FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship

FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship was inaugurated in 1964 and for the following 40 years it had been held biannually. From 2004 onwards, it is held every year.

Contents

Statistic

Statistic Division A

Summaries

Summaries
Year Host Gold medal game Bronze medal game
Gold Score Silver Bronze Score Fourth place
1964
details
 Italy (Naples)
Soviet Union

France

Italy
1966
details
 Italy (Porto San Giorgio)
Soviet Union

Yugoslavia

Italy
1968
details
 Spain (Vigo)
Soviet Union

Yugoslavia

Italy
1970
details
 Greece (Athens)
Soviet Union

Greece

Italy
1972
details
 Yugoslavia (Zadar)
Yugoslavia

Italy

Soviet Union
1974
details
 France (Orléans)
Yugoslavia

Spain

Italy
1976
details
 Spain (Santiago de Compostela)
Yugoslavia

Soviet Union

Spain
1978
details
 Italy (Roseto degli Abruzzi, Teramo)
Soviet Union

Spain

Yugoslavia
1980
details
 Yugoslavia (Celje)
Soviet Union

Yugoslavia

Bulgaria
1982
details
 Bulgaria (Bulgaria, Haskovo)
Soviet Union

Yugoslavia

Bulgaria
1984
details
 Sweden (Huskvarna, Katrineholm)
Soviet Union

Italy

Yugoslavia
1986
details
 Austria (Vöcklabruck, Gmunden)
Yugoslavia

Soviet Union

Italy
1988
details
 Yugoslavia (Titov Vrbas, Srbobran)
Yugoslavia

Italy

Czechoslovakia
1990
details
 Netherlands (Groningue, Emmen)
Italy

Soviet Union

Spain
1992
details
 Hungary (Budapest, Zalaegerszeg, Szolnok)
France

Italy

CIS
1994
details
 Israel (Tel Aviv)
Lithuania

Croatia

Spain
1996
details
 France (Auch, Lourdes, Tarbes)
Croatia

France

FR Yugoslavia
1998
details
 Bulgaria (Varna)
Spain

Croatia

Greece
2000
details
 Croatia (Zadar)
France

Croatia

Greece
2002
details
 Germany (Ludwigsbourg, Esslingen, Böblingen)
Croatia

Slovenia

Greece
2004
details
 Spain (Zaragoza)
Spain

Turkey

France

Italy
2005
details
 Serbia (Belgrade)
Serbia and Montenegro

Turkey

Italy

Spain
2006
details
 Greece (Amaliada, Olympie, Argostoli)
France

Lithuania

Spain

Turkey
2007
details
 Spain (Madrid)
Serbia

Greece

Latvia

Lithuania
2008
details
 Greece (Amaliada, Pyrgos)
Greece

Lithuania

Croatia

France
2009
details
 France (Metz)
Serbia

France

Turkey

Lithuania
2010
details
 Lithuania (Vilnius)
Lithuania
90–61
Russia

Latvia
75–49
Serbia
2011
details
 Poland (Wroclaw)
Spain
71–65
Serbia

Turkey
69–65
Italy
2012
details
 Lithuania (Vilnius, Klaipėda)
 Latvia (Liepaja)

Performances by nation

 Rank  Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  Soviet Union* 8 3 1 12
2  Yugoslavia* 5 4 2 11
3  France 3 3 1 7
4  Spain 3 2 4 9
5  Croatia 2 3 1 6
6  Lithuania 2 2 0 4
7  Serbia 2 1 1 4
8  Italy 1 4 7 13
9  Greece 1 2 3 6
10  Serbia and Montenegro* 1 0 1 2
11  Turkey 0 2 2 4
12  Russia 0 1 0 1
 Slovenia 0 1 0 1
14  Bulgaria 0 0 3 3
15  Latvia 0 0 2 2
16  Czechoslovakia 0 0 1 1
 CIS 0 0 1 1

Statistic Division B

Summaries

Summaries
Year Host Promoted to Division A Bronze medal game
Gold Score Silver Bronze Score Fourth place
2005
details
 Slovak Republic
Ukraine

Iceland

Hungary
2006
details
 Romania
Romania

Estonia

Portugal
2007
details
 Bulgaria
Belgium

Ukraine

Poland
2008
details
 Hungary (Debrecen)
Slovenia

Czech Republic

Poland

Slovak Republic
2009
details
 Bosnia and Herzegovina
Sweden

Poland

Montenegro
2010
details
 Israel
Czech Republic

Finland

Montenegro
2011
details
 Bulgaria
Bulgaria
70–68
Denmark

Sweden
71–65
Montenegro
2012
details
 Bosnia and Herzegovina

Statistic Division C

Summaries

Year Host Gold Silver Bronze
1997  Andorra  Moldova  Andorra  Cyprus
1999  Luxembourg  Iceland  Ireland  Luxembourg
2001  Malta  Cyprus  Scotland  Luxembourg
2003  Malta  Albania  Scotland  Andorra
2005  Malta  Andorra  Scotland  Luxembourg
2007  Wales  Scotland  Wales  Moldova
2009  Malta  Malta  Gibraltar  Andorra
2011  San Marino

Performances by nation

 Rank  Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  Scotland 1 3 0 4
2  Andorra 1 1 2 4
3  Moldova 1 0 1 2
4  Cyprus 1 0 1 2
5  Albania 1 0 0 1
 Iceland 1 0 0 1
 Malta 1 0 0 1
8  Gibraltar 0 1 0 1
 Ireland 0 1 0 1
 Wales 0 1 0 1
11  Luxembourg 0 0 3 3

Division B Leaders

Top Scorers

Here is a list of all Top Scorers

Year Top Scorer PPG
2005 Tom Schumacher 20.6
2006 Samy Picard 22.1
2007 Antti Kanervo 24.5
2008 Richard Grznárr 22.0
2009 Thomas Laerke 27.0
2010 Alasdair Fraser 20.6

Top Rebounders

Here is a list of all Top Rebounders

Year Top Scorer RPG
2005 Eoin McDermott 12.1
2006 Daniel Clark 15.9
2007 Cláudio Fonseca 15.4
2008 Rolland Török 12.8
2009 Enes Kanter 16.4
2010 Ondrej Balvin 11.0

Top Assist Leaders

Here is a list of all Top Assist Leaders

Year Top Scorer APG
2005 Pavel Ermolinskij 5.5
2006 Aron Roijé 3.3
2007 Nikola Lalic 7.1
2008 Tomás Satoránský 6.4
2009 Aegir Steinarsson 5.5
2010 Bar Timor 5.8

European U18 Championship 2010 (Vilnius, Lithuania) July 22 – August 1

  1.  Lithuania
  2.  Russia
  3.  Latvia
  4.  Serbia
  5.  Croatia
  6.  Poland
  7.  France
  8.  Greece
  9.  Turkey
  10.  Slovenia
  11.  Spain
  12.  Italy

Winning Roster: 4. Renaldas Simanavičius, 5. Deividas Pukis, 6. Evaldas Aniulis, 7. Edgaras Ulanovas, 8. Dovydas Redikas, 9. Tadas Maželis, 10. Egidijus Mockevičius, 11. Tautvydas Sabonis, 12. Žygimantas Skučas, 13. Vytenis Čižauskas, 14. Rolandas Jakštas, 15. Jonas Valančiūnas, coach: Kazys Maskvytis

European U18 Championship 2009 (Metz, France) July 23 – August 2

  1.  Serbia
  2.  France
  3.  Turkey
  4.  Lithuania
  5.  Spain
  6.  Russia
  7.  Italy
  8.  Croatia
  9.  Latvia
  10.  Bulgaria
  11.  Germany
  12.  Slovenia
  13.  Greece
  14.  Ukraine
  15.  Israel
  16.  Czech Republic

Winning Roster: 4. Nemanja Jaramaz, 5. Aleksandar Ponjavić, 6. Petar Torlak, 7. Miloš Tripković, 8. Nikola Vukasović, 9. Milić Blagojević, 10. Danilo Anđušić, 11. Lazar Radosavljević, 12. Nemanja Bešović, 13. Nikola Rondović, 14. Branislav Đekić, 15. Dejan Musli, coach: Vladimir "Vlada" Jovanović

European U18 Championship 2008 (Amaliada / Pyrgos, Greece), July 25 – August 3

  1.  Greece
  2.  Lithuania
  3.  Croatia
  4.  France
  5.  Spain
  6.  Serbia
  7.  Latvia
  8.  Russia
  9.  Turkey
  10.  Israel
  11.  Italy
  12.  Ukraine
  13.  Bulgaria
  14.  Germany
  15.  Belgium
  16.  Estonia

Winning Roster: 4. Epameinondas Papantoniou, 5. Dimitrios Katsivelis, 6. Ioannis Angelopoulos, 7. Evangelos Mantzaris, 8. Ioannis Karathanasis, 9. Konstantinos Papanikolaou, 10. Georgios Georgakis, 11. Konstantinos Sloukas, 12. Vladimir Janković, 13. Nikolaos Pappas, 14. Leonidas Kaselakis, 15. Zisis Sarikopoulos, coach: George Vlassopoulos

European U18 Championship 2007 (Madrid, Spain), August 3–12

  1.  Serbia
  2.  Greece
  3.  Latvia
  4.  Lithuania
  5.  Spain
  6.  France
  7.  Croatia
  8.  Turkey
  9.  Germany
  10.  Russia
  11.  Israel
  12.  Estonia
  13.  Italy
  14.  Bulgaria
  15.  Slovenia
  16.  Romania

Winning Roster: 4. Filip Čović, 5. Stevan Tapušković, 6. Stefan Živanović, 7. Branko Lazić, 8. Dušan Katnić, 9. Dejan Čvoro, 10. Stefan Stojačić, 11. Dušan Cvetković, 12. Nikola Maravić, 13. Ivan Smiljanić, 14. Nikola Marković, 15. Milan Mačvan, coach: Dejan Mijatović

European U18 Championship 2006 (Amaliada / Olympia / Argostoli, Greece), July 18–27

  1.  France
  2.  Lithuania
  3.  Spain
  4.  Turkey
  5.  Serbia and Montenegro
  6.  Greece
  7.  Italy
  8.  Bulgaria
  9.  Russia
  10.  Croatia
  11.  Israel
  12.  Latvia
  13.  Germany
  14.  Slovenia
  15.  Iceland
  16.  Ukraine

Winning Roster: 4. Jessie Bégarin, 5. Nicolas Batum, 6. Antoine Diot, 7. Abdoulaye Mbaye, 8. Oliver Romain, 9. Alexis Ajinca, 10. Benoît Mangin, 11. Edwin Jackson, 12. Johwe Casseus, 13. Kim Tillie, 14. Ludovic Vaty, 15. Adrien Moerman, coach: Richard Billant

European U18 Championship 2005 (Belgrade, Serbia-Montenegro), July 15–24

  1.  Serbia and Montenegro
  2.  Turkey
  3.  Italy
  4.  Spain
  5.  Russia
  6.  France
  7.  Israel
  8.  Latvia
  9.  Lithuania
  10.  Slovenia
  11.  Croatia
  12.  Bulgaria
  13.  Greece
  14.  Germany
  15.  Poland
  16.  Belgium

Winning Roster: 4. Miloš Teodosić, 5. Milenko Tepić, 6. Ivan Paunić, 7. Marko Đurković, 8. Dragan Labović, 9. Nenad Mijatović, 10. Branko Jereminov, 11. Nenad Živčević, 12. Vladimir Štimac, 13. Miroslav Raduljica, 14. Nikola Dragović, 15. Vladimir Dašić, coach: Stevan Karadžić

European U18 Championship 2004 (Zaragoza, Spain), July 9–18

  1.  Spain
  2.  Turkey
  3.  France
  4.  Italy
  5.  Serbia and Montenegro
  6.  Russia
  7.  Greece
  8.  Israel
  9.  Lithuania
  10.  Bulgaria
  11.  Georgia
  12.  Latvia

Winning Roster: 4. Sergio Llull, 5. Marc Fernández, 6. Albert Teruel, 7. Gonzalo Echevarria, 8. Albert Moncasi, 9. Marc Sobrepera, 10. Sergio Rodríguez, 11. Alberto Aspe, 12. Carlos Suárez, 13. Albert Fontet, 14. Jose Angel Antelo, 15. Ivan Garcia, coach: Txus Vidorreta

MVP Awards (since 1998)

Year MVP Award Winner
1998 Sani Bečirovič
2000 Tony Parker
2002 Erazem Lorbek
2004 Sergio Rodríguez
2005 Dragan Labović
2006 Nicolas Batum
2007 Kosta Koufos
2008 Donatas Motiejūnas
2009 Enes Kanter
2010 Jonas Valančiūnas
2011 Alex Abrines

Notes

External links