Jump to content

EuroBasket 1937

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by FakirNL (talk | contribs) at 19:20, 20 September 2015 (new key for Category:FIBA EuroBasket: "1937" using HotCat). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

FIBA EuroBasket 1937
2nd FIBA European Basketball Championship
Tournament details
Host countryLatvia
Dates2–7 May
Teams8
Venue(s)1 (in 1 host city)
Final positions
Champions Lithuania (1st title)
Tournament statistics
Top scorerLatvia Rūdolfs Jurciņš (12.5)
Official website
EuroBasket 1937 (archive)
1935
1939

The 1937 FIBA European Championship, commonly called FIBA EuroBasket 1937, was the second FIBA EuroBasket regional basketball championship, held by FIBA Europe. Eight national teams affiliated with the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) took part in the competition. Defending champions Latvia hosted the tournament, held in Riga.

Results

Game between Lithuania and Estonia

First round

The preliminary round consisted of the eight teams being separated into two groups of four. Each group played a round-robin format tournament, with the top two teams in each group advancing to the semifinals and the bottom two playing in the lower classification matches. Wins counted for 2 points, losses for 1 point.

Group A

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1  Lithuania 3 3 0 63 42 +21 6 Semifinal
2  Italy 3 2 1 52 42 +10 5
3  Estonia 3 1 2 79 65 +14 4 Classification 5–8
4  Egypt 3 0 3 22 67 −45 3
Lithuania  22–20  Italy

Estonia  44–15  Egypt

Lithuania  20–15  Estonia

Egypt  0–2  Italy

Lithuania  21–7  Egypt

Italy  30–20  Estonia

Egypt won against Italy 31:28 but because of the mistake, FIBA ruled to replay the game. Egypt objected the ruling of FIBA and decided to withdrew from replaying of the match.

Group B

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1  Poland 3 2 1 84 73 +11 5 Semifinal
2  France 3 2 1 75 69 +6 5
3  Latvia 3 2 1 95 63 +32 5 Classification 5–8
4  Czechoslovakia 3 0 3 49 98 −49 3
France  29–24  Poland

Latvia  44–11  Czechoslovakia

Poland  32–25  Latvia

France  26–19  Czechoslovakia

Poland  28–19  Czechoslovakia

Latvia  26–20  France

Latvia are classified third, because of scores differences between France-Poland-Latvia (Latvia has −1, Poland +2 and France −1), and the next factor – average points scored (Latvia has 26, France 29).

Classification 5–8

The bottom four teams from the preliminary group faced off in the classification matches.

Classification semifinals

Estonia  30–20  Czechoslovakia

Latvia  2–0  Egypt

7th/8th playoff

Czechoslovakia  2–0  Egypt

5th/6th playoff

Estonia  41–19  Latvia

Semifinals

The semifinals pitted the four top teams of the preliminary round against each other. Winners advanced to the final, with the losers playing in a match for 3rd and 4th place.

Lithuania  31–25  Poland

Italy  36–32  France

Bronze medal match

France  27–24  Poland

Final

Lithuania  24–23  Italy


 1937 FIBA European Champions 

Lithuania
1st title

Final rankings

Lithuania national team, winners of the competition, holding the Latvian presidential prize.
Rank Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts
1.  Lithuania 5 5 0 118 90 +28 10
2.  Italy 5 3 2 111 98 +13 8
3.  France 5 3 2 134 129 +5 8
4.  Poland 5 2 3 133 131 +2 7
5.  Estonia 5 3 2 150 104 +46 8
6.  Latvia 5 3 2 116 104 +12 8
7.  Czechoslovakia 5 1 4 71 128 −57 6
8.  Egypt 5 0 5 22 71 −49 5

Team rosters

1. Lithuania: Feliksas Kriaučiūnas, Pranas Talzūnas, Stasys Šackus, Juozas Žukas, Leonas Baltrūnas, Zenonas Puzinauskas, Artūras Andrulis, Leopoldas Kepalas, Pranas Mažeika, Česlovas Daukša, Leonas Petrauskas, Eugenijus Nikolskis (Coach: Feliksas Kriaučiūnas)

2. Italy: Livio Franceschini, Ambrogio Bessi, Galeazzo Dondi, Emilio Giassetti, Giancarlo Marinelli, Camillo Marinone, Sergio Paganella, Mino Pasquini, Michele Pelliccia, Ezio Varisco

3. France: Pierre Boel, Robert Cohu, Jacques Flouret, Henri Hell, Edmond Leclere, Henri Lesmayoux, Fernand Prudhomme, Etienne Roland, Eugene Ronner, Marcel Vérot (Coach: Henri Kretzschmar)

4. Poland: Pawel Stok, Michal Czajczyk, Stefan Gendera, Florian Grzechowiak, Zdzislaw Kasprzak, Janusz Patrzykont, Andrzej Plucinski, Zbigniew Resich, Zenon Rozycki, Jaroslaw Smigielski (Coach: Walenty Kłyszejko)

5.Estonia: Heino Veskila, Oskar Erikson, Evald Mahl, Vladimir Kärk, Robert Keres, Aleksander Illi, Alfred Zimmermann, Albert Suurna, Ralf Viksten (Coach: Herbert Niiler)