1963 FIBA World Championship

1963 FIBA World Championship
4th FIBA World Championship
Tournament details
Host nation Brazil
Dates May 12–25
Teams 13 (from 3 federations)
Champions  Brazil (2nd title)
Tournament leaders
PlayersTeams
Points Peru Ricardo Duarte (23.1)  United States (83.8)
< 1959
1967 >

The 1963 FIBA World Championship was an international basketball competition hosted by Brazil.

The Philippines was originally supposed to host the tournament but FIBA revoked hosting rights after the country refused to grant visas to players from communist countries. Brazil being the defending Champion and a previous host, fairly manage to re-host the Championship from May 12 to 25, 1963 and won the 1st back to back title with just six (6) games by seeding the well rested host team in the final round only.

Background

The Philippines was supposed to host the FIBA World Championship in 1962 but FIBA revoked hosting rights after the government of then President Diosdado Macapagal, refused to grant visas to players and officials of socialists countries including Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union.[1] A separate seven nation tournament was hosted by the Philippines instead. Among the teams which was participated are the United States, Canada, and Republic of China. The United States won title of the Philippines-hosted tournament.[2]

The FIBA World Championship was held in 1963 in Brazil.

Competing nations

Event Date Location Berths Qualified
Original Host nation 0  Philippines
1959 FIBA World Championship/Host nation 16–31 January 1959 Chile Chile 1  Brazil
1960 Summer Olympics 26 August–10 September 1960 Italy Rome 1  United States
EuroBasket 1961 29 April–8 May 1961 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Beograd 3  Soviet Union
 Yugoslavia
 France
South American Basketball Championship 1961 20–30 April 1961 Brazil Rio de Janeiro 3  Peru
 Uruguay
 Argentina
Wild cards 5  Canada
 Mexico
 Puerto Rico
 Italy
 Japan

Suspension

Competition format

Preliminary round

Qualified for the final round

Group A

Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts
 Soviet Union 3 3 0 222 177+45 6
 France 3 2 1 200 181+19 5
 Uruguay 3 1 2 195 21419 4
 Canada 3 0 3 158 20345 3

Group B

Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts
 Yugoslavia 3 3 0 262 208+54 6
 Puerto Rico 3 2 1 234 212+22 5
 Japan 3 1 2 198 23133 4
 Peru 3 0 3 181 22443 3
12 May
Yugoslavia  8467  Peru

Group C

Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts
 United States 3 3 0 256 202+54 6
 Italy 3 2 1 258 242+16 5
 Mexico 3 1 2 240 26020 4
 Argentina 3 0 3 206 25650 3

Classification round

Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts
 Argentina 5 4 1 449 414+35 9
 Mexico 5 3 2 389 364+25 8
 Uruguay 5 3 2 376 372+4 8
 Canada 5 3 2 365 37510 8
 Peru 5 2 3 362 3675 7
 Japan 5 0 5 377 42649 5
16 May
Argentina  8886  Mexico

Final round

Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts
 Brazil 6 6 0 485 411+74 12
 Yugoslavia 6 5 1 472 424+48 11
 Soviet Union 6 4 2 426 399+27 10
 United States 6 3 3 498 433+65 9
 France 6 2 4 369 43869 8
 Puerto Rico 6 1 5 366 42660 7
 Italy 6 0 6 407 49285 6

Awards

 1963 World Championship Winner 

Brazil
Second title

Final ranking

Rank Team Record
1  Brazil 6–0
2  Yugoslavia 8–1
3  Soviet Union 7–2
4  United States 6–3
5  France 4–5
6  Puerto Rico 3–6
7  Italy 2–7
8  Argentina 4–4
9  Mexico 4–4
10  Uruguay 4–4
11  Canada 3–5
12  Peru 2–6
13  Japan 1–7
=  Philippines Suspended

All-Tournament Team

Top scorers (ppg)

  1. Ricardo Duarte (Peru) 20.3
  2. Aleksander Petrov (USSR) 17.6
  3. Luis Enrique Grajeda (Mexico) 17.5
  4. Radivoj Korać (Yugoslavia) 16.8
  5. Maxime Dorigo (France) 16.8
  6. Alfredo Tulli (Argentina) 16.1
  7. Alberto Desimone (Argentina) 16
  8. Rafael Valle (Puerto Rico) 15.8
  9. Nemanja Djuric (Yugoslavia) 14.6
  10. Paolo Vittori (Italy) 14.3

References

  1. Ramirez, Bert (4 August 2014). "Looking back: The 1978 World Basketball Championship in Manila (Part I)". Rappler. Retrieved 1 February 2016.
  2. "A roundup of the sports information of the week". Sports Illustrated. 17 December 1962. Retrieved 1 February 2016.
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