Showing posts with label FIBA Asia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FIBA Asia. Show all posts

Thursday, October 6, 2011

2nd FIBA Asia U16 Championship schedule of games



NHA TRANG CITY, Vietnam The schedule of games for the Preliminary Round of the 2nd FIBA Asia U16 Championship has been announced. Defending champions China will take on SAARC qualifiers India, while 2009 FIBA Asia U16 Championship silver medalists Korea match wits with WABA U16 Champions Iraq on the opening day.

Hosts Vietnam will play their first ever FIBA Asia competition game against fellow SEABA team Indonesia; 2009 FIBA Asia U16 Championship Iran take on GCC team and debutants Qatar; Lebanon, who also will make their maiden appearance will take on another debutants Uzbekistan in other contests of the opening day, which will tip off with a game between Saudi Arabia and Japan.

Click here for Complete Preliminary Round Schedule.

India have been placed in Group A of the tournament, along with China, Malaysia, and Chinese Taipei.

India’s Schedule of Preliminary Round Games (Timings will be local)

  • Tuesday, October 18th – 2100: India vs. China
  • Wednesday, October 19th – 2100: India vs. Malaysia
  • Thursday, October 20th – India vs. Chinese Taipei

    The Second Round of the tournament will begin on Saturday, October 22nd. The Final is scheduled to be held on Friday, October 28th.

    FIBA Asia will run a special event website http://nhatrang2011.fibaasia.net during the event.
  • Wednesday, September 28, 2011

    Draw completed for 2nd FIBA Asia U16 Championship



    Defending champions China were drawn with fellow East Asian team Chinese Taipei, Middle Asia’s India and SEABA’s Malaysia in Group A for the Preliminary Round of the 2nd FIBA Asia U16 Championship to be held in Nha Trang City in Vietnam from Oct 18-28, 2011.

    The draw was conducted at the Media Conference Room at the Wuhan Sports Center in Wuhan (China) on Sunday, the final day of the 26th FIBA Asia Championship.

    Group B involves Korea, who lost to China in the final of the inaugural FIBA Asia U16 Championship at Johor Bahru (Malaysia) two years ago, along with two WABA teams Iraq and Lebanon and Uzbekistan.

    Iran, the bronze medalists from Johor Bahru lead the fray in Group C also comprising Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Japan.

    With only 15 teams in fray, Group D will see only three teams and all-SEABA affair – Philippines, Indonesia and Vietnam.

    “It is a great significance that we are conducting this draw for the 2nd FIBA Asia U16 Championship on the final day of the 26th FIBA Asia Championship,” said FIBA Asia president Sheikh Saud bin Ali Al-Thani who presided over the draw proceedings.

    “The 26th FIBA Asia Championship will decide the champion team of FIBA Asia, while the 2nd FIBA Asia U16 Championship will throw up the stars for the future,” he said.

    FIBA Asia will run a special event website http://nhatrang2011.fibaasia.net during the event.

    Groupings for the Preliminary Round

  • Group A: China, India, Malaysia, Chinese Taipei
  • Group B: Korea, Iraq, Uzbekistan, Lebanon
  • Group C: Iran, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Japan
  • Group D: Philippines, Indonesia, Vietnam

    India’s U16 side qualified for the championship after defeating Nepal and Sri Lanka in qualifiers in New Delhi in August

    About 2nd FIBA Asia U16 Championship

    The 2nd FIBA Asia U16 Championship is the qualifying event for the 2012 FIBA U17 World Championship to be played in Lithuania from July 17-26, 2012.

    The top two teams from the 2nd FIBA Asia U16 Championship will represent FIBA Asia at Lithuania.

    System of Competition

    The 16 teams are pooled into four groups of four teams each for the Preliminary Round.

    The top three teams from each group will advance to the Second Round, and will be drawn into two groups of six teams each.

    In the Second Round, each team will carry forward the results against the other qualifying teams in their Preliminary Round group and will play against teams qualifying from the other Preliminary Round group. The top four teams from each Second Round will qualify for the Quarterfinals, from which stage it will be a knockout.
  • Wednesday, July 6, 2011

    Draw completed for Preliminary Round of 26th FIBA Asia Championship



    FIBA Asia Press Release, Wuhan (China): Twice defending champions Iran will match wits with GCC champions Qatar, East Asia’s Chinese Taipei and the qualifier from the “Stan” division of Middle Asia in Group B in the Preliminary Round of the 26th FIBA Asia Championship.

    The draw for the 26th FIBA Asia Championship was completed at the host city Wuhan amidst a sparkling ceremony on the Yangzte River on Wednesday.

    The 26th FIBA Asia Championship, also the qualifying event for the 2012 London Olympics, will be held from Sept 15-25.

    The champion team from Wuhan will directly qualify for the most significant sporting event at the British capital, while the No 2 and No 3 teams will qualify for the FIBA Olympic qualifying tournament.

    Hosts China as per the procedure of the draw opted to play in Group D after SEABA champions Philippines along with GCC duo UAE and Bahrain were drawn.

    Lebanon, who qualified for the 26th FIBA Asia Championship directly by virtue of winning the title in the 3rd FIBA Asia Stankovic Cup last year were drawn in Group A along with the qualifier from the SAARC division of Middle Asia, SEABA’s Malaysia and recently crowned East Asian champions Korea.

    Japan, who lost to Lebanon in the 3rd FIBA Asia Stankovic Cup, were drawn into Group C along with SEABA runners-up Indonesia, 2009 FIBA Asia Championship bronze medalists Jordan and another WABA team Syria.

    The 26th FIBA Asia Championship is the fifth occasion when China will host this prestigious event – 1989 Beijing, 2001 Shanghai, 2003 Harbin and 2009 Tianjin are the earlier occasions.

    Note: India will host the SAARC teams – Bangladesh, Bhutan, Sri Lanka, and Nepal – at the Thyagraj Stadium in New Delhi from July 13-15th to decide which team qualifies for the Middle Asia 1 spot.

    The Draw process

    The four semifinalists of the 3rd FIBA Asia Stankovic Cup – Lebanon, Japan, Qatar and Philippines – were seeded into four different groups, and the draw decided which group each of them will figure.

    The two Middle Asian representatives along with Indonesia and UAE were drawn next. It was the turn of Malaysia, Taipei, Syria and Bahrain to follow suit.

    At this stage, China exercised their right – as hosts – of choice in the groupings after which Iran, Jordan and Korea were drawn into their respective groups.

    Groupings for Preliminary Round

    Group A: Lebanon, Middle Asia 1, Malaysia, Korea
    Group B: Qatar, Middle Asia 2, Chinese Taipei, Iran
    Group C: Japan, Indonesia, Syria, Jordan
    Group D: Philippines, UAE, Bahrain, China

    Middle Asia 1: New Delhi hosts the SAARC teams from July 13-15 to identify this qualifier.
    Middle Asia 2: Navoi (UBZ) will host Afghanistan, Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan as the four teams attempt to win this qualifying berth.

    The top three teams from each group will advance to the Second Round in the following manner.

    Second Round Groupings

    Group E: A1, A2, A3, B1, B2, B3
    Group F: C1, C2, C3, D1, D2, D3

    Each team will play the three (3) new teams in its own group (the final scores of all games played in the Preliminary Round are valid for this round). The top four from each group in the Second Round will advance to the knockout quarterfinal stage.

    Monday, June 6, 2011

    Al Riyadi (Lebanon) win 22nd FIBA Asia Champions Cup



    For the first time in the club’s history, Al Riyadi of Beirut (Lebanon) lifted the FIBA Asia Champions Cup, the premier club basketball championship for men in Asia, after defeating two-time reigning champions Mahram Tehran (Iran) 91-82 on Sunday at the PhilSports Arena in Manila (Philippines). Al Riyadi finished the 22nd edition of this championship that was held from May 28th – June 5th with a perfect 7-0 record and the gold medal.

    Co-organised by Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas (Basketball Federation of the Philippines) and FIBA Asia, the tournament pitted 10 of the best Asian club basketball teams against each other. Mahram Tehran, who were bidding for a three-peat after winning the 2009 and 2010 editions of the tournament, had to settle for silver in the final after losing to Al Riyadi.

    The star of the show in the final was El Cheikh Fadi El Khatib, who scored a tournament-high 41 points to lead his team to victory. Jean Abd El Nour pitched in 32 for Al Riyadi in the Final. Mahram Tehran were led by M. Sadam Nikkhah Bahrami (28) and Christopher Williams (21). The team from Iran actually led by a point at the end of the third quarter, but Al Riyadi held their nerves to dominate the final quarter, make some crunch plays, and steal the win.

    Al Rayyan (Qatar) beat home team Smart Gilas (Philippines) 74-61 in the third-place game to win the bronze medal.

    Tuesday, February 1, 2011

    FIBA Asia releases 2011 Events Calendar



    Press Release: The complete FIBA Asia calendar of events for 2011 has been announced.

    The calendar will tip off with the 22nd FIBA Asia Champions Cup, FIBA Asia’s premier event for club teams, to be hosted by Philippines at Manila from May 28 – June 5, 2011.

    Philippines will host a FIBA Asia event after a gap of six years. The last FIBA Asia event hosted by Philippines was incidentally also the Champions Cup – the 16th edition of the event – in 2005.

    Wuhan in China and Omura-Nagasaki in Japan have already been chosen to host the two marquee events of the calendar – the 26th FIBA Asia Championship (Sept 15-25, 2011) and the 24th FIBA Asia Championship for Women (Aug 21-28, 2011).

    Ho Chi Minh City, the capital of South East Asian nation Vietnam will host the 2nd FIBA Asia U16 Championship at a date to be decided. The event will mark the first time Vietnam will host a FIBA Asia event.

    Urumqi in China has been chosen as the host for the 2nd FIBA Asia U16 Championship for Women, at a date to be decided. Among other important events, Urumqi had hosted the 2006 FIBA Asia U18 Championship.

    The two FIBA Asia U16 events are qualifying events for the corresponding FIBA World U17 events to be held in 2012.

    Lauding the host of each events, FIBA Asia president Sheikh Saud Ali Al-Thani said: “Hosting an event is charming, but the challenges that come up can be understood only by the hosts. I congratulate each of the host and the National Federations for coming forward to host the events.”

    “From FIBA Asia side I assure all support. I hereby call upon all the prospective participants for each event to provide all the necessary support so that each event runs smoothly,” Sheikh Saud added.

    “I also welcome Vietnam who are joining our list of hosts,” Sheikh Saud said.

    “Last year we had Yemen joining the list of hosts. This year it is Vietnam,” said FIBA Asia Secretary General Dato’ Yeoh Choo Hock.

    “The quality of FIBA Asia events has seen a tremendous improvement in the last couple of years. I am confident we can not only continue but also improve our standards this year,” Dato Yeoh added.

    “Organizing an event in new cities is always exciting. It provides a wonderful opportunity to widen the support base for our sport,” said FIBA Asia Deputy Secretary General Hagop Khajirian, also the Chairman of the FIBA Asia Committee for Marketing and Media.

    “The fact that new cities are coming forward to host events is very encouraging. It means our sport is gaining in support from more people. I congratulate and look forward to working with all the host cities and National Federations,” Khajirian added.

    The complete FIBA Asia 2011 calendar:

    May 28 - June 5: 22nd FIBA Asia Champions Cup (Manila, Phillipines).
    Aug 21 - 28: 24th FIBA Asia Championship for Women (Omura-Nagasaki, Japan).
    Sep 15 - 25: 26th FIBA Asia Championship (Wuhan, China).
    Dates TBC: 2nd FIBA Asia Championship (Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam).
    Dates TBC: 2nd FIBA Asia U16 Championship for Women (Urumqi, China).

    Wednesday, January 12, 2011

    FIBA rules leaning the NBA way



    Rule changes have been abuzz for a while now for FIBA (Fédération Internationale de Basket-ball), the globe's dominating authority on all that's right and wrong in basketball. With 214 national federations as members, everyone from world champions' USA to India to the Republic of Benin follow FIBA's laws when conducting the game of basketball. Thanks a lot, Dr. James Naismith.

    But just because everyone follows FIBA doesn't mean FIBA doesn't follow someone too - the biggest basketball league in the world, the NBA, has its own set of slightly differing basketball rules. The differences may be negligible to the laymen, but to a serious basketball player or any other technical expert of the game, they're massive. FIBA's new set of rules, started officially from October 2010 but implemented to all FIBA Asia events starting Jan 1, 2011, are starting to lean more and more towards the NBA. Whether it is the extended three-point line or the 'no-charge' area, FIBA is starting to get a little more NBA-ised. And since FIBA controls basketball, basketball is going to get a little more NBA-ised. Deal with it.

    There will be several FIBA Asia championships in which India will potentially participate in this year, and thus, have to adhere to this new rules, such as the FIBA Asia Championship, the FIBA Asia U19 Championship, and the FIBA Asia U16 Championship (competitions will be held separately for Men and Women).

    In his two part article, FIBA Asia's Technical Director Col. Lee Kak Kuan lays describes these changes well for the FIBA Asia website, offering his own opinion mostly from a refereeing standout about how these changes will affect the game. Here is a quick recap of the major rule changes:

    The Restricted Area: The trapezoid that is unique to FIBA has been replaced with the Rectangular Restricted Area, similar to NBA marking. Though the shape has changed, the rules and related interpretations remain the same. The overall area has been increased and uniform to allow better maneuver of the players.

    Three-point field goal area: The 3-point semi-circle has been extended from the radius of 6.25 meters to 6.75 meters, making three-pointers ever-so-slightly more difficult. Kuan argues that extending this semi-circle will make life difficult for players in the FIBA competitions, who are mostly amateurs, unlike NBA players, who are professionals. It gives them less space to maneuver between the sidelines on the sides, and of course, makes shooting more difficult.

    Kuan says: "We failed to consider NBA is mainly played by professionals. Whereas, FIBA has to cater for the various categories of competitions including the amateurs, the junior boys and girls. It would be a handicap to Asians who are generally smaller built compare with their Western counterparts, to master the 3 pointer shots. Physical and mental strength are vital to produce the power required for consistency in distance shooting."

    Throw-in Lines

    In FIBA, when a team takes a time-out during the last two minutes of the game, the game re-starts with a throw-in from the half-line. Now, just like the NBA, the throw-in line will be a few meters inside the opponents half.

    The No-charge Area

    If points were give for charges, then the likes of Shane Battier and Glen Davis might be given a little more respect in the NBA! Also like the NBA, FIBA will now have a no-charge semi-circle under the basket - a small area where a charge will not result in an offensive foul.

    Again, this is what Kuan has to say about it: "The introduction of the no charge area is deemed to make basketball game less dramatic instead of improving it. The coach may consider that it would be a disadvantage to have the defense at this area and has to plan its strategy on defense outside the area. Also taking into consideration that more casualties would sustain on legal or illegal contacts taking place here."
    "This rule may be good for NBA which is exclusively for the Professionals. As FIBA caters for all levels of championships, it is definitely not feasible for the Junior Boys or Girls (Cadets)"




    24-seconds

    Like the NBA, the 24-second shot-clock, like the game-clock now starts not when the ball is thrown inbounds but when a player first touches the ball. Also like the NBA, if there are less than 14 seconds left on the shot-clock when the defensive team commits a foul, then the offensive team gets 14 seconds to start with. This used to be 13 seconds before.

    A few more minor changes are mentioned in Kuan's and the FIBA articles. But the end-result is clear: FIBA is clearly influenced by the NBA, and it seems to be slowly leaning its basketball to favour the NBA's style of play. For some, this may be great news, as the NBA does indeed feature eye-catching and more dramatic basketball. Others might believe that these changes might hurt the games of Non-American players, who aren't accustomed to the new systems.

    In any case, there does exist a Bible/Qu'ran/Manusmriti for all those that subscribe to the religion of basketball. That is the booklet of FIBA's Official Basketball Rules.

    Now, it's up to you to decide whether or not FIBA/NBA should really be the word of basketball's higher power!

    Saturday, September 18, 2010

    FIBA launches new ranking system



    Following the 2010 FIBA World Championship for Men which concluded last Sunday in Istanbul, Turkey, the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) have launched a completely new ranking system. For the first time ever, the U19 and U17 FIBA World Championships for Boys and Girls as well as all U16 and U18 continental championships weigh in to determine the new FIBA categories for Boys and Girls.

    Therefore the new FIBA ranking now includes five categories: Men, Women, Boys, Girls and a Combined Ranking that takes into account results from all genders and all age categories. The new system makes for a more accurate pecking order of the world's basketball nations.


    India’s FIBA World rankings are:
    Men: 50
    Women: 43
    Boys: 45
    Girls: 34
    Combined: 49

    India’s FIBA Asia rankings are:
    Men: 10
    Women: 7
    Boys: 11
    Girls: 7
    Combined: 8

    "I am very happy to see these new and complete world rankings including the youth categories," said FIBA Secretary General and International Olympic Committee (IOC) member Patrick Baumann.

    "This is a great initiative and one that has been a long time coming. We have to make sure we reward the countries that perform well in youth competitions because the young players coming through the junior ranks are the best investment in the future of basketball."


    The United States of America (USA), whose Senior Men’s team won the World Championship recently, currently rank supreme in all categories, including the new youth rankings for Boys and Girls which have been added in the new system.

    See full rankings here.