2010 FIBA World Championship for Women explained

Tourney Name:FIBA World Championship for Women
Year:2010
Other Titles:Mistrovství světa fiba 2010 pro ženy
Size:130
Country:Czech Republic
Dates:September 23 – October 3
Num Teams:16
Confederations:5
Venues:3
Cities:3
Count:8
Mvp: Hana Horáková
Top Scorer: Yuko Oga
(19.1 points per game)
Prevseason:2006
Nextseason:2014

The 2010 FIBA World Championship for Women, the 16th edition of FIBA's premier tournament for women's national basketball teams, was held from September 23 to October 3, 2010 in the Czech Republic. Three cities, Ostrava, Brno and Karlovy Vary, hosted games. Four countries initially bid for the event but Australia, France and Latvia withdrew during the bidding process.[1]

The USA won its eighth title, extending its own record for the most wins in tournament history. The other medalists—the Czech Republic with silver and Spain with bronze—had not previously medaled at a World Championship. The Czechoslovakia women's team had won six medals in previous World Championships, but FIBA considers the Czech Republic and Slovakia to be separate teams from the former Czechoslovakia. The Czech Republic's Hana Horáková was chosen as the tournament's most valuable player.[2]

Pre-tournament favourites USA, Russia, and Australia dominated play in the first two rounds, with the Russia and the USA going undefeated and Australia only losing to the USA in the second round after both teams had guaranteed progression to the quarterfinals. In the quarterfinals, however, Russia and Australia suffered shock defeats to Belarus and the Czech Republic respectively.[3] Meanwhile, the USA cruised into the final with easy wins over injury-ridden South Korea[4] and Spain. After knocking out the defending World Champions, the Czechs defeated Belarus in overtime to set up the final with the USA.[5]

In the final the USA were heavy favourites but the Czechs were supported by a partisan crowd of over 6000 that included Czech president Václav Klaus. The USA led for most of the match, but the Czechs were able to keep it close in the first half, trailing only 40-35 at the break.[6] The USA pulled away in the second half to win 89-69.[7]

Venues

The tournament was held in three cities. The Preliminary Round and the Eighth-final Round was played at Brno and Ostrava, while the Final Round was played at Karlovy Vary.

Qualification

16 teams participated in the 2010 World Championship for Women. After the 2008 Summer Olympics, the continental allocation for FIBA Americas was reduced by one when the United States won the Olympic tournament, they automatically qualified for the 2010 World Championship.

EventDateLocationVacanciesQualified
Host Nation1
2008 Summer Olympics9–23 August 2008 Beijing1
EuroBasket Women 20097–20 June 2009 Latvia5



2009 FIBA Oceania Championship for Women31 August – 2 September 2009 New Zealand
Australia
1
2009 FIBA Africa Championship for Women9–18 October 2009 Antananarivo2
2009 FIBA Americas Championship for Women23–27 September 2013 Cuiabá3

2009 FIBA Asia Championship for Women17–24 September 2009 Chennai3

Total 16

Squads

See main article: 2010 FIBA World Championship for Women squads.

Preliminary round

Times given below are in CEST (UTC+2).

Group A

width=150Teamwidth=20Pldwidth=20Wwidth=20Lwidth=30PFwidth=30PAwidth=30PDwidth=20Pts
3 3 0 246 174 +72 6
3 2 1 188 189 −1 5
3 1 2 161 194 −33 4
3 0 3 186 224 −38 3

Group B

width=150Teamwidth=20Pldwidth=20Wwidth=20Lwidth=30PFwidth=30PAwidth=30PDwidth=20Pts
3 3 0 288 185 +103 6
3 2 1 212 181 +31 5
3 1 2 211 236 −25 4
3 0 3 165 274 −99 3

Group C

width=150Teamwidth=20Pldwidth=20Wwidth=20Lwidth=30PFwidth=30PAwidth=30PDwidth=20Pts
3 3 0 233 162 +71 6
32 1 198 210 −12 5
3 1 2 197 203 −6 4
3 0 3 175 228 −53 3

Group D

width=150Teamwidth=20Pldwidth=20Wwidth=20Lwidth=30PFwidth=30PAwidth=30PDwidth=20Pts
3 3 0 218 174 +44 6
3 2 1 185 168 +17 5
3 1 2 182 210 −28 4
3 0 3 170 203 −33 3

Eighth-final round

width=10px bgcolor="#98fb98"Qualified for the quarterfinals

Group E

width=150Teamwidth=20Pldwidth=20Wwidth=20Lwidth=30PFwidth=30PAwidth=30PDwidth=20Pts
6 6 0 565 367 +198 12
6 5 1 476 363 +113 11
6 4 2 371 338 +33 10
6 3 3 371 424 −53 9
6 2 4 392 455 −63 8
6 1 5 306 387 −81 7

Group F

width=150Teamwidth=20Pldwidth=20Wwidth=20Lwidth=30PFwidth=30PAwidth=30PDwidth=20Pts
6 6 0 451 342 +109 12
6 5 1 463 354 +109 11
6 4 2 422 380 +42 10
6 3 3 376 451 −75 9
6 2 4 413 454 −41 8
6 1 5 396 454 −58 7

Knockout round

13th–16th playoffs

13th place playoff

9th–12th playoffs

9th place playoff

5th–8th playoffs

Final

Statistical leaders

Points

Name PPG
19.1
18.4
17.9
17.7
16.6

Rebounds

Name RPG
12.0
11.5
10.4
8.8
8.1

Assists

Name APG
4.6
3.9
3.8
3.4

Blocks

Name BPG
1.8
1.7
1.5
1.2

Steals

Name SPG
2.9
2.7
2.4
2.1
1.9

Final standings

RankTeamRecord
1 9 - 0
26 - 3
37 - 2
44 - 5
57 - 2
65 - 4
77 - 2
83 - 6
94 - 4
102 - 6
113 - 5
121 - 7
132 - 3
141 - 4
151 - 4
160 - 5

Awards

All-Tournament Team

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: FIBA Central Board - 2010 Women's World Championships for Czech Republic . AIPS . 2007-12-10 . 2008-05-27 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110707095647/http://www.aipsmedia.com/index.php?page=news&cod=1707&tp=n . 2011-07-07 . dead .
  2. Web site: CZE - FIBA considers lowering rim for women's basketball. FIBA.COM. 2010-10-04. https://web.archive.org/web/20101007115213/http://www.czechrepublic2010.fiba.com/pages/eng/fe/10/fwc/women/news/p/eid/4730/nid/44880/sid/4730/article.html. 2010-10-07. dead.
  3. News: Hosts shock Australia as Russia lose to Belarus . BBC News . October 2, 2010.
  4. Web site: KOR - Derailed by injuries FIBA.COM . 2010-10-04 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120315123051/http://czechrepublic2010.fiba.com/pages/eng/fe/10/fwc/women/news/p/eid/4730/nid/44871/sid/4730/article.html . 2012-03-15 . dead .
  5. News: Czechs steal thrilling OT win at basketball worlds . BBC News . October 3, 2010.
  6. News: US women beat Czechs for gold at basketball worlds. 2010-10-04. USA Today. 2010-10-04.
  7. Web site: 2010 FIBA Women's World Championship: United States beats Czech Republic for gold medal. ESPN.com.