2016 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship for Women

2016 EuroBasket Under-16 for Women
28th FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship for Women
Tournament details
Host nation Italy
Dates 6 – 14 August 2016
Teams 16
Champions  Spain (10th title)
MVP Germany Luisa Geiselsoder
Official website
http://www.fiba.com/europe/u16women/2016
< 2015
2017 >

The 2016 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship for Women was the 28th edition of the Women's European basketball championship for national under-16 teams.

Spain won their 10th championship title by beating Germany in the final, 64–48.[1]

Participating teams

Preliminary round

In this round, the 16 teams are allocated in four groups of four teams each. All teams advance to the playoff round of 16.[2]

Group A

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts
1  Germany 3 3 0 197 154 +43 6
2  Spain 3 2 1 165 127 +38 5
3  Hungary 3 1 2 168 179 11 4
4  Portugal 3 0 3 127 197 70 3
Source: FIBA.com
6 August 2016
Portugal  5172  Germany
6 August 2016
Spain  5946  Hungary

7 August 2016
Hungary  5948  Portugal
7 August 2016
Germany  5340  Spain

9 August 2016
Hungary  6372  Germany
9 August 2016
Portugal  2866  Spain

Group B

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts
1  Italy 3 3 0 215 160 +55 6
2  Lithuania 3 2 1 232 215 +17 5
3  Russia 3 1 2 185 199 14 4
4  Turkey 3 0 3 161 219 58 3
Source: FIBA.com
6 August 2016
Turkey  6077  Lithuania
6 August 2016
Russia  4360  Italy

7 August 2016
Lithuania  8575  Russia
7 August 2016
Italy  7547  Turkey

9 August 2016
Turkey  5467  Russia
9 August 2016
Italy  8070  Lithuania

Group C

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts
1  Czech Republic 3 3 0 215 154 +61 6
2  Belarus 3 2 1 199 209 10 5
3  Latvia 3 1 2 171 180 9 4
4  Serbia 3 0 3 198 240 42 3
Source: FIBA.com
6 August 2016
Serbia  7492  Belarus
6 August 2016
Czech Republic  5845  Latvia

7 August 2016
Belarus  4679  Czech Republic
7 August 2016
Latvia  7061  Serbia

9 August 2016
Latvia  5661  Belarus
9 August 2016
Serbia  6378  Czech Republic

Group D

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts
1  France 3 3 0 199 105 +94 6
2  Croatia 3 2 1 155 141 +14 5
3  Sweden 3 1 2 138 151 13 4
4  Slovakia 3 0 3 96 191 95 3
Source: FIBA.com
6 August 2016
France  5144  Croatia
6 August 2016
Slovakia  2756  Sweden

7 August 2016
Croatia  5840  Slovakia
7 August 2016
Sweden  3271  France

9 August 2016
Croatia  5350  Sweden
9 August 2016
Slovakia  2977  France

Knockout stage

Bracket

 
Round of 16Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
              
 
10 Aug
 
 
 Germany63
 
12 Aug
 
 Turkey43
 
 Germany69
 
10 Aug
 
 Belarus53
 
 Belarus62
 
13 Aug
 
 Sweden56
 
 Germany44
 
10 Aug
 
 France43
 
 Lithuania74
 
12 Aug
 
 Hungary72
 
 Lithuania36
 
10 Aug
 
 France76
 
 France85
 
14 Aug
 
 Serbia50
 
 Germany48
 
10 Aug
 
 Spain64
 
 Spain48
 
12 Aug
 
 Russia47
 
 Spain63
 
10 Aug
 
 Czech Republic51
 
 Czech Republic65
 
13 Aug
 
 Slovakia47
 
 Spain57
 
10 Aug
 
 Italy49 Third Place
 
 Italy60
 
12 Aug14 Aug
 
 Portugal51
 
 Italy50 France68
 
10 Aug
 
 Croatia45  Italy50
 
 Croatia53
 
 
 Latvia49
 

5–8th place bracket

 
5th–8th place semifinalsFifth place
 
      
 
13 Aug
 
 
 Belarus68
 
14 Aug
 
 Lithuania71
 
 Lithuania51
 
13 Aug
 
 Croatia54
 
 Czech Republic41
 
 
 Croatia50
 
Seventh place
 
 
14 Aug
 
 
 Belarus58
 
 
 Czech Republic84

9–16th place bracket

  13th place game
(14 Aug)
13th-16th place semifinals
(13 Aug)
9th-16th place quarterfinals
(12 Aug)
9th-12th place semifinals
(13 Aug)
9th place game
(14 Aug)
                                               
     Turkey 66  
     Sweden 53  
   Sweden 51        Turkey 63  
   Serbia 79        Hungary 56  
   Hungary 68
     Serbia 59  
   Serbia 77        Turkey 60
   Portugal 74        Latvia 56
     Russia 72  
       Slovakia 60  
 Slovakia 51        Russia 65
  15th place game
(14 Aug)
     Portugal 88        Latvia 68     11th place game
(14 Aug)
   Sweden 73    Portugal 32    Hungary 56
   Slovakia 49      Latvia 58      Russia 63

Final ranking

Team relegated to 2017 Division B.
Rank Team Record
1st, gold medalist(s)  Spain 6–1
2nd, silver medalist(s)  Germany 6–1
3rd, bronze medalist(s)  France 6–1
4  Italy 5–2
5  Croatia 5–2
6  Lithuania 4–3
7  Czech Republic 5–2
8  Belarus 3–4
9  Turkey 3–4
10  Latvia 3–4
11  Russia 3–4
12  Hungary 2–5
13  Serbia 2–5
14  Portugal 1–6
15  Sweden 2–5
16  Slovakia 0–7

References

  1. "Spain claim fourth title in six years". FIBA.com. 15 August 2016. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  2. Competition system
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.