Reading Rockets and Milton Keynes Breakers contested the Men's crown in a repeat of last month's KitKing Trophy Final, with the Rockets coming out on top once again with a 102-91 victory.
That was preceded by the D1 Women's showdown, where CoLA Southwark Pride made their mark on the WNBL history books with a 67-50 win against Endeavour Ipswich Basketball.
Recaps for both games are below, with a gallery of images at the foot of this article.
CoLA Southwark Pride passed the great Rhondda Rebels to become the joint second-most decorated team in D1W history, beating long-standing rivals Endeavour Ipswich Basketball 67-50 for their fifth title.
Now tied with 1980's powerhouse Northampton, CoLA made it three crowns in the last four years as they stifled their opponent's league-leading offence on the way to a comfortable win.
The margin of victory increased significantly after the Suffolk side's offence went cold at the worst possible time, failing to hit a single field goal in the fourth quarter. Going 0/12 in the final frame as their four points all came from the foul line, Ipswich's hope dwindled as they went 2/24 from beyond the arc across a tough afternoon.
CoLA had no such problems, hitting nine triples and shooting 34% overall, winning the second half 38-18 to recover from a second quarter wobble.
D1W U19 Player of the Season, Ayla Habbal, collected MVP honours, leading the CoLA offence and dropping a game-high 17 points to go with nine rebounds, three assists and a pair of steals.
Forward Adaora Dioramma (15pts, 11reb) chipped in a double-double in the absence of injured Chloe Vella, who jointly collected her side's trophy in the post-game presentations, with Chandera Jones-Aryeh (11pts, 9reb, 4ast) offering another well-rounded performance in the win.
Harriet Welham (16pts, 8reb) played the full 40 for Ipswich, as did departing forward Louisa Gibbins (13pts, 13reb, 4ast), who now leaves coach Drane's side for the States.
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Reading Rockets won their first D1M Playoff title since 2012/13 as they beat Milton Keynes Breakers 102-91, completing an NBL National Cup, KitKing Trophy and Playoff title treble in the process.
Beaten finalists three times in that span, Reading's talented roster wouldn't be denied against a short-handed Breakers unit, who fought valiantly but couldn't replicate the heroics they showed to beat top seeds Hemel a week ago.
Missing key import K.J Johnson, influential guard Blayne Freckleton, plus long-term injury doubt Luke Gregory, coach Beddow-Patel had few options to turn to as his side missed their first seven shots from the floor, slipping to a 12-0 deficit as they'd eventually trail from tip to buzzer.
Reading kept their opponents at bay with high-quality looks and efficient shooting (53%), rotating the hot hand as needed to seal a comfortable win despite a late MK fightback.
That was encapsulated by regular season and NBL National Cup Final MVP Justin Hopkins playing less than 17 minutes of action going into the fourth quarter.
The last MVP nod of the season went to Reading's explosive guard Victor Olarerin, who utilised a number of highlight plays to drop a team-high 26 points that included a perfect 9/9 from 2PT range.
Mitch Clarke (21pts, 14ast) was unlucky not to get the award for a strong double-double, and Hopkins (24pts) still more than played his part.
Kai Walker (27pts, 5reb) and Adrian Scarborough (26pts 13reb) carried the load for MK, with only Romario Spence (12:30) playing more than 2:32 off the Breakers bench.
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