2001 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship
2001 EuroBasket Under-16 |
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16th FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship |
Tournament details |
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Host nation |
Latvia |
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Dates |
13–22 July 2001 |
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Teams |
12 (from 1 federations) |
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Champions |
Yugoslavia (8th title) |
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MVP |
Veljko Tomović |
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Tournament leaders |
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Official website |
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Official website (archive) |
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The 2001 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship (known at that time as 2001 European Championship for Cadets) was the 16th edition of the FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship. The city of Riga, in Latvia, hosted the tournament. Yugoslavia won the trophy for the eighth time. It was their third title in a row.
Teams
Qualification
There were two qualifying rounds for this tournament. Twenty-four national teams entered the qualifying round. Fifteen teams advanced to the Challenge Round, where they joined Turkey, Macedonia and France. The remaining eighteen teams were allocated in three groups of six teams each. The three top teams of each group joined Yugoslavia (title holder), Greece (runner-up) and Latvia (host) in the final tournament.
Preliminary round
The twelve teams were allocated in two groups of six teams each.
Group A
Group B
Knockout stage
9th–12th playoffs
Championship
5th–8th playoffs
Final standings
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2001 European Championship for Cadets |
 Yugoslavia Eighth title |
- Team Roster
Stefan Majstorović, Mlađen Šljivančanin, Vukašin Aleksić, Srđan Živković, Dušan Vučićević, Vladimir Micov, Veljko Tomović, Darko Miličić, Vladimir Mašulović, Kosta Perović, Milovan Raković, and Luka Bogdanović.
Head Coach: Stevan Karadžić. |
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References
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| Division A | | Tournaments | |
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| Qualification |
- 1971
- 1973
- 1975
- 1977
- 1979
- 1981
- 1983
- 1985
- 1987
- 1989
- 1991
- 1993
- 1995
- 1997
- 1999
- 2001
- 2003
- 2004–2015 not held
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| | Division B | | Tournaments |
- Italy 1971
- Italy 1973
- Greece 1975
- France 1977
- Syria 1979
- Greece 1981
- Germany 1983
- Bulgaria 1985
- Hungary 1987
- Spain 1989
- Greece 1991
- Turkey 1993
- Portugal 1995
- Belgium 1997
- Slovenia 1999
- Latvia 2001
- Spain 2003
- Greece 2004
- Spain 2005
- Spain 2006
- Greece 2007
- Italy 2008
- Lithuania 2009
- Montenegro 2010
- Czech Republic 2011
- Lithuania 2012
- Ukraine 2013
- Latvia 2014
- Bulgaria 2015
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| | | Africa | | |
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| Americas | |
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| Asia | |
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| Europe | |
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| Oceania | |
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| Note: Under-20/21 tourneys except FIBA Europe's are no longer held. |
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