2018 FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup

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2018 FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup
Copa Mundial de Baloncesto Femenino FIBA 2018
File:2018 FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup.png
Tournament details
Host country Spain
Dates 22–30 September
Teams 16
Venue(s) 2 (in 1 host city)
Final positions
Champions  United States (10th title)
Runners-up  Australia
Third place  Spain
Fourth place  Belgium
Tournament statistics
MVP United States Breanna Stewart
Top scorer Australia Liz Cambage
(23.8 points per game)
2014
2022

The 2018 FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup, the 18th edition of FIBA's premier international tournament for women's national basketball teams, was held in Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain from 22 to 30 September 2018.[1] This was the first edition to use the name of FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup. After the last edition in 2014, FIBA changed the name of the competition from the FIBA World Championship for Women, in order to align its name with that of the corresponding men's competition.

The United States were the two-time defending champions.[2] This tournament saw the World Cup debut of Belgium, Latvia and Puerto Rico.

The US Team won the final against Australia, to win their third straight and tenth overall title.[3]

Venues

San Cristóbal de La Laguna Santa Cruz de Tenerife
Tenerife Sports Pavilion Santiago Martín Palacio Municipal de Deportes
Group Phase, Qualification for Quarter-Finals, Final Phase Group Phase, Qualification for Quarter-Finals
Capacity: 5,100 Capacity: 3,600

Hosts selection

The whole bidding process started in October 2014. Bids from two nations were submitted. On 31 October 2014, it was confirmed that Spain and Israel were the bidders.[4] On 16 December 2014, it was announced that Spain won the bid and would host the upcoming World Cup.[5]

2018 FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup bidding results
Nation Votes
Spain Spain 18
Israel Israel 5

Qualification

Spain as the hosts automatically qualified for the tournament in December 2014. The United States were the next to qualify after winning Gold at the 2016 Summer Olympics.

The remaining teams were decided over June, July & August 2017 through the Women’s Continental Cups. The continental qualifiers vary in the number of teams; the European qualifiers featured 16 teams, Africa featured 12 teams, Americas featured 10 teams and Asia featured 8 teams. From the 46 teams competing for the final 14 spots, the field was completed by the top five teams from 2017 EuroBasket Women, the top three teams from the 2017 FIBA Women's AmeriCup, the two finalists from the 2017 Women's Afrobasket; as well as the top four teams from the 2017 FIBA Asia Women's Cup, which saw teams from Asia and Oceania compete together for the first time ever.[6]

Team Qualification Appearance Best Performance FIBA World Ranking FIBA Zone Ranking
Method Date Last Total Streak
 Spain Host nation 16 December 2014 2014 7 7 Runners-up (2014) 2 1
 United States 2016 Summer Olympics 20 August 2016 2014 17 15 Champions (1953, 1957, 1979, 1986, 1990, 1998, 2002, 2010, 2014) 1 1
 Belgium EuroBasket Women 22 June 2017 1 1 Debut 28 14
 France EuroBasket Women 22 June 2017 2014 10 5 3rd Place (1953) 3 2
 Greece EuroBasket Women 22 June 2017 2010 2 1 11th Place (2010) 20 9
 Latvia EuroBasket Women 24 June 2017 1 1 Debut 26 12
 Turkey EuroBasket Women 24 June 2017 2014 2 2 4th Place (2014) 7 4
 South Korea Women's Asia Cup 27 July 2017 2014 15 15 Runners-up (1967, 1979) 16 4
 Australia Women's Asia Cup 27 July 2017 2014 15 14 Champions (2006) 4 1
 China Women's Asia Cup 27 July 2017 2014 10 10 Runners-up (1994) 10 1
 Japan Women's Asia Cup 27 July 2017 2014 13 3 Runners-up (1975) 13 2
 Canada Women's AmeriCup 12 August 2017 2014 11 4 3rd Place (1979, 1986) 5 2
 Argentina Women's AmeriCup 12 August 2017 2010 9 1 6th Place (1953) 15 5
 Puerto Rico Women's AmeriCup 13 August 2017 1 1 Debut 22 6
 Nigeria Women's Afrobasket 26 August 2017 2006 2 1 16th Place (2006) 34 5
 Senegal Women's Afrobasket 26 August 2017 2010 8 1 12th Place (1979) 17 1

Format

The tournament was played in two phases.[7] In the first phase, the 16 qualified teams were sorted into four groups of four (A-D), each team in a group played each other once, 24 games were played in the first phase. The top team from each group directly advanced to the quarterfinals. The teams that placed fourth in the group stage were eliminated. The teams placed second and third from each group advanced to the quarterfinal qualifications, where the winners of the qualification round then progressed to the quarterfinals, losers were eliminated.

In the second phase, a knockout stage was used to determine the champion. In the quarterfinals the four winners progressed to the semifinals, the four losers played in classification games for 5–8th. In total, 40 games were played over a total of 8 days.

Squads

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Draw

The official draw ceremony took place on 6 February 2018, at San Cristóbal de la Laguna, Island of Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain.[8][9]

Seedings

Included are the respective FIBA World Rankings for women:

Pot 1 Pot 2 Pot 3 Pot 4

 United States (1)
 Australia (4)
 Spain (2)
 France (3)

 Belgium (28)
 Greece (20)
 Turkey (7)
 Latvia (26)

 Canada (5)
 Argentina (15)
 Japan (13)
 China (10)

 Puerto Rico (22)
 South Korea (16)
 Nigeria (34)
 Senegal (17)

Preliminary round

Group A

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2018 FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup Group A

22 September 2018
South Korea  58–89  France
Greece  50–81  Canada
23 September 2018
Canada  82–63  South Korea
France  75–71  Greece
25 September 2018
South Korea  48–58  Greece
Canada  71–60  France

Group B

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2018 FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup Group B

22 September 2018
Australia  86–68  Nigeria
Turkey  63–37  Argentina
23 September 2018
Argentina  43–84  Australia
Nigeria  74–68  Turkey
25 September 2018
Australia  90–64  Turkey
Argentina  70–75  Nigeria

Group C

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2018 FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup Group C

22 September 2018
Japan  71–84  Spain
Puerto Rico  36–86  Belgium
23 September 2018
Belgium  75–77 (OT)  Japan
Spain  78–53  Puerto Rico
25 September 2018
Japan  69–61  Puerto Rico
Belgium  72–63  Spain

Group D

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2018 FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup Group D

22 September 2018
Latvia  61–64  China
United States  87–67  Senegal
23 September 2018
Senegal  70–69  Latvia
China  88–100  United States
25 September 2018
Senegal  66–75  China
Latvia  76–102  United States

Final round

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2018 FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup final round

Final

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30 September 2018
20:00
Australia  56–73  United States
Scoring by quarter: 15–20, 12–15, 11–26, 18–12
Pts: Smith 10
Rebs: Cambage 14
Asts: O'Hea 4
Pts: Griner 15
Rebs: Stewart 8
Asts: Bird 5
Tenerife Sports Pavilion Santiago Martin, San Cristóbal de La Laguna
Attendance: 3,715
Referees: Antonio Conde (ESP), Yu Jung (TPE), Yohan Rosso (FRA)

Final rankings

# Team Pld W L PF PA PD Preliminary round FIBA World Ranking
Grp Rank W–L GA Old New +/−
1st  United States 6 6 0 526 404 +122 D N/A 1 1 Steady
2nd  Australia 6 5 1 471 356 +115 B 4 3 Increase 1
3rd  Spain 7 5 2 489 429 +60 C 2 2 Steady
4th  Belgium 6 3 3 456 401 +55 C 28 16 Increase 12
Eliminated at the quarterfinals
5th  France 7 5 2 532 476 +56 A N/A 3 4 Decrease 1
6th  China 7 4 3 499 543 −44 D 10 7 Increase 3
7th  Canada 6 4 2 431 389 +42 A 5 5 Steady
8th  Nigeria 7 3 4 448 508 −60 B 34 19 Increase 15
Eliminated at the qualification round
9th  Japan 4 2 2 298 307 −9 C 3rd 2–1 0.723 13 10 Increase 3
10th  Turkey 4 1 3 256 279 −23 B 1–2 0.650 7 6 Increase 1
11th  Greece 4 1 3 235 261 −26 A 1–2 0.597 20 23 Decrease 3
12th  Senegal 4 1 3 251 294 −43 D 1–2 0.677 17 17 Steady
Eliminated at the preliminary round
13th  Latvia 3 0 3 206 236 −30 D 4th 0–3 0.687 26 24 Increase 2
14th  South Korea 3 0 3 169 229 −60 A 0–3 0.563 16 18 Decrease 2
15th  Argentina 3 0 3 150 222 −72 B 0–3 0.500 15 15 Steady
16th  Puerto Rico 3 0 3 150 233 −83 C 0–3 0.500 22 22 Steady
Qualified for the 2020 Summer Olympics

Awards and statistics

Awards

The All-Star Five was revealed on 30 September 2018.[10]

Statistics

Player tournament averages

Team tournament averages

Tournament game highs

Statistic Player[13] Total Opponent Team[14] Total Opponent
Points Australia Liz Cambage 34  Nigeria (22 Sep)  United States 102  Latvia (25 Sep)
Rebounds Belgium Emma Meesseman 18  Japan (23 Sep)  United States 62  Nigeria (28 Sep)
Assists Belgium Julie Allemand 13  France (28 Sep)  France 30  Nigeria (29 Sep)
Steals Puerto Rico Pamela Rosado
Nigeria Ezinne Kalu
5  Spain (23 Sep)
 United States (28 Sep)
 Nigeria 13  Greece (26 Sep)
 France (29 Sep)
Blocks Australia Liz Cambage 5  United States (30 Sep)  Australia 8  Nigeria (22 Sep)
 United States (30 Sep)

Marketing

The logo and branding identity was unveiled on 5 February 2018 at the La Laguna Gran Hotel in San Cristóbal de La Laguna, the logo is inspired by the treasures of the island of Tenerife, its coastlines and its heart of Spain.

The Mascot Tina the Turtle were also unveiled at the ceremony in the town hall of Santa Cruz de Tenerife on 7 August 2018, 6 Weeks before the Tournament kick off the mascot name is a short form of Tinerfina which means Coming from or Living from Tenerife,[15] Both Logo and the Mascot were designed by a Tenerife Artist Raul Pena[16]

References

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  11. Individual statistics
  12. Team statistics
  13. Pl,yer game highs
  14. Team game highs
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External links