2005 FIBA Under-19 World Championship for Women
Appearance
Tournament details | |
---|---|
Host country | Tunisia |
Dates | July 15–24 |
Teams | 12 |
Venue(s) | 2 (in 2 host cities) |
Final positions | |
Champions | United States (2nd title) |
Tournament statistics | |
MVP | Crystal Langhorne |
Top scorer | Camino (21.6) |
Top rebounds | M'Nasria (13.2) |
Top assists | Lumanu Kalonda (3.7) |
PPG (Team) | United States (105.3) |
RPG (Team) | United States (44.4) |
APG (Team) | United States (23.4) |
The 2005 FIBA Under-19 World Championship for Women(Arabic: 2005 بطولة العالم لكرة السلة للسيدات تحت 19 سنة) took place in Tunisia from 15 to 24 July 2005. It was co-organised by the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) and Tunisia Basketball Federation.
Twelve national teams competed for the championship. United States came away with the Gold medal by defeating Serbia & Montenegro 97-76 in the final.[1]
Venues
[edit]Competing nations
[edit]Except Tunisia, which automatically qualified as the host nation, the 11 remaining countries qualified through their continents’ qualifying tournaments:
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Preliminary round
[edit]Group A
[edit]Team | Pld | W | L | PF | PA | PD | Pts | |
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United States | 5 | 5 | 0 | 561 | 272 | +289 | 10 | |
Russia | 5 | 4 | 1 | 422 | 358 | +64 | 9 | |
South Korea | 5 | 3 | 2 | 419 | 460 | -41 | 8 | |
Serbia and Montenegro | 5 | 2 | 3 | 403 | 402 | +1 | 7 | |
Puerto Rico | 5 | 1 | 4 | 283 | 450 | −67 | 6 | |
DR Congo | 5 | 0 | 5 | 280 | 426 | -146 | 5 |
Group B
[edit]Team | Pld | W | L | PF | PA | PD | Pts | Tiebreak |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Australia | 5 | 4 | 1 | 337 | 297 | +40 | 9 | 1-0 |
China | 5 | 4 | 1 | 382 | 312 | +70 | 9 | 0-1 |
Spain | 5 | 3 | 2 | 324 | 274 | +50 | 8 | 1-0 |
Hungary | 5 | 3 | 2 | 322 | 297 | +25 | 8 | 0-1 |
Canada | 5 | 1 | 4 | 283 | 340 | −57 | 6 | |
Tunisia | 5 | 0 | 5 | 261 | 389 | -128 | 5 |
Knockout stage
[edit]Bracket
[edit]Quarter-finals | Semi-finals | Final | ||||||||
22 July | ||||||||||
Russia | 79 | |||||||||
23 July | ||||||||||
Spain | 62 | |||||||||
Russia | 65 | |||||||||
22 July | ||||||||||
Serbia and Montenegro | 78 | |||||||||
Australia | 70 | |||||||||
24 July | ||||||||||
Serbia and Montenegro | 76 | |||||||||
Serbia and Montenegro | 76 | |||||||||
22 July | ||||||||||
United States | 97 | |||||||||
China | 93 | |||||||||
23 July | ||||||||||
South Korea | 72 | |||||||||
China | 68 | |||||||||
22 July | ||||||||||
United States | 99 | Third place | ||||||||
United States | 85 | |||||||||
24 July | ||||||||||
Hungary | 55 | |||||||||
Russia | 61 | |||||||||
China | 78 | |||||||||
- 5th place bracket
Semi-finals | Fifth place | |||||
23 July | ||||||
South Korea | 92 | |||||
24 July | ||||||
Hungary | 70 | |||||
South Korea | 71 | |||||
23 July | ||||||
Spain | 75 | |||||
Spain | 75 | |||||
Australia | 71 | |||||
Seventh place | ||||||
24 July | ||||||
Hungary | 62 | |||||
Australia | 68 |
- 9th place bracket
Semi-finals | Ninth place | |||||
22 July | ||||||
Canada | 67 | |||||
23 July | ||||||
DR Congo | 51 | |||||
Canada | 71 | |||||
22 July | ||||||
Puerto Rico | 64 | |||||
Puerto Rico | 77 | |||||
Tunisia | 63 | |||||
Eleventh place | ||||||
23 July | ||||||
DR Congo | 78 | |||||
Tunisia | 60 |
Quarterfinals
[edit]Classification 9–12
[edit]Classification 5–8
[edit]Semifinals
[edit]Eleventh place game
[edit]Ninth place game
[edit]Seventh place game
[edit]Fifth place game
[edit]Third place game
[edit]Final
[edit]Final standings
[edit]# | Team | W-L |
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United States | 8-0 | |
Serbia and Montenegro | 4-4 | |
China | 6-2 | |
4 | Russia | 4-3 |
5 | Spain | 5-3 |
6 | Korea | 4-4 |
7 | Australia | 5-3 |
8 | Hungary | 3-5 |
9 | Canada | 3-4 |
10 | Puerto Rico | 2-5 |
11 | DR Congo | 1-6 |
12 | Tunisia | 0-7 |
Awards
[edit]2005 FIBA Women's World Junior Championship winner |
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United States Second title |
Most Valuable Player |
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Crystal Langhorne |
References
[edit]- ^ FIBA Archive. 2005 World Championship for Junior Women. Event Standings. Retrieved 2016-07-14