The 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was the 18th tournament of the FIBA Basketball World Cup for men's national basketball teams, held from 31 August to 15 September 2019. The tournament was hosted in China and was rescheduled from 2018 to 2019, becoming the first since 1967 that did not occur in the same year as the FIFA World Cup (which was held the previous year). The tournament expanded from 24 to 32 teams.

The tournament also served as qualification for the 2020 Summer Olympics, which took the top two teams from each of the Americas and Europe, and the top team from each of Africa, Asia and Oceania, alongside the tournament's host Japan. Montenegro and the Czech Republic each made their first appearance as independent nations after previously being part of Serbia and Montenegro and Czechoslovakia respectively, while Poland marked its return to the FIBA Basketball World Cup for the first time since 1967.

The defending champions, the United States, experienced their worst result at a World Cup, losing to France in the quarter-finals and Serbia in the subsequent classification game. The United States' previous worst result was sixth place in 2002. This was the first World Cup at which all three of the historically most successful teams (United States, Serbia/Yugoslavia and Russia/Soviet Union) failed to reach the semi-finals. Asian powerhouse and hosts China failed to get out of the first round, losing in shocking upsets to Poland and Venezuela. China ultimately missed the Asian qualifying spot for Tokyo, the first time in the country's history they did not qualify directly for the Olympics.

Spain captured their second title after beating Argentina in the final 95–75. It was the second time Spain had reached a World Cup final, and its second win, while for Argentina it would prove to be its second defeat in three attempts. France went on to win the bronze medal for the second consecutive time after defeating Australia 67–59.

Hosts selection

The whole bidding process started in April 2014. Bids from numerous nations were submitted. On 16 March 2015, it was confirmed that the World Cup would be staged in Asia, with China and Philippines as the final countries to be the basis for the selection of the host. On 7 August 2015, it was announced that China won the bid against the Philippines and will host the upcoming World Cup.

Voting results

2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup bidding results
NationVotes
China14
Philippines7

Venues

Host venues in China
BeijingBeijingGuangdongShanghaiNanjingWuhanNanjing
Wukesong ArenaNanjing Youth Olympic Sports Park Gymnasium
Capacity: 17,173Capacity: 19,610
ShanghaiWuhan
Shanghai Oriental Sports CenterWuhan Sports Center Gymnasium
Capacity: 18,000Capacity: 11,700
Venues within Guangdong area
DongguanDongguanFoshanGuangzhouShenzhenFoshan
Dongguan Basketball CenterFoshan International Sports & Cultural Arena
Capacity: 16,133Capacity: 15,028
GuangzhouShenzhen
Guangzhou GymnasiumShenzhen Bay Sports Centre
Capacity: 11,468Capacity: 12,381

Qualification

Teams qualifiedTeams failed to qualifyTeams withdrewTeams did not enter

China as the hosts automatically qualified for the tournament. The continental championships were no longer the qualification system for the World Cup. Instead, two rounds of continental qualifying tournaments were held over two years.

The first round of the Americas, Asia/Oceania and Africa qualifiers featured 16 teams each, whereas Europe had 32 teams. Division A teams were split in groups of four, to be held in a home-and-away round-robin. The top three teams in each groups advanced to round two, and the last placed teams played the best Division B teams to qualify for the next season's Division A.

In round two of the World Cup qualifiers, teams were split in groups of six, totalling four groups in Europe and two in the other qualifiers. Teams carried over the points from round one, and faced other three teams again in a home-and-away round-robin. The best teams in each group qualified for the World Cup.

Starting 2019, no wild card selection was held, and the Olympic champions were not guaranteed a spot in the tournament.

The draw for the qualifiers was held on 7 May 2017 in Guangzhou.

Montenegro and the Czech Republic debuted in the World Cup. Montenegro was formerly a part of Yugoslavia, and later, Serbia and Montenegro teams, while the Czech Republic was a part of the old Czechoslovakia. Poland was returning to the World Cup, after participating in 1967. Canada, China, Germany, Ivory Coast, Russia, and Tunisia were returning to the World Cup after missing out in 2014. Croatia, Egypt, Finland, Mexico, Slovenia, and Ukraine were the teams that participated in 2014 that did not qualify in 2019. Brazil and the United States qualified in 2019, continuing their streaks in participating in all World Cups.

Qualified teams

Africa (5) Angola Ivory Coast Nigeria Senegal TunisiaAmericas (7) Argentina Brazil Canada Dominican Republic Puerto Rico United States VenezuelaAsia and Oceania (8) Australia China (host) Iran Japan Jordan New Zealand Philippines South KoreaEurope (12) Czech Republic France Germany Greece Italy Lithuania Montenegro Poland Russia Serbia Spain Turkey

Squads

Each team had a final roster of 12 players; a team can opt to have one naturalized player as per FIBA eligibility rules from its roster.

Referees

The following referees were selected for the tournament.

Gentian Cici (ALB) Juan Fernández (ARG) Leandro Lezcano1 (ARG) Leandro Zalazar (ARG) Scott Beker (AUS) James Boyer (AUS) Ademir Zurapović (BIH) Guilherme Locatelli (BRA) Cristiano Maranho (BRA) Martin Horozov (BUL) Arnaud Kom Njilo (CMR) Matthew Kallio (CAN) Michael Weiland (CAN) Felipe Ibarra (CHI)Duan Zhu (CHN) Ye Nan (CHN) Yu Jung (TPE) Carlos Peralta (ECU) Yohan Rosso (FRA) Carsten Straube (GER) Georgios Poursanidis (GRE) Harja Jaladri (INA) Ahmed Al-Shuwaili (IRQ) Saverio Lanzarini (ITA) Manuel Mazzoni (ITA) Tolga Şahin (ITA) Takaki Kato (JPN) Yevgeniy Mikheyev (KAZ)Andris Aunkrogers (LAT) Mārtiņš Kozlovskis (LAT) Omar Bermúdez (MEX) Krishna Domínguez (MEX) Ahmed Abaakil (MAR) Kingsley Ojeaburu (NGR) Julio Anaya (PAN) Ferdinand Pascual (PHI) Wojciech Liszka (POL) Michał Proc (POL) Alexis Mercado (PUR) Jorge Vázquez (PUR) Roberto Vázquez (PUR) Aleksandar Glišić (SRB)Zdenko Tomašovič (SVK) Boris Krejič (SLO) Luis Castillo (ESP) Antonio Conde1 (ESP) Hwang In-tae (KOR) Kim Jong-kuk (KOR) Markos Michaelides (SUI) Nicolas Fernandes (TAH) Yener Yılmaz (TUR) Sergiy Zashchuk (UKR) Steven Anderson (USA) Matthew Myers (USA) Andrés Bartel (URU) Daniel García1 (VEN)

1 – Suspended after the match France vs. Lithuania.

Preparation games

Several teams participated in official tournaments or in exhibition ones, either ad hoc or already existing ones, to prepare for the World Cup.

Pan American Games

An official and traditional tournament in the Americas. Out of the eight teams from the tournament, five already qualified to the World Cup. Of these five, all except the United States had players expected to be in the World Cup rosters, with the USA playing with collegiate players. Argentina defeated Puerto Rico to win the gold medal.

Acropolis International Basketball Tournament

An exhibition tournament. All four participating teams used the Acropolis Tournament as a warm-up. Serbia topped the table to win the championship, ahead of Greece.

Austiger Cup

An exhibition tournament. The four teams played in this tournament hosted by China as a warm-up to the World Cup. Serbia topped the table to win the championship, ahead of France.

Málaga Tournament

An exhibition tournament. Four teams participated in a preparation tournament hosted in Málaga, Spain. It was contested by Spain, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ivory Coast, and the Philippines.

Other games

Exhibition games were held as warm-ups for the World Cup. The United States defeated Spain in the Honda Center in Anaheim, which was between the top two teams in the FIBA World Rankings. Australia's defeat of the United States in Marvel Stadium, Melbourne in the 2019 Australian International Basketball series was the first USA team's loss with NBA players since its 2006 FIBA World Championship semifinals loss to Greece. The USA is the second-youngest team in the tournament and features only two players with international experience. Notably the US is missing over 30 of their best players, who opted out either due to injury, or to prepare for the NBA season.

Format

The tournament was played in three stages. During the first stage, the 32 qualified teams were sorted into eight groups of four (A-H) and each team in a group played the other three teams once. The top two teams from each group then advanced to the second group stage. In the second group stage, there were four groups of four (I-L) made up of the teams that advanced from the first round, with the teams that have not yet played each other facing off against one another once. The top two teams from groups I to L will qualify for the final knockout phase.

Classification rounds were revived after they were not held in 2014. They were traditionally held in every World Championship/World Cup and were last seen in action in 2010.

In total, 92 games were played over a total of 16 days.

Draw

The draw took place on 16 March 2019 at Shenzhen Cultural Center in Shenzhen.

Hosts China and the three best qualified teams as per the February 2019 FIBA World Rankings were seeded in Pot 1, and China and USA were assigned to groups A and E, respectively. The remaining 28 teams were allocated Pots 2-8 based on the 2019 FIBA World Ranking. Teams in pots 1, 4, 5 and 8 were drawn into Groups A, C, E and G, and Teams in pots 2, 3, 6 and 7 were drawn into Groups B, D, F and H.

Aside from Europe, two teams from the same qualification zone could not be drawn into the same group. Canada was moved from Pot 5 to Pot 6, switching places with Iran (the best ranked team from that pot) to avoid having two teams from the Americas in the same group.

FIBA Basketball World Cup 2019 Global Ambassadors Kobe Bryant and Yao Ming, American singer and songwriter Jason Derulo, and Chinese idol singer Yang Chaoyue led the draw ceremony.

After the draw, Group H, which includes Australia, Canada, Lithuania, and Senegal, was described as the "group of death".

Groups A, C, E, and G

Pot 1Pot 4Pot 5Pot 8
China (29) (host)(Group A) United States (1) (Group E) Spain (2) France (3)Puerto Rico (16) Turkey (17) Dominican Rep. (18) Venezuela (20)Germany (22) Czech Republic (24) Poland (25) Iran (27)Japan (48) Jordan (49) Tunisia (51) Ivory Coast (64)

Groups B, D, F, and H

Pot 2Pot 3Pot 6Pot 7
Serbia (4) Argentina (5) Lithuania (6) Greece (8)Russia (10) Australia (11) Brazil (12) Italy (13)Canada (23) Montenegro (28) Philippines (31) South Korea (32)Nigeria (33) Senegal (37) New Zealand (38) Angola (39)

Preliminary round

2019 FIBA World Championship final rankings.

Classification of teams

  1. Highest number of points earned, with each game result having a corresponding point: Win: 2 points Loss: 1 point Loss by default: 1 point, with a final score of 2–0 for the opponents of the defaulting team if the latter team is not trailing or if the score is tied, or the score at the time of stoppage if they are trailing. Loss by forfeit: 0 points, with a final score of 20–0 for the opponents of the forfeiting team.
  2. Head-to-head record via points system above
  3. Point difference in games among tied teams
  4. Points for in games among tied teams
  5. Point difference in all group games
  6. Points for in all group games

Source: FIBA

Group A

Venue: Wukesong Arena, Beijing

PosTeamvtePldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification
1Poland330239208+316Second round
2Venezuela321228210+185
3China (H)312205206−1417th–32nd classification
4Ivory Coast303189237−483
31 August 2019
Poland80–69Venezuela
Ivory Coast55–70China
2 September 2019
Venezuela87–71Ivory Coast
China76–79 (OT)Poland
4 September 2019
Ivory Coast63–80Poland
Venezuela72–59China

Group B

Venue : Wuhan Sports Center Gymnasium, Wuhan

PosTeamvtePldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification
1Argentina330258211+476Second round
2Russia321230219+115
3Nigeria312266242+24417th–32nd classification
4South Korea303208290−823
31 August 2019
Russia82–77Nigeria
Argentina95–69South Korea
2 September 2019
Nigeria81–94Argentina
South Korea73–87Russia
4 September 2019
South Korea66–108Nigeria
Russia61–69Argentina

Group C

Venue: Guangzhou Gymnasium, Guangzhou

PosTeamvtePldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification
1Spain330247190+576Second round
2Puerto Rico321213218−55
3Tunisia312205235−30417th–32nd classification
4Iran303213235−223
31 August 2019
Iran81–83Puerto Rico
Spain101–62Tunisia
2 September 2019
Tunisia79–67Iran
Puerto Rico63–73Spain
4 September 2019
Puerto Rico67–64Tunisia
Spain73–65Iran

Group D

Venue: Foshan International Sports and Cultural Center, Foshan

PosTeamvtePldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification
1Serbia330323203+1206Second round
2Italy321277215+625
3Angola312204278−74417th–32nd classification
4Philippines303210318−1083
31 August 2019
Angola59–105Serbia
Philippines62–108Italy
2 September 2019
Italy92–61Angola
Serbia126–67Philippines
4 September 2019
Angola84–81 (OT)Philippines
Italy77–92Serbia

Group E

Venue: Shanghai Oriental Sports Center, Shanghai

PosTeamvtePldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification
1United States330279204+756Second round
2Czech Republic321247240+75
3Turkey312254251+3417th–32nd classification
4Japan303188273−853
1 September 2019
Turkey86–67Japan
Czech Republic67–88United States
3 September 2019
Japan76–89Czech Republic
United States93–92 (OT)Turkey
5 September 2019
Turkey76–91Czech Republic
United States98–45Japan

Group F

Venue: Nanjing Youth Olympic Sports Park Gymnasium, Nanjing

PosTeamvtePldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification
1Brazil330265245+206Second round
2Greece321266236+305
3New Zealand312284288−4417th–32nd classification
4Montenegro303216262−463
1 September 2019
New Zealand94–102Brazil
Greece85–60Montenegro
3 September 2019
Montenegro83–93New Zealand
Brazil79–78Greece
5 September 2019
Brazil84–73Montenegro
Greece103–97New Zealand

Group G

Venue: Shenzhen Bay Sports Centre, Shenzhen

PosTeamvtePldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification
1France330271194+776Second round
2Dominican Republic321206234−285
3Germany312238210+28417th–32nd classification
4Jordan303202279−773
1 September 2019
Dominican Republic80–76Jordan
France78–74Germany
3 September 2019
Germany68–70Dominican Republic
Jordan64–103France
5 September 2019
Germany96–62Jordan
Dominican Republic56–90France

Group H

Venue: Dongfeng Nissan Cultural and Sports Centre, Dongguan

PosTeamvtePldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification
1Australia330276242+346Second round
2Lithuania321275203+725
3Canada312243260−17417th–32nd classification
4Senegal303175264−893
1 September 2019
Canada92–108Australia
Senegal47–101Lithuania
3 September 2019
Australia81–68Senegal
Lithuania92–69Canada
5 September 2019
Canada82–60Senegal
Lithuania82–87Australia

Second round

Group I

Venue: Foshan International Sports and Cultural Center, Foshan

PosTeamvtePldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification
1Argentina550436343+9310Quarter-finals
2Poland541383373+109
3Russia532373358+158
4Venezuela523355366−117
6 September 2019
Poland79–74Russia
Argentina87–67Venezuela
8 September 2019
Venezuela60–69Russia
Poland65–91Argentina

Group J

Venue: Wuhan Sports Center Gymnasium, Wuhan

PosTeamvtePldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification
1Spain550395319+7610Quarter-finals
2Serbia541482331+1519
3Italy532431371+608
4Puerto Rico523349402−537
6 September 2019
Serbia90–47Puerto Rico
Spain67–60Italy
8 September 2019
Puerto Rico89–94 (OT)Italy
Spain81–69Serbia

Group K

Venue: Shenzhen Bay Sports Centre, Shenzhen

PosTeamvtePldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification
1United States550437330+10710Quarter-finals
2Czech Republic532417395+228
3Greece532403382+218
4Brazil532409427−188
7 September 2019
Brazil71–93Czech Republic
United States69–53Greece
9 September 2019
Czech Republic77–84Greece
United States89–73Brazil

Group L

Venue: Nanjing Youth Olympic Sports Park Gymnasium, Nanjing

PosTeamvtePldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification
1Australia550458416+4210Quarter-finals
2France541447369+789
3Lithuania532424336+888
4Dominican Republic523337390−537
7 September 2019
Australia82–76Dominican Republic
France78–75Lithuania
9 September 2019
Dominican Republic55–74Lithuania
France98–100Australia

17th–32nd Classification

Bottom 2 teams from each group in Round 1 played in the Classification Round.

Group M

Venue: Guangzhou Gymnasium, Guangzhou

PosTeamvtePldWLPFPAPDPts
1Nigeria532435381+548
2China (H)523355365−107
3South Korea514361438−776
4Ivory Coast505326400−745
6 September 2019
Nigeria83–66Ivory Coast
China77–73South Korea
8 September 2019
Ivory Coast71–80South Korea
China73–86Nigeria

Group N

Venue: Wukesong Arena, Beijing

PosTeamvtePldWLPFPAPDPts
1Tunisia532377386−98
2Iran523379372+77
3Angola514350435−856
4Philippines505352499−1475
6 September 2019
Angola62–71Iran
Tunisia86–67Philippines
8 September 2019
Tunisia86–84Angola
Iran95–75Philippines

Group O

Venue: Dongfeng Nissan Cultural and Sports Centre, Dongguan

PosTeamvtePldWLPFPAPDPts
1New Zealand532497470+278
2Turkey523434427+77
3Montenegro514370406−366
4Japan505334464−1305
7 September 2019
New Zealand111–81Japan
Turkey79–74Montenegro
9 September 2019
Japan65–80Montenegro
Turkey101–102New Zealand

Group P

Venue: Shanghai Oriental Sports Center, Shanghai

PosTeamvtePldWLPFPAPDPts
1Germany532409364+458
2Canada523445413+327
3Jordan514352482−1306
4Senegal505330432−1025
7 September 2019
Canada126–71Jordan
Germany89–78Senegal
9 September 2019
Jordan79–77Senegal
Germany82–76Canada

Final round

Quarter-finals

Argentina vs. Serbia

10 September 2019 19:00 vte
Argentina97–87Serbia
Scoring by quarter: 25–23, 29–26, 14–18, 29–20
Pts: Scola 20 Rebs: Deck 8 Asts: Campazzo 12Pts: Bogdanović 21 Rebs: Jokić 10 Asts: Jokić 5
Dongfeng Nissan Cultural and Sports Centre, Dongguan Attendance: 8,469 Referees: Cristiano Maranho (BRA), Tolga Şahin (ITA), Michael Weiland (CAN)

Spain vs. Poland

10 September 2019 21:00 vte
Spain90–78Poland
Scoring by quarter: 22–18, 24–23, 21–17, 23–20
Pts: Rubio 19 Rebs: Rubio 5 Asts: Rubio 9Pts: Slaughter 19 Rebs: Ponitka 11 Asts: Slaughter 6
Shanghai Oriental Sports Center, Shanghai Attendance: 13,300 Referees: Jorge Vázquez (PUR), Yohan Rosso (FRA), Takaki Kato (JPN)

United States vs. France

11 September 2019 19:00 vte
United States79–89France
Scoring by quarter: 18–18, 21–27, 27–18, 13–26
Pts: Mitchell 29 Rebs: Mitchell 6 Asts: Barnes, Mitchell 4Pts: Fournier 22 Rebs: Gobert 16 Asts: Fournier 4
Dongfeng Nissan Cultural and Sports Centre, Dongguan Attendance: 11,019 Referees: Guilherme Locatelli (BRA), Georgios Poursanidis (GRE), Ferdinand Pascual (PHI)

Australia vs. Czech Republic

11 September 2019 21:00 vte
Australia82–70Czech Republic
Scoring by quarter: 17–17, 16–13, 30–18, 19–22
Pts: Mills 24 Rebs: Kay 7 Asts: Mills 6Pts: Auda 21 Rebs: Satoranský 9 Asts: Satoranský 13
Shanghai Oriental Sports Center, Shanghai Attendance: 13,800 Referees: Roberto Vázquez (PUR), Ademir Zurapović (BIH), Matthew Kallio (CAN)

Classification semi-finals

Serbia vs. United States

12 September 2019 19:00 vte
Serbia94–89United States
Scoring by quarter: 32–7, 12–33, 27–28, 23–21
Pts: Bogdanović 28 Rebs: Bjelica 5 Asts: Jokić 7Pts: Barnes 22 Rebs: Middleton 6 Asts: Walker 8
Dongfeng Nissan Cultural and Sports Centre, Dongguan Attendance: 9,540 Referees: Cristiano Maranho (BRA), Yu Jung (TPE), Luis Castillo (ESP)

Poland vs. Czech Republic

12 September 2019 21:00 vte
Poland84–94Czech Republic
Scoring by quarter: 23–23, 12–20, 28–21, 21–30
Pts: Waczyński 22 Rebs: Kulig 7 Asts: Slaughter 10Pts: Hruban 24 Rebs: Hruban 12 Asts: Satoranský 12
Shanghai Oriental Sports Center, Shanghai Attendance: 8,016 Referees: Juan Fernández (ARG), Boris Krejić (SLO), Yohan Rosso (FRA)

Semi-finals

Spain vs. Australia

13 September 2019 16:00 vte
Spain95–88 (2OT)Australia
Scoring by quarter: 22–21, 10–16, 19–18, 20–16, Overtime: 9–9, 15–8
Pts: Gasol 33 Rebs: Rubio 7 Asts: Rubio 12Pts: Mills 32 Rebs: Kay 11 Asts: Dellavedova 9
Wukesong Arena, Beijing Attendance: 5,934 Referees: Guilherme Locatelli (BRA), Tolga Şahin (ITA), Omar Bermúdez (MEX)

Argentina vs. France

13 September 2019 20:00 vte
Argentina80–66France
Scoring by quarter: 21–18, 18–14, 21–16, 20–18
Pts: Scola 28 Rebs: Scola 13 Asts: Campazzo 6Pts: Fournier, Ntilikina 16 Rebs: Gobert 11 Asts: De Colo 4
Wukesong Arena, Beijing Attendance: 7,945 Referees: Steven Anderson (USA), Ademir Zurapović (BIH), Jorge Vázquez (PUR)

Seventh place playoff

14 September 2019 16:00 vte
United States87–74Poland
Scoring by quarter: 28–14, 19–16, 16–25, 24–19
Pts: Mitchell 16 Rebs: Turner 8 Asts: Mitchell 10Pts: Ponitka 18 Rebs: Ponitka 7 Asts: Slaughter 5
Wukesong Arena, Beijing Attendance: 8,210 Referees: Aleksandar Glišić (SRB), Yu Jung (TPE), Takaki Kato (JPN)

Fifth place playoff

14 September 2019 20:00 vte
Serbia90–81Czech Republic
Scoring by quarter: 20–20, 21–30, 28–12, 21–19
Pts: Bogdanović 31 Rebs: Jokić 14 Asts: Jokić 7Pts: Auda 16 Rebs: Balvín 10 Asts: Satoranský 6
Wukesong Arena, Beijing Attendance: 8,252 Referees: Guilherme Locatelli (BRA), Georgios Poursanidis (GRE), Michael Weiland (CAN)

Third place playoff

15 September 2019 16:00 vte
France67–59Australia
Scoring by quarter: 11–16, 10–14, 21–16, 25–13
Pts: De Colo 19 Rebs: Poirier 7 Asts: Batum 6Pts: Ingles 17 Rebs: Bogut 6 Asts: Dellavedova 5
Wukesong Arena, Beijing Attendance: 7,749 Referees: Roberto Vázquez (PUR), Ademir Zurapović (BIH), Ferdinand Pascual (PHI)

Final

15 September 2019 20:00 vte
Argentina75–95Spain
Scoring by quarter: 14–23, 17–20, 16–23, 28–29
Pts: Deck 24 Rebs: Scola 8 Asts: Campazzo 8Pts: Rubio 20 Rebs: Fernández 10 Asts: Gasol 7
Wukesong Arena, Beijing Attendance: 11,110 Referees: Cristiano Maranho (BRA), Yohan Rosso (FRA), Steven Anderson (USA)

Final standings

PosZoneTeamPldWLPFPAPDQualification
EuropeSpain880675560+115Qualification to Summer Olympics
AmericasArgentina871688591+97
EuropeFrance862669587+82Qualification to Summer Olympics
4OceaniaAustralia862687648+39
5EuropeSerbia862753598+155Qualification to Olympic Qualifying Tournament
6EuropeCzech Republic844662651+11
7AmericasUnited States862692587+105Qualification to Summer Olympics
8EuropePoland844619644−25Qualification to Olympic Qualifying Tournament
9EuropeLithuania532424336+88Qualification to Olympic Qualifying Tournament
10EuropeItaly532431371+60
11EuropeGreece532403382+21
12EuropeRussia532373358+15
13AmericasBrazil532409427−18Qualification to Olympic Qualifying Tournament
14AmericasVenezuela523355366−11
15AmericasPuerto Rico523349402−53
16AmericasDominican Republic523337390−53
17AfricaNigeria532435381+54Qualification to Summer Olympics
18EuropeGermany532409364+45Qualification to Olympic Qualifying Tournament
19OceaniaNew Zealand532497470+27
20AfricaTunisia532377386−9
21AmericasCanada523445413+32Qualification to Olympic Qualifying Tournament
22EuropeTurkey523434427+7
23AsiaIran523379372+7Qualification to Summer Olympics
24AsiaChina (H)523355365−10
25EuropeMontenegro514370406−36
26AsiaSouth Korea514361438−77
27AfricaAngola514350435−85
28AsiaJordan514352482−130
29AfricaIvory Coast505326400−74
30AfricaSenegal505330432−102
31AsiaJapan505334464−130Already qualified to Summer Olympics
32AsiaPhilippines505352499−147

Awards

The all-star team and MVP were announced on 15 September 2019.

2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup champion
Spain 2nd title

All-Tournament Team

All-Star Team
GuardsForwardsCenter
Spain Ricky Rubio Serbia Bogdan BogdanovićArgentina Luis Scola France Evan FournierSpain Marc Gasol
MVP: Spain Ricky Rubio

Statistical leaders

Player tournament averages

Points

#PlayerPldPtsPPG
1South Korea Ra Gun-ah511523.0
2Serbia Bogdan Bogdanović818322.9
3New Zealand Corey Webster511422.8
Australia Patty Mills818222.8
5Jordan Dar Tucker510521.0
6Turkey Cedi Osman510220.4
7France Evan Fournier815819.8
8Germany Dennis Schröder59819.6
9Turkey Melih Mahmutoğlu59318.6
10New Zealand Isaac Fotu59218.4

Rebounds

#PlayerPldRebsRPG
1South Korea Ra Gun-ah56412.8
2Iran Hamed Haddadi55410.8
3Tunisia Salah Mejri55110.2
4France Rudy Gobert8739.1
5Greece Giannis Antetokounmpo5448.8
Lithuania Jonas Valančiūnas5448.8
7Angola Yanick Moreira5438.6
8Philippines Andray Blatche5428.4
Czech Republic Ondřej Balvín8678.4
10Argentina Luis Scola8658.1

Assists

#PlayerPldAstsAPG
1Germany Dennis Schröder5479.4
2Czech Republic Tomáš Satoranský8688.5
3Argentina Facundo Campazzo8627.8
4Dominican Republic Gelvis Solano5336.6
5Turkey Scottie Wilbekin4266.5
6Australia Matthew Dellavedova8506.3
7Venezuela Heissler Guillent5316.2
8Spain Ricky Rubio8486.0
9Australia Joe Ingles8455.6
New Zealand Corey Webster5285.6

Blocks

#PlayerPldBlksBPG
1Tunisia Salah Mejri5163.2
2France Rudy Gobert8151.9
3Germany Maxi Kleber591.8
United States Myles Turner8141.8
5Lithuania Jonas Valančiūnas581.6
6Puerto Rico Renaldo Balkman571.4
Canada Khem Birch571.4
Senegal Youssou Ndoye571.4
China Zhou Qi571.4
10Czech Republic Ondřej Balvín8101.3

Steals

#PlayerPldStlsSPG
1Tunisia Omar Abada5132.6
2Greece Giannis Antetokounmpo5122.4
Philippines Andray Blatche5122.4
Nigeria Josh Okogie5122.4
5Argentina Facundo Campazzo8162.0
Canada Khem Birch5102.0
Canada Melvin Ejim5102.0
Senegal Maurice Ndour591.8
9Tunisia Makram Ben Romdhane591.8
Iran Behnam Yakhchali591.8

Minutes

#PlayerPldMinsMPG
1South Korea Ra Gun-ah518036.1
2Iran Behnam Yakhchali517635.4
3Australia Patty Mills827133.9
Australia Joe Ingles827133.9
5Czech Republic Tomáš Satoranský826533.2
6Jordan Dar Tucker516533.0
7Philippines Andray Blatche516432.9
8Germany Dennis Schröder516432.8
Tunisia Michael Roll516332.8
10Turkey Cedi Osman515332.7

Free throws

#PlayerFTMFTAFT%
1Poland Adam Waczyński283093.3
Lithuania Paulius Jankūnas141593.3
Lithuania Lukas Lekavičius141593.3
4Japan Yuta Watanabe262892.9
5Serbia Miroslav Raduljica212391.3
6Nigeria Josh Okogie192190.5
7Czech Republic Tomáš Satoranský273090.0
8France Nando de Colo353989.7
9United States Harrison Barnes242788.9
10Serbia Vladimir Lučić212487.5

Field goal shooting

#PlayerFGMFGAFG%
1New Zealand Isaac Fotu345166.7
2Lithuania Jonas Valančiūnas274264.3
3Jordan Ahmad Al Dwairi264360.5
4Turkey Melih Mahmutoğlu376457.8
5Argentina Gabriel Deck427556.0
6Serbia Bogdan Bogdanović6010855.6
7France Nando de Colo427754.5
8Tunisia Salah Mejri315754.4
9Philippines CJ Perez254654.3
10New Zealand Corey Webster397254.2
Angola Yanick Moreira264854.2

Double-doubles

#PlayerPldDblDblDD%
1South Korea Ra Gun-ah55100
2Czech Republic Ondřej Balvín8337.5
Philippines Andray Blatche5360.0
Iran Hamed Haddadi5360.0
Germany Dennis Schröder5360.0
6Greece Giannis Antetokounmpo5240.0
France Rudy Gobert8225.0
Serbia Nikola Jokić8225.0
Tunisia Salah Mejri5240.0
Senegal Youssou Ndoye5240.0
Czech Republic Tomáš Satoranský8225.0
Argentina Luis Scola8225.0
Lithuania Jonas Valančiūnas5240.0

Efficiency

#PlayerPldMPGPPGEffEffPG
1South Korea Ra Gun-ah536.123.013226.4
2New Zealand Corey Webster529.822.812825.6
3Tunisia Salah Mejri530.916.212625.2
4Serbia Bogdan Bogdanović828.022.919724.6
5Germany Dennis Schröder532.819.611122.2
6Czech Republic Tomáš Satoranský833.215.517221.5
7Lithuania Jonas Valančiūnas522.614.010621.2
8Italy Danilo Gallinari529.817.210120.2
9Greece Giannis Antetokounmpo524.914.810020.0
10New Zealand Isaac Fotu524.618.49819.6

Team tournament averages

Points

#TeamPldPtsPPG
1New Zealand549799.4
2Serbia875394.1
3Canada544589.0
4Nigeria543587.0
5Turkey543486.8

Rebounds

#TeamPldRebsRPG
1United States834443.0
2Nigeria521042.0
3New Zealand520240.4
Venezuela520240.4
5South Korea520040.0

Assists

#TeamPldAstsAPG
1Serbia820325.4
2Australia818222.8
Spain818222.8
4Canada511322.6
New Zealand511322.6

Blocks

#TeamPldBlksBPG
1Nigeria5316.2
2Senegal5244.8
3France8344.3
4Tunisia5214.2
5United States8324.0
Germany5204.0

Steals

#TeamPldStlsSPG
1Nigeria55611.2
2Argentina88010.0
3Spain8729.0
4China5448.8
5Canada5438.6

Free throws

#TeamPldFTM/AFT%
1Brazil572/8782.8
2Puerto Rico564/7882.1
3Germany575/9281.5
4Lithuania591/11281.3
5Serbia8152/19080.0

Field goal

#TeamPldFGM/AFG%
1Serbia8260/48653.5
2New Zealand5171/33850.6
3France8236/48448.8
4Lithuania5155/31948.6
5Australia8252/52348.2

Player game highs

CategoryPlayerTeamOpponentTotal
PointsAhmad Al DwairiJordanDominican Republic34
Dar TuckerJordanSenegal
Yuta WatanabeJapanMontenegro
Patty MillsAustraliaSpain
ReboundsHamed HaddadiIranPuerto Rico16
Ra Gun-ahSouth KoreaIvory Coast
Rudy GobertFranceUnited States
AssistsScottie WilbekinTurkeyMontenegro13
Tomáš SatoranskýCzech RepublicAustralia
StealsOmar AbadaTunisiaPuerto Rico6
BlocksSalah MejriTunisiaAngola8

Team game highs

CategoryTeamOpponentTotal
PointsCanadaJordan126
SerbiaPhilippines
ReboundsUnited StatesJapan58
AssistsCanadaJordan37
SerbiaPhilippines
StealsArgentinaPoland16
BlocksNigeriaArgentina10
MontenegroJapan
DifferenceSerbiaPhilippines59

Marketing

Opening ceremony of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup.

Logo

The official logo of the 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup was officially unveiled on 21 March 2017 in a ceremony held in Shanghai. The logo's concept was inspired from the Beijing Opera where the actors symbolize concepts such as wisdom, persistence, power and perfection, which are prerequisite characteristics that the participating players of national team will need to exhibit "in order to succeed". The logo design was also inspired from the Chinese Dragon Dance, a cultural tradition depicting a story of two flying dragons battling over a shining pearl which is meant to parallel the competition of national teams for the Naismith Trophy. The logo was created by Shanghai-based agency Flagship.

Sponsors

Infront China became the exclusive marketing partner for the domestic commercial rights of FIBA Basketball World Cup China 2019, according to a strategic cooperation agreement officially announced between Infront China, a Wanda Sports company, the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) and the Organizing Committee for the competition.

Mascot

An international mascot design competition was organized with the winning mascot chosen by fans. Yan Xu's design, a Chinese Dragon-inspired mascot named Son of Dreams, was announced to be the winning mascot on 18 April 2018. Son of Dreams was born in China on 8 August 2015 one day after China was announced as the host according to the mascot's fictional biography. The magical horns of the mascot is described as having the ability to give the dragon "the power to see in the future, envisioning plays and moves before they actually happen". He wears a red and blue uniform with the tournament's logo and high tops by China's top player Yao Ming. The mascot was chosen over other finalists Speed Tiger who was inspired by a Siberian tiger and QiuQiu (a.k.a. Little Lightning) who was inspired by a Chinese lion. The official mascot made his first public appearance on 28 June 2018 in Shenzhen.

Ball

On 16 March 2019, FIBA revealed the official ball that would be used in the World Cup, Molten BG5000, designed by Molten.

Official song

The song "Champion" was released on 24 July 2019, and performed by American singer-songwriter Jason Derulo featuring Chinese singer Tia Ray. It was performed both in English and the host language Chinese.

Issues and concerns

There were concerns from national federations that they would not be able to play the qualifiers with players from top professional leagues globally (the National Basketball Association and EuroLeague), which was possible with professional leagues operating in mid-year.

Broadcasters

The television rights holders by territory as follows:

TerritoryRights holderRef
AndorraCanal+ Mediaset
AngolaTPA
ArgentinaDeporTV TV Pública TyC Sports
AustraliaFox Sports
Baltic statesTVPlay Sports
BelgiumBeTV
Bosnia and HerzegovinaSport Klub
BrazilSporTV
BulgariaBNT
CanadaDAZN
ChinaCCTV Tencent
CroatiaHRT Sport Klub
CubaICRT
CyprusCYTA
Czech RepublicCzech Television
EstoniaTV3
FinlandYle
FranceCanal+
GeorgiaGPB
GermanyMagenta Sport
GreeceERT
Hong KongI-Cable
HungaryM4 Sport
IcelandRÚV
IndiaFanCode
IndonesiaTVRI
IrelandEurosport
IsraelSport 5
ItalySky Sport
JapanFuji TV DAZN
KosovoRTK
Latin AmericaDirecTV Fox Sports
LatviaTV3
LebanonLBC
LithuaniaTV3
MacauTDM
MalaysiaAstro
MENAbeIN Sports
MongoliaNTV
MontenegroRTCG Sport Klub
NetherlandsZiggo
New ZealandMāori Television Sky
NordicNENT
North MacedoniaSport Klub
Pacific IslandsMelania Media
ParaguayTigoStarTV
PhilippinesCignal ESPN5
PolandTVP
PortugalEleven Sports
Puerto RicoWAPA-TV
QatarAl Kass
RussiaMatch TV
SenegalRTS
SerbiaRTS Sport Klub
SingaporeStarHub
SloveniaPop TV
South KoreaSPOTV
SpainDAZN Mediaset
Sub-Saharan AfricaStarTimes Canal+
SwitzerlandCanal+ SRG SSR Teleclub
TaiwanEleven Sports
TurkeyNTV S Sport
UkraineXSPORT
United KingdomEurosport
United StatesESPN
UruguayANTEL
VietnamHTV

See also

External links