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2006 FIBA World Championship

2006 edition of the FIBA World Championship

2006 FIBA World Championship

2006 edition of the FIBA World Championship

FieldValue
tourney_nameFIBA World Championship
year2006
other_titlesFIBA バスケットボール世界選手権 2006
image2006 FIBA World Championship logo.jpg
size145
countryJapan
dates19 August – 3 September
openedAkihito
num_teams24
confederations5
venues5
cities5
championSpain
count1
secondGreece
thirdUnited States
fourthArgentina
games80
mvpESP Pau Gasol
top_scorerCHN Yao Ming
(25.3 points per game)
prevseason[2002](2002-fiba-world-championship)
nextseason[2010](2010-fiba-world-championship)

FIBA Basukettobōru Sekai Senshuken 2006 (25.3 points per game) The 2006 FIBA World Championship was the 15th FIBA World Championship, the international basketball world championship for men's national teams. The tournament was hosted by Japan and held from 19 August to 3 September 2006. It was co-organised by the International Basketball Federation (FIBA), Japan Basketball Association (JABBA) and the 2006 Organising Committee.

For the first time since 1986, the World Championship was contested by 24 nations, eight more than in 2002. As a result, group rounds were conducted in four cities, with the knockout rounds being hosted by Saitama City.

Spain won the tournament by beating Greece 70–47 in the championship final. Spain won all nine games they played. Spain's gold medal in this tournament was the first medal Spain had ever won in a FIBA World Championship. Pau Gasol also became the first Spaniard to win the MVP award. It was the first time a country has won all nine of its games since 1994 when the United States won all nine games and took the gold medal home. The bronze medal was won by the United States, who defeated Argentina, 96–81, in the third place game, after a semi-finals loss to Greece. Up to 2019, including the 2014 tournament, it has been the only tournament where neither Yugoslavia (or one of its successor republics) or the USA have reached the final. The 2006 tournament marked the final appearance of Serbia and Montenegro as they broke up into the independent nations of Serbia and Montenegro after a successful independence referendum in Montenegro in May.

Seventeen years after the 2006 edition, Japan once again hosted the FIBA World Championships, now called the World Cup in 2023 in Okinawa along with the Philippines and Indonesia.

Venues

[[File:Hiroshima Prefectural Sports Center 2021-03 ac (2).jpg150px]][[File:Japanese Saitama Super Arena.jpg210px]][[File:Arena of the Kameiarena sendai.jpg150px]]

Qualification

Main article: 2006 FIBA World Championship Qualification

There were 24 teams taking part in the 2006 World Cup of Basketball.

  • Host nation: 1 berth
  • 2004 Summer Olympics: 12 teams competing for 1 berth, removed from that country's FIBA zone
  • FIBA Africa: 12 teams competing for 3 berths
  • FIBA Oceania: 2 teams competing for 2 berths
  • FIBA Americas: 10 teams competing for 4 berths
  • FIBA Asia: 16 teams competing for 3 berths
  • FIBA Europe: 16 teams competing for 6 berths
  • Wild card: 4 berths

Qualified teams

EventDateLocationBerthsQualifiedTOTAL24
Host nation1
2004 OlympicsAugust 15–28, 2004GRE Athens1
[2005 FIBA Africa Championship](2005-fiba-africa-championship)August 15–24, 2005ALG Algiers3
[2005 FIBA Oceania Championship](2005-fiba-oceania-championship)August 17–21, 2005NZL Auckland and Dunedin2
[2005 FIBA Americas Championship](2005-fiba-americas-championship)August 24–September 4, 2005DOM Santo Domingo4
[2005 FIBA Asia Championship](2005-fiba-asia-championship)September 8–16, 2005QAT Doha3
EuroBasket 20054–22 September 2005SCG6
Wild cards4

Squads

Main article: 2006 FIBA World Championship squads

At the start of tournament, all 24 participating countries had 12 players on their roster.

Competing nations

The following national teams competed:

Teams that entered qualification tournaments; Asia (purple), Africa (orange), Americas (green), Europe (blue) and Oceania (yellow) and automatic qualifiers (aqua)
Group AGroup BGroup CGroup D
Teams qualified

Japan qualified as the host country, and Italy, Puerto Rico, Serbia and Montenegro, and Turkey gained FIBA wild-card invitations. Argentina qualified as the champion of the 2004 Olympics. The remaining 18 countries qualified through their continents' qualifying tournaments (six from Europe, four from the Americas, three from each of Asia and Africa and two from Oceania).

The draw for the 2006 World Championship was held in Tokyo on 15 January 2006. In the preliminary rounds, Group A played at Sendai, Group B at Hiroshima, Group C at Hamamatsu and Group D at Sapporo. The Medal Rounds were played at Saitama.

Group stage

Group A

Venue: Sendai Gymnasium, Sendai

19 August 2006

******80**–70

20 August 2006

******65**–61

21 August 2006

******64**–53

23 August 2006

******74**–73

24 August 2006

******81**–61

Group B

Venue: Hiroshima Green Arena, Hiroshima

19 August 2006

******86**–70

20 August 2006

57–**101******

21 August 2006

******78**–61

23 August 2006

******60**–57

24 August 2006

55–**104******

Group C

Venue: Hamamatsu Arena, Hamamatsu

19 August 2006

******76**–74

20 August 2006

76–**81**(OT)****

22 August 2006

******73**–71

23 August 2006

80–**91******

24 August 2006

******76**–69

Group D

Venue: Sapporo Arena, Sapporo

19 August 2006

69–**84******

20 August 2006

******121**–90

22 August 2006

95–**114******

23 August 2006

******94**–85

24 August 2006

******103**–58

Knockout stage

Note

All times are local [Japan Standard Time

Venue: [Saitama Super Arena, Saitama |26 August||79||62 |26 August||90||84 |26 August||87||75 |26 August||68||71 |27 August||95||64 |27 August||68||62 |27 August||113||73 |27 August||78||77 |29 August||83||58 |29 August||89||67 |30 August||73||56 |30 August||85||65 |1 September||74||75 |1 September||101||95 |3 September||70||47 |2 September||96||81}}

Round of 16

Quarterfinals

5th–8th classification

|31 August||84|** (OT)**|95 |31 August||75||73 |2 September||56||64 |3 September|****|77||62

5th–8th classification

Seventh place playoff

Fifth place playoff

Semifinals

Third place playoff

Final

Main article: 2006 FIBA World Championship final

Scene from the final. A member of Span's team is seen dunking the ball
Spain's Gold Medal ceremony

Since the inaugural competition in 1950 the five competing countries for the title had always been two of Argentina, United States, Soviet Union, Brazil and Yugoslavia, one of which always being either United States or Yugoslavia. After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Russia took its place in the finals of 1994 and 1998, and after the breakup of Yugoslavia, FR Yugoslavia took its place in the finals of 1998 and 2002. The 2006 final was the first and only one in which none of these five teams competed.

The final was an unexpectedly one-sided affair, with Spain dominating from the beginning and limiting Greece to just 47 points, fewer than the Greeks had scored in any single game in the tournament, and less than half what Greece had scored against the US in the semifinals. Spain won despite having lost power forward Pau Gasol, who was ultimately named the tournament's most valuable player, to injury in a semifinal match against Argentina.

Final standings

2006 FIBA World Championship final rankings.
  • Teams that were eliminated at the round of 16 are officially tied for 9th.
  • Teams that were 5th at their preliminary rounds are officially tied for 17th.
  • Teams that were 6th at their preliminary rounds are officially tied for 21st.
RankTeamRecord1234567891721
9–0
8–1
8–1
7–2
6–3
6–3
5–4
5–4
3–3
2–4
2–4
4–2
2–4
2–4
2–4
2–4
1–4
1–4
2–3
2–3
0–5
0–5
0–5
1–4

Awards

Most Valuable Player
Spain Pau Gasol

All-Tournament Team

Main article: FIBA Basketball World Cup All-Tournament Team

  • Spain Pau Gasol
  • Spain Jorge Garbajosa
  • USA Carmelo Anthony
  • Argentina Manu Ginóbili
  • Greece Theodoros Papaloukas

Leading scorers

No.PlayerTeamPPG
Yao Ming
Dirk Nowitzki
Pau Gasol
Carlos Arroyo
Larry Ayuso{{center21.2

Referees

For the World Championship, FIBA selected 40 professional referees.

Group AGroup BGroup CGroup D

Sponsorship

• McDonald's

References

References

  1. [https://web.archive.org/web/20090207215407/http://www.fiba.com/pages/eng/fc/news/lateNews/p/newsid/10155/arti.html Press Release no. 38: ITA, PUR, YUG and TUR receive Wild Cards]
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