EuroBasket 1993
The 1993 FIBA European Championship, commonly called FIBA EuroBasket 1993, was the 28th FIBA EuroBasket regional basketball championship, held by FIBA Europe. It was held in Germany between 22 June and 4 July 1993. Sixteen national teams entered the event under the auspices of FIBA Europe, the sport's regional governing body. The cities of Berlin, Karlsruhe and Munich hosted the tournament. Hosts Germany won their first FIBA European title by defeating Russia with a 71–70 score in the final. Germany's Chris Welp was voted the tournament's MVP. This edition of the FIBA EuroBasket tournament also served as qualification for the 1994 FIBA World Championship, giving a berth to the top five teams in the final standings.
Tournament details | |
---|---|
Host country | Germany |
Dates | 22 June – 4 July |
Teams | 16 |
Venue(s) | 3 (in 3 host cities) |
Final positions | |
Champions | Germany (1st title) |
Runners-up | Russia |
Third place | Croatia |
Fourth place | Greece |
Tournament statistics | |
MVP | Chris Welp |
Top scorer | Sabahudin Bilalović (24.6 points per game) |
Qualification
Competition | Date | Vacancies | Qualified |
---|---|---|---|
Qualified from EuroBasket 1991 | 24 – 29 June 1991 | 3 | France Italy Spain |
Qualified through Qualifying Round | 1 May 1991 – 18 November 1992 | 8 | Belgium Bulgaria Germany Greece Israel Russia Sweden Turkey |
Qualified through Additional Qualifying Round | 30 May – 7 June 1993 | 5 | Bosnia and Herzegovina Croatia Estonia Latvia Slovenia |
Venues
Location | Picture | City | Arena | Capacity | Status | Round |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Berlin | Deutschlandhalle | 8,500 | Opened in 1935 | Groups B, D and F | ||
Karlsruhe | Europahalle | 5,000 | Opened in 1983 | Groups A, C and E | ||
München | Olympiahalle | 10,800 | Opened in 1972 | Knockout and qualification rounds |
Teams
It was first decided that 12 teams would participate in EuroBasket 1993, however, after the Qualifying Round was concluded, FIBA Europe decided to expand it up to 16 teams.
The reason for this were politic changes in Eastern Europe caused by breaks of two big countries, Soviet Union and Yugoslavia, which dominated in European basketball in recent decades. Yugoslavia as title holder was excluded from all international sport competitions because of sanctions against Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Russia was announced as successor of the Soviet Union and the first time competed as independent country at major tournament. Since other new countries, including silver medalist Croatia and bronze medalist Lithuania from the Olympic tournament at Barcelona 1992, did not compete at the Qualifying Round, FIBA Europe organized additional qualifying tournament in order to enable them participation at championship. The additional tournament was held in Wroclaw a month before Eurobasket.
Format
- The teams were split in four groups of four teams each. The top three teams from each group advance to the second round.
- The 12 teams that qualify to the second round are divided in two groups of six teams each, with one group containing the best three teams from groups A and B, while the other containing the three best teams from groups C and D. Results from the previous round are carried over, but only those against teams that qualified to the second round.
- The four best teams in the second round advance to the knockout quarterfinals. The winners in the semifinals compete for the European Championship, while the losers from the semifinals play a consolation game for the third place.
- The losers in the quarterfinals compete in another bracket to define 5th through 8th place in the final standings.
Squads
Preliminary round
Qualified for the second round |
Group A
- Times given below are in Central European Summer Time (UTC+2).
Team | Pld | W | L | PF | PA | PD | Pts | Tie |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Spain | 3 | 3 | 0 | 254 | 213 | +41 | 6 | |
Russia | 3 | 1 | 2 | 266 | 263 | +3 | 4 | 1-1, +14 |
Bosnia and Herzegovina | 3 | 1 | 2 | 255 | 264 | −9 | 4 | 1-1, -2 |
Sweden | 3 | 1 | 2 | 218 | 253 | −35 | 4 | 1-1, -12 |
22 June 14:00 |
Russia | 99–77 | Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Scoring by half: 49–27, 50–50 | ||
Pts: Bazarevich 17 | Pts: Primorac 24 |
22 June 16:00 |
Spain | 72–49 | Sweden |
Scoring by half: 36–25, 36–24 | ||
Pts: Villacampa 17 | Pts: Sahlström 20 |
Europahalle, Karlsruhe Attendance: 2,000 Referees: Iztok Rems (SLO), Peter George (GER) |
23 June 14:00 |
Sweden | 100–92 (OT) | Russia |
Scoring by half: 51–43, 32–40 Overtime: 17–9 | ||
Pts: Gehrke 24 | Pts: Sucharev 19 |
Europahalle, Karlsruhe Attendance: 2,000 Referees: Danko Radic (CRO), Fatih Dalay (TUR) |
23 June 16:00 |
Spain | 96–89 | Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Scoring by half: 46–41, 50–48 | ||
Pts: Villacampa 28 | Pts: Avdić, Bilalović, Primorac 20 |
Europahalle, Karlsruhe Attendance: 2,000 Referees: Wieslaw Zych (POL), Pascal Dorizon (FRA) |
24 June 14:00 |
Bosnia and Herzegovina | 89–69 | Sweden |
Scoring by half: 45–36, 44–33 | ||
Pts: Primorac 27 | Pts: Sahlström 28 |
Europahalle, Karlsruhe Attendance: 2,500 Referees: Anguel Ivanov (BUL), Atso Matsalu (EST) |
24 June 16:00 |
Spain | 86–75 | Russia |
Scoring by half: 38–38, 48–37 | ||
Pts: Martín Espina, Villacampa 21 | Pts: Babkov 24 |
Europahalle, Karlsruhe Attendance: 2,000 Referees: Iztok Rems (SLO), Pascal Dorizon (FRA) |
Group B
Team | Pld | W | L | PF | PA | PD | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Croatia | 3 | 3 | 0 | 317 | 241 | +76 | 6 |
France | 3 | 2 | 1 | 255 | 229 | +26 | 5 |
Turkey | 3 | 1 | 2 | 196 | 252 | −56 | 4 |
Bulgaria | 3 | 0 | 3 | 227 | 273 | −46 | 3 |
22 June 13:30 |
Bulgaria | 83–104 | Croatia |
Scoring by half: 39–50, 44–54 | ||
Pts: Mladenov 30 | Pts: Perasović 23 |
22 June 15:30 |
France | 69–55 | Turkey |
Scoring by half: 34–24, 35–31 | ||
Pts: Allinéi 12 | Pts: Büyükaycan 19 |
Deutschlandhalle, Berlin Attendance: 1,300 Referees: Roger Ekström (SWE), Reuven Virovnik (ISR) |
23 June 13:30 |
France | 95–100 (OT) | Croatia |
Scoring by half: 42–41, 43–44 Overtime: 10–15 | ||
Pts: Ostrowski 19 | Pts: Cvjetićanin 26 |
Deutschlandhalle, Berlin Attendance: 1,500 Referees: Mariss Bernats (LAT), Nikolaos Pitsilkas (GRE) |
23 June 15:30 |
Turkey | 78–70 | Bulgaria |
Scoring by half: 29–35, 49–35 | ||
Pts: Erdenay 19 | Pts: Mladenov 16 |
Deutschlandhalle, Berlin Attendance: 2,000 Referees: Michail Grigoriev (RUS), Paolo Zanon (ITA) |
Group C
Team | Pld | W | L | PF | PA | PD | Pts | Tie |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Greece | 3 | 2 | 1 | 243 | 214 | +29 | 5 | 1-0, +19 |
Latvia | 3 | 2 | 1 | 243 | 244 | −1 | 5 | 0-1, -19 |
Italy | 3 | 1 | 2 | 244 | 251 | −7 | 4 | 1-0, +9 |
Israel | 3 | 1 | 2 | 246 | 267 | −21 | 4 | 0-1, -9 |
22 June 15:00 |
Greece | 81–62 | Latvia |
Scoring by half: 45–40, 36–22 | ||
Pts: Christodoulou, Giannakis 17 | Pts: Muižnieks 21 |
22 June 21:00 |
Italy | 92–83 | Israel |
Scoring by half: 40–23, 52–60 | ||
Pts: Rusconi 22 | Pts: Jamchi 19 |
Europahalle, Karlsruhe Referees: Wieslaw Zych (POL), Carl Jungenbrand (FIN) |
23 June 19:00 |
Israel | 79–74 | Greece |
Scoring by half: 40–41, 39–33 | ||
Pts: Gordon 35 | Pts: Giannakis 32 |
Europahalle, Karlsruhe Attendance: 2,500 Referees: Iztok Rems (SLO), Peter George (GER) |
23 June 21:00 |
Italy | 79–80 | Latvia |
Scoring by half: 47–38, 32–42 | ||
Pts: Rusconi 18 | Pts: Muižnieks 22 |
Europahalle, Karlsruhe Referees: Anguel Ivanov (BUL), Armand de Keyser (BEL) |
Group D
Team | Pld | W | L | PF | PA | PD | Pts | Tie |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Estonia | 3 | 2 | 1 | 255 | 261 | −6 | 5 | 1-0, +10 |
Germany | 3 | 2 | 1 | 275 | 234 | +41 | 5 | 0-1, -10 |
Belgium | 3 | 1 | 2 | 224 | 233 | −9 | 4 | 1-0, +21 |
Slovenia | 3 | 1 | 2 | 198 | 224 | −26 | 4 | 0-1, -21 |
22 June 21:00 |
Slovenia | 61–82 | Belgium |
Scoring by half: 31–35, 30–47 | ||
Pts: Alibegović 22 | Pts: Bayer 25 |
Deutschlandhalle, Berlin Attendance: 2,000 Referees: Michail Grigoriev (RUS), Nikolaos Pitsilkas (GRE) |
23 June 19:00 |
Belgium | 64–93 | Germany |
Scoring by half: 35–56, 29–37 | ||
Pts: Struelens 15 | Pts: Harnisch 18 |
Deutschlandhalle, Berlin Attendance: 3,100 Referees: Tihomir Bubalo (SRB), Reuven Virovnik (ISR) |
23 June 21:00 |
Slovenia | 80–63 | Estonia |
Scoring by half: 37–28, 43–35 | ||
Pts: Alibegović 16 | Pts: Pehka 18 |
Deutschlandhalle, Berlin Attendance: 2,000 Referees: Miguel Betancor (ESP), Roger Ekström (SWE) |
Second round
Advanced to the quarterfinals |
Group E
Team | Pld | W | L | PF | PA | PD | Pts | Tie |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Spain | 5 | 4 | 1 | 430 | 387 | +43 | 9 | 1-1, +10 |
Russia | 5 | 4 | 1 | 444 | 371 | +73 | 9 | 1-1, +6 |
Greece | 5 | 4 | 1 | 414 | 378 | +36 | 9 | 1-1, -16 |
Bosnia and Herzegovina | 5 | 1 | 4 | 424 | 468 | −44 | 6 | 1-1, +3 |
Italy | 5 | 1 | 4 | 355 | 413 | −58 | 6 | 1-1, +1 |
Latvia | 5 | 1 | 4 | 398 | 448 | −50 | 6 | 1-1, -4 |
26 June 19:00 |
Latvia | 72–91 | Russia |
Scoring by half: 40–47, 32–44 | ||
Pts: Muižnieks 23 | Pts: Fetisov 21 |
Europahalle, Karlsruhe Attendance: 2,500 Referees: Wieslaw Zych (POL), Pascal Dorizon (FRA) |
26 June 21:00 |
Greece | 102–84 | Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Scoring by half: 56–49, 46–35 | ||
Pts: Galakteros 33 | Pts: Primorac 28 |
Europahalle, Karlsruhe Attendance: 5,000 Referees: Anguel Ivanov (BUL), Armand de Keyser (BEL) |
27 June 16:00 |
Spain | 95–87 | Latvia |
Scoring by half: 46–45, 49–42 | ||
Pts: Martín Espina 21 | Pts: Muižnieks 34 |
Europahalle, Karlsruhe Attendance: 1,000 Referees: Wieslaw Zych (POL), Atso Matsalu (EST) |
27 June 19:00 |
Bosnia and Herzegovina | 72–74 | Italy |
Scoring by half: 38–36, 34–38 | ||
Pts: Bilalović 22 | Pts: Gentile 17 |
Europahalle, Karlsruhe Attendance: 4,000 Referees: Carl Jungebrand (FIN), Pascal Dorizon (FRA) |
27 June 21:00 |
Greece | 67–84 | Russia |
Scoring by half: 38–42, 29–42 | ||
Pts: Galakteros 17 | Pts: Bazarevich 36 |
Europahalle, Karlsruhe Attendance: 5,000 Referees: Danko Radic (CRO), Peter George (GER) |
28 June 16:00 |
Latvia | 97–102 | Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Scoring by half: 48–47, 49–55 | ||
Pts: Muižnieks 29 | Pts: Bilalović 36 |
Europahalle, Karlsruhe Attendance: 1,000 Referees: Peter George (GER), Armand de Keyser (BEL) |
28 June 19:00 |
Russia | 95–69 | Italy |
Scoring by half: 44–48, 51–21 | ||
Pts: Bazarevich 24 | Pts: Pittis 20 |
Europahalle, Karlsruhe Attendance: 2,900 Referees: Wieslaw Zych (POL), Danko Radic (CRO) |
Group F
Team | Pld | W | L | PF | PA | PD | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Croatia | 5 | 5 | 0 | 487 | 375 | +112 | 10 |
France | 5 | 4 | 1 | 384 | 337 | +47 | 9 |
Estonia | 5 | 3 | 2 | 410 | 426 | −16 | 8 |
Germany | 5 | 2 | 3 | 392 | 375 | +17 | 7 |
Turkey | 5 | 1 | 4 | 325 | 395 | −70 | 6 |
Belgium | 5 | 0 | 5 | 340 | 430 | −90 | 5 |
26 June 17:00 |
Estonia | 77–74 | Turkey |
Scoring by half: 42–39, 35–35 | ||
Pts: Babenko 22 | Pts: Topsakal 26 |
Deutschlandhalle, Berlin Attendance: 3,500 Referees: Miguel Betancor (ESP), Reuven Virovnik (ISR) |
26 June 19:00 |
Croatia | 106–74 | Belgium |
Scoring by half: 54–34, 52–40 | ||
Pts: Rađa 27 | Pts: Samaey 14 |
Deutschlandhalle, Berlin Attendance: 3,000 Referees: Michail Grigoriev (RUS), Nikolaos Pitsilkas (GRE) |
27 June 15:00 |
Estonia | 62–73 | France |
Scoring by half: 23–44, 39–29 | ||
Pts: Noormets 15 | Pts: Gadou, Ostrowski 12 |
Deutschlandhalle, Berlin Attendance: 3,000 Referees: Goran Radonjic (FRA), Reuven Virovnik (ISR) |
27 June 17:00 |
Croatia | 70–63 | Germany |
Scoring by half: 38–31, 32–32 | ||
Pts: Rađa 22 | Pts: Koch 16 |
Deutschlandhalle, Berlin Attendance: 5,000 Referees: Miguel Betancor (ESP), Nikolaos Pitsilkas (GRE) |
27 June 19:00 |
Turkey | 69–59 | Belgium |
Scoring by half: 32–36, 37–23 | ||
Pts: Ene 18 | Pts: Bayer 14 |
Deutschlandhalle, Berlin Attendance: 3,500 Referees: Mariss Bernats (LAT), Paolo Zanon (ITA) |
28 June 15:00 |
Croatia | 98–80 | Estonia |
Scoring by half: 49–41, 49–39 | ||
Pts: Perasović 25 | Pts: Kullamäe 20 |
Deutschlandhalle, Berlin Referees: Miguel Betancor (ESP), Paolo Zanon (ITA) |
Knockout stage
Championship bracket
Quarter-finals | Semi-finals | Final | ||||||||
1 July – 17:30 | ||||||||||
Russia | 82 | |||||||||
2 July – 19:00 | ||||||||||
Estonia | 61 | |||||||||
Russia | 84 | |||||||||
1 July – 21:00 | ||||||||||
Croatia | 76 | |||||||||
Croatia | 98 | |||||||||
4 July – 21:00 | ||||||||||
Bosnia and Herzegovina | 78 | |||||||||
Russia | 70 | |||||||||
1 July – 15:30 | ||||||||||
Germany | 71 | |||||||||
France | 59 | |||||||||
2 July – 21:00 | ||||||||||
Greece | 61 | |||||||||
Greece | 73 | |||||||||
1 July – 19:00 | ||||||||||
Germany | 76 | Third place | ||||||||
Spain | 77 | |||||||||
3 July – 21:00 | ||||||||||
Germany (OT) | 79 | |||||||||
Croatia | 99 | |||||||||
Greece | 59 | |||||||||
Quarterfinals
1 July 15:30 |
France | 59–61 | Greece |
Scoring by half: 39–33, 20–28 | ||
Pts: Ostrowski 17 | Pts: Christodoulou 18 |
1 July 17:30 |
Russia | 82–61 | Estonia |
Scoring by half: 40–31, 42–30 | ||
Pts: Fetisov, Sucharev 18 | Pts: Babenko 19 |
Olympiahalle, Munich Attendance: 3,500 Referees: Peter George (GER), Nikolaos Pitsilkas (GRE) |
Semifinals
2 July 19:00 |
Russia | 84–76 | Croatia |
Scoring by half: 43–37, 41–39 | ||
Pts: Bazarevich 23 | Pts: Cvjetićanin 15 |
Third place
Final
5th to 8th place
Classification round | Fifth place | |||||
2 July – 13:00 | ||||||
Estonia | 99 | |||||
3 July – 19:00 | ||||||
Bosnia and Herzegovina | 91 | |||||
Estonia | 80 | |||||
2 July – 15:30 | ||||||
Spain | 119 | |||||
France | 83 | |||||
Spain | 95 | |||||
Seventh place | ||||||
4 July – 18:00 | ||||||
Bosnia and Herzegovina | 75 | |||||
France | 83 |
2 July 13:00 |
Estonia | 99–91 | Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Scoring by half: 43–38, 56–53 | ||
Pts: Kuusmaa 40 | Pts: Bilalović 29 |
2 July 15:30 |
France | 83–95 | Spain |
Scoring by half: 40–45, 43–50 | ||
Pts: Adams 18 | Pts: Martín Espina, Villacampa 24 |
Olympiahalle, Munich Attendance: 2,000 Referees: Carl Jungebrand (FIN), Tihomir Bubalo (SRB) |
3 July 19:00 |
Estonia | 80–119 | Spain |
Scoring by half: 33–60, 47–59 | ||
Pts: Babenko 25 | Pts: San Epifanio, Villacampa 18 |
Olympiahalle, Munich Attendance: 1,000 Referees: Danko Radic (CRO), Reuven Virovnik (ISR) |
Awards
1993 FIBA EuroBasket champions |
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Germany 1st title |
1993 FIBA EuroBasket MVP: Chris Welp ( Germany) |
All-Tournament Team[1] |
---|
Sergei Bazarevich |
Jordi Villacampa |
Fanis Christodoulou |
Chris Welp (MVP) |
Dino Rađa |
Final standings
Qualified for the 1994 FIBA World Championship |
Rank | Team | Record |
---|---|---|
Germany | 6–3 | |
Russia | 6–3 | |
Croatia | 8–1 | |
4 | Greece | 5–4 |
5 | Spain | 7–2 |
6 | Estonia | 4–5 |
7 | France | 6–3 |
8 | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 2–7 |
9 | Italy | 2–4 |
10 | Latvia | 2–4 |
11 | Turkey | 2–4 |
12 | Belgium | 1–5 |
13 | Israel | 1–2 |
14 | Slovenia | 1–2 |
15 | Sweden | 1–2 |
16 | Bulgaria | 0–3 |
4th | |||
Germany Moritz Kleine-Brockhoff Henrik Rödl Michael Koch Chris Welp Teoman Öztürk Henning Harnisch Gunther Behnke Stephan Baeck Hansi Gnad Kai Nürnberger Jens Kujawa Mike Jackel |
Russia Vladimir Gorin Dmitry Shakulin Dmitry Sucharev Maksim Astanin Vitaliy Nosov Sergei Bazarevich Sergei Babkov Mikhail Michajlov Vasily Karasev Andrei Fetisov Sergei Panov Vladislav Kondratov |
Croatia Velimir Perasović Alan Gregov Ivica Žurić Vladan Alanović Franjo Arapović Žan Tabak Stojko Vranković Danko Cvjetićanin Arijan Komazec Dino Rađa Emilio Kovačić Veljko Mršić |
Greece Giorgos Bosganas Kostas Patavoukas Panagiotis Giannakis Lefteris Kakiousis Giorgos Sigalas Efthimis Bakatsias Nasos Galakteros Christos Tsekos Giannis Papagiannis Panagiotis Fasoulas Nikos Oikonomou Fanis Christodoulou |