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Olympiacos overwhelms Monaco 91-70, takes 2-0 control of Euroleague Final

Olympiacos turned Game 2 into a statement at Peace and Friendship Stadium, beating Monaco 91-70 to extend its Finals lead to 2-0. A 26-point second quarter flipped the game after Monaco’s early edge, and the data backed up what the market and matchup profile suggested before tipoff: Olympiacos had the sharper form, cleaner rest profile and deeper statistical advantage.

James O'Brien
4 min read

Olympiacos did not just protect home court. It tightened its grip on the Euroleague Final.

Behind a decisive middle stretch and a 91-70 win over Monaco on April 28 at Peace and Friendship Stadium, Olympiacos moved ahead 2-0 in the best-of-seven Finals. Monaco led after the first quarter, but Olympiacos answered with a 26-16 second period and controlled the second half with the same efficiency markers that made it the clear pregame favorite.

The result followed the pregame indicators closely. Olympiacos entered with a 26-12 record, a perfect 9-0 home split and a 77.5 percent market-implied win probability across 11 bookmakers. Monaco arrived at 22-16, but with a 1-7 away split and a compressed schedule: four days of rest and two games in the previous week. Olympiacos had 11 days of rest and no games in the last seven days.

Second quarter breaks the game open

Monaco started well enough, taking the first quarter 20-19. That was the last time the game felt balanced.

Olympiacos won the second quarter 26-16, turning a one-point deficit into a halftime advantage and establishing the terms of the game. The third quarter brought more separation, with Olympiacos outscoring Monaco 21-15, before finishing the job with a 25-point fourth.

The final quarter-by-quarter profile showed sustained pressure rather than one isolated burst. Olympiacos scored 26, 21 and 25 points over the final three periods. Monaco never cleared 20 points in a quarter after the opening frame.

Shooting profile exposes Monaco’s limits

The clearest separation came from the perimeter. Olympiacos made 10 of 27 from 3-point range, while Monaco hit just 4 of 28. In a matchup between two high-scoring teams — Olympiacos entered averaging 89.6 points per game, Monaco 89.9 — Monaco’s inability to convert from outside collapsed its offensive ceiling.

Olympiacos also had the cleaner overall shooting night in the provided team statistics, going 25-for-41 from the field. Monaco finished 23-for-47. That efficiency gap mirrored the recent advanced profile coming in: Olympiacos had posted a 76.1 true shooting percentage and 76.1 effective field goal percentage over the last 10 games analyzed, compared with Monaco’s 69.6 in both categories.

Monaco’s defensive activity did show up in spots. It recorded 8 steals to Olympiacos’ 6, and both teams committed 11 turnovers. But the extra disruption did not translate into control. Olympiacos protected the margins elsewhere, especially through shooting, rebounding and rim protection.

Olympiacos controls the possession battle

Olympiacos won the rebounding battle 41-36 and blocked 5 shots to Monaco’s 1. Those numbers mattered in a game where turnovers were even and assists were nearly level, with Olympiacos at 17 and Monaco at 16.

The rebounding result was consistent with the pregame matchup. Olympiacos entered with a 52.8 rebound percentage across the last 10 games analyzed, compared with Monaco’s 48.6. Nikola Milutinov’s season profile — 9.9 points and 6.6 rebounds per game — gave Olympiacos a natural interior foundation, while Aleksandar Vezenkov’s 19.5 points and 5.6 rebounds per game anchored its frontcourt scoring balance.

Monaco had creators capable of changing the equation. Mike James entered averaging 16.8 points and 6.6 assists, while Elie Okobo brought 11.1 points and 5.6 assists. But Game 2 never became a Monaco guard-control game. The assist totals stayed close, yet Olympiacos dictated the more efficient shots and punished Monaco’s perimeter misses.

Pregame edge becomes postseason reality

This was not an upset profile. Olympiacos carried the stronger overall résumé, the better home split, the superior recent net rating and the cleaner rest advantage. Its CPI matchup was even more decisive: Olympiacos entered No. 1 at 100.00 with a positive 12.1 trend, while Monaco ranked No. 8 at 64.19 with a negative 11.2 trend. The differential was 35.8.

Those numbers played out on the floor. Olympiacos’ recent net rating of plus-9.1 over the last 10 games analyzed was far ahead of Monaco’s plus-0.6. The home team’s offensive rating stood at 114.1 entering the game, and its defensive rating at 105.1. Monaco came in at 108.9 offensively and 108.3 defensively, a narrower profile that left less room for survival when the jump shooting disappeared.

Neither team entered with significant injuries reported, removing a major variable from the evaluation. That made the outcome less about availability and more about execution, matchup pressure and environment. On all three fronts, Olympiacos had the advantage.

What it means for the series

Olympiacos now leads the Finals 2-0. It has won Game 2 by 21 points and reinforced the pre-series read that its home form is a major problem for Monaco. The Peace and Friendship Stadium split now sits at 9-0 in the provided home profile, with Olympiacos averaging 94 points in those games.

Monaco’s challenge is immediate and structural. Its away split entered at 1-7, and Game 2 offered little evidence that its offense can survive extended cold stretches against Olympiacos’ size and shot-making. With no elimination at stake yet, Monaco still has runway. But the burden has shifted sharply.

Olympiacos has the series lead, the statistical edge and the momentum. Game 2 made all three impossible to ignore.

Source: Official basketball data feed

Expert Analysis

"Olympiacos turned this into a rout, winning 91-70 and creating a 21-point gap that speaks to control as much as scoring. The key takeaway is margin: holding an opponent to 70 while reaching 91 suggests Olympiacos dictated tempo and got the cleaner looks across the game."