Jun 8, 2009, 7:39 pm
Interview with Paul Blake, Chairman of BBL
Quote:The British Basketball League closed the 2008-09 season with the Newcastle Eagles as champions. Founded in September 1987, BBL Chairman Paul Blake discusses on British basketball with uleb.com, addressing the structure of the League first:
The Shareholders of the League are the constituent clubs each with an equal share. There is a small central group managing the day-to-day operations. The clubs have joint responsibility to generate central sponsorship
How many teams will compete next season in the championship, and which will be regulations on players elegibility?
In September there will be 13 clubs operating in the BBL, there is no promotion and relegation as the league is a franchise operation.
There are 3 permit players (overseas) allowed on each team, the rest is made up of European Union players with EU passports.
What´s the TV situation?
Currently we do not have a TV Contract. The rights are held by the BBL.
Please mention and comment about the sponsors.
We currently only have a ball sponsor, Molten, for the League
What are you satisfied the most in your League?
After a number of years of operating with large league sponsorship, we lost a number of teams when this disappeared. The teams are now sustainable without large sponsorship, which is difficult to get in the current economic climate. The clubs have/are developing extensive community programmes to broaden the reach of the sport and increase participation.
Arenas: what can you say about fans attendance to BBL matches?
Most clubs play in large sports centres and the average attendance across the clubs is between 500 and 3000. There is a lack of suitable sized arenas in the UK and until more are built it is difficult to grow attendance.
Media: what has been the evolution of media coverage in these last years?
We are treated badly by the national media in the UK with little coverage in National newspapers or National TV. We do get support from the regional media around the clubs, which is one of our strengths. In the last few years the National coverage has gone from intermittent to close to zero.
What about the relationship with the Federation?
We now have an excellent relationship with our national federation who are supportive of what we are trying to achieve. We operate on a 3 year rolling licence from the federation. However, it is only in the last 18 months that our relationship has improved, previous to that it was very poor.
Which are your plans of future for the League?
Our plans are around developing a better media strategy and get a TV contract. Without this it is difficult to grow the sport. We are currently involved in a working party in the UK to develop basketball and this includes the NBA, GB National team and the national Federation. We all understand that the game will grow if all the key stakeholders work together for the good of the sport. A new refreshing approach.
How do you imagine your League in 10 years?
We aim to be between 15 to 18 teams all operating in venues of more than 2,000 capacity with the sport having attendance that make it a top 3 sport in the UK. In the UK the sport is an exciting family sport with family groups making up the largest part of our fan base. Growing this to make it one of the top sports will generate more interest and larger fan base in the UK.
Respect and thanks for everything:
Alvertis, Bodiroga, Jasikevicius, Radja, Wilkins, Vrankovic, Fotsis, Rebraca, Kattash, Gentile, Koch, Middleton, Kutluay, Rogers, Papadopoulos, Becirovic, Tomasevic, Siskauskas, Pekovic, Lakovic, Vujanic, Chatzivrettas, Maljkovic, Spanoulis and many more to follow in the near future.
![[Image: vspa.jpg]](http://i199.photobucket.com/albums/aa105/Talkbasket/Blog/vspa.jpg)