Germany is getting a versatile 6’7 forward who just spent six weeks grinding in Valencia. Dylan Quirijnen earned a tryout and an opportunity this week in Germany. He secured this move following a solid performance in our 6-Week European Summer League.
Dylan grew up competing in the Dutch basketball system. He started playing in the Eredivisie, the highest youth level in the Netherlands, when he was just 12 years old. By 2021, he had earned a spot as a U15 national team player. Most recently, the 20-year-old Bosman A player spent time as a practice player and competitor for Prismaworks BAL in the BNXT League.
When Dylan arrived in Valencia, he needed to translate his youth and regional experience into a professional European pace. He enrolled in our 6-Week European Summer League. The five weeks of preparation before the actual summer league games began were critical. That dedicated training block really helped him prepare and adjust to the speed, physicality, and style of basketball played at the next level.
Hundreds of players have trained in our environment and gone pro. We are not an agency. The program puts you in the rooms where signings happen—the contract is something you earn. Games are professionally recorded and shared with our scouting network. You compete in front of scouts, agents, and GMs from 20+ countries.
EuroProBasket runs its programs inside L’Alqueria del Basket—the official training facility of Valencia Basket, currently ranked among the Top 4 basketball clubs in the world. Our players train on 13 courts in the same environment as ACB professionals, EuroLeague talent, and Spanish national team players. FIBA-certified European professional coaches run all programs.
Dylan took full advantage of that environment. Wearing number 59, the all-around 2/3/4 player averaged 11 points, 6 rebounds, 1.25 assists, and 0.75 steals across four summer league games. He showed his true capability on June 20th, dropping 22 points, 5 rebounds, 2 assists, and a steal in a standout performance. He proved he could produce when the lights were on.
That body of work led directly to his tryout this week in Germany. For players reading this who are sitting at home wondering how to break into the European market, this is the reality. You need film against European competition. You need to adjust to the FIBA style of play.
Dylan put himself in the facility, did the five weeks of prep work, and let his game speak during the showcase. Operating since 2015, we’ve seen 400+ players from 50+ countries sign to pro contracts in 20+ countries. Receipts, not promises.
If you are ready to put in the work and earn your spot, your path starts here:
/european-summer-league/