached by NBA Championship winning coach Nick Nurse in one of these years.

The End

Despite working on plans to build their own arena for a number of years, linking with their community and development work, in 2006 the London Towers first team pulled out of BBL, for a "one year break". In common with at least two other teams who followed this path at around the same time, they were never to return. The recently started second team, London Towers II, continued to fly the flag for a few seasons, competing in the English Basketball League Division 3 and operating the club's youth and development teams, before also folding.

Head coaches

  • Mark Dunning
  • Kevin Cadle
  • Lino Frattin
  • Ron Abegglen
  • Nick Nurse
  • David Lindstrom
  • Robbie Peers
  • Gary Lyttle

:Assistant Coaches - Tony Garbelotto, Andre Alleyne, Graham Wilson, Darren Johnson, Alex Fuhrmann, Julian Martinez, Joe Lofthouse.

Season-by-season records

SeasonDivisionTierRegular SeasonPost-SeasonCupTrophyHead coachFinishPlayedWinsLossesPointsWin %
Tower Hamlets
1984–85NBL 2II
1985–86NBL 2II
1986–87NBL 2II
1987–88NBL 1II
1988–89NBL 1II
London Docklands
1989–90BBLI8th2822640.071Did not qualifyLast 16Pool Stage
1990–91BBLI9th2412320.041Did not qualifyLast 16Pool Stage
SeasonDivisionTierRegular SeasonPost-SeasonCupTrophyHead coachFinishPlayedWinsLossesPointsWin %
London Towers
1991–92BBLI4th30219420.700Semi-finalsLast 16Semi-finals
1992–93BBLI3rd33258500.757Semi-finalsLast 16Pool Stage
1993–94BBLI5th362115420.583Quarter-finalsLast 16Pool StageMark Dunning
1994–95BBLI3rd36288560.777Semi-finalsQuarter-finalsPool Stage
1995–96BBLI1st36324640.889Runners Up, losing to BirminghamWinners, beating SheffieldWinners, beating WorthingKevin Cadle
1996–97BBLI2nd362610520.722Winners, beating LeopardsSemi-finalsWinners, beating ChesterKevin Cadle
1997–98BBLI6th362313460.638Semi-finalsSemi-finalsRunners Up, losing to SheffieldKevin Cadle
1998–99BBLI3rd362412480.667Winners, beating Thames ValleyLast 16Quarter-finalsLino Frattin
1999–00BBL SI1st342311460.676Semi-finalsQuarter-finalsWinners, beating ManchesterRon Abegglen
2000–01BBL SI1st34277540.794Semi-finalsSemi-finalsCompeted in EuroleagueNick Nurse
2001–02BBL SI1st322111420.656Semi-finalsLast 16Semi-finalsLino Frattin
David Lindstrom
2002–03BBLI7th401921380.475Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsRunners Up, losing to ChesterDavid Lindstrom
2003–04BBLI3rd362313460.638Semi-finalsSemi-finalsSemi-finalsRobbie Peers
2004–05BBLI3rd402911580.725Quarter-finals1st roundSemi-finalsRobbie Peers
2005–06BBLI4th402218440.550Quarter-finalsRunners Up, losing to NewcastlePool StageRobbie Peers

Home arenas

:London Arena (1989–1991) :Newham Leisure Centre (1991–1992) :Sobell Sports Centre (1992–1994) :Wembley Arena (1994–1999) - split games between Crystal Palace from 1998. :Crystal Palace Sports Centre (1998–2007) - split games between Wembley Arena until 1999. :Harris Sports Centre https://web.archive.org/web/20071227080345/http://www.fusion-lifestyle.com/CentreDetails.asp?cat=33 (2007–2009)

Trophies

  • 1995/96 League Champions, National Cup Winners, League Trophy Winners
  • 1996/97 Championship Winners, League Trophy Winners
  • 1998/99 Tournament of Champions Winners, Championship Winners
  • 1999/00 Southern Conference Champions, League Trophy Winners
  • 2000/01 Tournament of Champions Winners, Southern Conference Champions

References

Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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