EuroBasket Women 2003

EuroBasket 2003 Women
29th FIBA European Women's
Basketball Championship
Tournament details
Host nation Greece
Dates September 19 – September 28
Teams 12 (from 49 federations)
Champions  Russia (1st title)
MVP Lucie Blahůšková
Official website
Official website (archive)
< 2001
2005 >

The 2003 European Women Basketball Championship, commonly called EuroBasket Women 2003, was the 29th regional championship held by FIBA Europe. The competition was held in Greece and took place from September 19 to September 28, 2003. Russia won the gold medal and Czech Republic the silver medal while Spain won the bronze. Lucie Blahůšková from Czech Republic was named the tournament MVP.

Participating Teams

Group A

Group B

Venues

Group City Arena
APyrgos Pyrgos Indoor Hall
BAmaliada Basketball Hall of Amaliada
Knockout Stage and FinalPatras Apollon Patras Indoor Hall

Preliminary Round

Group A (Pyrgos)

Team Pts. Pld W L PF PA Diff
1.  Czech Republic 10550435336+99
2.  France 8532386346+40
3.  Poland 8532353309+44
4.  Serbia and Montenegro 8532374352+22
5.  Greece 6514321362-41
6.  Israel 5505293457-164

Group B (Amaliada)

Team Pts Pld W L PF PA Pts
1.  Spain 10550359300+59
2.  Slovakia 8532345340+5
3.  Russia 8532348308+40
4.  Belgium 7523355377-22
5.  Hungary 7523299319-20
6.  Ukraine 5505301363-62

Knockout stage

Championship bracket

Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final
                   
September 26, 2003        
  France  66
September 27, 2003
  Russia  79  
  Russia  78
September 26, 2003
    Spain  71  
  Spain  76
September 28, 2003
  Serbia and Montenegro  64  
  Czech Republic  73
September 26, 2003
    Russia  68
  Czech Republic  98
September 27, 2003
  Belgium  62  
  Poland  66 Third place
September 26, 2003
    Czech Republic  74  
  Slovakia  61   Poland  81
  Poland  78     Spain  87
September 28, 2003

5th place bracket

Semi-finals Fifth place
September 27, 2003 - Patras
   France   83  
   Serbia and Montenegro   61  
 
September 27, 2003 - Patras
       Belgium   75
     France   94
Seventh place
September 27, 2003 - Patras September 27, 2003 - Patras
   Slovakia   80    Slovakia   68
   Belgium   86      Serbia and Montenegro   67

9th place bracket

Semi-finals Ninth place
September 26, 2003 - Patras
   Greece   76  
   Ukraine   68  
 
September 27, 2003 - Patras
       Greece   85
     Hungary   83
Twelfth place
September 26, 2003 - Patras September 27, 2003 - Patras
   Hungary   85    Ukraine   107
   Israel   77      Israel   87
 2003 FIBA European Champions 

Russia
1st title

Final standings

Place Team W-L
1  Russia 6–2
2  Czech Republic 7–1
3  Spain 7–1
4  Poland 4–4
5  France 5–3
6  Belgium 3–5
7  Slovakia 4–4
8  Serbia and Montenegro 3–5
9  Greece 3–4
10  Hungary 2–5
11  Ukraine 1–6
12  Israel 0–7

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/21/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.