2007 FIBA Under-19 World Championship | |
Continent: | World U-19 |
Year: | 2007 |
Size: | 270px |
City: | Novi Sad |
Dates: | 12–22 July |
Teams: | 16 |
Confederations: | 5 |
Venues: | 1 |
Cities: | 1 |
Champions: | Serbia |
Champions-Flagvar: | 2004 |
Title Number: | 1 |
Mvp: | Milan Mačvan |
Ppg P: | Paulão Prestes (23.0) |
Ppg T: | (93.7) |
Rpg P: | Paulão Prestes (14.7) |
Rpg T: | (51.6) |
Apg P: | Žygimantas Janavičius (6.6) |
Apg T: | (19.4) |
Website: | archive.today |
Prevseason: | 2003 |
Nextseason: | 2009 |
The 2007 FIBA Under-19 World Championship (Serbian: Светско првенство до 19 година ФИБА до 19 година) was the 8th edition of the FIBA U19 World Championship. It was held in Novi Sad, Serbia from 12 to 22 July 2007. The host nation won the tournament after beating the United States 74–69 in the final.[1] Milan Mačvan was named the tournament MVP.
Serbia | |
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SPC Vojvodina | |
Capacity: 11,000 | |
Means of Qualification | Dates | Venue | Berths | Qualifiers | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Host Nation | 1 | ||||
28 July–6 August 2006 | 2 | ||||
28 June–2 July 2006 | 5 | ||||
1–9 September 2006 | 3 | ||||
18–27 July 2006 | 4 | ||||
1 | |||||
Total | 16 |
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Rank | width=170 | Team ! | Record |
---|---|---|---|
8–1 | |||
8–1 | |||
6–3 | |||
4th | 4–5 | ||
5th | 8–1 | ||
6th | 4–5 | ||
7th | 4–5 | ||
8th | 4–5 | ||
9th | 4–4 | ||
10th | 4–4 | ||
11th | 3–5 | ||
12th | 1–7 | ||
13th | 2–3 | ||
14th | 1–4 | ||
15th | 1–4 | ||
16th | 0–5 |
4 Mladen Jeremić, 5 Petar Despotović, 6 Dušan Katnić, 7 Stefan Marković, 8 Marko Kešelj, 9 Aleksandar Radulović, 10 Stefan Stojačić, 11 Marko Čakarević, 12 Milan Mačvan, 13 Miroslav Raduljica, 14 Boban Marjanović, 15 Slaven Čupković (Head coach: Miroslav Nikolić)
4 Tajuan Porter, 5 Stephen Curry, 6 Jonny Flynn, 7 Patrick Beverley, 8 Matt Bouldin, 9 David Lighty, 10 Donté Greene, 11 Raymar Morgan, 12 Deon Thompson, 13 Damian Hollis, 14 Michael Beasley, 15 DeAndre Jordan (Head coach: Jerry Wainwright)
4 Jessie Bégarin, 5 Nicolas Batum, 6 Antoine Diot, 7 Abdoulaye M'Baye, 8 Olivier Romain, 9 Alexis Ajinça, 10 Benoît Mangin, 11 Edwin Jackson, 12 Rudy Etilopy, 13 Kim Tillie, 14 Ludovic Vaty, 15 Adrien Moerman (Head coach: Richard Billant)