EuroBasket 1935
FIBA EuroBasket 1935 | |||||||
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1st FIBA European Basketball Championship | |||||||
Tournament details | |||||||
Host nation | Switzerland | ||||||
Dates | 2–7 May | ||||||
Teams | 10 (from 15 federations) | ||||||
Venues | 1 (in 1 host city) | ||||||
Champions | Latvia (1st title) | ||||||
Tournament leaders | |||||||
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Official website | |||||||
EuroBasket 1935 (archive) | |||||||
1937 >
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The 1935 FIBA European Championship, commonly called EuroBasket 1935, was the first FIBA EuroBasket regional basketball championship, held by FIBA Europe, as well as a test event preceding the first Olympic basketball tournament at the 1936 Summer Olympics. Ten national teams affiliated with the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) took part in the competition. The event was hosted by Switzerland and held in Geneva in May, 1935.
The 2012 Latvian film Dream Team 1935 is based on the events of the tournament. It tells the story of the Latvian national basketball team, the winners of the tournament.
Contents
Preliminary round
Before the tournament began, a qualification game was played between Spain and Portugal. The game was held in Madrid, Spain and refereed by Spanish coach Mariano Manent. Spain won, 33–12.
Results
First round
The preliminary round was single-elimination, with losers moving to the classification round. Three of the five winners moved immediately to the semi-finals, while two (Italy and Switzerland) played each other in a sixth preliminary game, with the winner moving on and the loser going to classification.
Bold = game winner; Italic = advanced to final
23x15px Spain | 25 – 17 | Belgium |
Latvia | 46 – 12 | Hungary |
Czechoslovakia | 23 – 21 | France |
Italy | 42 – 23 | Bulgaria |
Switzerland | 42 – 9 | Romania |
Switzerland | 27 – 17 | Italy |
Classification round
The classification round served to place the six teams eliminated in the preliminary round into places 5 through 10.
Bold = game winner
Classification 5–10: winner to classification 5–8, loser to classification 9/10.
Bulgaria | 22 – 19 | Hungary |
France | 66 – 23 | Romania |
Classification 9/10: winner receives 9th place, loser receives 10th place
Hungary | 24 – 17 | Romania |
Classification 5–8: winner to classification 5/6, loser to classification 7/8
France | 29 – 27 | Italy |
Belgium | 29 – 11 | Bulgaria |
Classification 7/8: winner receives 7th place, loser receives 8th place
Italy | 35 – 22 | Bulgaria |
Classification 5/6: winner receives 5th place, loser receives 6th place
France | 49 – 30 | Belgium |
Semifinals
The semifinals pitted the four winners of the preliminary round against each other. Winners advanced to the final, with the losers playing in a match for 3rd and 4th place.
Bold = game winner
Latvia | 28 – 19 | Switzerland |
Spain | 21 – 17 | Czechoslovakia |
Finals
No medals were awarded in the first few EuroBasket tournaments.
Bold = game winner
3rd/4th game:
Czechoslovakia | 25 – 23 | Switzerland |
Championship game:
Latvia | 24 – 18 | Spain | 5 May 1935 |
1935 FIBA European Champions |
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Latvia 1st title |
Final rankings
Rank | Team | Pld | W | L | PF | PA | PD |
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Latvia | 3 | 3 | 0 | 98 | 49 | +49 | |
23x15px Spain | 3 | 2 | 1 | 64 | 58 | +6 | |
Czechoslovakia | 3 | 2 | 1 | 65 | 65 | 0 | |
4 | Switzerland | 4 | 2 | 2 | 111 | 79 | +32 |
5 | France | 4 | 3 | 1 | 165 | 103 | +62 |
6 | Belgium | 3 | 1 | 2 | 76 | 85 | −9 |
7 | Italy | 4 | 2 | 2 | 121 | 101 | +20 |
8 | Bulgaria | 4 | 1 | 3 | 78 | 125 | −47 |
9 | Hungary | 3 | 1 | 2 | 55 | 85 | −30 |
10 | Romania | 3 | 0 | 3 | 49 | 132 | −83 |
Team rosters
- Latvia: Eduards Andersons, Aleksejs Anufrijevs, Mārtiņš Grundmanis, Herberts Gubiņš, Rūdolfs Jurciņš, Jānis Lidmanis, Džems Raudziņš, Visvaldis Melderis (Coach: Valdemārs Baumanis)
- Spain: Rafael Martin, Emilio Alonso, Pedro Alonso, Juan Carbonell, Armando Maunier, Fernando Muscat, Cayetano Ortega, Rafael Ruano (Coach: Mariano Manent)
- Czechoslovakia: Jiří Ctyroky, Jan Fertek, Josef Franc, Josef Klima, Josef Moc, František Picek, Vaclav Voves
- Switzerland: R.Karlen, J.Pollet, R.Lambercy, M.Wuilleumier, J.Pare, Mottier, Radle, Sidler
- Bulgaria: Nikola Rogatchev, Etropolski, Krum Konstantinov, Pinkas,