B.LEAGUE 2018-2019 Hiroshima Dragonflies Home Game Hiroshima Dragonflies vs Kumamoto Volters is Fighting Sports event held in Japan.
Performance name: B. LEAGUE 2018-2019 Hiroshima Dragonflies Home Game Hiroshima Dragonflies vs Kumamoto Volters
Venue: Hiroshima Sun Plaza Hall
Date: 2019/02/08 (Fri) 10:00
Notes:
※ It becomes 2nd floor free seat pair = greedy life ticket. It is a pair ticket sold by the home game held after 18:00 in the evening. This is up to 6 tickets (it becomes sale by 2 ticket 1 set unit, and the price of 1 set becomes ¥ 4,200), 1 ticket of 500 yen coupon per 1 ticket, at the ticket section on the day
※ Opening hours may change, please check the official website.
※ Preschool children are free to watch on the lap. Pay if you need a seat.
※ From child = primary schoolchild to high school student. Student identification required.
※ When players play in the court end and each court front side row, the ball or the player may jump into the audience seat unavoidably when it plays, so please be aware in advance and select the seat to be purchased. Please keep in mind every point. In addition, please watch the ball and the whereabouts of the player enough when watching the game.
Limited number: You can book up to 12 tickets per application.
Application number : 4 times
Seat type and charge
Second floor free seat (adult): ¥ 2,100
second floor free seat (child): ¥ 1,000
second floor free seat (pair): ¥ 2,100
Payment methods available at this reception
Credit card: It will be settled when the application is completed.
Convenience store / ATM: Please pay by the time limit displayed at the time of application.
Family mart
Seven-Eleven
Lawson Ministop
Page compatible ATM
Internet Banking: Please pay by the deadline displayed at the time of application.
Details of payment / receipt method
Receiving method available at this reception
Delivery 【Delivery service】: We will deliver in about a week after payment is complete.
FamilyMart: Please receive at the in-store Fami port terminal after 2019/02/08 (Fri).
Seven-Eleven: Please book at the cash register after Friday, February 20, 1919.
Hiroshima Dragonflies (Hiroshima Dragonflies, (abbreviated)) is a professional basketball team that belongs to B.LEAGUE, based in
Founded: 2013
History: Hiroshima Dragonflies (2014–present)
Arena: Hiroshima Sun Plaza
Capacity: 6,052
Location: Hiroshima Prefecture
Team colors: Blue, Orange
Head coach: Shota Shakuno
Ownership: Nova Holdings
Championships: None
Website: Hiroshima Dragonflies
Past total match record
Team name: Hiroshima (Number of wins: 1 Total score: 313 )
Team name Kumamoto (Number of wins: 3 Total score: 334 )
B.LEAGUE 2018-19 Season B2 League Section 24 Logic · Kumamoto City
presents held on 3/2 (Sat), 3 (Sunday ) A game of Kumamoto Volters vs Hiroshima Dragon Flies (at the venue; Kumamoto City General Gymnasium) We will inform you of the information.
The B.League is a professional men's basketball league that began in Japan in September 2016. The league is operated by the Japan Professional Basketball League and was formed as a result of a merger between the National Basketball League that was operated by the FIBA-affiliated Japan Basketball Association and the independently operated BJ league. The merger had been mandated by FIBA as a condition to Japan having its membership resumed following suspension in November 2014.
History
The Japan Basketball Association was formed in 1930 and has operated Japan's top basketball leagues under various names since 1967. Throughout the history of the association, teams have been affiliated with large corporations and players have been employed by their respective owner company rather than competing as professional basketball players. In the early 1990s soccer in Japan moved away from a similar corporate structure and launched the J.League in 1993. The JBA commenced investigating the professionalization of basketball in the same year, and in 1997 lifted the ban on professional players. Despite this, the structure of the Japan Super League remained amateur in nature, with most teams remaining under the control of a corporate sponsor/owner.
In 2005 a rival bj league was launched in competition with the Super League, based on an American franchise system of professional teams. In response, the JBA re-launched the Super League as the Japan Basketball League in 2007, but there was still a mixture of professional and corporate teams in the competition. The JBL was again rebranded as the National Basketball League in 2013. Since the establishment of the bj league in 2005, both competitions rapidly expanded the number of teams, with 45 teams participating between the two competitions in 2015.
FIBA, the international governing body for basketball, grew concerned with the division and disorganization of the sport within the country. After the JBA failed to comply with deadlines to commence reorganizing the domestic leagues, FIBA suspended Japan from international competitions in November 2014. A task force to investigate the reformation of the domestic leagues was formed and Saburō Kawabuchi was appointed co-chairman. In May 2015, upon FIBA's recommendation, Kawabuchi was appointed as president of the JBA. The merger of the two competing leagues into the B.League was announced in June 2015 and the international suspension was lifted by FIBA in August. Telecommunications company Softbank were named as the league's top sponsor for the inaugural season in March 2016.
The 2016–17 season commenced with an inaugural match between four-time JBL/NBL champions Alvark Tokyo, who finished on top of the NBL ladder in 2015–16, and four-time bj-league champions Ryukyu Golden Kings, who won the 2015–16 bj-league championship, at Yoyogi National Gymnasium on 22 September 2016. A full round of games involving all other teams commenced on September 24.
The league consists of three divisions; the first two divisions have 18 teams each with a system of promotion and relegation between the first and second division. Each of the first two divisions is further divided into three conferences. The third division has nine teams made up of de facto semi-professional teams.
First Division
In the first division, each team plays a 60-game schedule that consists of 36 games against teams within their own conference (8 games against three teams and 6 games against the remaining two teams) and 24 games against teams in the other conferences (2 games against each team). The top two teams from each conference will qualify for the playoffs, along with the two teams that finish with the best record but do not finish in the top two of their conference. The quarter-final and semi-final rounds of the playoffs will consist of two games played at the home court of the team that finished with the higher winning percentage during the season. If the two teams win one game each, a ten-minute deciding match will be played after the second game. The championship final will be a single match played at a neutral venue.
Second Division
In the second division, the regular season will take the same 60-game schedule as the first division, with 36 intra-conference and 24 inter-conference games. The winner of each conference plus the team with the best winning percentage from the remaining 15 teams will qualify for the playoffs. The semi-finals will take the same two-game format (with 10-minute tie-breaker) as the first division and be played at the home venue of the higher-ranked team. The grand final and playoff for third place will be a single match played at a neutral venue.
Promotion and relegation
The four first division teams with the worst regular-season records will contest a tournament to avoid relegation to the second division. The first round will be a two-game series played at the home venue of the better ranked team, with a 10-minute tie breaker match if required. The two losing teams from this first round will be automatically relegated to the second division and replaced by the winner and runner-up of the second division playoffs. The two first-division teams that win the first round of relegation matches will meet in a single match at a neutral venue, with the winner remaining in the first division. The loser of the final match will contest a relegation match at a neutral venue against the second division's third placed team. However, this basic system is subject to change in circumstances where one of the second division teams that qualifies for promotion to the first division does not hold a full first division license with the league.
Current clubs
In the 2014–15 season, there were 12 teams in the NBL, 10 teams in the National Basketball Development League (NBDL, the NBL's second division league) and 24 teams in the bj-league. All 46 teams sought entrance to the B.League's inaugural 2016–17 season, along with the Wakayama Trians, who withdrew from the NBL in January 2015 due to financial difficulty. Ultimately, all clubs were accepted into the league except for the Trians and the Hiroshima Lightning, who were in their first season as a bj-league expansion club.The allocation of the 45 teams into three divisions was announced in two phases in July and August 2015. In April 2016 the league announced rules regarding official team names, shortened names and abbreviations to be used by the clubs. A list of names to be used by each club in the 2016–17 season was also published.
Kumamoto Volters (熊本ヴォルターズ , Kumamoto Vorutāzu) is a Japanese professional basketball team in Kumamoto, Kumamoto. The team competes in the B.League. Volters hosted the B.League All-star Game in 2018.
The Hiroshima Dragonflies (広島ドラゴンフライズ) are a professional basketball team based in Hiroshima, Japan. In October 2014 they commenced competing in the Western Conference of the Japanese National Basketball League. In September 2016 they joined the B.League, the NBL's successor league, and play in the lower division's Western Conference.
In April 2014, following the announcement that the former Japan Basketball League would be restructured as the National Basketball League, a group was launched to support the formation of a professional basketball team in Hiroshima. In May 2014 the group received support from the prefectural basketball association and an application to join the NBL was submitted in July. In August 2014 the application was approved and the name Hiroshima Dragonflies was decided. In October 2014 an operating company Hiroshima Dragonflies Corporation (株式会社広島ドラゴンフライズ) was established.
There is no schedule or ticket right now.
日本、〒733-0833 広島県広島市西区商工センター3丁目1−1 Map
This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "B.LEAGUE", "Kumamoto Volters", "Hiroshima Dragonflies", which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0.
Content listed above is edited and modified some for making article reading easily. All content above are auto generated by service.
All images used in articles are placed as quotation. Each quotation URL are placed under images.
All maps provided by Google.