East Asia Super League
0 sources
East Asia Super League
Summary
East Asia Super League is a basketball league[1]. It draws 150 Wikipedia views per month (basketball_league category, ranking #18 of 93).[2]
Key Facts
- East Asia Super League won the Chiba Jets Funabashi[3].
- East Asia Super League won the Guangzhou Loong Lions[4].
- East Asia Super League won the Ryukyu Golden Kings[5].
- East Asia Super League won the Liaoning Flying Leopards[6].
- East Asia Super League won the Anyang Jung Kwan Jang Red Boosters[7].
- East Asia Super League won the Chiba Jets Funabashi[8].
- East Asia Super League is in the country of People's Republic of China[9].
- East Asia Super League is in the country of Japan[10].
- East Asia Super League is in the country of South Korea[11].
- East Asia Super League is in the country of Philippines[12].
- East Asia Super League is in the country of Taiwan[13].
- East Asia Super League is in the country of Mongolia[14].
- East Asia Super League's instance of is recorded as basketball league[15].
- East Asia Super League's Commons category is recorded as East Asia Super League[16].
- East Asia Super League's sport is recorded as basketball[17].
- East Asia Super League's official website is recorded as https://www.easl.basketball/[18].
- East Asia Super League's official website is recorded as https://www.easl.basketball/zh[19].
- East Asia Super League's official website is recorded as https://www.easl.basketball/cn[20].
- East Asia Super League's official website is recorded as https://www.easl.basketball/ja[21].
- East Asia Super League's official website is recorded as https://www.easl.basketball/ko[22].
- East Asia Super League's topic's main category is recorded as Category:East Asia Super League[23].
- East Asia Super League's topic has template is recorded as Template:East Asia Super League[24].
- East Asia Super League's short name is recorded as {'lang': 'mul', 'text': 'EASL'}[25].
- East Asia Super League's X is recorded as EASLofficial[26].
- East Asia Super League's X is recorded as EASLofficial_jp[27].
Body
Identity
East Asia Super League's short name is recorded as {'lang': 'mul', 'text': 'EASL'}[25].
Recognition
Wins include Chiba Jets Funabashi[3], a basketball team[28], in Japan[29], founded in 2005[30], headquartered in Funabashi[31]; Guangzhou Loong Lions[4], a basketball team[32], in People's Republic of China[33], founded in 2000[34], headquartered in Guangzhou[35]; Ryukyu Golden Kings[5], a basketball team[36], in Japan[37], founded in 2006[38], headquartered in Okinawa Prefecture[39]; Liaoning Flying Leopards[6], a basketball team[40], in People's Republic of China[41], founded in 1995[42], headquartered in Benxi[43]; Anyang Jung Kwan Jang Red Boosters[7], a basketball team[44], in South Korea[45], founded in 1997[46], headquartered in Anyang[47]; and Hiroshima Dragonflies[48], a basketball team[49], in Japan[50], founded in 2013[51], headquartered in Hiroshima[52].
Why It Matters
East Asia Super League draws 150 Wikipedia views per month (basketball_league category, ranking #18 of 93).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[53] It is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[54]
FAQs
What awards did East Asia Super League receive?
Honors received include Chiba Jets Funabashi[3], Guangzhou Loong Lions[4], Ryukyu Golden Kings[5], and Liaoning Flying Leopards[6].