Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup

(Redirected from 2014 Basketball World Cup)

The 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the 17th edition of the FIBA Basketball World Cup, the tournament previously known as the FIBA World Championship.[1] The tournament was held from 30 August to 14 September 2014. Hosted by Spain, it was the last tournament to be held on the then-current four-year cycle. The next FIBA World Cup was held five years later, in 2019, to reset the four-year-cycle on a different year than the FIFA World Cup.[2]

2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup
Copa Mundial de la FIBA España 2014
Tournament details
Host countrySpain
Dates30 August – 14 September
Officially opened byFelipe VI
Teams24 (from 5 confederations)
Venue(s)6 (in 6 host cities)
Final positions
Champions United States (5th title)
Runners-up Serbia
Third place France
Fourth place Lithuania
Tournament statistics
Games played76
Attendance645,135 (8,489 per game)
MVPUnited States Kyrie Irving
Top scorerPuerto Rico J. J. Barea
(22.0 points per game)
2010
2019
Countdown clock outside the FIBA headquarters in Mies, Switzerland as of June 2013.

The United States won their fifth world championship, after beating silver medal-winning Serbia in the Final. France claimed the third place, while Lithuania finished fourth in the tournament.

Host selection

edit

FIBA opened the bidding process on 10 January 2008 and all the letters of intent were submitted on 30 April 2008.[3] Nine countries showed interest in hosting the event, as in order, they were Spain,[4] France,[5] Denmark,[6] Russia,[7] Saudi Arabia,[8] Qatar,[9] Italy,[10] Greece,[11] and China.[12]

Among the nine, only three were shortlisted by FIBA: China which would have hosted the 2009 FIBA Asia Championship later that year, Italy which last hosted a FIBA tournament in EuroBasket Women 2007, and FIBA EuroBasket 2007 host Spain.

On 23 May 2009, after voting by the FIBA Central Board in Geneva in which the Chinese and Spanish representatives abstained, China was the first to be eliminated in the first round of voting. In the final round, Arvydas Sabonis and Saša Djordjević announced that Spain won the hosting rights with eleven votes as opposed to Italy's eight.[13]

2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup bidding results
(final round)
Nation Votes
  Spain 11
  Italy 8
  China Eliminated

Venues

edit

The Palacio de Deportes de la Comunidad de Madrid was the main venue, hosting the final and half of the matches in the final round. While no arenas from the 1986 FIBA World Championship were reused, the current Madrid arena was built on the site of the original venue that was destroyed by fire in 2001, which was a venue used in 1986. Amongst venues used in FIBA EuroBasket 2007, the arenas in Granada, Seville and Madrid were reused. One arena, the Gran Canaria Arena, was the only new venue, being built after the tournament was awarded to Spain. The other cities hosted a group.

On 17 April 2010, Barcelona was added to the list of cities to hold games, bringing the total venues to six.[14] This was Barcelona's first time being part of a major international event in basketball since the 1997 EuroBasket, in which the Palau Sant Jordi hosted the final stages.[14] Barcelona will host half of the games in the knockout stage, including a semifinal.

Below is a list of the confirmed venues which were used to host games during the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup. Connor Floor was the official supplier of the basketball courts for each of the six sites.[15][16]

Iberian Peninsula Madrid Barcelona Granada
Palacio de Deportes de la Comunidad de Madrid
Capacity: 13,700
Palau Sant Jordi
Capacity: 15,700
Palacio Municipal de Deportes de Granada
Capacity: 9,507
     
Bilbao Seville Las Palmas
Bizkaia Arena
Capacity: 16,200
Palacio Municipal de Deportes San Pablo
Capacity: 7,200
Gran Canaria Arena
Capacity: 9,700
Canary Islands      
 

Qualification

edit
 
Status of teams with the intent of participating in the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup.
  Qualified
  Eliminated
  Did not enter
  Disqualified and suspended by FIBA
  Not a member of FIBA

There were 24 teams taking part in the 2014 World Cup of Basketball. After the 2012 Olympics, the continental allocation for FIBA Americas was reduced by one when the United States won the Olympic tournament, automatically qualifying them for the 2014 World Cup.[17]

Qualified teams

edit

As of 21 September 2013, twenty teams had already qualified for the final tournament in 2014. To complete the 24-team tournament, FIBA would announce the four wild cards after a meeting in Barcelona on 1–2 February 2014; they could have announced an initial list of teams that would be considered after a Buenos Aires meeting on 23–24 November 2013.[18] But later the FIBA Central Board decided not to trim the list of wild card applicants on their Buenos Aires meeting, making all 15 teams eligible to be selected on the February meeting at Barcelona.[19]

On 1 February 2014, FIBA announced that it had allocated the wild cards to Brazil, Finland, Greece and Turkey.[20]

Event Date Location Berths Qualified
Host nation 23 May 2009 Switzerland  Geneva 1   Spain
2012 Olympics 29 July–12 August 2012 United Kingdom  London 1   United States
2013 FIBA Africa Championship 20–31 August 2013 Ivory Coast  Abidjan 3   Angola
  Egypt
  Senegal
2013 FIBA Americas Championship 30 August–11 September 2013 Venezuela  Caracas 4   Mexico
  Puerto Rico
  Argentina
  Dominican Republic
2013 FIBA Asia Championship 1–11 August 2013 Philippines  Manila 3   Iran
  Philippines
  South Korea
FIBA EuroBasket 2013 4–22 September 2013   Slovenia 6   France
  Lithuania
  Croatia
  Slovenia
  Ukraine
  Serbia
2013 FIBA Oceania Championship 14–18 August 2013 New Zealand  Auckland
Australia  Canberra
2   Australia
  New Zealand
Wild cards 1 February 2014 Spain  Barcelona 4   Brazil
  Finland
  Greece
  Turkey
TOTAL 24

Suspension of Senegal

edit

On the FIBA Central Board meeting in Buenos Aires, FIBA suspended the basketball federations of Guatemala, Morocco and Senegal indefinitely "due to their inability to properly function as the governing body for basketball in their respective countries."[21] The Senegalese federation was suspended reportedly due to age fabrication in the 2013 FIBA Under-19 World Championship for Men and for Women; the Senegalese federation was dissolved as a result.[22] On 2 February, FIBA lifted the suspension on the Senegalese federation after they complied with all of the requirements imposed by the FIBA, clearing the way for the participation of its national team in the tournament.[20]

Rule and format changes

edit

This was the first time the NBA-style 4.90m rectangular free throw lane, the 1.25m restricted arc, and extended three point line (6.6 m [21' 8"] from the basket at the corners; 6.75 m [22' 1.75"] elsewhere) took effect in the tournament.

The final round was held in two arenas: in the Palacio de Deportes de la Comunidad de Madrid and Palau Sant Jordi, as opposed to a singular arena in 2010. Also, the arrangement of the round of 16 match-ups in the bracket were changed. In 2010, a team from Group A or B can meet a team from Group C or D as early in the quarterfinals, and cannot meet their groupmates until the semifinals. In 2014, teams from Groups A and B were in one half of the bracket played in Madrid, while teams from Groups C and D were in the other half and played in Barcelona; teams from Groups A and B could not meet teams from Group C or D until the final or third-place playoff, and could meet their groupmates as early as the quarterfinals.

In 2010, the round of 16 games were held in a span of four days, or two matches per day; in 2014, there would be four games per day, and the round of 16 will be done in two days. From the semifinals onward, unlike in 2010 where the semifinals were held in one day, and the third-place playoff and the final on the next day, the semifinals in 2014 were held on two days, followed by the third-place playoff the next day, and the final on the day after, or one game per day. Finally, the classification round for 5th place was also eliminated.

Draw

edit

The draw was held on 3 February 2014 at 19:00 CET at the Palau de la Música Catalana, Barcelona.[23] On 2 February, FIBA released the pots on how the teams would be drawn. "Pot 1" included the top 4 teams in the FIBA World Rankings, while the other pots were grouped on geographical and sporting criteria.

Former Spanish international Juan Antonio San Epifanio, Croatia's Dino Rađa, José Ortiz of Puerto Rico and Angolan Jean-Jacques Conceição assisted in the draw.[24]

Group A, which included European champions France, hosts Spain, and traditional powerhouse Serbia has been labeled as the "group of death".[25] The Americans, meanwhile, avoided the "bracket of death" of Groups A and B by landing in Group C, setting up a rematch of the 2010 final against Turkey, which were selected as wild cards, and a possible late knockout match-up against European runners-up Lithuania.[26]

Seeding

edit
Pot 1 Pot 2 Pot 3 Pot 4 Pot 5 Pot 6

  United States (1)
  Spain (2)
  Argentina (3)
  Lithuania (4)

  Angola (15)
  Finland (39)
  Senegal (41)
  Egypt (46)

  New Zealand (19)
  Iran (20)
  South Korea (31)
  Philippines (34)

  Serbia (11)
  Slovenia (13)
  Croatia (16)
  Ukraine (45)

  Brazil (10)
  Puerto Rico (17)
  Mexico (24)
  Dominican Republic (26)

  Greece (5)
  Turkey (7)
  France (8)
  Australia (9)

Squads

edit

Each team had a roster of 12 players; a team could opt to have one naturalized player from its roster. The final rosters had to be finalized at the team managers' meeting at the night prior to the first game. The final roster of 12 players per team must have been taken from a list of at most 24 players submitted to FIBA two months before the beginning of the championship.

Preparation matches

edit

2014 South American Basketball Championship

edit

The 2014 South American Basketball Championship in Isla Margarita, Venezuela was a qualifying tournament for the 2015 FIBA Americas Championship and for the 2015 Pan-American Games. Venezuela defeated World Cup participants Argentina (who played with its "B" team) to win the title; the other team in the World Cup, Brazil (who also played with its "B" team), finished in third place defeating Uruguay. All four teams qualified to the 2015 FIBA Americas Championship while only the top three teams qualified to the 2015 Pan-American Games.

2014 FIBA Asia Cup

edit

The 2014 FIBA Asia Cup in Wuhan, China was a qualifying tournament for the 2015 FIBA Asia Championship in China. Iran defeated Chinese Taipei to win the title and qualify outright; the other team in the World Cup, the Philippines, defeated China in the third place playoff.

2014 Centrobasket

edit

The 2014 Centrobasket in Tepic, Mexico is a qualifying tournament for the 2015 FIBA Americas Championship and for the 2015 Pan-American Games. The three teams in the World Cup occupied the top three places. Mexico defeated Puerto Rico in the final, while Dominican Republic finished third place defeating Cuba. All four teams qualified to the 2015 FIBA Americas Championship while only the top three teams qualified to the 2015 Pan-American Games.

2014 William Jones Cup

edit

The 2014 William Jones Cup was a friendly tournament in New Taipei, Taiwan. Egypt is the only World Cup team participated; they finished third. Iran sent their "B-team", while South Korea sent in a Korean Basketball League team.

2014 Antibes International Basketball tournament

edit

Australia won this friendly tournament in Antibes, France organized by Fédération Française de Basket-Ball. The Philippines, France, and Ukraine were the other teams that participated.

Preliminary round

edit
 
2014 FIBA World Championship final rankings.

How teams are ranked:

  1. Highest number of points earned, with each game result having a corresponding point:
    • Win: 2 points
    • Loss: 1 point
    • Loss by default: 1 point, with a final score of 2–0 for the opponents of the defaulting team if the latter team is not trailing or if the score is tied, or the score at the time of stoppage if they are trailing.
    • Loss by forfeit: 0 points, with a final score of 20–0 for the opponents of the forfeiting team.
  2. Head-to-head record via points system above
  3. Goal average on games among tied teams
  4. Goal average on all group games
  5. Drawing of lots
Qualified to the final round

Group A

edit

Venue: Palacio Municipal de Deportes de Granada, Granada

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1   Spain (H) 5 5 0 440 314 +126 10 Round of 16
2   Brazil 5 4 1 416 333 +83 9
3   France 5 3 2 376 357 +19 8
4   Serbia 5 2 3 387 378 +9 7
5   Iran 5 1 4 344 406 −62 6
6   Egypt 5 0 5 311 486 −175 5
Source: FIBA archive
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) head-to-head points; 3) head-to-head goal average; 4) head-to-head number of points scored.
(H) Hosts
30 August 2014
Egypt   64–85   Serbia
France   63–65   Brazil
Iran   60–90   Spain
31 August 2014
Serbia   73–74   France
Brazil   79–50   Iran
Spain   91–54   Egypt
1 September 2014
Iran   70–83   Serbia
France   94–55   Egypt
Brazil   63–82   Spain
3 September 2014
Egypt   73–88   Iran
Serbia   73–81   Brazil
Spain   88–64   France
4 September 2014
Brazil   128–65   Egypt
Iran   76–81   France
Serbia   73–89   Spain

Group B

edit
 
Croatia against Philippines

Venue: Palacio Municipal de Deportes San Pablo, Seville

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1   Greece 5 5 0 414 349 +65 10 Round of 16
2   Croatia 5 3 2 414 398 +16 8[a]
3   Argentina 5 3 2 420 371 +49 8[a]
4   Senegal 5 2 3 348 399 −51 7
5   Puerto Rico 5 1 4 388 446 −58 6[b]
6   Philippines 5 1 4 383 404 −21 6[b]
Source: FIBA archive
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) head-to-head points; 3) head-to-head goal average; 4) head-to-head number of points scored.
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Head-to-head record: Croatia 1–0 Argentina
  2. ^ a b Head-to-head record: Puerto Rico 1–0 Philippines


30 August 2014
Croatia   81–78 OT   Philippines
Puerto Rico   75–98   Argentina
Greece   87–64   Senegal
31 August 2014
Argentina   85–90   Croatia
Senegal   82–75   Puerto Rico
Philippines   70–82   Greece
1 September 2014
Croatia   75–77   Senegal
Argentina   85–81   Philippines
Puerto Rico   79–90   Greece
3 September 2014
Philippines   73–77   Puerto Rico
Senegal   46–81   Argentina
Greece   76–65   Croatia
4 September 2014
Senegal   79–81 OT   Philippines
Croatia   103–82   Puerto Rico
Argentina   71–79   Greece

Group C

edit

Venue: Bizkaia Arena, Barakaldo

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1   United States 5 5 0 511 345 +166 10 Round of 16
2   Turkey 5 3 2 365 372 −7 8
3   Dominican Republic 5 2 3 347 386 −39 7[a]
4   New Zealand 5 2 3 347 376 −29 7[a]
5   Ukraine 5 2 3 344 369 −25 7[a]
6   Finland 5 1 4 342 408 −66 6
Source: FIBA archive
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) head-to-head points; 3) head-to-head goal average; 4) head-to-head number of points scored.
Notes:
  1. ^ a b c Head-to-head record: Dominican Republic 1–1 (1.022 GAvg), New Zealand 1–1 (0.993 GAvg), Ukraine 1–1 (0.985 GAvg),
30 August 2014
Ukraine   72–62   Dominican Republic
New Zealand   73–76   Turkey
United States   114–55   Finland
31 August 2014
Dominican Republic   76–63   New Zealand
Finland   81–76   Ukraine
Turkey   77–98   United States
2 September 2014
Ukraine   64–58   Turkey
United States   98–71   New Zealand
Finland   68–74   Dominican Republic
3 September 2014
New Zealand   73–61   Ukraine
Turkey   77–73 OT   Finland
Dominican Republic   71–106   United States
4 September 2014
Finland   65–67   New Zealand
Ukraine   71–95   United States
Turkey   77–64   Dominican Republic

Group D

edit

Venue: Gran Canaria Arena, Las Palmas

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1   Lithuania 5 4 1 383 331 +52 9[a] Round of 16
2   Slovenia 5 4 1 425 374 +51 9[a]
3   Australia 5 3 2 404 373 +31 8
4   Mexico 5 2 3 370 372 −2 7[b]
5   Angola 5 2 3 375 399 −24 7[b]
6   South Korea 5 0 5 316 424 −108 5
Source: FIBA archive
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) head-to-head points; 3) head-to-head goal average; 4) head-to-head number of points scored.
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Head-to-head record: Lithuania 1–0 Slovenia
  2. ^ a b Head-to-head record: Mexico 1–0 Angola
30 August 2014
Angola   80–69   South Korea
Australia   80–90   Slovenia
Mexico   74–87   Lithuania
31 August 2014
South Korea   55–89   Australia
Slovenia   89–68   Mexico
Lithuania   75–62   Angola
2 September 2014
Angola   55–79   Mexico
Australia   82–75   Lithuania
South Korea   72–89   Slovenia
3 September 2014
Mexico   62–70   Australia
Slovenia   93–87   Angola
Lithuania   79–49   South Korea
4 September 2014
Australia   83–91   Angola
South Korea   71–87   Mexico
Lithuania   67–64   Slovenia

Final round

edit
 
Round of 16Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
              
 
6 September – Madrid
 
 
  Spain89
 
10 September – Madrid
 
  Senegal56
 
  Spain52
 
6 September – Madrid
 
  France65
 
  Croatia64
 
12 September – Madrid
 
  France69
 
  France85
 
7 September – Madrid
 
  Serbia90
 
  Greece72
 
10 September – Madrid
 
  Serbia90
 
  Serbia84
 
7 September – Madrid
 
  Brazil56
 
  Brazil85
 
14 September – Madrid
 
  Argentina65
 
  Serbia92
 
6 September – Barcelona
 
  United States129
 
  United States86
 
9 September – Barcelona
 
  Mexico63
 
  United States119
 
6 September – Barcelona
 
  Slovenia76
 
  Slovenia71
 
11 September – Barcelona
 
  Dominican Republic61
 
  United States96
 
7 September – Barcelona
 
  Lithuania68 Third place
 
  Lithuania76
 
9 September – Barcelona13 September – Madrid
 
  New Zealand71
 
  Lithuania73  France95
 
7 September – Barcelona
 
  Turkey61   Lithuania93
 
  Turkey65
 
 
  Australia64
 

Round of 16

edit
6 September 2014
16:00
United States   86–63   Mexico
Scoring by quarter: 23–13, 19–14, 24–11, 20–25
Pts: Curry 20
Rebs: Faried 8
Asts: Curry, Rose 4
Pts: Ayón 25
Rebs: Ayón 8
Asts: Gutiérrez 3
Palau Sant Jordi, Barcelona
Attendance: 14,200
Referees: Eddie Viator (FRA), Carlos Julio (ANG), Oļegs Latiševs (LAT)
6 September 2014
18:00
France   69–64   Croatia
Scoring by quarter: 7–15, 16–7, 23–12, 23–30
Pts: Batum 14
Rebs: Gelabale 6
Asts: Diaw 5
Pts: Bogdanović 27
Rebs: Šarić 7
Asts: Lafayette 6
Palacio de Deportes de la Comunidad de Madrid, Madrid
Attendance: 12,600
Referees: Anthony Jordan (USA), José Reyes (MEX), Borys Ryzhyk (UKR)
6 September 2014
20:00
Dominican Republic   61–71   Slovenia
Scoring by quarter: 15–15, 13–23, 20–16, 13–17
Pts: Feldeine 18
Rebs: Martínez 11
Asts: Feldeine 3
Pts: Z. Dragić 18
Rebs: Slokar 6
Asts: G. Dragić 6
Palau Sant Jordi, Barcelona
Attendance: 10,324
Referees: Christos Christodoulou (GRE), Alejandro Chiti (ARG), Juan González (ESP)
6 September 2014
22:00
Spain   89–56   Senegal
Scoring by quarter: 23–17, 18–11, 21–15, 27–13
Pts: P. Gasol 17
Rebs: M. Gasol, Ibaka 6
Asts: Rubio 6
Pts: Faye, Badji 12
Rebs: three players 7
Asts: D'Almeida 4
Palacio de Deportes de la Comunidad de Madrid, Madrid
Attendance: 13,400
Referees: Sreten Radović (CRO), Matej Boltauzer (SLO), Robert Lottermoser (GER)
7 September 2014
16:00
New Zealand   71–76   Lithuania
Scoring by quarter: 9–23, 17–13, 24–22, 21–18
Pts: C. Webster 26
Rebs: Vukona 10
Asts: Penney 3
Pts: Valančiūnas 22
Rebs: Valančiūnas 13
Asts: Seibutis 5
Palau Sant Jordi, Barcelona
Attendance: 7,783
Referees: Ilija Belošević (SRB), Alejandro Chiti (ARG), Ferdinand Pascual (PHI)
7 September 2014
18:00
Serbia   90–72   Greece
Scoring by quarter: 23–20, 23–22, 18–13, 26–17
Pts: Bogdanović 21
Rebs: Bjelica 10
Asts: Teodosić 5
Pts: Calathes 14
Rebs: Kaimakoglou 6
Asts: Printezis 5
Palacio de Deportes de la Comunidad de Madrid, Madrid
Attendance: 13,100
Referees: Michael Aylen (AUS), Robert Lottermoser (GER), Stephen Seibel (CAN)
7 September 2014
20:00
Turkey   65–64   Australia
Scoring by quarter: 15–18, 19–17, 12–15, 19–14
Pts: Güler, Preldžić 16
Rebs: Preldžić 7
Asts: Tunçeri 3
Pts: Baynes 15
Rebs: Baynes 7
Asts: Dellavedova 5
Palau Sant Jordi, Barcelona
Attendance: 6,339
Referees: Cristiano Maranho (BRA), Steven Anderson (USA), Oļegs Latiševs (LAT)
7 September 2014
22:00
Brazil   85–65   Argentina
Scoring by quarter: 13–21, 20–15, 24–13, 28–16
Pts: Neto 21
Rebs: Varejão 9
Asts: Varejão, Nenê 4
Pts: Prigioni 18
Rebs: Scola 7
Asts: Scola, Prigioni 3
Palacio de Deportes de la Comunidad de Madrid, Madrid
Attendance: 13,450
Referees: Luigi Lamonica (ITA), Sreten Radović (CRO), Jorge Vázquez (PUR)

Quarterfinals

edit
9 September 2014
17:00
Lithuania   73–61   Turkey
Scoring by quarter: 13–18, 20–10, 14–16, 26–17
Pts: Seibutis 19
Rebs: Valančiūnas 13
Asts: Seibutis, Pocius 3
Pts: Gönlüm 13
Rebs: Aşık 10
Asts: Preldžić 5
Palau Sant Jordi, Barcelona
Attendance: 9,752
Referees: Juan González (ESP), Stephen Seibel (CAN), Eddie Viator (FRA)
9 September 2014
21:00
Slovenia   76–119   United States
Scoring by quarter: 22–29, 20–20, 22–37, 12–33
Pts: G. Dragić 13
Rebs: Balažič, Lorbek 6
Asts: G. Dragić 4
Pts: Thompson 20
Rebs: Davis 11
Asts: Rose 5
Palau Sant Jordi, Barcelona
Attendance: 13,674
Referees: Cristiano Maranho (BRA), Robert Lottermoser (GER), Ferdinand Pascual (PHI)
10 September 2014
18:00
Serbia   84–56   Brazil
Scoring by quarter: 21–17, 16–15, 29–12, 18–12
Pts: Teodosić 23
Rebs: Bjelica 8
Asts: Bjelica 5
Pts: Varejão 12
Rebs: Varejão 9
Asts: Huertas 9
Palacio de Deportes de la Comunidad de Madrid, Madrid
Attendance: 12,550
Referees: Steven Anderson (USA), José Reyes (MEX), Borys Ryzhyk (UKR)
10 September 2014
22:00
France   65–52   Spain
Scoring by quarter: 15–15, 20–13, 7–15, 23–9
Pts: Diaw 15
Rebs: Gobert 13
Asts: Heurtel, Diot 4
Pts: P. Gasol 17
Rebs: P. Gasol 8
Asts: Fernández 3
Palacio de Deportes de la Comunidad de Madrid, Madrid
Attendance: 13,673
Referees: Luigi Lamonica (ITA), Michael Aylen (AUS), Oļegs Latiševs (LAT)

Semifinals

edit
11 September 2014
21:00
United States   96–68   Lithuania
Scoring by quarter: 21–16, 22–19, 33–14, 20–19
Pts: Irving 18
Rebs: Gay 7
Asts: Irving 4
Pts: Valančiūnas, Kuzminskas 15
Rebs: Kuzminskas 9
Asts: Juškevičius, Seibutis 2
Palau Sant Jordi, Barcelona
Attendance: 15,070
Referees: José Reyes (MEX), Matej Boltauzer (SLO), Sreten Radović (CRO)
12 September 2014
22:00
France   85–90   Serbia
Scoring by quarter: 15–21, 17–25, 14–15, 39–29
Pts: Batum 35
Rebs: Diaw 10
Asts: Heurtel 6
Pts: Teodosić 24
Rebs: Bjelica 7
Asts: Bjelica, Marković 5
Palacio de Deportes de la Comunidad de Madrid, Madrid
Attendance: 13,470
Referees: Cristiano Maranho (BRA), Alejandro Chiti (ARG), Christos Christodoulou (GRE)

Third place playoff

edit
13 September 2014
18:00
Lithuania   93–95   France
Scoring by quarter: 19–22, 23–21, 29–21, 22–31
Pts: Valančiūnas 25
Rebs: Valančiūnas 9
Asts: Seibutis 4
Pts: Batum 27
Rebs: Lauvergne 9
Asts: Diaw 4
Palacio de Deportes de la Comunidad de Madrid, Madrid
Attendance: 11,800
Referees: Steven Anderson (USA), Ilija Belošević (SRB), Juan González (ESP)

Final

edit
14 September 2014
21:00
United States   129–92 Serbia  Serbia
Scoring by quarter: 35–21, 32–20, 38–26, 24–25
Pts: Irving 26
Rebs: Cousins 9
Asts: Rose 6
Pts: Bjelica, Kalinić 18
Rebs: Marković 6
Asts: Teodosić 7
Palacio de Deportes de la Comunidad de Madrid, Madrid
Attendance: 13,673
Referees: Stephen Seibel (CAN), Borys Ryzhyk (UKR), Eddie Viator (FRA)

Statistics

edit

Player tournament averages

edit
Efficiency
# Player Pld MPG PPG RPG Eff EffPG
1 Philippines  Andray Blatche 5 33.8 24.2 13.8 112 22.4
2 Spain  Pau Gasol 7 26.5 20.0 5.9 152 21.7
3 Iran  Hamed Haddadi 5 29.4 18.8 11.4 101 20.2
Angola  Yanick Moreira 5 20.4 17.8 8.2 101 20.2
5 Lithuania  Jonas Valančiūnas 9 24.8 14.4 8.4 178 19.8
6 Senegal  Gorgui Dieng 6 36.3 16.0 10.7 117 19.5
7 Mexico  Gustavo Ayón 5 32.2 17.6 7.6 96 19.2
Argentina  Luis Scola 6 32.4 19.5 8.5 115 19.2
9 Greece  Ioannis Bourousis 6 26.5 11.5 9.2 114 19.0
10 Dominican Republic  Francisco García 5 28.2 17.6 3.2 91 18.2

Team tournament averages

edit
Tournament game highs
Statistic Player Total Opponent (Date) Team Total Opponent (Date)
Points Angola  Yanick Moreira 38   Australia (4 Sep)   United States 129   Serbia (14 Sep)
Offensive
Rebounds
Angola  Yanick Moreira 10   Australia (4 Sep)   Angola
  United States
24
24
  Mexico (2 Sep)
  Slovenia (9 Sep)
Defensive
Rebounds
Philippines  Andray Blatche 14   Greece (31 Aug)   Brazil
  France
36
36
  Egypt (4 Sep)
  Egypt (1 Sep)
Rebounds Turkey  Ömer Aşık 20   Ukraine (2 Sep)   United States 54   Slovenia (9 Sep)
Assists Senegal  Xane D'Almeida
Brazil  Raulzinho Neto
Argentina  Pablo Prigioni
Greece  Nikos Zisis
14 (OT)
10
10
10
  Philippines (4 Sep)
  Egypt (4 Sep)
  Puerto Rico (30 Aug)
  Croatia (3 Sep)
  Brazil 35   Egypt (4 Sep)
Steals Spain  Ricky Rubio 7   Serbia (4 Sep)   United States 18   Finland (30 Aug)
Blocks United States  Anthony Davis 5   Dominican Republic (3 Sep)   Spain 13   Senegal (6 Sep)

Final standings

edit
 
Final rankings of teams.

Method of breaking ties:[27]

  • Ranked 17th–24th:
    1. Place in preliminary round group (5th placed teams ranked 17th–20th; 6th placed teams ranked 21st–24th)
    2. Win–loss record in preliminary round group
    3. Goal average in preliminary round group
  • Ranked 5th–16th:
    1. Furthest round eliminated
    2. Win–loss record in preliminary round group
    3. Place in preliminary round group
    4. Goal average in preliminary round group
  • Ranked 1st–4th:
    1. Result of final and third-place playoff
# Team Pld W L PF PA PD Preliminary round FIBA World Ranking
Grp Rank W–L GA Old New +/−
1st place, gold medalist(s)    United States 9 9 0 941 644 +297 C 1 1 0
2nd place, silver medalist(s)    Serbia 9 5 4 743 720 +23 A 11 7 +4
Eliminated at the semifinals
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)    France 9 6 3 690 656 +34 A 8 5 +3
4th   Lithuania 9 6 3 693 654 +39 D 4 4 0
Eliminated at the quarterfinals
5th   Spain 7 6 1 581 435 +146 A 1st 5–0 1.4013 2 2 0
6th   Brazil 7 5 2 557 482 +75 A 2nd 4–1 1.2492 10 9 +1
7th   Slovenia 7 5 2 572 554 +18 D 4–1 1.1364 13 13 0
8th   Turkey 7 4 3 491 509 −18 C 3–2 0.9812 7 8 −1
Eliminated at the round of 16
9th   Greece 6 5 1 486 439 +47 B 1st 5–0 1.1862 5 10 −5
10th   Croatia 6 3 3 478 467 +11 B 2nd 3–2 1.0402 16 12 +4
11th   Argentina 6 3 3 485 456 +29 B 3rd 3–2 1.1321 3 3 0
12th   Australia 6 3 3 468 438 +30 D 3–2 1.0831 9 11 −2
13th   Dominican Republic 6 2 4 408 457 −49 C 2–3 0.8990 26 20 +6
14th   Mexico 6 2 4 433 458 −25 D 4th 2–3 0.9946 24 19 +5
15th   New Zealand 6 2 4 418 452 −34 C 2–3 0.9229 19 21 −2
16th   Senegal 6 2 4 404 488 −84 B 2–3 0.8722 41 30 +11
5th place in preliminary round groups
17th   Angola 5 2 3 375 399 −24 D 5th 2–3 0.9398 15 16 −1
18th   Ukraine 5 2 3 344 369 −25 C 2–3 0.9322 45 40 +5
19th   Puerto Rico 5 1 4 388 446 −58 B 1–4 0.8700 17 15 +2
20th   Iran 5 1 4 344 406 −62 A 1–4 0.8473 20 17 +3
6th place in preliminary round groups
21st   Philippines 5 1 4 383 404 −21 B 6th 1–4 0.9480 34 31 +3
22nd   Finland 5 1 4 342 408 −66 C 1–4 0.8382 39 35 +4
23rd   South Korea 5 0 5 316 424 −108 D 0–5 0.7453 31 27 +4
24th   Egypt 5 0 5 311 486 −175 A 0–5 0.6399 46 41 +5
Qualified for the 2016 Summer Olympics

Awards

edit
 
Kyrie Irving was named MVP
 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup champion 
 
United States
5th title
Most Valuable Player
United States  Kyrie Irving

All-Tournament Team

edit

Special Awards

edit

Controversies

edit

Australia's alleged tanking

edit

At their final group matches between Australia and Angola, Australia rested their key players towards the end of the game, allowing for Angola to win 91–83, after the Boomers led at the half by double digits. Australia fell to third place, thereby allowing them to face the United States at the semifinals instead of the quarterfinals if they finished second. This so-called "tanking" was blasted by Goran Dragić, whose Slovenian team were defeated by Lithuania in the final group match, dropping them to second place, causing them to face the Americans instead in the quarterfinals if they reach that far. Dragic implored on FIBA "to do something about" it.[29]

Right after Australia's elimination by Turkey in the first round, FIBA announced that the Boomers were under investigation for tanking. Australia coach Andrej Lemanis rejected the accusation that they tanked, saying he rested his players for the next stage due to the heavy tournament schedule, adding that: "We always, as Australians, compete the right way".[30]

On 26 November 2014, Australia was cleared of tanking by FIBA.[31][32][33][34]

Marketing

edit

Road show and trophy tour

edit

A tour of the Naismith Trophy was held to promote the event. The trophy was on display at the 2014 NBA All-Star Game in New Orleans in February 2014, then the tour visited several countries in Latin America, Europe and the Philippines from April to mid-July.[35] It also visited South Africa during the finals of the South African Premier Basketball League in August.[36]

Prior to this, FIBA and the Spanish Basketball Federation held a road show that ran from 2012 to 2014 visiting key Spanish cities, with some of the final stops being the host cities, and at Ljubljana, Slovenia during FIBA EuroBasket 2013.[37]

Ball

edit

On 30 January, FIBA revealed the official ball that would be used in the World Cup. Designed by Molten, it "will be the first time ever a custom designed basketball has been developed exclusively for an individual event".[38]

Mascots

edit
 
Olé and Hop (official mascots)

On 31 January, FIBA revealed the mascots of the World Cup: Olé and Hop. Olé and Hop's name came from the word "alley-oop"; they are directly inspired from the 2014 World Cup logo, and will have a tour of host cities leading up to the championship.[39]

Theme song

edit

"Sube la Copa" by Huecco was named the official theme song of the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup. The song, starting from 27 August, can be downloaded on iTunes, Spotify and Deezer, with all of the proceeds going to the FEB's Casa Espana, Huecco's Fundacion Dame Vida, and FIBA's International Basketball Foundation.[40]

Referees

edit

The following referees were selected for the tournament.[41]

  • Angola  Carlos Julio
  • Argentina  Alejandro Chiti
  • Australia  Michael Aylen
  • Australia  Vaughan Mayberry
  • Brazil  Marcos Benito
  • Brazil  Cristiano Maranho
  • Cameroon  Arnaud Kom Njilo
  • Canada  Stephen Seibel
  • Canada  Michael Weiland
  • Croatia  Sreten Radović
  • Dominican Republic  Reynaldo Mercedes
  • France  Joseph Bissang
  • France  Eddie Viator
  • Germany  Robert Lottermoser
  • Greece  Christos Christodoulou
  • Greece  Elias Koromilas
  • Italy  Guerrino Cerebuch
  • Italy  Luigi Lamonica
  • Japan  Yuji Hirahara
  • Kazakhstan  Yevgeniy Mikheyev
  • Kuwait  Mohammad Al-Amiri
  • Latvia  Oļegs Latiševs
  • Mexico  José Reyes
  • Nigeria  Kingsley Ojeaburu
  • Philippines  Ferdinand Pascual
  • Portugal  Fernando Rocha
  • Puerto Rico  Jorge Vázquez
  • Puerto Rico  Luis Vázquez
  • Serbia  Ilija Belošević
  • Serbia  Milivoje Jovčić
  • Slovenia  Matej Boltauzer
  • Spain  Juan Arteaga
  • Spain  Juan González
  • Spain  Benjamin Jiménez
  • Spain  Miguel Pérez
  • Turkey  Rüştü Nuran
  • Ukraine  Borys Ryzhyk
  • United States  Steven Anderson
  • United States  Anthony Jordan
  • Uruguay  Alejandro Sánchez

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "PR N°1 – FIBA Basketball World Cup officially launched in Madrid". FIBA. 26 January 2012. Archived from the original on 28 January 2012. Retrieved 26 January 2012.
  2. ^ "Hoops World Cup will be played on years opposite soccer". USA Today. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  3. ^ "PR N°2 – Bidding process for the 2014 FIBA World Championship opened". FIBA.com. 10 January 2008. Archived from the original on 30 April 2008. Retrieved 27 May 2008.
  4. ^ "PR N°3 – Spain, 1st bidding candidate to host the 2014 FIBA World Champ". FIBA.com. 22 January 2008. Archived from the original on 14 September 2008. Retrieved 27 May 2008.
  5. ^ "PR N°10 – France, 2nd candidate interested in hosting the 2014 FIBA World Champ". FIBA.com. 8 February 2008. Archived from the original on 19 June 2009. Retrieved 27 May 2008.
  6. ^ "PR N°11 – Denmark, 3rd candidate interested in hosting the 2014 FIBA World Champ". FIBA.com. 18 February 2008. Archived from the original on 19 June 2009. Retrieved 27 May 2008.
  7. ^ "PR N°15 – Russia, 4th candidate interested in hosting the 2014 FIBA World Champ". FIBA.com. 4 March 2008. Archived from the original on 19 June 2009. Retrieved 27 May 2008.
  8. ^ "PR N°21 – Saudi Arabia, 5th candidate interested in hosting the 2014 FIBA World Champ". FIBA.com. 21 April 2008. Archived from the original on 19 June 2009. Retrieved 27 May 2008.
  9. ^ "PR N°22 – Qatar, 6th candidate interested in hosting the 2014 FIBA World Champ". FIBA.com. 22 April 2008. Archived from the original on 30 July 2012. Retrieved 27 May 2008.
  10. ^ "PR N°24 – Italy, 7th candidate interested in hosting the 2014 FIBA World Champ". FIBA.com. 25 April 2008. Archived from the original on 19 June 2009. Retrieved 27 May 2008.
  11. ^ "PR N°28 – Greece, 8th candidate interested in hosting the 2014 FIBA World Champ". FIBA.com. 29 April 2008. Archived from the original on 1 June 2008. Retrieved 27 May 2008.
  12. ^ "PR N°30 – China, 9th candidate interested in hosting the 2014 FIBA World Champ". FIBA.com. 30 April 2008. Archived from the original on 4 June 2008. Retrieved 27 May 2008.
  13. ^ "ESP – Spain selected to host 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup". FIBA.com. 22 May 2008. Archived from the original on 27 May 2009. Retrieved 26 May 2009.
  14. ^ a b Barcelona and FIBA 2014 FIBA.com
  15. ^ Connor Sport Court International to provide courts for 2014 FIBA World Cup, archived from the original on 18 September 2013
  16. ^ 2014 FIBA BASKETBALL WORLD CUP MEDIA GUIDE – GUÍA DE MEDIOS, archived from the original on 27 February 2019
  17. ^ "Internal Regulations 2010 – Book 2" (PDF). FIBA. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 April 2014. Retrieved 8 August 2012.
  18. ^ "PR N°22 – Qualification for Spain 2014 ends, attribution of four wild cards to come". FIBA. 26 September 2013. Archived from the original on 29 September 2013. Retrieved 28 September 2013.
  19. ^ "PR N°25 – Addition of two NFs, new competition system for youth events headline Central Board". FIBA. 25 November 2013. Archived from the original on 28 November 2013. Retrieved 3 January 2014.
  20. ^ a b "PR N°4 – Brazil, Finland, Greece and Turkey awarded wild cards for Spain 2014". FIBA.com. 1 February 2014. Archived from the original on 2 February 2014. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
  21. ^ "PR N°25 – Addition of two NFs, new competition system for youth events headline Central Board". FIBA.com. 25 November 2013. Archived from the original on 29 January 2014. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  22. ^ Matthew, Tamba-Jean (5 December 2013). "Senegal dissolves basketball association after cheating scandal". Africa Review. Archived from the original on 19 February 2014. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  23. ^ "Official draw headlines exciting week on Road to Spain 2014". FIBA.com. 28 January 2014. Archived from the original on 31 January 2014. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
  24. ^ "FIBA Draw Video" (video). FIBA. 3 February 2014. Retrieved 20 May 2023 – via YouTube.
  25. ^ "2014 World Cup Groups Revealed". FIBA Europe. 4 February 2014. Retrieved 29 March 2014.
  26. ^ Stein, Marc (4 February 2014). "Team USA's 2014 off to great start". ESPN. Retrieved 29 March 2014.
  27. ^ "2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup Media Guide". FIBA. p. 16. Archived from the original on 27 February 2019. Retrieved 5 September 2014.
  28. ^ FIBA (14 September 2014), MVF Best Country Award: Philippines – 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup, retrieved 20 July 2017
  29. ^ Golliver, Ben (4 September 2014). "Australia accused of 'fixing' in ugly loss to Angola at FIBA World Cup". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 17 September 2014.
  30. ^ "Australia's Boomers under investigation for 'tanking'". The Guardian. London. 9 September 2014. Retrieved 17 September 2014.
  31. ^ "Boomers cleared of tanking by FIBA". Australia: ABC News. 27 November 2014. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  32. ^ "Australia cleared of tanking Angola match – Yahoo!7 Sport". Archived from the original on 6 December 2014. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
  33. ^ "Basketball | Australia cleared of tanking at FIBA Basketball World Cup | SPORTAL". Archived from the original on 4 December 2014. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
  34. ^ "FIBA clears Aussies of tanking at World Cup". ESPN. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  35. ^ "Trophy Tour hits the road to promote 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup". FIBA.com. 9 April 2014. Archived from the original on 13 April 2014. Retrieved 13 April 2014.
  36. ^ "FIBA – Naismith Trophy on first-ever visit of African continent". FIBA.com. 7 August 2014. Archived from the original on 7 September 2020. Retrieved 10 August 2014.
  37. ^ "Road Show 2014". FIBA.com. Archived from the original on 7 July 2013. Retrieved 13 April 2014.
  38. ^ "PR N°2 – Official Ball of 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup unveiled". FIBA.com. 30 January 2014. Archived from the original on 2 February 2014. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
  39. ^ "PR N°2 – Olé and Hop – two hands as Official Mascots of Spain 2014, presented by Beko". FIBA.com. 31 January 2014. Archived from the original on 2 February 2014. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
  40. ^ "PR N°39 – 'Sube la Copa', official song of the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup, released". FIBA.com. 12 August 2014. Archived from the original on 17 June 2019. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  41. ^ Referees
edit