The NBA is on the brink of something seismic. So when NBA Commissioner Adam Silver stepped to the podium Saturday for his annual state of the league address, he wasn’t just talking about the midseason showcase. He was outlining a continental land grab.
The NBA’s proposed “NBA Europe” league, tentatively targeting an October 2027 launch, is no longer a whisper campaign. It’s now a blueprint.
Silver made it clear the league office has moved into what he called a “new phase,” working alongside financial heavyweights JPMorgan Chase and the Raine Group, with dozens of prospective ownership groups already signed to nondisclosure agreements and reviewing projections. The message was unmistakable: This is real money, real infrastructure, real ambition.

The structure being discussed reads like a hybrid between American franchise stability and European meritocracy. A 12- to 16-team model is under serious consideration, with 10 to 12 permanent “A-license” spots reserved for elite clubs and four to six places earned through qualification from existing European competitions.
“We want to be respectful of the existing teams,” Silver said. “We want to be respectful of a passionate fan base and move as quickly as possible.”
That respect, however, does not mean retreat.
The NBA is targeting some of the most powerful brands in global sport: Real Madrid, FC Barcelona, Bayern Munich, Fenerbahce and Anadolu Efes. These are institutions with soccer empires and basketball pedigrees, clubs that command hundreds of millions of global followers. Silver understands the leverage that comes with attaching NBA intellectual property to those crests.
“If someone is a Real Madrid football fan,” Silver said, “and they also have a great basketball organization, a relaunch league may bring a lot of those historic fans with them.”
The financial threshold will not be for the faint of heart. Expansion fees are projected to range from $500 million to $1 billion. Silver did not sugarcoat the timeline for profitability. “People who are looking for a short return should probably look elsewhere,” he said. This is generational thinking — a decades-long build designed to reshape the basketball map.

The league is also exploring modern arena infrastructure across Europe, acknowledging that world-class competition requires world-class buildings. It’s part sport, part urban development strategy.
“One of the things we’re focused on is building a new arena infrastructure in Europe,” said Silver about needing to invest in new structures for the teams to play in. “It’s badly needed.”
And then there’s ownership.
Silver confirmed the NBA is in discussions with the Players Association about allowing current NBA players to invest in NBA Europe franchises. Lakers superstar Luka Dončić is already in talks with former Mavericks GM Donnie Nelson to purchase Italian basketball team Vanoli Basket Cremona, with plans to relocate it to Rome.
Roughly 15% of the NBA is European-born. Some of its brightest stars — from Serbia, Greece, France and Slovenia — already define the league’s MVP conversation. The idea of global superstars becoming transcontinental stakeholders is not a side plot. It’s the future.
Of course, the elephant in the room is the EuroLeague, the continent’s current top-tier competition. Silver struck a diplomatic tone, citing “constructive discussions” with new EuroLeague CEO Chus Bueno. Still, make no mistake: Coexistence will require compromise. The NBA’s semi-closed model, salary cap principles and revenue-sharing philosophy are foreign concepts in much of European sport. Translating that system overseas will test lawyers and economists as much as coaches.
Silver admitted as much. “Nothing is easy here,” he said. “There are reasons why this hasn’t been done before. But I think we’re up to it.”
Behind the scenes, the league is already contemplating cross-continental competitions — perhaps a basketball version of a Club World Cup — pitting NBA teams against their European counterparts.
Download The California Post App, follow us on social, and subscribe to our newsletters
California Post News: Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X, YouTube, WhatsApp, LinkedIn
California Post Sports Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, X
California Post Opinion
California Post Newsletters: Sign up here!
California Post App: Download here!
Home delivery: Sign up here!
Page Six Hollywood: Sign up here!
As Silver fielded questions about NBA expansion in Las Vegas and Seattle, he joked about the bags under his eyes. But when he spoke about Europe, the fatigue vanished. This is the heavy lift. This is the swing-for-the-fences opportunity to take the game to even higher heights than ever before.
If October 2027 becomes reality, it won’t simply mark the birth of a new league. It will signal the NBA’s transformation from a North American powerhouse with global reach into a truly bicontinental empire.
The commissioner knows the clock is ticking. Europe’s basketball culture is rich, proud and fiercely independent. Silver isn’t asking it to freeze in time. He’s asking it to evolve.
And in typical NBA fashion, he’s betting big that the world will follow.


