2010 South American Basketball Championship for Women
2010 South American Basketball Championship for Women | |
---|---|
32nd South American Basketball Championship for Women | |
Tournament details | |
Host nation | Chile |
Dates | 10 – August 14 |
Teams | 8 |
Venues | 1 (in 1 host city) |
Champions | Brazil (23rd title) |
MVP | Paola Ferrari[1] |
Official website | |
South American Women's Basketball Championship 2010 | |
< 2008 |
The 2010 South American Basketball Championship for Women was the 32nd edition of the FIBA South America Championship for Women. Seven teams featured the competition, held in Santiago, Chile from 10 to August 14. Brazil was the defending champion and retain the title.[1]
Preliminary round
Qualified for the semifinals | |
Team competed in Classification Round |
Group A
Team | Pts | Pld | W | L | PF | PA | PD |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Argentina | 4 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 179 | 144 | +35 |
Paraguay | 3 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 168 | 185 | –17 |
Chile | 2 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 163 | 181 | –18 |
August 10 19:30 |
Argentina | 97–69 | Paraguay |
Scoring by quarter: 30–11, 16–19, 28–17, 23–22 | ||
Pts: Cava, Fernández 20 Rebs: Fernández 8 Asts: González, Chesta, Pavón 3 |
Pts: Ferrari 33 Rebs: Ferrari 8 Asts: Peña, Aponte 2 |
August 11 19:30 |
Chile | 88–99 | Paraguay |
Scoring by quarter: 16–30, 14–15, 28–25, 30–29 | ||
Pts: Aragonese 23 Rebs: Gómez 19 Asts: Novión 6 |
Pts: Ferrari 48 Rebs: Aponte 6 Asts: Ferrari 9 |
August 12 19:30 |
Chile | 75–82 | Argentina |
Scoring by quarter: 15–20, 21–21, 18–28, 21–13 | ||
Pts: Gómez 18 Rebs: Gómez 6 Asts: Morrison 3 |
Pts: Sánchez 28 Rebs: Sánchez 8 Asts: Gatti 5 |
Group B
Team | Pts | Pld | W | L | PF | PA | PD |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Brazil | 6 | 3 | 3 | 0 | 321 | 133 | +188 |
Colombia | 5 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 200 | 216 | –16 |
Venezuela | 4 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 170 | 244 | –74 |
Uruguay | 3 | 3 | 0 | 3 | 173 | 271 | –98 |
August 10 15:30 |
Venezuela | 61–68 | Colombia |
Scoring by quarter: 10–21, 12–10, 22–17, 17–20 | ||
Pts: Silva 19 Rebs: Villarroel 9 Asts: Pérez 3 |
Pts: Mosquera 28 Rebs: Mosquera, Martínez 6 Asts: Valek 7 |
August 10 17:30 |
Brazil | 120–43 | Uruguay |
Scoring by quarter: 31–8, 26–14, 35–10, 28–11 | ||
Pts: Amaral 18 Rebs: Santos 8 Asts: K. Rocha 4 |
Pts: Pereyra 9 Rebs: Pereyra, Acosta, Dagnino, Somma 2 Asts: Tovagliari, Acosta 1 |
August 11 15:30 |
Uruguay | 69–72 | Venezuela |
Scoring by quarter: 19–15, 13–25, 18–22, 19–10 | ||
Pts: Pereyra 19 Rebs: Somma 10 Asts: Guadalupe 2 |
Pts: Corrales 21 Rebs: Corrales, C. Blanco 9 Asts: Silva 3 |
August 11 17:30 |
Brazil | 94–53 | Colombia |
Scoring by quarter: 28–10, 22–7, 24–17, 20–19 | ||
Pts: Beling 13 Rebs: S. Rocha, Oliveira 7 Asts: Pinto 6 |
Pts: Mosquera 16 Rebs: Robledo 6 Asts: Valek 5 |
August 12 15:30 |
Colombia | 79–61 | Uruguay |
Scoring by quarter: 28–20, 22–15, 13–14, 16–12 | ||
Pts: Arias 26 Rebs: Mosquera 9 Asts: Valek 8 |
Pts: Tovagliari 16 Rebs: Dibarboure, Somma 5 Asts: Guadalupe, Dagnino 2 |
August 12 17:30 |
Brazil | 107–37 | Venezuela |
Scoring by quarter: 20–11, 30–7, 28–12, 29–7 | ||
Pts: Colhado 16 Rebs: S. Rocha 8 Asts: Luz 7 |
Pts: C. Blanco 8 Rebs: Villarroel 5 Asts: Silva 4 |
Knockout round
5th–7th playoffs
Semi-finals | Fifth place | ||||||
August 13 – Santiago | |||||||
Chile | 96 | ||||||
Uruguay | 63 | ||||||
August 14 – Santiago | |||||||
Chile | 86 | ||||||
Venezuela | 71 | ||||||
Venezuela | |||||||
bye |
5th–7th semifinals
August 13 15:30 |
Chile | 96–63 | Uruguay |
Scoring by quarter: 30–13, 16–16, 18–17, 32–17 | ||
Pts: Gómez 23 Rebs: Morrison, Gómez 13 Asts: Novión 6 |
Pts: Guadalupe 17 Rebs: Guadalupe 5 Asts: Guarnaschelli 2 |
5th place playoff
August 14 15:30 |
Chile | 86–71 | Venezuela |
Scoring by quarter: 30–18, 12–12, 20–17, 24–24 | ||
Pts: Morrison 20 Rebs: Morrison 16 Asts: Franco, Novión, Morrison, Gómez 2 |
Pts: Villarroel 25 Rebs: Blanco 11 Asts: Silva 3 |
Championship
Semi-finals | Final | ||||||
August 13 – Santiago | |||||||
Argentina | 83 | ||||||
Colombia | 74 | ||||||
August 14 – Santiago | |||||||
Argentina | 68 | ||||||
Brazil | 94 | ||||||
Third place | |||||||
August 13 – Santiago | August 14 – Santiago | ||||||
Brazil | 114 | Colombia | 85 | ||||
Paraguay | 61 | Paraguay | 70 |
Semifinals
August 13 17:30 |
Argentina | 83–74 | Colombia |
Scoring by quarter: 16–24, 18–14, 31–17, 18–19 | ||
Pts: Sánchez 20 Rebs: Pavón 9 Asts: Paoletta 4 |
Pts: Arias 23 Rebs: Arias 11 Asts: Valek 5 |
August 13 19:30 |
Brazil | 114–61 | Paraguay |
Scoring by quarter: 32–14, 28–21, 29–14, 25–12 | ||
Pts: Colhado 23 Rebs: Colhado 9 Asts: Pinto, K. Rocha, S. Rocha 4 |
Pts: Ferrari 23 Rebs: Ferrari, Caraves 4 Asts: Aponte |
Bronze medal game
August 14 17:30 |
Colombia | 85–70 | Paraguay |
Scoring by quarter: 17–20, 29–17, 25–11, 14–22 | ||
Pts: Arias 34 Rebs: Arias 14 Asts: Valek 7 |
Pts: Ferrari 30 Rebs: Huttemann, Insfran 6 Asts: Ferrari 7 |
Final
August 14 19:30 |
Argentina | 68–94 | Brazil |
Scoring by quarter: 25–17, 17–23, 13–23, 13–31 | ||
Pts: Reggiardo 19 Rebs: Cava 5 Asts: González, Reggiardo 2 |
Pts: S. Rocha 14 Rebs: Amaral 6 Asts: Pinto, K. Rocha, Colhado 2 |
Final standings
Rank | Team | Record |
---|---|---|
Brazil | 5–0 | |
Argentina | 3–1 | |
Colombia | 3–2 | |
4th | Paraguay | 1–3 |
5th | Chile | 2–2 |
6th | Venezuela | 1–3 |
7th | Uruguay | 0–4 |
References
- 1 2 Brazil wins the Gold medal in the South American Championship for Women by beating Argentina, FIBA Americas, August 14, 2010
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, May 05, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.