February 2, 2026

GAME PREVIEW: Everything to know about Hong Kong Eastern vs. Utsunomiya Brex (Group A: February 4, 2026)

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GAME PREVIEW: Everything to know about Hong Kong Eastern vs. Utsunomiya Brex (Group A: February 4, 2026)

Written By

Tyler Schiff

GAME PREVIEW: Everything to know about Hong Kong Eastern vs. Utsunomiya Brex (Group A: February 4, 2026)

Eastern face a must-win at home as the Brex look to climb above .500.

Where: Southorn Stadium 

When: Wednesday, February 4, 8 P.M. / 8:10 P.M. (On-air / Tip-off) CST

Team Records: Hong Kong Eastern (2-3) / Utsunomiya Brex (2-2) 

Where to Watch: Ticket Information / Broadcast Information  

‍PROJECTED STARTERS 

Hong Kong Eastern

PG: Glen Yang — 193cm / 91kg

SG: Jenning Leung — 186cm / 84kg

SF: Dominic Gilbert — 197cm / N/A 

PF: Cameron Clark  — 198cm / 95kg

C: Alexandre Gavrilovic  — 208cm / 112kg

Utsunomiya Brex: 

PG: D.J. Newbill — 193cm / 96kg

SG: Shinji Takashima — 191 cm / 90kg

SF: Makoto Hiejima — 191cm / 87kg 

PF: Grant Jarrett — 208 cm / 110kg

C: Gavin Edwards — 206cm / 112kg

‍TEAM STATISTIC LEADERS 

Hong Kong Eastern

Points: Cameron Clark — 22.8 

Rebounds: Alexandre Gavrilovic — 10.4 

Assists: Chan Siu Wing / Glen Yang / Damian Chong Qui — 4.0 

Steals: Dominic Gilbert, Jenning Leung — 1.2 

Blocks: Alexandre Gavrilovic — 0.8 

Utsunomiya Brex

Points: Isaac Fotu — 28.0 

Rebounds: Isaac Fotu — 9.7 

Assists: D.J. Newbill — 7.8

Steals: D.J. Newbill — 1.5 

Blocks: Grant Jerrett — 1.0 

THE RUNDOWN

Group A reaches a defining moment on Wednesday night, with Hong Kong Eastern in a true do-or-die spot. There is no margin for error. Eastern must win to keep their season alive, and even then, they will be watching the rest of the group closely.

Their clearest path forward is a three-way tie at 3-3 if Taipei Fubon also defeats Utsunomiya on February 11, a result that would send Group A into a tiebreaker scenario and make every margin and matchup count.

The urgency is amplified by their first meeting. On January 17, Utsunomiya won 83-74 at home behind D.J. Newbill’s near triple-double of 23 points, 10 assists, and eight rebounds, while Cam Clark kept Eastern in the fight with 18 points in 40 minutes.

Now the stakes are even higher. Hong Kong Eastern are playing to survive, while Utsunomiya still have a small cushion with one game to come, though a loss would tighten the picture immediately.

By the end of the night, Group A could look completely different, either wide open and more complicated than ever, or with one less team left in the race for an EASL Finals spot.

EASTERN

Hong Kong Eastern, even at 2-3, has been one of the league’s bigger surprises. After a 0-2 start, they responded with back-to-back wins to level at 2-2, but the loss to Utsunomiya dropped them below .500 and left them with no margin for error down the stretch.

Roster-wise, the biggest storyline is the midseason arrival of Damian Chongqui, acquired from the Macau Black Bears. A proven impact player in EASL over the past two seasons, he is averaging 23 points and 6.2 assists per game in 2025-26. He made his Hong Kong debut against the Brex last time out, finishing with 10 points and four assists in just under 30 minutes.

Through five games, Eastern has largely leaned on a tight six-man rotation, occasionally stretching to a seventh with Jamal Mayali. Against a deeper, disciplined Utsunomiya side, Eastern will need to dig even deeper to topple the reigning B.LEAGUE champions. 

Still, with a home crowd behind them and a win-or-go-home mindset, the belief is real. The last time Eastern played at home, they knocked off the only team to have already clinched an EASL Finals spot.

THE BREX 

Utsunomiya looked far more like themselves the last time they faced Hong Kong Eastern, with D.J. Newbill, the reigning two-time B.LEAGUE MVP, controlling the game from the opening tip. The Brex also introduced Grant Jarrett in his EASL debut, and he delivered immediately with 22 points and eight rebounds in a comfortable win, even with key pieces such as Shinji Takahashi and Isaac Fotu unavailable.

This time, the challenge shifts to the road, where the atmosphere will be far less friendly, but Utsunomiya is a veteran group built on poise. Domestically, they have hit a bump since the B.LEAGUE All-Star break (January 16 to January 18), dropping a few games, yet they remain tied for first in the East Division alongside Hokkaido and Chiba.

It is still surprising to see a team of Utsunomiya’s caliber already carrying two losses in EASL play, but it reflects just how unforgiving Group A can be. A loss here would not eliminate the Brex, but it would place them back under .500, while a win would push them back above the line for the first time this season and strengthen their case to reach the EASL Finals in their first year competing under the home-and-away format.

SPOTLIGHT STORYLINE

A Win Keeps Hong Kong Alive 

Hong Kong Eastern still has not beaten a B.LEAGUE team in EASL play, and this is the moment they need to change that. If they do not, they will miss the postseason for the second time in as many EASL seasons, and they will not be headed to Macau for the EASL Finals.

Even a win does not immediately lock anything in, but it is the only move Eastern can make. Victory would lift Hong Kong to 3-3 and drop Utsunomiya to 2-3, keeping the door open heading into the final gameday. From there, Eastern’s best-case scenario is for Utsunomiya to beat the Taipei Fubon Braves on February 11, creating a three-way tie at 3-3 and sending Group A to a three-team tiebreaker.

If Fubon instead beat the Brex, Utsunomiya would fall to 2-4 and be eliminated, while Hong Kong and Fubon would both finish 3-3. In that two-team tie, Fubon would hold the edge on head-to-head point differential, having beaten Eastern by 14 while Eastern’s win over Fubon was by 10.

If Group A does end up as a three-team tie, then the final margin of Hong Kong’s result against Utsunomiya on February 4 becomes a key piece of the puzzle.

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