FIBA EuroBasket 1953 | |||||||
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8th FIBA European Basketball Championship | |||||||
Tournament details | |||||||
Host nation | Soviet Union | ||||||
Dates | 23 May – 4 June | ||||||
Teams | 17 (from 27 federations) | ||||||
Venues | 1 (in 1 host city) | ||||||
Champions | Soviet Union (3rd title) | ||||||
MVP | Anatoly Konev | ||||||
Tournament leaders | |||||||
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Official website | |||||||
EuroBasket 1953 (archive) | |||||||
< 1951
1955 >
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The 1953 FIBA European Championship, commonly called FIBA EuroBasket 1953, was the eighth FIBA EuroBasket regional basketball championship, held by FIBA Europe. Seventeen national teams affiliated with the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) entered the competition. The competition was hosted by the Soviet Union, champions of EuroBasket 1951. Moscow was the location of the event.
In the preliminary round, the 17 teams were split up into four groups. One of the groups had five teams, with the other three having four each. The top two teams in each group advanced to the final round, while the remaining nine teams were relegated to classification play.
Lebanon's forfeit to Israel did not earn them the usual 1 standings point for a loss.
The first classification round was played in two round-robin groups. Teams advanced into the second classification round depending on their results in the first round—first and second place teams played in the 9–12 segment of classification round 2 while third and fourth place teams played for 13th to 16th places. The fifth place team (one group had 5 teams, the other had 4) received 17th place.
The final round was played as an 8-team round robin, with no further playoffs. Egypt's forfeit to Israel did not earn them a rankings point, and they had only 7 to Italy's 8 despite having the same records.
1. Soviet Union: Otar Korkia, Stepas Butautas, Armenak Alachachian, Ilmar Kullam, Heino Kruus, Anatoly Konev, Aleksandr Moiseyev, Kazys Petkevičius, Justinas Lagunavičius, Yuri Ozerov, Algirdas Lauritėnas, Viktor Vlasov, Gunars Siliņš, Lev Reshetnikov (Coach: Konstantin Travin)