FIBA 33

FIBA 3x3 basketball is a formalized version of three-on-three basketball, a form of the game initially developed on inner-city asphalt outdoor courts in the United States. With over 250 million players worldwide and among the most played recreational sports in the world, 3x3 will become a key motor for the growth of basketball. This variant of the sport is currently being promoted by the sport's worldwide governing body, FIBA, which began developing it in 2007. The format was first tested at the 2007 Asian Indoor Games in Macau,[1] introduced at international level at the 2009 Asian Youth Games in Singapore, and made its worldwide competitive debut at the 2010 Youth Olympics, also in Singapore.[2]

Contents

Basic rules

FIBA released its official rules for FIBA 3x3 on June 2, 2010 as a supplement to its official basketball rules. The rules state that regular FIBA rules apply to all situations not specifically addressed in the FIBA 3x3 rules.[3]

The departures from regular full-court basketball are as follows:[3]

Some similarities to traditional basketball rules are explicitly addressed in the FIBA 3x3 rules:[3]

FIBA Secretary General Patrick Baumann has stated that the rules are a work in progress, but that any changes will not compromise the spirit of street 3-on-3.[2] One change from the original rules was in the number of periods; in the first test event, games were conducted in three 5-minute periods.

Development

The FIBA 3x3 concept was first developed in 2007, with a demonstration competition held in November of that year at the Asian Indoor Games in Macau. Further test events were held in April 2008 in the Dominican Republic and October 2008 in Indonesia. FIBA 3x3 was later contested at the 2009 Asian Youth Games[2] by 19 teams in the boys' tournament and 16 teams in the girls' tournament. All games were held at Anglican High School, Singapore[3]. FIBA 3x3 basketball was the only form of basketball at the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics, contested by 20 teams each in the boys' and girls' tournaments. The tournaments were held at the *scape Youth Space, Singapore.

According to Baumann, enthusiasm for the FIBA 3x3 format in China is "beyond any imagination", and FIBA 33 tournaments are held "almost every week" in Southeast Asia. [2]

FIBA is also developing a world ranking system for FIBA 3x3 in consultation with technology companies, as well as statistics professors from a university in FIBA's headquarters country of Switzerland. Because FIBA 3x3, as a truncated version of the full game of basketball, has an obvious parallel in beach volleyball, a two-person outdoor variant of volleyball, FIBA is in regular contact with volleyball's governing body, FIVB, to learn about the development of beach volleyball since that discipline's debut at the 1996 Olympics.[2]

FIBA sees FIBA 3x3 as a major vehicle for promotion of the game throughout the world. As Baumann stated in 2008, "The 3-on-3 concept has all the elements and skills required for basketball, it has inspired and will continue to inspire many great players in the future. At the same time, it is the easiest and one of the most effective ways to bring youngsters to basketball, keep them and promote our game. Finally, FIBA 3x3 can and will promote key educational and social values to the next generations." Baumann is also hoping that FIBA 3x3 will be adopted for the Summer Olympics as early as 2016 or 2020.[2][4]

See also

References

  1. ^ "PR N°13 - Youth Olympic Games: It's Singapore… and it's FIBA 33!" (Press release). International Basketball Federation. 2008-02-21. http://www.fiba.com/pages/eng/fc/news/presRele/p/newsid/23545/presReleArti.html. Retrieved 2010-08-13. 
  2. ^ a b c d e "3-on-3 hoops game set to debut". Associated Press. ESPN.com. August 13, 2010. http://sports.espn.go.com/oly/olybb/news/story?id=5461684. Retrieved August 13, 2010. 
  3. ^ a b c FIBA (2 June 2010). FIBA 3x3: Official Rules of the Game. Downloadable from the official FIBA site here [1] (click on the link immediately below "FIBA 3x3 Official Rules").
  4. ^ Press, Associated (2011-12-15). "Olympics FIBA hopes to see 3-on-3 basketball in Olympics". Universal Sports. http://www.universalsports.com/news-blogs/article/newsid=492338.html. Retrieved 2011-12-28. 

External links