Croatia–Serbia basketball rivalry explained

Croatia–Serbia basketball rivalry
Sport:Basketball
City Or Region:Europe (FIBA Europe)
First Contested:30 June 1997
EuroBasket
Croatia 62, FR Yugoslavia 64
Team1logo:Flag of Croatia.svg
Team2logo:Flag of Serbia.svg
Team1:Croatia
Team2:Serbia
Total:13 meetings
Most Wins:Serbia
Mostrecent:17 August 2016
Summer Olympics
Croatia 83, Serbia 86
Alltimerecord:Serbia, 11–2
Currentstreak:Serbia, 5
Largestvictory:3 August 2012
Ex-Yu Cup
Croatia 74, Serbia 90
Smallestvictory:4 September 2010
FIBA World Championship
Serbia 73, Croatia 72
Largestscoring:17 August 2016
Summer Olympics
Croatia 83, Serbia 86

The Croatia–Serbia basketball rivalry is a competitive sports rivalry that exists between the national basketball teams of the two countries and their respective sets of fans.

History

The big rivalry in basketball started at the FIBA European Championship in 1995, in Athens. At the time, Croatia was a newly independent state, while Serbia was a federal unit of FR Yugoslavia. Both countries did well in the tournament, with Yugoslavia ranking first. The third-place Croatian team caused an international scandal when they walked off the medal stand and out of the arena just before Serbs and Montenegrins were about to receive their gold medals.[1] Curiously, there hasn't been a single direct game involving the two countries over the course of the championship.

Croatia and Yugoslavia did face each other in a game at EuroBasket 1997. Four seconds before the end of the tense game, Croatian team was leading by two points when Serbian guard Aleksandar Đorđević took the ball and made a three-pointer, winning the game for Yugoslavia.[2] Yugoslavia went on to win the championship, while Croatia ended up ranking 11th overall.

Afterward, at EuroBasket 2001, Croats were heavily beaten by 80–66.

Serbia defeated Croatia, 86–83, in the last quarterfinal of the Olympic Basketball Tournament on 17 August 2016 to set up a semifinal clash with Australia. On 19 August, Serbia cruised to a resounding 87–61 win over Australia.[3] Serbia won the silver medal following a 96–66 lost to the United States in the final.[4] Croatia finished at 5th place.

Head-to-head

EuroBasket 1997

valign=top align=right width=33%
CRO StatisticsYUG
13/39 (33%) 2-pt field goals 16/36 (44%)
4/10 (40%) 3-pt field goals 4/11 (36%)
24/27 (89%) Free throws 20/33 (61%)
6 Offensive rebounds 8
20 Defensive rebounds 19
26 Total rebounds 27
11 Assists 9
10 Turnovers 10
9 Steals 9
0 Blocks 0
30 Fouls 25

2000 Trofeo Lido delle Rose in Roseto, Italy

Croatia

Yugoslavia

Number in parentheses indicates points scored in the game.

EuroBasket 2001

valign=top align=right width=33%
CRO StatisticsYUG
22/41 (54%) 2-pt field goals 26/55 (47%)
4/17 (24%) 3-pt field goals 5/20 (25%)
10/13 (77%) Free throws 12/21 (62%)
6 Offensive rebounds 12
24 Defensive rebounds 24
30 Total rebounds 26
10 Assists 9
7 Turnovers 3
1 Steals 9
3 Blocks 2
12 Fouls 18

2005 ProMonte Supercup in Podgorica

Serbia and Montenegro

Croatia

Number in parentheses indicates points scored in the game.

2007 Trofeo Diego Gianatti in Bormio, Italy

Croatia

Serbia

Number in parentheses indicates points scored in the game.

2010 FIBA World Championship

See also: 2010 FIBA World Championship. The first eighth-final round match-up pitted two former Yugoslav republics against each other as Group A winner Serbia met Group B fourth-place finisher Croatia, the first meeting for the teams in a major international tournament.[5] Serbia prevailed 73 - 72 in a back-and-forth battle that neither team led by more than eight points at any point during the game. Milan Mačvan, Serbia's youngest player at age 20, drained a three-pointer to extend Serbia's lead to 64 - 57 with 4:24 remaining before Croatia began a late comeback to pull within one at 68 - 67 with 24 seconds left in the game. Aleksandar Rašić hit two free throws to extend the lead to three with 21 seconds left before Croatia's Marko Popović answered with two free throws of his own with 15 seconds left. Marko Tomas then stole the ensuing inbounds pass and dished to Popović, who was fouled with 11 seconds left. Popović made only one of two free throws to tie the game at 70 and set up a dramatic finish.

Serbia freed Rašić with a screen on the ensuing inbounds pass and he made an uncontested layup with nine seconds left.[6] Popović was then fouled with 5.9 seconds left, and hit both free throws to tie the game at 72. Serbia inbounded the ball to Rašić, who drove downcourt and was fouled by Croatia's Davor Kus while attempting an off-balance shot with one second left. Rašić made the first and missed the second free throw to give Serbia a one-point victory. Rašić ended up with 15 points, including eight in the fourth quarter and five in the final 21 seconds. Croatia's Popović led all scorers with 21 points to go along with five rebounds and five assists. The Oklahoma City Thunder's Nenad Krstić scored a team-high 16 points for Serbia.

valign=top align=right width=33%
SER StatisticsCRO
20/38 (53%) 2-pt field goals 21/38 (55%)
5/15 (33%) 3-pt field goals 5/24 (21%)
18/25 (72%) Free throws 15/17 (88%)
7 Offensive rebounds 13
22 Defensive rebounds 23
29 Total rebounds 36
14 Assists 12
12 Turnovers 13
9 Steals 7
0 Blocks 3
14 Fouls 22

2011 Adecco Ex-Yu Cup in Ljubljana, Slovenia

The 2011 game was a part of exhibition tournament for the EuroBasket 2011. Serbia had a 80–71 win over Croatia in the tournament final on 9 August 2011. Croatia led for most of the game, seven minutes before the end of the game it reached the 10 points margin, 67–57, but then played very poorly in the game closure. With a 13–0 run, Serbia took the lead, 67–70, two minutes before the end, and then increased its advantage to the final nine point lead, 71–80, by the end of the game. Croatia was led by forward Bojan Bogdanović with 17 points, while center Nenad Krstić was the most efficient in Serbia with 18 points scored.[7] [8]

valign=top align=right width=33%
CRO StatisticsSER
24/47 (51%) 2-pt field goals 22/38 (58%)
3/13 (23%) 3-pt field goals 5/22 (23%)
14/18 (78%) Free throws 21/26 (81%)
9 Offensive rebounds 7
26 Defensive rebounds 19
35 Total rebounds 26
16 Assists 17
16 Turnovers 10
8 Steals 8
2 Blocks 1
27 Fouls 22

2011 London Invitational

Croatia national team was able to successfully open its London Tournament campaign with the initial 83–71 win over rival Serbia. Croatia took the lead just before the end of the first quarter (17–16), led at the half by 44–36 and reached 16-point surplus midway the last quarter before managing to stay on the top. Croatian guard Krunoslav Simon again displayed his excellent shooting stroke while leading the Croatia with 17 points (6–8 from the floor). Croatian center Ante Tomić added 13 points and 9 rebounds.[9]

valign=top align=right width=33%
SER StatisticsCRO
19/38 (50%) 2-pt field goals 21/38 (55%)
7/21 (33%) 3-pt field goals 5/24 (21%)
12/24 (50%) Free throws 15/17 (88%)
12 Offensive rebounds 13
19 Defensive rebounds 23
31 Total rebounds 36
11 Assists 12
16 Turnovers 13
3 Steals 7
1 Blocks 3
27 Fouls 22

2012 Adecco Ex-Yu Cup in Ljubljana, Slovenia

The 2012 game was a part of exhibition tournament for the FIBA EuroBasket 2013 qualification in Slovenia. Croatia and Serbia had a very interesting game on the first day of the Adecco Cup on 3 August 2012. Serbia topped Croatia with final score of 90–74 and proved that they getting better form. Guard Miloš Teodosić led Serbia with great performances as he recorded 14 points, 9 assists and 4 rebounds. Forward Zoran Erceg added 14 points and Duško Savanović scored 13 points. It was obvious at the game that Serbia is much better team. Serbian coach Dušan Ivković even used last quarter to practice offense and defense combinations.[10] [11]

valign=top align=right width=33%
CRO StatisticsSER
19/41 (46%) 2-pt field goals 23/35 (66%)
8/12 (67%) 3-pt field goals 9/28 (32%)
12/17 (71%) Free throws 17/21 (81%)
4 Offensive rebounds 8
23 Defensive rebounds 23
27 Total rebounds 31
14 Assists 21
17 Turnovers 9
2 Steals 1
0 Blocks 0
24 Fouls 23

2013 Spor Toto World Cup in Istanbul, Turkey

See also: Basketball World Cup (Turkey). On 23 August 2013, Serbia won over Croatia with an 88–71 score, in the first round of the Spor Toto World Cup in Istanbul, Turkey. The Dušan Ivković's team was much better for the most part of the interesting match. They gained a six-point lead at halftime, the Croats then tried to return to the match, but the Serbian players routinely secured a convincing victory with an excellent game in the last quarter. Success against a quality rival is a great encouragement for the Serbian team before participating in the EuroBasket 2013 in Slovenia, and the tournament in Istanbul is the last test before the continental competition. The most efficient in the winning team were captain Nenad Krstić with 19, Raško Katić with 18 and Nemanja Bjelica with 14 points, while Marko Tomas stood out in the Croatian team with 16 points.[12] [13] [14] [15]

valign=top align=right width=33%
CRO StatisticsSER
2-pt field goals
3-pt field goals
Free throws
Offensive rebounds
Defensive rebounds
Total rebounds
Assists
Turnovers
Steals
Blocks
Fouls

2014 Tournament in Pau, France

Croatia suffered its second defeat at the exhibition tournament in Pau, France, after losing to Serbia 83–84 in overtime on 9 August 2014. In an equal match three minutes before the end, Croatia led 68–60, but the Serbs made 10–0 run in two minutes and took the lead 70–68. But then Croatian guard Oliver Lafayette scored a three-pointer and two free throws for the lead of the Croats 73–70. However, Serbian forward Marko Simonović scored 20 seconds before the game end and tied at 73–73 and the game went into overtime. In the additional five minutes, Croatia was in the lead, but six seconds before the end, Serbian guard Bogdan Bogdanović scored a three-pointer for Serbia's 84–83 lead. In the last run, Croatia tried through forward Bojan Bogdanović, but he missed a three-pointer and Serbia won 84–83 in the end. Serbia took what was offered, and Croatia suffered its defeat. Bojan Bogdanović was the best Croatian scorer with 19 points, and Luka Žorić 13, Damjan Rudež 11, Krunoslav Simon 11, and Oliver Lafayette scored 10 points. The Serbs were led by Marko Simonović with 24 points, Nemanja Bjelica scored 15 points and Miroslav Raduljica with 13 points joined them.[16] [17] [18] [19]

2016 Super4 in Córdoba, Argentina

The Croats were better for most of the first half. The central player in the composition of the Croats was Krunoslav Simon. By entering the game of Nemanja Nedović Serbia accelerated the game, a series of points from the transition followed, so the nine points minus was reduced to only one. Since Serbian guard Miloš Teodosić was not in the team, the Croats closed all the approaches under the basket, and conditionally speaking, they fired from a distance. Serbia was not served by a shot, but the other guys were up to the task, especially in defense. In the end, in the first half, Croatia led with 40–36. Simon scored 15 points, on the other hand, the central figure in the Serbian team was center Miroslav Raduljica with 11 points. At the beginning of the third section, with a triple by Bogdan Bogdanović, Serbia took the lead with 50–48. The main problem was still the Krunoslav Simon-Dario Šarić duo. Even then, it was clear that a match awaited us in which the nuances would decide. Croatian forward Bojan Bogdanović set up the targets, Raduljica kept Serbia in the game. Five minutes before the end, after Rok Stipčević's triple, the score was tied at 70–70. The Croats have scored 10 three-pointers so far. An uncertain ending followed. Serbian guard Stefan Marković hit a three-pointer for 79–77. Serbian guard Stefan Jović hit a three-pointer in the last second of the attack for 82–77. Croatia was broken at the time. More precisely, a miracle should have happened so that they could return to the match with the Croats. The mistake of the Croats, Nikola Kalinić's dunk from the counter, Bogdanovic's points and practically everything was clear.[20] [21] [22]

2016 Summer Olympics

Serbia defeated Croatia, 86–83, in the last quarterfinal of the Olympic Basketball Tournament on 17 August 2016 to set up a semifinal clash with Australia.

In the closest game of the day, the Serbs saw a 14-point third quarter lead melt away in the final frame as Croatia got within one several times down the stretch. But with time running out on them, Serbia had to foul to stop the clock and Serbians Miloš Teodosić and Nikola Jokić made good on their trips to the free-throw line in the final 18 seconds. There was little to separate the two teams in the first half, with Serbia up 20–19 at the end of the opening period and Croatia taking a 38–32 advantage at the break. Serbia took control thanks to a third quarter in which they outscored Croatia 34–14. They took their biggest lead of the night, 66–52, when guard Bogdan Bogdanović buried a three-pointer with 22 seconds left in the period. Croatia answered by going on a 22–7 run that got them within 74–73 on Darko Planinić's pair of free-throws with 3:26 remaining. Serbia stayed in front but Croatia were breathing down their neck. The Serbian side got a bit of breathing room when Miroslav Raduljica made the second of two foul shots to make it 79–75 with 27 seconds and that forced Croatia in having to foul intentionally to stop the clock but ultimately running out of time.[23] [24] [25] [26] [27]

Had Serbia rolled to a comfortable win on the back of their impressive third quarter, a great turning point could have been in the shape of Raduljica's postering dunk over Croatian forward Dario Šarić in transition for a 41–40 lead with 6:50 left to play in the period. Instead, the real turning point really came down to Serbia knocking down 6-of-6 free-throws in the dying seconds of the game. Serbia got 39 points from their reserves, compared to 26 for Croatia. Bogdanović (game-high 18 points before fouling out), Stefan Jović (9 points and 4 rebounds) and Milan Mačvan (8 points and 3 rebounds) each played key roles in the outcome of this game. Teodosić and Jokić didn't have huge games offensively, the former going only 2-of-11 for 9 points and the latter 3-of-8 for 12 points. But Teodosić handed out 10 assists and both players stepped up when it counted the most, knocking down shots from the charity stripe with the game on the line.[23] [24] [28] [27]

valign=top align=right width=33%
CRO StatisticsSER
16/32 (50%) 2-pt field goals 21/48 (44%)
7/19 (37%) 3-pt field goals 8/23 (35%)
30/38 (79%) Free throws 20/25 (80%)
10 Offensive rebounds 14
29 Defensive rebounds 21
39 Total rebounds 35
16 Assists 22
18 Turnovers 10
3 Steals 10
0 Blocks 2
28 Fouls 31

Statistics

Note: Last updated on 17 August 2016

CompetitionsGames played
2 0 2
1 0 1
1 0 1
9 2 7
Total 13 2 11

Comparison in major international tournaments

width=20%Tournamentwidth=15%width=15%width=60%Notes
1992 Summer OlympicsSilversuspendedYugoslavia was banned from international sports tournaments as part of United Nations Security Council Resolution 757.
1993 EuroBasketBronze
1994 FIBA World Championship
1995 EuroBasketGold
1996 Summer Olympics7thSilver
1997 EuroBasket11thGoldYugoslavia won 64–62 over Croatia, following the Aleksandar Đorđević's 3-point buzzer beater.
1998 FIBA World Championshipdid not qualify
1999 EuroBasket9thBronze
2000 Summer Olympicsdid not qualify6th
2001 EuroBasket7thGoldYugoslavia had a 80–66 win over Croatia.
2002 FIBA World Championshipdid not qualify
2003 EuroBasket11thwidth=15%
6th
2004 Summer Olympicsdid not qualify11th
2005 EuroBasket7th9th
2006 FIBA World Championshipdid not qualify11th
2007 EuroBasket6thwidth=15%
14th
2008 Summer Olympicsdid not qualify
2009 EuroBasketSilver
2010 FIBA World Championship14th4thSerbia had a 73–72 win over Croatia in a Round of 16 game.
2011 EuroBasket13th8th
2012 Summer Olympicsdid not qualify
2013 EuroBasket4th7th
2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup10thSilver
2015 EuroBasket9th4th
2016 Summer Olympics5thSilverSerbia had a 86–83 win over Croatia in a quarterfinal game.
2017 EuroBasket10th
2019 FIBA Basketball World Cupdid not qualify5th
2020 Summer Olympicsdid not qualify
2022 EuroBasket12th9th
2023 FIBA Basketball World Cupdid not qualifySilver
2024 Summer OlympicsQualified

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: BASKETBALL; Politics Take Center Court as Yugoslavs Win Title. Clarey. Christopher. 3 July 1995. The New York Times. 0362-4331. 2016-08-18.
  2. Sasa Djordjevic trojka protiv Hrvatske. 14 September 2010. 2 May 2016. YouTube.
  3. Web site: Serbia crush Australia to set up showdown with USA . fiba.basketball . 27 March 2022.
  4. Web site: USA beat Serbia to take third gold medal in a row . fiba.basketball . 27 March 2022.
  5. News: Serbia edges Croatia 73-72 in round of 16 at world basketball championship. Canadian Press. canadianpress.com. 3 September 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20100908115956/https://www.google.com/hostednews/canadianpress/article/ALeqM5hysqzAfpOHhAqPiX5M6_CewGVf9g. 8 September 2010 . dead.
  6. News: ESPN's recap: Serbia 73, Croatia 72. ESPN. ESPN.com. 3 September 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20100907082042/http://espn.go.com/blog/truehoop/post/_/id/19684/espns-recap-serbia-73-croatia-72. 7 September 2010 . live.
  7. Web site: Preokret sedam minuta prije kraja: Hrvatska u finalu izgubila od Srbije . novilist.hr . 9 August 2011 . 31 March 2022.
  8. Web site: Srbi bolji u finalu Ex-Yu turnira . vecernji.hr . 31 March 2022.
  9. Web site: London invitational: Croatia opens the tournament with 83–71 win over Serbia . crohoops.com . 1 April 2022.
  10. Web site: Košarkaši bez šanse protiv Srbije . tportal.hr . 31 March 2022.
  11. Web site: Srbija deklasirala hrvatske košarkaše . rtl.hr . 3 August 2012 . 31 March 2022.
  12. Web site: Srbija ubedljivo pobedila Hrvatsku . rtv.rs . 2 April 2022.
  13. Web site: "Orlovi" lako nadvisili Hrvate . net.hr . 14 May 2021 . 2 April 2022.
  14. Web site: Basketbol: Spor Toto World Cup 11 . memleket.com . 23 August 2013 . 6 April 2022.
  15. Web site: Istanbul turnir Sportoto: Pobeda, Srbija-Hrvatska 88:71 . svet-scandal.rs . 6 April 2022.
  16. Web site: U produžetku Srbija bolja od Hrvatske: Bojan Bogdanović promašio tricu za pobjedu . sportske.jutarnji.hr . 9 August 2014 . 2 April 2022.
  17. Web site: VIDEO: Srbija opet pobijedila Hrvatsku tricom u posljednjim sekundama . gol.dnevnik.hr . 2 April 2022.
  18. Web site: Ludo! Triler pobeda Srbije nad Hrvatskom! . mondo.rs . 2 April 2022.
  19. Web site: Hrvatska na nevjerojatan način ispustila pobjedu nad Srbijom! . vecernji.hr . 2 April 2022.
  20. Web site: Kordoba: Srbija bolja od Hrvatske! . rs.n1info.com . 2 August 2016 . 2 April 2022.
  21. Web site: KRAJ: Hrvatska - Srbija 77:86! . mozzartsport.com . 2 April 2022.
  22. Web site: Poraz od Srbije pred Rio . crosarka.com . August 2016 . 2 April 2022.
  23. Web site: Croatia vs. Serbia 2016 final score: Serbia advances to Olympic semifinals with 86-83 win . sbnation.com . 17 August 2016 . 27 March 2022.
  24. Web site: Serbia uses big third to surge past Croatia, holds on to make semis . sports.yahoo.com . 18 August 2016 . 27 March 2022.
  25. Web site: Hrvatski košarkaši ispali nakon drame: Protiv Srbije nadoknadili minus 14, ali dalje nije išlo... . vecernji.hr . 27 March 2022. hr.
  26. News: Srbija poslala Hrvatsku kući . Sportsport . 18 August 2016 . 27 March 2022. bs.
  27. Web site: Srbija herojski do polufinala!!! . b92.net . 27 March 2022.
  28. Web site: Srbija nakon velike drame eliminirala Hrvatsku s Olimpijskih igara! . gol.dnevnik.hr . 27 March 2022. hr.