EuroBasket 2013 was the 38th edition of the EuroBasket championship that was organized by FIBA Europe. It took place from 4 September until 22 September 2013 in Slovenia. The number of participating teams was 24.

France defeated Lithuania in the final to win their first title. Tony Parker was named the tournament's MVP.

Host selection

Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Czech Republic, Germany, Italy and Slovenia brought forward a potential candidature for the FIBA EuroBasket. Countries which were interested in submitting a formal candidature had to do so by 31 August 2010. On 5 September 2010, it was announced that only two countries, Slovenia and Italy had submitted formal bids. On 15 October 2010, Italy announced its withdrawal from the run. The Basketball Federation of Slovenia (BFS) thus remained the only candidate organizer.

The decision on the candidacy was officially reported after FIBA Europe's meeting in Munich, Germany on 5 December 2010. In March 2011, the BFS appointed the economist Aleš Križnar as the director of the event.

Format

In the first stage, every team had to play against every other team of their group (round-robin). This meant five matches per team.

From every group, the three best teams advanced to the second stage and the three worst teams were eliminated. In the second stage, two new groups were formed. The three best teams from groups A and B were united to form group E and the three best teams from groups C and D were united to form group F.

In these two new groups of the second stage only matches by teams that had not yet played each other have to be played. As for the matches that had already happened in the first stage, their results also counted in the second stage. Therefore, every team played three matches and there are 12 teams in the second stage.

Out of the second stage, the four best teams from each of the two groups advanced to the quarterfinals (8 teams in total) whereas the two worst teams will be eliminated from the championship (four teams in total).

Financing

The fee that Slovenia had to pay to FIBA Europe amounted to 6 million euros. According to the agreement, half of the money was paid by the Slovenian state.

Logo, official song and mascot of the championship

Official mascot

The official mascot was Lipko, whose name came from combining the Slovenian word for linden tree and the diminutive "ko". The word lipa is of Slavic origin. Lipko is spelt the same in every language and in every market where he is present.

Attendance

Serbian fans in Arena Stožice
Slovenian fans in Arena Zlatorog

Preliminary round

CityArenaVisitors (avg. per game)Total visitors (all 15 events)Total capacity (all 15 events)% visitors (avg. p/g & total)
LjubljanaTivoli Hall1,53623,04082,50027.9
JesenicePodmežakla Hall3,38950,84682,50061.6
CeljeZlatorog Arena2,88843,32082,50052.5
KoperArena Bonifika2,54238,13075,00046.2
Total (all 60 events)2,588155,336322,50048.2
  • Slovenia already beat record attendance of 155,336 after preliminary round for almost 20,000 more people from previous FIBA Eurobasket. The average attendance per game was 2,588 visitors.

Second round

CityArenaVisitors (avg. per game)Total visitors (all 18 events)Total capacity (all 18 events)% visitors (avg. p/g & total)
LjubljanaArena Stožice5,08691,560225,00040.7

Venues

On 24 March 2011, it was officially announced that the preliminary round would be played in Novo Mesto, Jesenice, Koper and Ptuj. Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia, will host the final round at the Arena Stožice. On 18 June 2012, it was announced that the city council of Ptuj cancelled their bid for the tournament. Novo Mesto cancelled their bid on 2 July 2012. On 28 August 2012, it was confirmed that the preliminary round would be played in Celje and Ljubljana (Tivoli Hall) instead of Ptuj and Novo Mesto, which cancelled their bids.

LocationPictureCityArenaCapacityStatusRound
LjubljanaLjubljanaArena Stožice12,500Opened in 2010Second and knockout stages
JeseniceJesenicePodmežakla Hall5,500Reconstruction completed in 2013Preliminary stage
KoperKoperArena Bonifika5,000Reconstruction completed in 2013Preliminary stage
LjubljanaLjubljanaTivoli Hall5,600Opened in 1965Preliminary stage
CeljeCeljeZlatorog Arena5,500Opened in 2003Preliminary stage

Qualification

Olympic Games or Olympic Qualifying Tournament participants Spain, France, Russia, North Macedonia, Lithuania, Greece, Slovenia and Great Britain all qualified directly to the EuroBasket 2013 Final Round.

The 31 remaining teams were divided into 5 groups of 5 teams and 1 group of 6 teams. The first and second placed teams in each group plus the 4 best third placed teams were qualified for the Final Round.

The Qualifiers were played between 15 August and 11 September 2012.

The EuroBasket 2013 draw took place on 18 November 2012; first time in the history the draw took place underground – in the Concert Hall of Postojna Cave.

Qualified teams

Participating countries of EuroBasket 2013
CompetitionDateVacanciesQualified
Host nation5 December 20101Slovenia
Participants of 2012 Olympics and of the 2012 Olympic Qualifying Tournament28 July – 12 August 2012 2–8 July 20127France Great Britain Greece Lithuania Macedonia Russia Spain
Qualified through FIBA Eurobasket 2013 qualification14 August – 11 September 201216Belgium Bosnia and Herzegovina Croatia Czech Republic Finland Georgia Germany Israel Italy Latvia Montenegro Poland Serbia Sweden Turkey Ukraine

Squads

Draw

The EuroBasket 2013 draw took place on 18 November 2012, first time in history the draw took place underground – in the Postojna Cave Concert Hall, divided the qualified teams into four groups of six, groups A, B, C, and D. It was decided that games would take place in Celje, Jesenice, Koper and Ljubljana. Included are the latest published FIBA World Rankings prior to the draw.

Seeding
TeamQualifying PCTQualifying PDPot
Spain France Russia MacedoniaTop 4 in 20111
Lithuania Greece SloveniaNext 3 in 20112
Great Britain2012 Olympics host
Germany1.000+1483
Croatia1.000+146
Italy1.000+142
Montenegro1.000+117
Finland.750+1454
Poland.750+136
Bosnia and Herzegovina.750+64
Ukraine.750+57
Georgia.750+415
Belgium.625+73
Latvia.625+71
Turkey.625+49
Czech Republic.625+146
Serbia.600+125
Israel.600+90
Sweden.600+54
Pot 1Pot 2Pot 3Pot 4Pot 5Pot 6
Spain (2) France (8) Russia (6) Macedonia (34)Lithuania (5) Greece (4) Slovenia (14) Great Britain (23)Italy (21) Croatia (16) Germany (13) Montenegro (77)Finland (48) Poland (40) Ukraine (50) Bosnia and Herzegovina (50)Georgia (50) Belgium (77) Latvia (39) Turkey (7)Czech Republic (61) Serbia (12) Israel (31) Sweden (83)

Preliminary round

Group A

Venue: Tivoli Hall, Ljubljana

TeamPldWLPFPAPDPtsTie
France541403344+5991–0
Ukraine541378352+2690–1
Belgium523344371−2772–0
Great Britain523360396−3671–1
Germany523390396−670–2
Israel514364380−166
4 September 2013
Israel71–75OTGreat Britain
Belgium57–58Ukraine
France74–80Germany
5 September 2013
Ukraine74–67Israel
Germany73–77OTBelgium
Great Britain65–88France
6 September 2013
Germany83–88Ukraine
Belgium76–71Great Britain
France82–63Israel
8 September 2013
Great Britain81–74Germany
Ukraine71–77France
Israel87–69Belgium
9 September 2013
Great Britain68–87Ukraine
Germany80–76Israel
Belgium65–82France

Group B

Venue: Podmežakla Hall, Jesenice

TeamPldWLPFPAPDPtsTie
Serbia532371366+583–0
Latvia532365360+581–2, 1–1, 1.021
Lithuania532347337+1081–2, 1–1, 1.015
Bosnia and Herzegovina532358359−181–2, 1–1, 0.968
Montenegro523376382−67
Macedonia514356369−136
4 September 2013
Latvia86–75Bosnia and Herzegovina
Macedonia80–81Montenegro
Serbia63–56Lithuania
5 September 2013
Montenegro72–73Latvia
Bosnia and Herzegovina67–77Serbia
Lithuania75–67Macedonia
6 September 2013
Montenegro70–76Bosnia and Herzegovina
Latvia59–67Lithuania
Macedonia89–75Serbia
8 September 2013
Bosnia and Herzegovina62–54Macedonia
Serbia80–71Latvia
Lithuania77–70OTMontenegro
9 September 2013
Latvia76–66Macedonia
Lithuania72–78Bosnia and Herzegovina
Montenegro83–76Serbia

Group C

Venue: Zlatorog Arena, Celje

TeamPldWLPFPAPDPtsTie
Spain541369269+10091–0
Croatia541337341−490–1
Slovenia532347344+38
Czech Republic523316339−237
Georgia514366394−2861–0
Poland514329377−4860–1
4 September 2013
Georgia84–67Poland
Spain68–40Croatia
Czech Republic60–62Slovenia
5 September 2013
Croatia77–76Georgia
Poland68–69Czech Republic
Slovenia78–69Spain
7 September 2013
Spain60–39Czech Republic
Croatia74–70Poland
Georgia68–72Slovenia
8 September 2013
Poland53–89Spain
Czech Republic95–79Georgia
Slovenia74–76OTCroatia
9 September 2013
Georgia59–83Spain
Croatia70–53Czech Republic
Slovenia61–71Poland

Group D

Venue: Arena Bonifika, Koper

TeamPldWLPFPAPDPtsTie
Italy550391339+5210
Finland541358337+219
Greece532392350+428
Sweden514345391−4661–1, 1.040
Turkey514355398−4361–1, 1.006
Russia514374400−2661–1, 0.956
4 September 2013
Turkey55–61Finland
Sweden51–79Greece
Russia69–76Italy
5 September 2013
Finland81–60Sweden
Italy90–75Turkey
Greece80–71Russia
7 September 2013
Russia62–81Sweden
Italy62–44Finland
Turkey61–84Greece
8 September 2013
Finland86–832OTRussia
Greece72–81Italy
Sweden74–87Turkey
9 September 2013
Greece77–86Finland
Italy82–79Sweden
Turkey77–89Russia

Second round

Eugene "Pooh" Jeter versus Vasilije Micić as Ukraine plays Serbia

The two groups comprised the three best-ranked teams from Groups A, B, C and D. Teams coming from the same initial group did not play again vs. each other, but "carried" the results of the matches played between them from the first round.

The best four teams advanced to the quarterfinals.

Group E

TeamPldWLPFPAPDPtsTie
Serbia541371343+2891–0
Lithuania541355314+4190–1
France532388380+88
Ukraine523325364−397
Belgium514318358−4061–0
Latvia514362360+260–1
11 September 2013
Latvia85–51UkraineArena Stožice, Ljubljana
Belgium69–76SerbiaArena Stožice, Ljubljana
Lithuania76–62FranceArena Stožice, Ljubljana
13 September 2013
Lithuania86–67BelgiumArena Stožice, Ljubljana
Ukraine82–75SerbiaArena Stožice, Ljubljana
France102–91LatviaArena Stožice, Ljubljana
15 September 2013
Latvia56–60BelgiumArena Stožice, Ljubljana
Ukraine63–70LithuaniaArena Stožice, Ljubljana
Serbia77–65FranceArena Stožice, Ljubljana

Group F

Slovenia against Italy
TeamPldWLPFPAPDPtsTie
Croatia541372361+119
Slovenia532385379+681–0
Italy532374357+1780–1
Spain523375339+3671–0
Finland523341385−4470–1
Greece514381407−266
12 September 2013
Finland63–88CroatiaArena Stožice, Ljubljana
Greece79–75SpainArena Stožice, Ljubljana
Slovenia84–77ItalyArena Stožice, Ljubljana
14 September 2013
Croatia76–68ItalyArena Stožice, Ljubljana
Spain82–56FinlandArena Stožice, Ljubljana
Greece65–73SloveniaArena Stožice, Ljubljana
16 September 2013
Croatia92–882OTGreeceArena Stožice, Ljubljana
Italy86–81OTSpainArena Stožice, Ljubljana
Finland92–76SloveniaArena Stožice, Ljubljana

Knockout stage

Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
18 September
Serbia60
20 September
Spain90
Spain72
18 September
France (OT)75
Slovenia62
22 September
France72
France80
19 September
Lithuania66
Croatia84
20 September
Ukraine72
Croatia62
19 September
Lithuania77Third place
Lithuania81
22 September
Italy77
Spain92
Croatia66

5th place bracket

Semi-finalsFifth place
19 September
Serbia74
21 September
Slovenia92
Slovenia69
20 September
Ukraine63
Ukraine66
Italy58
Seventh place
21 September
Serbia76
Italy64

Quarterfinals

18 September 2013 17:30
Serbia60–90Spain
Scoring by quarter: 5–21, 18–27, 16–25, 21–17
Arena Stožice, Ljubljana Attendance: 7,610
18 September 2013 21:00
Slovenia62–72France
Scoring by quarter: 12–10, 12–16, 21–24, 17–22
Arena Stožice, Ljubljana Attendance: 10,000
19 September 2013 17:45
Croatia84–72Ukraine
Scoring by quarter: 22–22, 29–13, 19–26, 14–11
Arena Stožice, Ljubljana Attendance: 7,700
19 September 2013 21:00
Lithuania81–77Italy
Scoring by quarter: 22–15, 18–24, 17–19, 24–19
Arena Stožice, Ljubljana Attendance: 8,210

Classification 5–8

19 September 2013 14:30
Serbia74–92Slovenia
Scoring by quarter: 16–30, 19–23, 20–18, 19–21
Arena Stožice, Ljubljana Attendance: 5,730
20 September 2013 14:30
Italy58–66Ukraine
Scoring by quarter: 17–13, 17–22, 14–16, 10–15
Arena Stožice, Ljubljana Attendance: 3,070

Semifinals

20 September 2013 17:45
Lithuania77–62Croatia
Scoring by quarter: 24–19, 16–18, 21–8, 16–17
Arena Stožice, Ljubljana Attendance: 9,180
20 September 2013 21:00
Spain72–75 (OT)France
Scoring by quarter: 18–14, 16–6, 15–23, 16–22, Overtime: 7–10
Arena Stožice, Ljubljana Attendance: 9,060

Seventh place game

21 September 2013 17:30
Serbia76–64Italy
Scoring by quarter: 27–11, 14–16, 14–17, 21–20
Arena Stožice, Ljubljana Attendance: 4,030

Fifth place game

21 September 2013 21:00
Slovenia69–63Ukraine
Scoring by quarter: 16–23, 24–13, 14–8, 15–19
Arena Stožice, Ljubljana Attendance: 10,000

Third place game

22 September 2013 17:30
Spain92–66Croatia
Scoring by quarter: 23–18, 24–18, 16–12, 29–18
Arena Stožice, Ljubljana Attendance: 6,050

Final

22 September 2013 21:00
France80–66Lithuania
Scoring by quarter: 19–22, 31–12, 18–16, 12–16
Arena Stožice, Ljubljana Attendance: 10,000 Referees: Luigi Lamonica (ITA), Juan Arteaga (ESP), Ilija Belošević (SRB)
EuroBasket 2013 champions
France First title
Most Valuable Player
France Tony Parker

Final standings

Results
Key
Qualified for the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup.
Qualified as host nation for the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup.
Received wild card for the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup.
RankTeamRecord
France8–3
Lithuania8–3
Spain7–4
4Croatia8–3
5Slovenia7–4
6Ukraine6–5
7Serbia6–5
8Italy6–5
9Finland5–3
Belgium3–5
11Greece4–4
Latvia4–4
13Bosnia and Herzegovina3–2
Czech Republic2–3
Great Britain2–3
Sweden1–4
17Germany2–3
Montenegro2–3
Georgia1–4
Turkey1–4
21Macedonia1–4
Israel1–4
Russia1–4
Poland1–4

All-Tournament Team

Statistical leaders

  • In order for players to qualify as statistical leaders for the tournament, they had to play in at least 6 games during the competition.
NamePPG
Points Name PPG France Tony Parker 19.0 Croatia Bojan Bogdanović 17.4 Greece Vassillis Spanoulis 16.7 Slovenia Goran Dragić 15.8 Serbia Nenad Krstić 15.4Rebounds Name RPG Belgium Axel Hervelle 7.9 Spain Marc Gasol 7.8 Croatia Ante Tomić 7.2 France Alexis Ajinça 7.0 Serbia Nemanja BjelicaAssists Name APG Lithuania Mantas Kalnietis 5.0 Finland Petteri Koponen 4.8 Slovenia Goran Dragić 4.5 Greece Nikos Zisis 4.3 Ukraine Eugene "Pooh" Jeter 4.1
France Tony Parker19.0
Croatia Bojan Bogdanović17.4
Greece Vassillis Spanoulis16.7
Slovenia Goran Dragić15.8
Serbia Nenad Krstić15.4
NameRPG
Belgium Axel Hervelle7.9
Spain Marc Gasol7.8
Croatia Ante Tomić7.2
France Alexis Ajinça7.0
Serbia Nemanja Bjelica
NameAPG
Lithuania Mantas Kalnietis5.0
Finland Petteri Koponen4.8
Slovenia Goran Dragić4.5
Greece Nikos Zisis4.3
Ukraine Eugene "Pooh" Jeter4.1
NameBPG
Blocks Name BPG Ukraine Viacheslav Kravtsov 2.0 Italy Marco Cusin 1.6 Slovenia Mirza Begić 1.5 Lithuania Jonas Valančiūnas 1.4 France Alexis Ajinça 1.3Steals Name SPG Finland Petteri Koponen 1.4 Spain Ricky Rubio 1.4 France Nando de Colo 1.1 Croatia Dontaye Draper seven players 1.0
Ukraine Viacheslav Kravtsov2.0
Italy Marco Cusin1.6
Slovenia Mirza Begić1.5
Lithuania Jonas Valančiūnas1.4
France Alexis Ajinça1.3
NameSPG
Finland Petteri Koponen1.4
Spain Ricky Rubio1.4
France Nando de Colo1.1
Croatia Dontaye Draper
seven players1.0

FIBA broadcasting rights

The tournament was broadcast in a record 167 countries around the globe (previous record is 162 countries).

CountryBroadcaster
Country Broadcaster Albania TVSH Argentina DirecTV Belgium Be TV TELENET Bosnia and Herzegovina FTV RTRS Brazil SporTV ESPN Brasil TV Esporte Interativo Bulgaria Nova Sport China CCTV-5 Croatia HRT2 Sportska televizija Sport Klub Czech Republic Czech Television Cyprus CYTA Denmark Viasat Sport Estonia Viasat Sport Baltic Finland Viasat Sport Yle France Sport+ Canal+ Sport Kosovo Radio Television of Kosovo Macedonia Sitel Georgia 1TV Germany Das Erste Greece ANT1 Cosmote TV Hungary Sport 1 India NEO Sports Ireland BT Sport Israel Sport 5 Italy Rai SportCountry Broadcaster Latvia TV6 Viasat Sport Baltic Lithuania TV3 Viasat Sport Baltic Japan Fuji TV Malaysia Astro Montenegro TV Vijesti Netherlands Sport1 Norway Viasat Sport Philippines Solar TV Basketball TV Poland Polsat Sport Portugal Sport TV Qatar Al Jazeera Sports Romania Digi TV (TV channel) Russia Rossiya 2 Sport 1 Serbia RTS Singapore StarHub Slovakia Slovak Sport.TV Slovenia RTV Slovenija Šport TV South Africa SuperSport Spain Cuatro Energy Sweden TV10 Viasat Sport Turkey NTV Spor Ukraine XSPORT United Kingdom BT Sport United States ESPN3
AlbaniaTVSH
ArgentinaDirecTV
BelgiumBe TV
TELENET
Bosnia and HerzegovinaFTV
RTRS
BrazilSporTV
ESPN Brasil
TV Esporte Interativo
BulgariaNova Sport
ChinaCCTV-5
CroatiaHRT2
Sportska televizija
Sport Klub
Czech RepublicCzech Television
CyprusCYTA
DenmarkViasat Sport
EstoniaViasat Sport Baltic
FinlandViasat Sport
Yle
FranceSport+
Canal+ Sport
KosovoRadio Television of Kosovo
MacedoniaSitel
Georgia1TV
GermanyDas Erste
GreeceANT1
Cosmote TV
HungarySport 1
IndiaNEO Sports
IrelandBT Sport
IsraelSport 5
ItalyRai Sport
CountryBroadcaster
LatviaTV6
Viasat Sport Baltic
LithuaniaTV3
Viasat Sport Baltic
JapanFuji TV
MalaysiaAstro
MontenegroTV Vijesti
NetherlandsSport1
NorwayViasat Sport
PhilippinesSolar TV
Basketball TV
PolandPolsat Sport
PortugalSport TV
QatarAl Jazeera Sports
RomaniaDigi TV (TV channel)
RussiaRossiya 2
Sport 1
SerbiaRTS
SingaporeStarHub
SlovakiaSlovak Sport.TV
SloveniaRTV Slovenija
Šport TV
South AfricaSuperSport
SpainCuatro
Energy
SwedenTV10
Viasat Sport
TurkeyNTV Spor
UkraineXSPORT
United KingdomBT Sport
United StatesESPN3

External links