The 2024 Basketball Champions League Final Four, also known as the 2024 BCL Final Four, is the concluding tournament of the 2023–24 Basketball Champions League. The tournament was hosted at the Belgrade Arena in Belgrade, Serbia.

Teams

Unicaja qualified for a second consecutive Final Four appearance. UCAM Murcia returned to the Final Four after a 6-year absence. Lenovo Tenerife will play their record-extending sixth Final Four, and their sixth in eight years. Peristeri will make their Final Four debut and become the second Greek team to qualify (after AEK Athens).

Three teams from Spain qualified for the Final Four, which is the first time in the league's history that it features teams from the same country.

TeamQualified onPrevious final tournament appearances
Spain UCAM Murcia9 April 20241 (2018)
Spain Unicaja9 April 20241 (2023)
Greece Peristeri16 April 20240
Spain Lenovo Tenerife17 April 20246 (2017, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023)

Venue and floor

On 21 March 2024, FIBA Europe revelead the Belgrade Arena in Belgrade, Serbia, as the venue for the Final Four at a ceremony in Mies, Switzerland. It is the first time the league's final four is hosted in Serbia, and the second time a neutral venue is selected (following Bilbao in 2022). Željko Rebrača was named ambassador for the Final Four.

The games will be played on a glass floor equipped with LED panels, provided by ASB GlassFloor. It will be the first time this type of floor is used in an international basketball club competition game.

Bracket

SemifinalsFinal
26 April
Spain Lenovo Tenerife97
28 April
Greece Peristeri93
Spain Lenovo Tenerife75
26 April
Spain Unicaja80
Spain UCAM Murcia74
Spain Unicaja80
Third place game
28 April
Greece Peristeri84
Spain UCAM Murcia87

Semifinals

In the first semifinal, Kyle Guy of Lenovo Tenerife set a new Final Four record for most points in a game with 34 points.

26 April 2024Lenovo Tenerife Spain97–93Greece PeristeriBelgrade
18:00Scoring by quarter: 19–23, 24–19, 23–18, 31–33
Pts: Guy 34 Rebs: Huertas 9 Asts: Huertas 7 Eff: Huertas 32Pts: Mitrou-Long 18 Rebs: Dangubić 5 Asts: Mitrou-Long 6 Eff: Mitrou-Long 19Arena: Belgrade Arena Referees: Ademir Zurapović (BIH), Manuel Mazzoni (ITA), Boris Krejic (SVN)
26 April 2024UCAM Murcia Spain74–80Spain UnicajaBelgrade
21:00Scoring by quarter: 26–15, 14–18, 15–26, 19–21
Pts: Todorović 18 Rebs: Birgander, Todorović 5 Asts: Ennis 5 Eff: Todorović 23Pts: Carter 14 Rebs: Đedović, Osetkowski 5 Asts: Díaz 6 Eff: Kravish 15Arena: Belgrade Arena Referees: Yohan Rosso (FRA), Wojciech Liszka (POL), Gatis Saliņš (LVA)

Third place game

28 April 2024Peristeri Greece84–87Spain UCAM MurciaBelgrade
17:00Scoring by quarter: 23–27, 12–17, 20–19, 29–24
Pts: Ragland 24 Rebs: Renfro 6 Asts: Ragland 8 Eff: Ragland 28Pts: Håkanson 22 Rebs: Sleva 5 Asts: Caupain 4 Eff: Håkanson 23Arena: Belgrade Arena Referees: Martins Kozlovskis (LVA), Gatis Saliņš (LVA), Kerem Baki (TUR)

Final

It was the second time in league history that the final was contested by two Spanish teams, and the fifth time in all European competitions. Tenerife's Marcelo Huertas was named league MVP at age 40 one day before the final. Unicaja forced Lenovo Tenerife to commit 19 turnovers on their way to the 80–75 win. Kendrick Perry won the Final Four MVP award after scoring a team-high 17 points in 20 minutes off the bench.

28 April 2024Lenovo Tenerife Spain75–80Spain UnicajaBelgrade
20:00Scoring by quarter: 10–16, 17–22, 29–24, 19–18
Pts: Guy 18 Rebs: Abromaitis 7 Asts: Huertas 9 Eff: Shermadini 23Pts: Perry 17 Rebs: Kravish 5 Asts: Díaz 5 Eff: Perry 16Arena: Belgrade Arena Attendance: 5,237 Referees: Yohan Rosso (FRA), Manuel Mazzoni (ITA), Wojciech Liszka (POL)

Notes