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Standings

CEBL · 2026

Current CEBL 2026 standings with 9 teams. Scarborough Shooting Stars leads the table with 10 points after 12 matches, followed by Montreal Alliance on 6 points. The table shows wins, losses, scoring, and win percentage — essential for pre-match betting analysis.

Playoffs
TeamPlayedWonLostPoints For:Points AgainstPoint Diff
Eastern Conference
1Scarborough Shooting Stars121021167:1078+89
3Montreal Alliance12661050:1055-5
4Niagara River Lions12571051:1084-33
5Ottawa Blackjacks13581194:1249-55
Western Conference
1Winnipeg Sea Bears12841201:1053+148
2Vancouver Bandits12841229:1159+70
3Saskatoon Mamba12661152:1195-43
4Edmonton Stingers1147996:1035-39
5Calgary Surge121111057:1174-117

Results

CEBL · 50
Results07/06/2026–25/06/2026
Thu 25/06
Match Details
Tue 23/06
Match Details
Sun 21/06
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Sun 21/06
Match Details
Sat 20/06
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Sat 20/06
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Fri 19/06
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Fri 19/06
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Fri 19/06
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Thu 18/06
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Thu 18/06
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Tue 16/06
Match Details
Tue 16/06
Match Details
Mon 15/06
Match Details
Sun 14/06
Match Details
Sun 14/06
Match Details
Sun 14/06
Match Details
Sat 13/06
Match Details
Sat 13/06
Match Details
Thu 11/06
Match Details
Wed 10/06
Match Details
Wed 10/06
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Sun 07/06
Match Details
Sun 07/06
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Upcoming Fixtures

59 matches
Scarborough Shooting Stars
Brampton Honey Badgers
Vancouver Bandits
Winnipeg Sea Bears
Ottawa Blackjacks
Niagara River Lions
Edmonton Stingers
Saskatoon Mamba
Winnipeg Sea Bears
Saskatoon Mamba
Scarborough Shooting Stars
Montreal Alliance
Edmonton Stingers
Calgary Surge
Brampton Honey Badgers
Ottawa Blackjacks
Montreal Alliance
Scarborough Shooting Stars
Saskatoon Mamba
Calgary Surge
Vancouver Bandits
Edmonton Stingers
Niagara River Lions
Ottawa Blackjacks
Vancouver Bandits
Calgary Surge
Brampton Honey Badgers
Scarborough Shooting Stars
Edmonton Stingers
Winnipeg Sea Bears
Saskatoon Mamba
Vancouver Bandits
Ottawa Blackjacks
Montreal Alliance
Winnipeg Sea Bears
Edmonton Stingers
Calgary Surge
Vancouver Bandits
Niagara River Lions
Scarborough Shooting Stars
Montreal Alliance
Brampton Honey Badgers
Edmonton Stingers
Vancouver Bandits
Niagara River Lions
Montreal Alliance
Winnipeg Sea Bears
Calgary Surge
Ottawa Blackjacks
Brampton Honey Badgers
Brampton Honey Badgers
Niagara River Lions
Saskatoon Mamba
Winnipeg Sea Bears
Niagara River Lions
Brampton Honey Badgers
Scarborough Shooting Stars
Edmonton Stingers
Calgary Surge
Winnipeg Sea Bears
Vancouver Bandits
Montreal Alliance
Niagara River Lions
Edmonton Stingers
Scarborough Shooting Stars
Ottawa Blackjacks
Winnipeg Sea Bears
Montreal Alliance
Calgary Surge
Saskatoon Mamba
Calgary Surge
Vancouver Bandits
Saskatoon Mamba
Edmonton Stingers
Ottawa Blackjacks
Scarborough Shooting Stars
Winnipeg Sea Bears
Vancouver Bandits
Saskatoon Mamba
Brampton Honey Badgers
Montreal Alliance
Ottawa Blackjacks
Scarborough Shooting Stars
Niagara River Lions
Calgary Surge
Edmonton Stingers
Winnipeg Sea Bears
Brampton Honey Badgers
Vancouver Bandits
Saskatoon Mamba
Niagara River Lions
Ottawa Blackjacks
Scarborough Shooting Stars
Montreal Alliance
Edmonton Stingers
Calgary Surge
Montreal Alliance
Vancouver Bandits
Saskatoon Mamba
Niagara River Lions
Brampton Honey Badgers
Montreal Alliance
Winnipeg Sea Bears
Ottawa Blackjacks
Edmonton Stingers
Saskatoon Mamba
Calgary Surge
Niagara River Lions
Brampton Honey Badgers
Scarborough Shooting Stars
Vancouver Bandits
Winnipeg Sea Bears
Edmonton Stingers
Ottawa Blackjacks
Scarborough Shooting Stars
Brampton Honey Badgers
Saskatoon Mamba
Calgary Surge

Team Stats

Side-by-side performance comparison of all 9 teams in the CEBL. Scarborough Shooting Stars leads with 10 wins this season. The colour-coded heatmap highlights wins, losses, scoring, scoring difference, and win percentage — making it easy to spot the strongest and weakest teams at a glance for betting analysis.

Top Scoring Teams

Team#PlayedWonLostPoints ForPoints Against
Scarborough Shooting Stars11210211671078
Montreal Alliance2126610501055
Niagara River Lions3125710511084
Ottawa Blackjacks4135811941249
Winnipeg Sea Bears5128412011053
Vancouver Bandits6128412291159
Saskatoon Mamba7126611521195
Edmonton Stingers811479961035
Calgary Surge91211110571174

Past Seasons

CEBL

Browse 6 archived seasons of the CEBL, from 2021 to 2026. Each season page includes full standings, top scorers, and match results — useful for comparing historical performance and identifying long-term betting patterns.

History 24 Aug 2025

Founded2019

The CEBL was officially established on October 25, 2017, with the inaugural season launching in May 2019 featuring six teams all owned and operated by Canadian Basketball Ventures. The league was created to provide a high-level professional basketball platform for Canadian players and international talent, filling a void in the North American basketball ecosystem. From its launch with six teams in 2019, the CEBL expanded to ten teams by 2025, demonstrating rapid growth and market demand. The league introduced a revolutionary playoff format in 2026, replacing the single-elimination Championship Weekend with a best-of-three Finals series—the first multi-game playoff series in CEBL history. Structurally, the regular season expanded from 20 games to 24 games per team in 2025, increasing total regular-season matches from 100 to 120, reflecting the league's commitment to competitive depth and extended fan engagement.

  • 2017 — Canadian Elite Basketball League officially established on October 25
  • 2019 — Inaugural CEBL season launches with six teams across two conferences
  • 2023 — Ahmed Hill becomes CEBL's first player to reach 1,000 career points
  • 2024 — Niagara River Lions capture inaugural championship with 97–95 victory over Vancouver Bandits
  • 2025 — Regular season expands to 24-game format; Niagara River Lions win back-to-back championships
  • 2026 — CEBL introduces best-of-three Finals series, replacing single-elimination Championship Weekend format

Competition Format 24 Aug 2025

Teams10

The CEBL operates a balanced conference structure with five teams in each of the Eastern and Western conferences. All teams play 24 regular-season games from May through August in a round-robin format, with two points awarded for a win and one for a loss. The top four teams from each conference qualify for the playoffs, which begin with single-elimination Conference Semifinals (1st vs. 4th seed, 2nd vs. 3rd seed), followed by single-elimination Conference Finals. The two conference champions advance to the CEBL Finals, contested as a best-of-three series from August 12–16, with the lower seed hosting Game 1 and the higher seed hosting Games 2 and 3 (if necessary). This represents a landmark shift from the league's previous single-elimination Championship Weekend format, introducing multi-game playoff basketball for the first time in CEBL history.

Records 24 Aug 2025

Most titlesNiagara River Lions (2)All-time top scorerAhmed Hill (1,500+ points)

Jaden Bediako holds the single-game rebounding record with 20 boards on July 26, 2025, against Ottawa Blackjacks.

Analysis 24 Aug 2025

Current Season Analysis

The 2025 CEBL season showcases a league in competitive balance, with Vancouver Bandits establishing themselves as the Western Conference's dominant force through the first half of the schedule. The Bandits posted a commanding 19–5 record with a remarkable +250 goal differential, translating to a .792 winning percentage—the highest ever recorded over a full, non-pandemic-shortened CEBL season. Their offensive firepower and defensive discipline have positioned them as title favourites, though the expanded 24-game regular season and new best-of-three Finals format introduce unpredictability that favours well-rounded teams with depth.

In the Eastern Conference, Niagara River Lions emerged as defending champions seeking back-to-back titles, though their path proved more challenging in 2025 than their inaugural championship run. Sitting at 14–10 with 14 points, the River Lions qualified comfortably for the playoffs but faced stiffer competition from a strengthened league. Ottawa Blackjacks (12–12, 12 points) and Scarborough Shooting Stars (11–13, 11 points) remained in contention, demonstrating the competitive tightness of the Eastern Conference. The middle-of-the-pack cluster highlighted how the expanded format and increased game load have tested consistency across all franchises.

The relegation battle in the West intensified as Saskatchewan Rattlers (7–17, 7 points) and Brampton Honey Badgers (5–19, 5 points) struggled to find rhythm in a league where elite talent concentration has increased. Brampton's -240 goal differential and 21% win rate signal the challenges facing expansion franchises in establishing competitive rosters. Meanwhile, Calgary Surge (17–7, 17 points) and Edmonton Stingers (15–9, 15 points) maintained strong playoff positioning, with Calgary ultimately reaching the Finals to face Niagara.

Sean East II emerged as the season's standout performer, shattering the CEBL single-season scoring record with 546 points across 24 games—an average of 22.8 points per game. East's offensive explosion, which included setting the record in the final game of the regular season with 17 points, established him as a potential MVP finalist and the most prolific scorer in league history on a per-season basis. His achievement reflected the league's increasing talent calibre and the elevated scoring environment created by the expanded schedule.

The unexpected narrative of the 2025 season centred on the structural evolution of the CEBL itself. The introduction of the best-of-three Finals format in 2026—replacing the single-elimination Championship Weekend model—fundamentally altered playoff strategy and team preparation. This shift rewarded consistency and depth over single-game heroics, encouraging teams to build balanced rosters rather than relying on star power alone. The 24-game regular season, expanded from 20 games, tested roster depth and injury resilience; teams with strong benches and development pathways proved more competitive than those dependent on isolated star talent. Niagara's back-to-back championship achievement in this new context validated their organisational approach and coaching stability, positioning them as the league's standard-bearer.

League Evolution and Growth Trajectory

The CEBL's progression from six teams in 2019 to ten teams by 2025 reflects Canada's basketball renaissance and North American professional basketball's expansion into underserved markets. The league's 2025 expansion to a 24-game regular season—increasing total matches from 100 to 120—generated approximately 20% more competitive action, directly benefiting broadcasters, sponsors, and fan engagement. This structural growth occurred alongside improved player development pipelines, with the league increasingly attracting NCAA talent, international professionals, and Canadian national team members seeking competitive basketball in a time-zone-friendly environment.

The CBC Sports partnership announced in 2025 represented a significant commercial milestone. The five-year broadcast deal reunited the league with its original broadcaster from 2019–2022 and signalled renewed confidence in the CEBL's market viability. CBC's reach across Canada—encompassing television, digital platforms, and streaming services—positioned the CEBL for exponential audience growth. The league's 4.1 million Canadian fanbase and international streaming via CEBL+ demonstrated the dual-market strategy: domestic audience building through traditional broadcast and global reach through digital platforms.

Competitive Talent Ecosystem

The CEBL has established itself as a critical juncture in the North American basketball career pathway. For Canadian players, the league provides a domestic professional alternative to NCAA basketball, G League assignments, or international opportunities. For international talent, the CEBL offers a stepping stone to NBA G League contracts, overseas professional deals, or established league positions. Ahmed Hill's trajectory—becoming the CEBL's all-time leading scorer with 1,500+ points before transitioning to broader professional opportunities—exemplifies this ecosystem's value.

The presence of elite performers like Sean East II, whose 546-point 2025 season established a new benchmark, attracted NCAA-calibre talent and elevated competitive standards. This talent concentration—while creating competitive imbalances in some matchups—accelerated the league's reputation as a legitimate professional platform. Teams like Vancouver, Calgary, and Niagara built championship-calibre rosters by identifying undervalued talent and developing systems around complementary skill sets, proving that strategic roster construction mattered more than individual star power in the CEBL's format.

Future Outlook and Strategic Positioning

The CEBL's trajectory into 2026 and beyond rests on three strategic pillars: (1) continued franchise expansion into underserved Canadian markets, with two additional teams reportedly in development; (2) deepening broadcast and sponsorship partnerships to fund increased player salaries and operational budgets; and (3) establishing the league as a genuine development pathway for NBA talent, similar to how the EuroLeague functions in Europe.

The best-of-three Finals format introduced in 2026 represents a philosophical shift toward rewarding sustained excellence over single-game variance. This change aligns the CEBL with global basketball standards and increases playoff revenue through additional games. Niagara's back-to-back championship achievement—accomplished in this new structural environment—validates the format's competitiveness and suggests future champions will require well-rounded organisations rather than isolated star talent. For bettors and analysts, this evolution demands sophisticated understanding of roster depth, coaching stability, and organisational consistency rather than reliance on individual player performance metrics alone.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams compete in the CEBL?

The CEBL currently features 10 professional basketball teams divided equally between Eastern and Western conferences, with five teams in each conference competing in the 2025 season and beyond.

What is the CEBL regular season format?

Each team plays 24 regular-season games from May through August in a round-robin format. Teams earn 2 points for a win and 1 point for a loss. The top four teams from each conference advance to the playoffs.

How does the CEBL playoff format work?

The playoffs feature single-elimination Conference Semifinals and Finals, with the two conference champions meeting in a best-of-three Finals series starting in August. This replaced the previous single-elimination Championship Weekend format in 2026.

Who has won the most CEBL championships?

The Niagara River Lions have won the most CEBL titles with two championships: the 2024 inaugural championship (97–95 over Vancouver) and the 2025 championship (79–73 over Calgary Surge).

Who is the CEBL's all-time leading scorer?

Ahmed Hill holds the CEBL all-time scoring record with over 1,500 career points. He became the league's first player to reach 1,000 points on July 28, 2023, and continues to expand his record with the Niagara River Lions.

What is the single-season scoring record in the CEBL?

Sean East II set the CEBL single-season scoring record with 546 points across 24 games in 2025, surpassing the previous record held by Teddy Allen. East averaged 22.8 points per game during the season.

API data: 27 Jun 2026 · Content updated: 24 Aug 2025