| FIBA EuroBasket 1969 | 
|---|
| 
16th FIBA European Basketball Championship | 
  | 
| Tournament details | 
|---|
| Host nation | 
Italy | 
|---|
| Dates | 
September 27 – October 5 | 
|---|
| Teams | 
12 (from 33 federations) | 
|---|
| Venues | 
2 Naples, Caserta (in 2 host cities) | 
|---|
| Champions | 
  Soviet Union (10th title) | 
|---|
| MVP | 
  Sergei Belov | 
|---|
| Tournament leaders | 
|---|
| 
 | 
| Official website | 
|---|
| 
EuroBasket 1969 (archive) | 
| 
 | 
The 1969 FIBA European Championship, commonly called FIBA EuroBasket 1969, was the sixteenth FIBA EuroBasket regional basketball championship, held by FIBA Europe.
First round
Group A – Caserta
|  Pos.  |  Team  |  Matches  |  Wins  |  Loses  |  Results  |  Points  |  Diff. | 
|  1.  |    Yugoslavia  |  5  |  5  |  0  |  447:282  |  10  |  +165 | 
|  2.  |    Soviet Union  |  5  |  4  |  1  |  415:308  |  8  |  +107 | 
|  3.  |    Bulgaria  |  5  |  2  |  3  |  359:383  |  4  |  −24 | 
|  4.  |    Hungary   |  5  |  2  |  3  |  335:380  |  4  |  −45 | 
|  5.  |    Greece   |  5  |  1  |  4  |  338:400  |  2  |  −62 | 
|  6.  |    Sweden   |  5  |  1  |  4  |  332:473  |  2  |  −141 | 
Group B – Naples
|  Pos.  |  Team  |  Matches  |  Wins  |  Loses  |  Results  |  Points  |  Diff. | 
|  1.  |    Czechoslovakia  |  5  |  5  |  0  |  397:334  |  10  |  +63 | 
|  2.  |    Poland  |  5  |  3  |  2  |  349:380  |  6  |  −31 | 
|  3.  |    Italy  |  5  |  3  |  2  |  334:299  |  6  |  +35 | 
|  4.  |    Spain   |  5  |  2  |  3  |  359:385  |  4  |  −26 | 
|  5.  |    Romania   |  5  |  2  |  3  |  365:361  |  4  |  +4 | 
|  6.  |    Israel   |  5  |  0  |  5  |  381:426  |  0  |  −45 | 
Knockout stage
Places 9 – 12 in Naples
Places 5 – 8 in Naples
Places 1 – 4 in Naples
Finals – all games in Naples
Final rankings
-  
 Soviet Union 
-  
 Yugoslavia 
-  
 Czechoslovakia 
-  
 Poland 
-  
 Spain 
-  
 Italy 
-  
 Bulgaria 
-  
 Hungary 
-  
 Romania 
-  
 Greece 
-  
 Israel 
-  
 Sweden 
Awards
Team rosters
1. Soviet Union: Sergei Belov, Alexander Belov, Modestas Paulauskas, Gennadi Volnov, Priit Tomson, Anatoly Polivoda, Zurab Sakandelidze, Vladimir Andreev, Aleksander Kulkov, Aleksander Boloshev, Sergei Kovalenko, Vitali Zastukhov (Coach: Alexander Gomelsky)
2. Yugoslavia: Krešimir Ćosić, Ivo Daneu, Nikola Plećaš, Vinko Jelovac, Damir Šolman, Rato Tvrdić, Ljubodrag Simonović, Trajko Rajković, Dragutin Čermak, Dragan Kapičić, Vladimir Cvetković, Zoran Marojević (Coach: Ranko Žeravica)
3. Czechoslovakia: Jiří Zídek Sr., Vladimir Pistelak, Jiří Zedníček, Frantisek Konvicka, Jiri Ruzicka, Jiri Ammer, Jan Bobrovsky, Robert Mifka, Karel Baroch, Jiri Konopasek, Petr Novicky, Jan Blažek (Coach: Nikolaj Ordnung)
4. Poland: Bohdan Likszo, Edward Jurkiewicz, Bolesław Kwiatkowski, Włodzimierz Trams, Andrzej Seweryn, Grzegorz Korcz, Waldemar Kozak, Henryk Cegielski, Jan Dolczewski, Marek Ladniak, Adam Niemiec, Krzysztof Gula (Coach: Witold Zagórski)
References