P. League+
Current season, competition or edition: 2024–25 PLG season | |
Sport | Basketball |
---|---|
Founded | 2020 |
Founder | Chen Chien-Chou |
First season | 2020–21 |
CEO | Chen Chien-Chou (interim) |
President | Li Chung-Shu |
Commissioner | Chen Chien-Chou (interim) |
No. of teams | 4 |
Country | Taiwan |
Most recent champion(s) | New Taipei Kings (1st title) |
Most titles | Taipei Fubon Braves (3 titles) |
TV partner(s) | FTV One MOMOTV |
Official website | https://pleagueofficial.com/ |
The P. League+ (stylized as P. LEAGUE+, abbreviated as PLG), pronounced as Plus League, is a Taiwanese men's professional basketball league founded in 2020.[1]
History
[edit]The P. League+ was founded by Blackie Chen in 2020.[2] It is the first fully professional basketball league in Taiwan after the Chinese Basketball Alliance (CBA) ceased operations in 2000.[3][4] The first four teams participating in the inaugural season were the Formosa Taishin Dreamers,[5] the Hsinchu JKO Lioneers,[6][7] the Taipei Fubon Braves, and the Taoyuan Pilots.[8] In its second season 2021–22, the P. League+ added two more teams, the New Taipei Kings and the Kaohsiung Steelers.[9]
On June 26, 2024, the P. League+ announced the merger with the T1 League for the 2024–25 season.[10] On July 8, 2024, Kaohsiung 17LIVE Steelers, Taipei Fubon Braves and Taoyuan Pauian Pilots announced to exit the league merger, preferring to stay for the upcoming season.[11] On July 9, Tainan TSG GhostHawks announced to exit the merger and join PLG.[12] Formosa Dreamers, Hsinchu Toplus Lioneers and New Taipei Kings announced they will join the newly formed Taiwan Professional Basketball League.[13]
Teams
[edit]Team | Location(s) | Arena(s) | Founded | Joined | Map |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kaohsiung 17LIVE Steelers | Kaohsiung City | Fengshan Arena | 2021 | ||
Tainan TSG GhostHawks | Tainan City | NCKU Chung Cheng Gym | 2021 | 2024 | |
Taipei Fubon Braves | Taipei City | Taipei Heping Basketball Gymnasium | 1982 | 2020 | |
Taoyuan Pauian Pilots | Taoyuan City | Taoyuan Arena | 2020 |
Regular season
[edit]Each team is required to have at least 13 players for the opening roster and maximum 20 players after the registering deadline. Two of the players can either be both heritage players or each a foreign student and a heritage player. Maximum five import players is allowed for the opening roster and four after the registering deadline. Game Day Active Roster requires 14 players that includes up to three import players. Two import players can be on the court at the same time.
Each team plays 40 games, 20 each for home and away. Games are scheduled mainly on weekends and national holidays.
Playoffs
[edit]Four of six teams qualify the playoffs. All seeds will play the playoffs series. The winners advance and play in the finals series. All series are best-of-7, which is in a 2-2-1-1-1 format. The seeding is based on each team's regular season record. Home court advantage goes to the higher seed for all series.[14]
Champions
[edit]Teams | Win | Loss | Total | Year(s) won | Year(s) runner-up |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Taipei Fubon Braves | 3 | 0 | 3 | 2021, 2022, 2023 | — |
New Taipei Kings | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2024 | 2023 |
Formosa Dreamers | 0 | 1 | 1 | — | 2021 |
Hsinchu Toplus Lioneers | 0 | 1 | 1 | — | 2022 |
Taoyuan Pauian Pilots | 0 | 1 | 1 | — | 2024 |
Ticket prices and viewership demographics
[edit]This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (January 2021) |
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Notable people
[edit]Presidents and commissioners
[edit]- Chen Chien-Chou, President from 2020 to 2023
- Li Chung-Shu, President from 2023 to present
- Richard Chang, Commissioner from 2023 to 2024
Players
[edit]Note: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA-sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationalities not displayed.
Criteria |
---|
To appear in this section a player must have either:
|
- Will Artino – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Jeff Ayres – Former NBA player.
- Anthony Bennett – Former NBA player. Played for Canada.
- Keith Benson – Former NBA player.
- Tyler Bey – Former NBA player.
- Sim Bhullar – Former NBA player. 1x Import of the Year.
- Alec Brown – Played for United States.
- Earl Clark – Former NBA player.
- Chang Tsung-Hsien – Played for Chinese Taipei. 1x Most Valuable Player.
- Chen Ching-Huan – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Chen Kuan-Chuan – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Chen Yu-Wei – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Chien Wei-Ju – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Chien You-Che – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Chieng Li-Huan – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Chou Po-Chen – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Chou Po-Hsun – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Chou Yi-Hsiang – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Douglas Creighton – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Deyonta Davis – Former NBA player.
- Quincy Davis – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Branden Dawson – Former NBA player.
- Austin Daye – Former NBA player.
- Michael Efevberha – Played for Nigeria.
- Treveon Graham – Former NBA player.
- Manny Harris – Former NBA player.
- Aaron Harrison – Former NBA player.
- Hsieh Zong-Rong – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Huang Hung-Han – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Hung Chih-Shan – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Prince Ibeh – Played for Rwanda.
- Iong Ngai-San – Played for Macau.
- Chris Johnson – Former NBA player. 1x Finals Most Valuable Player.
- Perry Jones – Former NBA player.
- Terrence Jones – Former NBA player.
- Viacheslav Kravtsov – Former NBA player. Played for Ukraine.
- Ricky Ledo – Former NBA player.
- Lee Hsueh-Lin – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Lee Kai-Yan – Played for Chinese Taipei. 1x Finals Most Valuable Player.
- Lee Te-Wei – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- DeAndre Liggins – Former NBA player.
- Lin Cheng – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Lin Chih-Chieh – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Lin Chih-Wei – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Lin Chun-Chi – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Jeremy Lin – Former NBA player.
- Lin Yi-Huei – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Lu Cheng-Ju – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Lu Chi-Min – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Lu Chun-Hsiang – Played for Chinese Taipei. 1x Most Valuable Player.
- Devyn Marble – Former NBA player.
- Chris McCullough – Former NBA player.
- Malcolm Miller – Former NBA player.
- Tony Mitchell – Former NBA player.
- Byron Mullens – Former NBA player. 1x Import of the Year.
- Daniel Ochefu – Former NBA player.
- Justin Patton – Former NBA player.
- Peng Chun-Yen – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Davon Reed – Former NBA player.
- Devin Robinson – Former NBA player.
- Sani Sakakini – Played for Palestine.
- Wayne Selden Jr. – Former NBA player.
- Mike Singletary – 2x Finals Most Valuable Player.
- Su Shih-Hsuan – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Hasheem Thabeet – Former NBA player.
- Jeremy Tyler – Former NBA player.
- Tien Lei – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Tsai Wen-Cheng – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Tseng Hsiang-Chun – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Tseng Wen-Ting – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Willie Warren – Former NBA player.
- Jason Washburn – Played for Bulgaria. 1x Import of the Year.
- Thomas Welsh – Former NBA player.
- Julian Wright – Former NBA player.
- Wu Tai-Hao – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Wu Yung-Sheng – Played for Chinese Taipei.
- Yang Chin-Min – Played for Chinese Taipei. 2x Most Valuable Player.
- Ihor Zaytsev – 1x Import of the Year.
- Stephen Zimmerman – Former NBA player.
Individual awards
[edit]Finals MVP
[edit]Season | Player | Team |
---|---|---|
2021 | Mike Singletary | Taipei Fubon Braves |
2022 | Mike Singletary | Taipei Fubon Braves |
2023 | Chris Johnson | Taipei Fubon Braves |
2024 | Lee Kai-Yan | New Taipei Kings |
See also
[edit]- Chinese Basketball Alliance (CBA)
- Chinese Taipei men's national basketball team
- List of basketball leagues
- Sport in Taiwan
- Super Basketball League (SBL)
- T1 League
- Women's Super Basketball League (WSBL)
- Taiwan Professional Basketball League (TPBL)
References
[edit]- ^ Merlissa (August 14, 2020). "NEW CHINESE TAIPEI PRO LEAGUE, P.LEAGUE+". Locker Room.
- ^ Tan, Kendra (August 4, 2020). "Blackie Chen Sells His S$709K McLaren To Invest In New Basketball League". 8 Days.
- ^ Yen, William (November 11, 2020). "P.LEAGUE+ to boost domestic tourism, demonstrate virus prevention". Central News Agency.
- ^ Long, Po-an; Yen, William; Yeh, Joseph (February 13, 2021). "New pro league means fresh start for Taiwan basketball". Central News Agency. Retrieved February 13, 2021.
- ^ Chen, Jian (November 20, 2020). "P.LEAGUE+: Formosa Rebrands Ahead of Final Preseason Games". Asia Pacific Hoops.
- ^ Chen, Jian (August 3, 2020). "The Newest Taiwanese Team Is Ready to Roar in the P.League+". Asia Pacific Hoops.
- ^ Chen, Jian (September 2, 2020). "P.League+: Hsinchu Reveals Lineup for Debut Season". Asia Pacific Hoops.
- ^ Chen, Jian (October 14, 2020). "Pauian Archiland Rebrands to Taoyuan AirApe for P.League+". Asia Pacific Hoops.
- ^ Yen, William (October 19, 2021). "P.LEAGUE+ expands playoffs for new basketball season". Central News Agency. Retrieved October 20, 2021.
- ^ 林, 岳甫 (June 26, 2024). "職籃合併》PLG決定了!今年就要跟T1完成合併". The Liberty Times. Retrieved June 26, 2024.
- ^ "職籃合併》11隊變8隊!勇士、領航猿和鋼鐵人宣布退出 準備PLG新賽季". The Liberty Times. July 8, 2024. Retrieved July 8, 2024.
- ^ "PLG 歡迎台鋼獵鷹正式加盟". P.LEAGUE+ (Press release). July 9, 2024. Retrieved July 9, 2024.
- ^ "快訊/新職籃確定命名TPBL 台灣職業籃球大聯盟7隊聯合聲明開打". ETtoday.net. July 9, 2024. Retrieved July 9, 2024.
- ^ "About PLG". P. LEAGUE+. Retrieved November 8, 2023.