EuroBasket 1957

FIBA EuroBasket 1957
10th FIBA European Basketball Championship
Tournament details
Host nation Bulgaria
Dates June 20–30
Teams 16 (from 28 federations)
Venues 1 (in 1 host city)
Champions  Soviet Union (4th title)
Tournament leaders
PlayersTeams
Points Belgium Eddy Terrace (23.3)
Official website
EuroBasket 1957 (archive)
< 1955
1959 >

The 1957 FIBA European Championship, commonly called FIBA EuroBasket 1957, was the tenth FIBA EuroBasket regional basketball championship, held by FIBA Europe. Sixteen national teams affiliated with the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) entered the competition. The competition was hosted by Bulgaria. Vasil Levski National Stadium at Sofia was the location of the event.

Results

Preliminary round

In the preliminary round, the 16 teams were split up into four groups of four teams each. The top two teams in each group advanced to the final round to play for the first 8 places, while the bottom two were sent to the classification round to play for 9th through 16th.

Group A

Rank Team Pts W L PF PA Diff
1.  Czechoslovakia 630273142+131
2.  Yugoslavia 521244175+69
3.  Scotland 412148259−111
4.  Albania 303136225−89
Czechoslovakia 123 – 44 Scotland
Albania 57 – 89 Yugoslavia
Yugoslavia 94 – 39 Scotland
Czechoslovakia 71 – 37 Albania
Scotland 65 – 42 Albania
Czechoslovakia 79 – 61 Yugoslavia

Group B

Rank Team Pts W L PF PA Diff
1.  Soviet Union 630270158+112
2.  Poland 521188171+17
3.  Turkey 412179192−13
4.  Austria 303133249−116
Soviet Union 107 – 38 Austria
Poland 55 – 50 Turkey
Turkey 80 – 57 Austria
Soviet Union 83 – 71 Poland
Austria 38 – 62 Poland
Soviet Union 80 – 49 Turkey

Group C

Rank Team Pts W L PF PA Diff
1.  Bulgaria 630239155+84
2.  France 521196165+31
3.  Italy 412177185−8
4.  West Germany 303149256−107
Bulgaria 67 – 52 France
West Germany 52 – 73 Italy
Bulgaria 72 – 45 Italy
France 83 – 39 West Germany
Italy 59 – 61 France
Bulgaria 100 – 58 West Germany

Group D

Rank Team Pts W L PF PA Diff
1.  Hungary 630200154+46
2.  Romania 521205183+22
3.  Finland 412187207−20
4.  Belgium 303169217−48
Hungary 66 – 65 Romania
Finland 76 – 74 Belgium
Hungary 50 – 39 Finland
Belgium 45 – 57 Romania
Romania 83 – 72 Finland
Hungary 84 – 50 Belgium

Classification round

For the first time, the classification round, like the final round, was played as an 8-team round robin, with no further playoffs.

Rank Team Pts W L PF PA Diff
9.  Turkey 1470525364+161
10.  Italy 1361500350+150
11.  Finland 1252499435+64
12.  Belgium 1143473461+12
13.  West Germany 1034342364−22
14.  Austria 925342364−22
15.  Scotland 816368492−124
16.  Albania 707340559−219
Italy 91 – 50 Belgium
Finland 61 – 47 West Germany
Scotland 69 – 56 Albania
Turkey 59 – 42 Austria
Turkey 83 – 70 Belgium
Finland 53 – 51 Austria
West Germany 72 – 43 Albania
Scotland 47 – 91 Italy
West Germany 37 – 57 Italy
Turkey 100 – 54 Scotland
Austria 58 – 70 Belgium
Finland 91 – 42 Albania
Finland 84 – 67 Belgium
Austria 48 – 47 Scotland
Albania 42 – 82 Italy
West Germany 33 – 54 Turkey
Finland 87 – 97 Italy
Albania 64 – 97 Turkey
Austria 55 – 58 West Germany
Belgium 76 – 51 Scotland
Turkey 57 – 50 Italy
Belgium 50 – 46 West Germany
Finland 72 – 56 Scotland
Albania 45 – 58 Austria
Finland 51 – 75 Turkey
Belgium 90 – 48 Albania
Italy 32 – 30 Austria
Scotland 44 – 49 West Germany

Final round

The final round was played as an 8-team round robin, with no further playoffs.

Rank Team Pts W L PF PA Diff
1.  Soviet Union 1470537409+128
2.  Bulgaria 1361510456+54
3.  Czechoslovakia 1252505458+47
4.  Hungary 1143480433+47
5.  Romania 1034440462−22
6.  Yugoslavia 925476584−108
7.  Poland 816456518−62
8.  France 707417501−84
France 53 – 83 Soviet Union
Czechoslovakia 65 – 62 Hungary
Poland 66 – 70 Romania
Bulgaria 99 – 76 Yugoslavia

Yugoslavia was the first of the pool leaders to take a loss in the final round, playing against Bulgaria, who had won their division.

Poland 63 – 77 Hungary
France 45 – 65 Romania
Soviet Union 97 – 61 Yugoslavia
Bulgaria 82 – 80 Czechoslovakia

Bulgaria continued to oust division leaders, knocking Czechoslovakia out of the undefeated group. Romania and the Soviet Union each defeated their second opponents, joining Bulgaria at the top of the pool.

Poland 69 – 74 Bulgaria
Romania 61 – 76 Hungary
France 72 – 75 Yugoslavia
Soviet Union 62 – 60 Czechoslovakia

The Soviet team pulled off a close win over the Czechoslovakian team that had broken the Soviets' lossless European championship start at 32 games. Romania lost a rematch with preliminary round opponent Hungary, as those two teams went to 2–1 behind the Soviets and Bulgarians, who had each maintained perfect records in their first three games.

Yugoslavia 74 – 95 Czechoslovakia
France 58 – 81 Hungary
Soviet Union 86 – 64 Poland
Romania 54 – 67 Bulgaria

Bulgaria and the Soviet Union each won their 7th game of the tournament and 4th of the final round, improving to 4–0. Hungary stayed close behind, at 3–1, with Romania and Czechoslovakia staying in contention at 2–2.

Yugoslavia 69 – 68 Poland
Romania 63 – 87 Soviet Union
France 62 – 64 Czechoslovakia
Hungary 52 – 63 Bulgaria

The Soviets and Bulgarians remained undefeated as Hungary, falling to Bulgaria, dropped to 2 games behind them at 3–2 along with Czechoslovakia.

France 65 – 68 Bulgaria
Czechoslovakia 80 – 61 Poland
Yugoslavia 60 – 72 Romania
Hungary 51 – 62 Soviet Union

Improving to 6–0 each, the Soviet Union and Bulgaria set up a match between the two of them that would determine the championship in the seventh and final game of the round.

Hungary 81 – 61 Yugoslavia
Czechoslovakia 61 – 55 Romania
France 62 – 65 Poland
Bulgaria 57 – 60 Soviet Union

The Soviet Union trailed by 4 points at halftime in their decisive game against Bulgaria. The second half saw an explosion of scoring, with the Soviets adding 41 points in the frame to the 19 they had in the first half. Bulgaria wasn't able to maintain the pace, scoring only 34 in the second half to fall to the Soviets 60–57. Poland picked up their first win of the final round, defeating France, who fell to 0–7.

 1957 FIBA European Champions 

Soviet Union
4th title

Final rankings

  1.  Soviet Union
  2.  Bulgaria
  3.  Czechoslovakia
  4.  Hungary
  5.  Romania
  6.  Yugoslavia
  7.  Poland
  8.  France
  9.  Turkey
  10.  Italy
  11.  Finland
  12.  Belgium
  13.  West Germany
  14.  Austria
  15.  Scotland
  16.  Albania

Team rosters

1. Soviet Union: Viktor Zubkov, Valdis Muižnieks, Maigonis Valdmanis, Guram Minashvili, Yuri Ozerov, Mikhail Semyonov, Arkady Bochkarov, Stasys Stonkus, Vladimir Torban, Algirdas Lauritėnas, Mart Laga, Mikhail Studenetski (Coach: Stepan Spandaryan)

2. Bulgaria: Viktor Radev, Georgi Panov, Ilija Mirchev, Ljubomir Panov, Cvjatko Barchovski, Petko Lazarov, Mikhail Semov, Georgi Kanev, Vladimir Ganchev, Metodi Tomovski, Konstantin Totev, Atanas Pejchinski (Coach: Ljudmil Katerinski)

3. Czechoslovakia: Jiří Baumruk, Zdeněk Bobrovský, Miroslav Škeřík, Jaroslav Šíp, Dušan Lukášik, Zdeněk Rylich, Jaroslav Tetiva, Lubomír Kolář, Milan Merkl, Jiří Tetiva, Jaroslav Chocholáč, Nikolaj Ordnung (Coach: Gustáv Herrmann)

4. Hungary: János Greminger, László Tóth, Tibor Zsíros, László Bánhegyi, János Bencze, János Simon, László Gabányi, Tibor Czinkán, István Sahin-Tóth, Ervin Keszey, Zoltán Judik, Pál Borbély, István Liptai (Coach: Zoltán Csányi)

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/8/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.