Endeavour Ipswich Basketball easily defended their WNBL National Cup crown against Brent Bulls, before Reading Rockets handed Hemel Storm a 108-83 defeat in the NBL National Cup Final.
A recap of both games can be found below, including reactions and a gallery of images at the bottom of the page.
Ipswich retained the WNBL National Cup in style as they beat Brent Bulls 81-53.
The holders raced out to a 30-11 lead in the opening quarter, looking comfortable at the NBPC as the Bulls struggled to find their feet.
The difference between the two sides would balloon up to 48 points midway through the third quarter, signalling an end to proceedings long before the final buzzer. Brent would hit their stride to win the fourth quarter 18-6, showing a glimpse of what might have been had the Londoners played at that level for the duration.
The game's MVP award went to Harriet Welham once again as she helped her side secure their third National Cup success, dropping a game-high 28 points to go with an influential 11 rebounds and seven assists.
Louisa Gibbins provided a strong 12-point, 19-rebound double-double to go with six assists, and Maisie Keyes (21pts) scored 14 of Ipswich's first quarter points to fuel their explosive start.
Judit Fritz (16pts, 6reb) and Lindsey Cleary (10pts, 10reb) led the way for the Bulls, though Cleary played a limited role as she struggled through early foul trouble.
Winning the MVP award on her 28th birthday, Welham said: "It's amazing, an absolute birthday treat. We love a final but that was just epic!"
Addressing her side's consistent success in recent years, she added: "It's the pathway. A lot of it is home grown but we're now getting to the stage where people want to come to us. We had to work hard for that, it never used to be [like that].
"In 2018, we were all home-grown and then as soon as we win a couple of trophies, everyone wants to come [and play for us]. That's what we strive for, we want people to come to us."
When pressed on what the future could hold for the multiple MVP winner, Welham seemed relaxed: "Who knows? At 28, I keep questioning retirement but if my legs are still working, I'll keep playing for a little while."
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Reading Rockets claimed their first NBL National Cup since 2013/14 as they beat Hemel Storm 108-83.
Reading were good value for their win, taking the majority of the major stat battles to win at a canter, with their lead hovering around the 20-point park for much of the second half as they cruised to victory.
Timely three-point shooting and making tough baskets when it mattered allowed Coach Nuruzade's side to pass the century mark on offence, but Reading's defence kept Hemel well short of their D1M average of 95.8PPG, forcing Storm into difficult looks and too many empty trips down the floor on offence.
In what was a chippy and physical game with multiple technical fouls called, Reading would eventually win all four quarters, ending their 11-year wait for silverware in the process.
The MVP crown went to Reading's Justin Hopkins, who scored the first eight points for his side before finishing with a game-high 30 total, adding five rebounds and a pair of steals to a memorable performance.
Mitch Clarke (14pts, 12ast, 10reb) put together a stunning triple-double performance on the biggest of stages, with Victor Olarerin (20pts, 5reb) and Lewis Champion (12pts, 6reb, 5ast) also playing well.
Hemel went uncharacteristically cold in Manchester, a venue in which they've thrived so often in the past, with Trent Monkman (23pts) leading their scoring in defeat.
Reading Rockets' head coach Samit Nuruzade said after the game: "It feels great, it's been a long time coming. This great club of ours, Reading Rockets, we are very successful club, and we've been in the wrong end of the finals but this time we did well.
Addressing the physicality in the game, he added: "It's never perfect but we got close to it. We wanted to be physical, we are a physical team and the referees allowed that to happen, which is great for basketball and that was the plan for their big guys.
"We needed to be physical and we managed to do that."
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