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Romania men's national basketball team

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Romania Romania
FIBA ranking63 Decrease 2 (1 March 2024)[1]
Joined FIBA1932 (co-founders)
FIBA zoneFIBA Europe
National federationFRB
CoachTudor Costescu
Nickname(s)Tricolorii (The Tricolours)
Olympic Games
Appearances1 (1952)
MedalsNone
FIBA World Cup
AppearancesNone
EuroBasket
Appearances18
MedalsNone

The Romania national basketball team (Romanian: Echipa națională de basketbal a României) represents Romania in men's international basketball competition. They are administered by the Romanian Basketball Federation (FRB).

Romania has qualified for the EuroBasket 18 times. Their best tournament runs occurred in 1957, and 1967 respectively, when they finished fifth. The national team has also appeared at the Summer Olympics once, in 1952. However, Romania has yet to clinch qualification for their first trip to the FIBA World Cup.

History

EuroBasket 1935

At the first European Championship in Geneva, the Romanian national team finished in last place in the then 10 team tournament. Losing all three of their games; 42-9 to Switzerland, 66-23 to France, and 24-17 to Hungary.

EuroBasket 1947

Romania returned to the European championship twelve years later in Prague, for the EuroBasket 1947. They finished with a record of 1-2 after the preliminary round, which eliminated them from championship contention but they got their first ever EuroBasket win against the Netherlands. The Romanians added two more in the classification semifinal, as they defeated Austria and Albania. This put them in a classification match against Italy for 9th and 10th place, which Romania lost 55-39. The national team thus placed tenth again, but this time they had outranked four teams to do so, due to the expansion of the tournament to 14.

EuroBasket 1951

The Romanian national team entered the EuroBasket 1951 in Paris, but withdrew before any games were played, so official records gave them three preliminary round losses, each with a score of 2-0.

1952 Summer Olympics

Romania managed to qualify for the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki, where the national team finished 23rd. It was the first and only time they qualified for the Olympic Basketball Tournament.

EuroBasket 1953

The EuroBasket 1953 in Moscow was the next European tournament in which the Romanians actually played. They finished in 3rd place in their preliminary round group with a 1-2 record and advanced to the classification rounds. They won 3 of their 4 games there, finishing in a three-way tie for the top spot of the group. They lost out on the tiebreaker though and were relegated to the 13th-16th place semifinals. Winning that game and their next, the Romanians finished in 13th place of the 17 teams in the tournament.

EuroBasket 1955

Romania was much more successful two years later, at the EuroBasket 1955 in Budapest. A preliminary round loss to the global power house Soviet Union mattered little, as the national team won their other three preliminary matches against Sweden, Switzerland and Luxembourg to take second place in the group behind the Soviets to advance to the final round. There, they won games against Poland and Yugoslavia to finish 2-5 in the final round to take 7th place in the 18-team tournament.

EuroBasket 1957

Romania came within a single point of winning their preliminary pool at EuroBasket 1957 in Sofia, losing to Hungary in the narrow match. They beat their other two opponents Belgium and Finland to finish in second place in the pool to advance into the final round. There, they matched up again with Hungary, but the game wasn't as close as the Hungarians cruised to a 76-61 victory. The national team also lost to the other three pool winners, to finish with a 3-4 record to end the tournament in 5th place.

Later years

The team repeated its most successful campaign at the EuroBasket 1967 when it finished 5th again. The following years, the team had some successful performances but after 1987, it ceded completely from Europe's elite events. After 30 years of absence, Romania returned to the EuroBasket in 2017 when the country gained hosting rights alongside Finland, Israel and Turkey. However, the national team ended its participation with five losses in its five games played.[2]

Competitive record

Results and fixtures

EuroBasket 2021 Pre-Qualifiers

Second round

Group B

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1  Macedonia 4 3 1 297 282 +15 7[a] Qualification to EuroBasket qualifiers
2  Romania 4 3 1 308 301 +7 7[a] Transfer to third round
3  Kosovo 4 0 4 299 321 −22 4
Source: FIBA
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Macedonia 143–141 Romania
16 September 2018 Macedonia  90–76  Romania Skopje
18:15 Scoring by quarter: 20–19, 23–16, 24–17, 23–24
Pts: V. Stojanovski, Trajkovski 21
Rebs: V. Stojanovski 13
Asts: three players 5
Boxscore Pts: Watson 17
Rebs: Cățe 8
Asts: three players 4
Arena: Boris Trajkovski Sports Center
Referees: Sergiy Zashchuk (UKR), Marek Maliszewski (POL), Zdenko Tomašovič (SVK)
29 November 2018 Romania  88–83  Kosovo Oradea
19:00 Scoring by quarter: 14–17, 21–18, 24–18, 29–30
Pts: Watson 19
Rebs: Olah 9
Asts: Torok, Watson 4
Boxscore Pts: Shoshi 29
Rebs: Shoshi 18
Asts: Berisha, Mekaj 4
Arena: Arena Antonio Alexe
Attendance: 1,850
Referees: Ventsislav Velikov (BUL), Sergii Tyslenko (UKR), Serkan Emlek (TUR)
21 February 2019 Romania  65–53  Macedonia Ploiești
18:00 Scoring by quarter: 15–16, 19–13, 12–10, 19–14
Pts: Cățe, Torok 12
Rebs: Cățe 13
Asts: Watson 8
Boxscore Pts: D. Stojanovski 13
Rebs: Hendrix 9
Asts: V. Stojanovski 3
Arena: Olimpia Sports Hall
Attendance: 2,567
Referees: Sergey Mikhaylov (RUS), Gellért Kapitány (HUN), Ilias Kounellis (CYP)
24 February 2019 Kosovo  75–79  Romania Pristina
20:30 Scoring by quarter: 21–14, 17–25, 23–17, 14–23
Boxscore Arena: Palace of Youth and Sports

Third round

Group F

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1  Romania 4 4 0 336 275 +61 8 Qualification to EuroBasket qualifiers
2  Slovakia 4 2 2 293 301 −8 6
3  Cyprus 4 0 4 272 324 −52 4
Source: FIBA
7 August 2019 Cyprus  70–85  Romania Nicosia
18:00 Scoring by quarter: 11–27, 29–17, 13–25, 17–16
Pts: Markou, Razis 17
Rebs: Loizides 5
Asts: Michail 8
Boxscore Pts: Cățe 19
Rebs: Cățe 10
Asts: Tohatan 3
Arena: Eleftheria Indoor Hall
Attendance: 400
Referees: Saverio Lanzarini (ITA), Martin Horozov (BUL), Andris Aunkrogers (LAT)
10 August 2019 Romania  85–68  Slovakia Ploiești
18:00 Scoring by quarter: 26–9, 24–23, 14–22, 21–14
Pts: Watson 19
Rebs: Cățe 15
Asts: Watson 6
Boxscore Pts: Brodziansky 17
Rebs: Brodziansky 9
Asts: Ihring 4
Arena: Olimpia Sports Hall
Attendance: 1,001
Referees: Aleksandar Glišić (SRB), Saša Maričić (SRB), Luis Castillo (ESP)
17 August 2019 Romania  89–63  Cyprus Ploiești
18:00 Scoring by quarter: 27–18, 21–12, 21–19, 20–14
Pts: Popa 22
Rebs: Cățe 15
Asts: Watson 6
Boxscore Pts: Michail 19
Rebs: Koumis 9
Asts: Razis 7
Arena: Olimpia Sports Hall
Attendance: 1,000
Referees: Sergiy Zashchuk (UKR), Erez Gurion (ISR), Stanislav Valeev (RUS)
21 August 2019 Slovakia  74–77  Romania Bratislava
18:00 Scoring by quarter: 23–19, 9–28, 20–13, 22–17
Pts: Jones 25
Rebs: Fusek 9
Asts: three players 3
Boxscore Pts: Popa 14
Rebs: Cățe 9
Asts: Watson 7
Arena: Eurovia Aréna
Attendance: 1,817
Referees: Tanel Suslov (EST), Andrei Sharapa (BLR), Sergei Beliakov (RUS)

EuroBasket 2021 Qualifiers

Group A

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1  Israel 2 2 0 162 134 +28 4 EuroBasket 2021
2  Poland 2 1 1 151 144 +7 3[a]
3  Spain 2 1 1 153 151 +2 3[a]
4  Romania 2 0 2 134 171 −37 2
Updated to match(es) played on 24 February 2020. Source: FIBA
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Head-to-head; 3) Points difference; 4) Points scored.
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Spain 69–80 Poland
20 February 2020 Romania  71–84  Spain Cluj-Napoca
17:00 Scoring by quarter: 18–21, 16–23, 19–20, 18–20
Pts: Cățe 19
Rebs: Cățe 13
Asts: Richard 4
Boxscore Pts: Díez 21
Rebs: Saiz 10
Asts: Alocén 9
Arena: BT Arena
Referees: Oskars Lucis (LAT), Apostolos Kalpakas (SWE), Alexey Davydov (RUS)
24 February 2020 Israel  87–63  Romania Tel Aviv
18:00 Scoring by quarter: 16–12, 27–26, 22–18, 22–7
Pts: Avdija 21
Rebs: Avdija 8
Asts: Blatt 7
Boxscore Pts: Dragoste 11
Rebs: Cățe 10
Asts: Watson 5
Arena: Shlomo Group Arena
Referees: Tolga Sahin (ITA), Kerem Baki (TUR), Vladimir Jevtović (SRB)
27 November 2020 Romania  vs.  Poland
Boxscore
30 November 2020 Spain  vs.  Romania
Boxscore
18 February 2021 Romania  vs.  Israel
Boxscore
21 February 2021 Poland  vs.  Romania
Boxscore

Team

Current roster

Roster for the EuroBasket 2021 Qualifiers matches played on 20 and 23 February 2020 against Spain and Israel.[3]

Romania national basketball team roster
Players Coaches
Pos. No. Name Age – Date of birth Height Club Ctr.
SG 0 Kris Richard 30 – (1989-03-01)1 March 1989 1.93 m (6 ft 4 in) Oradea Romania
PG 1 Lucas Tohatan 20 – (1999-03-15)15 March 1999 1.87 m (6 ft 2 in) Sibiu Romania
PG 2 Giordan Watson 34 – (1985-10-24)24 October 1985 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in) Oradea Romania
SF 3 Dragos Diculescu 20 – (1999-08-25)25 August 1999 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) Craiova Romania
PG 5 Mirel Dragoste 25 – (1995-01-24)24 January 1995 1.84 m (6 ft 0 in) Timișoara Romania
SF 6 Julian Orbeanu 30 – (1989-12-19)19 December 1989 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) Voluntari Romania
PG 7 Tudor Gheorghe 22 – (1997-05-19)19 May 1997 1.84 m (6 ft 0 in) Pitești Romania
SF 8 Radu Paliciuc 31 – (1988-09-13)13 September 1988 1.98 m (6 ft 6 in) Sibiu Romania
PG 11 Radu Virna 22 – (1997-09-08)8 September 1997 1.90 m (6 ft 3 in) Steaua București Romania
F/C 12 Bogdan Popa 22 – (1997-06-04)4 June 1997 2.13 m (7 ft 0 in) Timișoara Romania
C 13 Alexandru Olah 26 – (1993-10-15)15 October 1993 2.13 m (7 ft 0 in) Breogán Spain
C 15 Emanuel Cățe 22 – (1997-07-30)30 July 1997 2.06 m (6 ft 9 in) Murcia Spain
C 21 Bogdan Tibirna 28 – (1991-06-07)7 June 1991 2.10 m (6 ft 11 in) Craiova Romania
C 44 Rares Uta 22 – (1997-12-24)24 December 1997 2.10 m (6 ft 11 in) Cluj-Napoca Romania
SF 77 Mihai Maciuca 19 – (2000-05-25)25 May 2000 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) Pitești Romania
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)
Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • Club – describes last
    club before the competition
  • Age – describes age
    on 20 February 2020

Depth chart

Pos. Starting 5 Bench 1 Bench 2 Bench 3
C Emanuel Cățe Alexandru Olah Bogdan Tibirna Rares Uta
PF Bogdan Popa
SF Dragos Diculescu Mihai Maciuca Radu Paliciuc Julian Orbeanu
SG Kris Richard
PG Lucas Tohatan Tudor Gheorghe Mirel Dragoste Radu Virna

Head coach position

Notable players

Past rosters

1935 EuroBasket: finished 10th among 10 teams

3 Nae Alexandrescu, 4 Balteanu, 5 O.Belitoreanu, 6 M.Bercus, 7 E.Dumitrescu, 8 Nicu Grozavescu, 9 Samy Grunstein, 10 C.Riegler (Coach: C. O. Lecca)


1947 EuroBasket: finished 10th among 14 teams

3 Constantin Herold, 4 N.Badulescu, 5 H.Dlugos, 6 S.Ferencz, 7 H.Kevorkian, 8 P.Marossi, 9 Alexandru Popescu, 10 S.Sadeanu, 11 Gh.Teodorescu, 12 I.Vulescu, 13 Vasile Popescu, 14 A.Neagu, 21 C.Babaliescu (Coach: C.Virgolici)


1952 Olympic Games: finished 23rd among 23 teams

3 Cornel Călugăreanu, 5 Grigore Costescu, 6 Emanoil Răducanu, 7 Andrei Folbert, 8 Ladislau Mokos, 9 Liviu Naghy, 10 Mihai Nedef, 11 Cezar Niculescu, 12 Dan Niculescu, 13 Adrian Petroșanu, 15 Vasile Popescu, 16 Gheorghe Constantinide (Coach: Alexandru Popescu)


1953 EuroBasket: finished 13th among 17 teams

3 Mihai Nedef, 4 Cezar Niculescu, 5 Trajan Lita, 6 Andrei Folbert, 7 Emanoil Răducanu, 8 Dan Niculescu, 9 Adrian Petroșanu, 10 Alexandru Fodor, 11 Corneliu Calugareanu, 12 Mihai Erdogh, 13 Liviu Naghy, 14 Vasile Kadar (Coach: Alexandru Popescu)


1955 EuroBasket: finished 7th among 18 teams

3 E.Ganea, 4 R.Popovici, 5 Mihai Nedef, 6 Andrei Folbert, 7 Emanoil Răducanu, 8 Dan Niculescu, 9 Emil Niculescu, 10 Alexandru Fodor, 11 Mihai Erdogh, 12 Marian Spiridon, 13 Liviu Naghy, 14 Vasile Kadar, 15 Corneliu Calugareanu (Coach: Vasile Popescu)


1957 EuroBasket: finished 5th among 16 teams

3 Grigore Costescu, 4 A.Borbely, 5 Mihai Nedef, 6 Andrei Folbert, 7 Emanoil Răducanu, 8 Alexandru Berecky, 9 Emil Niculescu, 10 Alexandru Fodor, 11 Mihai Erdogh, 12 Armand Nováček, 13 Liviu Naghy, 14 A Koukouch (Coach: Alexandru Popescu)


1959 EuroBasket: finished 8th among 17 teams

3 Feodor Nedelea, 4 Armand Nováček, 5 Grigore Costescu, 6 Andrei Folbert, 7 Mihai Nedef, 8 Emeric Vizi, 9 Emil Niculescu, 10 Alexandru Fodor, 11 Dragos Nosievici, 12 Cristian Popescu, 13 Ludovic Toth, 14 Jzidor Milelman (Coach: Constantin Herold)


1961 EuroBasket: finished 7th among 19 teams

4 Aurel Popovici, 5 Emil Niculescu, 6 Horatiu Giurgiu, 7 Mihai Nedef, 8 Nicolae Viciu, 9 Mihai Albu, 10 Pavel Visner, 11 Dragos Nosievici, 12 Cristian Popescu, 13 Armand Nováček, 14 Horia Demian, 15 Gheorghe Valeriu (Coach: Constantin Herold)


1963 EuroBasket: finished 11th among 16 teams

4 Horia Demian, 5 Emil Niculescu, 6 Marian Spiridon, 7 Mihai Nedef, 8 Mihai Kiss, 9 Mihai Albu, 10 Horatiu Giurgiu, 11 Dragos Nosievici, 12 Cristian Popescu, 13 Pavel Visner, 14 Mircea Cimpeanu, 15 Gheorghe Valeriu (Coach: Vasile Popescu)


1965 EuroBasket: finished 13th among 16 teams

4 Horia Demian, 5 Gheorghe Novac, 6 Marian Spiridon, 7 Mihai Nedef, 8 Nicolae Ionescu, 9 Mihai Albu, 10 Alin Savu, 11 Dragos Nosievici, 12 Cristian Popescu, 13 Armand Nováček, 14 Ekehardt Jekely, 15 Aurel Popovici (Coach: Vasile Popescu)


1967 EuroBasket: finished 5th among 16 teams

4 Adolf Cernea, 5 Gheorghe Novac, 6 Dragos Nosievici, 7 Alin Savu, 8 Ekehardt Jekely, 9 Mihai Albu, 10 Gheorghe Barau, 11 Nicolae Birsan, 12 Cristian Popescu, 13 Titus Tarau, 14 Radu Diaconescu, 15 Horia Demian (Coach: Alexandru Popescu)


1969 EuroBasket: finished 9th among 12 teams

4 Francisc Dikay, 5 Matei Ruhring, 6 Dragos Nosievici, 7 Constantin Dragomirescu, 8 Ekehardt Jekely, 9 Mihai Albu, 10 Petru Czmor, 11 Radu Diaconescu, 12 Gheorghe Novac, 13 Titus Tarau, 14 Mihai Dimancea, 15 Adolf Cernea (Coach: Alexandru Popescu)


1971 EuroBasket: finished 8th among 12 teams

4 Dan Georgescu, 5 Mircea Chivulescu, 6 Nicolae Pirsu, 7 Alin Savu, 8 Dan Niculescu, 9 Mihai Albu, 10 Constantin Dragomirescu, 11 Radu Diaconescu, 12 Gheorghe Cimpeanu, 13 Titus Tarau, 14 Gheorghe Oczelak, 15 Vasile Popa (Coach: Alexandru Popescu)


1973 EuroBasket: finished 9th among 12 teams

4 Gheorghe Cimpeanu, 5 Mircea Chivulescu, 6 Nicolae Pirsu, 7 Nicolae Manaila, 8 Dan Niculescu, 9 Dan Georgescu, 10 Costel Cernat, 11 Radu Diaconescu, 12 Gheorghe Novac, 13 Titus Tarau, 14 Gheorghe Oczelak, 15 Vasile Popa (Coach: Alexandru Popescu)


1975 EuroBasket: finished 11th among 12 teams

4 Dan Georgescu, 5 Georghe Mihuta, 6 Vasile Zdrenghea, 7 Dan Moisescu, 8 Nicolae Pirsu, 9 Dan Niculescu, 10 Costel Cernat, 11 Radu Diaconescu, 12 Gheorghe Novac, 13 Titus Tarau, 14 Gheorghe Oczelak, 15 Vasile Popa (Coach: Mihai Nedef)


1985 EuroBasket: finished 10th among 12 teams

4 Florentin Ermurache, 5 Attila Szabó, 6 Viorel Constantin, 7 Ioan Ionescu, 8 Doru Rădulescu, 9 Dan Niculescu, 10 Costel Cernat, 11 Roman Opsitaru, 12 Anton Netolitzchi, 13 Victor Jacob, 14 Marian Marinache, 15 Alexandru Vinereanu (Coach: Gheorghe Novac)


1987 EuroBasket: finished 12th among 12 teams

4 Florentin Ermurache, 5 Sorin Ardeleanu, 6 Robert Reisenbuchler, 7 Ioan Ionescu, 8 Petre Brănișteanu, 9 Dan Niculescu, 10 Costel Cernat, 11 Andrei Constantin, 12 Anton Netolitzchi, 13 Constantin Popa, 14 Gabriel David, 15 Alexandru Vinereanu (Coach: Gheorghe Novac)


2017 EuroBasket: finished 23rd among 24 teams

4 Andrei Mandache, 6 Catalin Petrisor, 8 Radu Paliciuc, 9 Vlad Moldoveanu, 10 Bogdan Nicolescu, 11 Octavian Calota, 13 Alexandru Olah, 14 Titus Nicoara, 15 Emanuel Cățe, 25 Rolland Torok, 26 Catalin Baciu, 32 Nandor Kuti (Coach: Marcel Tenter)

Kit

Manufacturer

2014: Ancada [4]
2015-2017: Peak
2019: Spalding

See also

References

  1. ^ "FIBA Ranking Presented by Nike". FIBA. 1 March 2024. Retrieved 1 March 2024.
  2. ^ "Romania at the EuroBasket 2017". Retrieved 17 September 2017.
  3. ^ "Romania during the EuroBasket 2021 Qualifiers in Feb. 2020". Retrieved 20 February 2020.
  4. ^ Men's Basketball ROMANIA's National Team Competition Set, Ancada.com, Retrieved 22 May 2016.

External links

Videos