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The 1957 European Basketball Championship, commonly called Eurobasket 1957, was the tenth regional championship held by FIBA Europe. Sixteen national teams affiliated with the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) entered the competition. The competition was hosted by Bulgaria. Sofia was the location of the event.
[edit] Final rankings
- Soviet Union
- Bulgaria
- Czechoslovakia
- Hungary
- Romania
- Yugoslavia
- Poland
- France
- Turkey
- Italy
- Finland
- Belgium
- West Germany
- Austria
- Scotland
- Albania
[edit] Results
[edit] Preliminary round
In the preliminary round, the 16 teams were split up into four groups of four teams each. The top two teams in each group advanced to the final round to play for the first 8 places, while the bottom two were sent to the classification round to play for 9th through 16th.
[edit] Group A
|
|
|
Czechoslovakia |
123 - 44 |
Scotland |
Albania |
57 - 89 |
Yugoslavia |
Yugoslavia |
94 - 39 |
Scotland |
Czechoslovakia |
71 - 37 |
Albania |
Scotland |
65 - 42 |
Albania |
Czechoslovakia |
79 - 61 |
Yugoslavia |
[edit] Group B
|
|
|
Soviet Union |
107 - 38 |
Austria |
Poland |
55 - 50 |
Turkey |
Turkey |
80 - 57 |
Austria |
Soviet Union |
83 - 71 |
Poland |
Austria |
38 - 62 |
Poland |
Soviet Union |
80 - 49 |
Turkey |
[edit] Group C
|
|
|
Bulgaria |
67 - 52 |
France |
West Germany |
52 - 73 |
Italy |
Bulgaria |
72 - 45 |
Italy |
France |
83 - 39 |
West Germany |
Italy |
59 - 61 |
France |
Bulgaria |
100 - 58 |
West Germany |
[edit] Group D
Rank |
Team |
Pts |
W |
L |
PF |
PA |
Diff |
1 |
Hungary |
6 |
3 |
0 |
200 |
154 |
+146 |
2 |
Romania |
5 |
2 |
1 |
205 |
183 |
+22 |
3 |
Finland |
4 |
1 |
2 |
187 |
207 |
-20 |
4 |
Belgium |
3 |
0 |
3 |
169 |
217 |
-48 |
|
|
|
Hungary |
66 - 65 |
Romania |
Finland |
76 - 74 |
Belgium |
Hungary |
50 - 39 |
Finland |
Belgium |
45 - 57 |
Romania |
Romania |
83 - 72 |
Finland |
Hungary |
84 - 50 |
Belgium |
[edit] Classification round
For the first time, the classification round, like the final round, was played as an 8-team round robin, with no further playoffs.
|
|
|
Italy |
91 - 50 |
Belgium |
Finland |
61 - 47 |
West Germany |
Scotland |
69 - 56 |
Albania |
Turkey |
59 - 42 |
Austria |
|
|
|
Turkey |
83 - 70 |
Belgium |
Finland |
53 - 51 |
Austria |
West Germany |
72 - 43 |
Albania |
Scotland |
47 - 91 |
Italy |
|
|
|
West Germany |
37 - 57 |
Italy |
Turkey |
100 - 54 |
Scotland |
Austria |
58 - 70 |
Belgium |
Finland |
91 - 42 |
Albania |
|
|
|
Finland |
84 - 67 |
Belgium |
Austria |
48 - 47 |
Scotland |
Albania |
42 - 82 |
Italy |
West Germany |
33 - 54 |
Turkey |
|
|
|
Finland |
87 - 97 |
Italy |
Albania |
64 - 97 |
Turkey |
Austria |
55 - 58 |
West Germany |
Belgium |
76 - 51 |
Scotland |
|
|
|
Turkey |
57 - 50 |
Italy |
Belgium |
50 - 46 |
West Germany |
Finland |
72 - 56 |
Scotland |
Albania |
45 - 58 |
Austria |
|
|
|
Finland |
51 - 75 |
Turkey |
Belgium |
90 - 48 |
Albania |
Italy |
32 - 30 |
Austria |
Scotland |
44 - 49 |
West Germany |
[edit] Final round
The final round was played as an 8-team round robin, with no further playoffs.
|
|
|
France |
53 - 83 |
Soviet Union |
Czechoslovakia |
65 - 62 |
Hungary |
Poland |
66 - 70 |
Romania |
Bulgaria |
99 - 76 |
Yugoslavia |
Yugoslavia was the first of the pool leaders to take a loss in the final round, playing against Bulgaria, who had won their division.
|
|
|
Poland |
63 - 77 |
Hungary |
France |
45 - 65 |
Romania |
Soviet Union |
97 - 61 |
Yugoslavia |
Bulgaria |
82 - 80 |
Czechoslovakia |
Bulgaria continued to oust division leaders, knocking Czechoslovakia out of the undefeated group. Romania and the Soviet Union each defeated their second opponents, joining Bulgaria at the top of the pool.
|
|
|
Poland |
69 - 74 |
Bulgaria |
Romania |
61 - 76 |
Hungary |
France |
72 - 75 |
Yugoslavia |
Soviet Union |
62 - 60 |
Czechoslovakia |
The Soviet team pulled off a close win over the Czechoslovakian team that had broken the Soviets' lossless European championship start at 31 games. Romania lost a rematch with preliminary round opponent Hungary, as those two teams went to 2-1 behind the Soviets and Bulgarians, who had each maintained perfect records in their first three games.
|
|
|
Yugoslavia |
74 - 95 |
Czechoslovakia |
France |
58 - 81 |
Hungary |
Soviet Union |
86 - 64 |
Poland |
Romania |
54 - 67 |
Bulgaria |
Bulgaria and the Soviet Union each won their 7th game of the tournament and 4th of the final round, improving to 4-0. Hungary stayed close behind, at 3-1, with Romania and Czechoslovakia staying in contention at 2-2.
|
|
|
Yugoslavia |
69 - 68 |
Poland |
Romania |
63 - 87 |
Soviet Union |
France |
62 - 64 |
Czechoslovakia |
Hungary |
52 - 63 |
Bulgaria |
The Soviets and Bulgarians remained undefeated as Hungary, falling to Bulgaria, dropped to 2 games behind them at 3-2 along with Czechoslovakia.
|
|
|
France |
65 - 68 |
Bulgaria |
Czechoslovakia |
80 - 61 |
Poland |
Yugoslavia |
60 - 72 |
Romania |
Hungary |
51 - 62 |
Soviet Union |
Improving to 6-0 each, the Soviet Union and Bulgaria set up a match between the two of them that would determine the championship in the seventh and final game of the round.
|
|
|
Hungary |
81 - 61 |
Yugoslavia |
Czechoslovakia |
61 - 55 |
Romania |
France |
62 - 65 |
Poland |
Bulgaria |
57 - 60 |
Soviet Union |
The Soviet Union trailed by 4 points at halftime in their decisive game against Bulgaria. The second half saw an explosion of scoring, with the Soviets adding 41 points in the frame to the 19 they had in the first half. Bulgaria wasn't able to maintain the pace, scoring only 34 in the second half to fall to the Soviets 60-57. Poland picked up their first win of the final round, defeating France, who fell to 0-7.
[edit] Team rosters
- Soviet Union - Arkadi Botschkarjew, Mart Laga, Algirdas Lauritėnas, Guram Minaschwili, Valdis Muižnieks, Juri Oserow, Stasys Stonkus, Michail Semjonow, Michail Studenezky, Wladimir Torban, Maigonis Valdmanis, Wiktor Subkow
- Bulgaria - Cvetan Barsovski, Vlado Gancev, Georgi Kanev, Petar Lasarov, Ilia Mircev, Georgi Panov, Lubomir Panov, Atanas Pejcinski, Viktor Radev, Cvetko Savov, Michail Semov, Metodi Tomovski, Konstantin Totev
- Czechoslovakia - Jiri Baumruk, Zdenek Bobrovsky, Jaroslav Chocholac, Lubomir Kolar, Boris Lukasik, Milan Merkl, Nikolaj Ordnung, Zdenek Rylich, Jaroslav Sip, Miroslav Skerik, Jaroslav Tetiva, Jiri Tetiva
[edit] External links