EuroBasket, also commonly called the European Basketball Championship, is the main international basketball competition for the senior men's national teams of primarily European countries. It is held every four years and organised by FIBA Europe, the European zone of FIBA, the International Basketball Federation.

The competition was first held in 1935. The former Soviet Union holds the record for most gold medals with 14. The tournament is generally held in August or September, in the offseason of major club competitions. The current champion is Germany, who won the 2025 title.

History

Beginning

Lithuania celebrating winning the EuroBasket 1937

The first championships was held three years after the establishment of FIBA, in 1935. Switzerland was chosen as the host country, and ten countries joined. Only one qualifying match was played between Portugal and Spain. With a complicated formula, the final would see Latvia as champions. According to the rule at the time, the winner had to hold the following games. The following two tournaments would be won by Lithuania and would see the introduction of Egypt who would compete in EuroBasket until 1953 winning one championship at home in 1949 along the way. The 1941 edition of the tournament was scheduled be held in Lithuania as well, but was cancelled due to WWII.

Soviet dominance

After the 1946 edition saw the first jump shot performed by Italian player Giuseppe Stefanini, the following edition would see the Soviet Union compete in their first edition in the 1947 edition and would see the Soviets win the first of eleven out of the next thirteen European championships. During the 50s, the Soviet Union won four of the five competitions held during the decade with the only tournament that they did not win being the 1955 edition. This was won by Hungary as they finished top while the Soviets finished in third place. It was also during that edition that the thirty-second shot clock was introduced, which changed the style of basketball.

The Soviets would win all championships of the 60s. They had a fifty-five game winning streak which would be broken by Yugoslavia in 1969. The 1960s would see also a change in how the competition was viewed and run with FIBA putting a limit on the number of countries that entered to 16 with qualifiers being the way to bring them down to that number as it first appeared in 1963. The following edition would see the competition not be held in one city with Tbilisi joining Moscow in hosting games and in 1967 the first modern games were held, because the games were televised and international media were present.

Rise of Yugoslavia

The 1970s were the competition between Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union. During the decade Yugoslavia won three gold medals and the Soviet Union taking out the remaining two. After the Soviets won 1971, the 1973 edition would finally see Yugoslavia win their first championship after Spain defeated the Soviets in the semi-finals to qualify for their first final since the first edition way back in 1935. Yugoslavia would finally have a chance to defeat the Soviets as at home, they would get the chance to defeat them and they did as they won by six points to take home 1975 edition. After following that up in 1977, the Soviets would get their revenge in the final round at EuroBasket 1979 when they defeated them 96–77 to qualify through to the final where they would defeat Israel who shocked the basketball world as they defeated Yugoslavia in the opening round by a point.

Brewing under the Soviets and Yugoslavs, Western Europe was starting to appear with the 1980s seeing the change happen. In 1983, the Western side of Europe tasted success with Italy defeating Spain in the final to record their first of two titles. An important development happened in the following edition which was held in Germany. That edition saw the first three-point arc being used.

New winners emerge and Spanish dominance

Greece would win the next edition in 1987 at home after remarkable victory over heavily favored Soviet Union, with a 103–101 score in a gripping final decided in overtime. At the 1989 edition, Greece beat the Soviet team again in the semifinals with a one-point margin but then lost to hosts Yugoslavia in the final. EuroBasket 1991 was the first EuroBasket tournament in which currently active NBA players, that had also already played in an official NBA regular season game were allowed to participate. It would also be the first edition where the Soviets weren't entered into the competition, as the USSR didn't qualify for the main tournament and afterwards collapsed. Yugoslavia would take the title, but afterwards war would split the country up with Jure Zdovc being a "casualty" after Slovenia declared independence, two days into the tournament. 1993 saw a shock winner, with Germany taking the championship at home with a one-point victory over Russia. After being suspended in 1993, FR Yugoslavia came back and took the trophy after defeating Lithuania who was making its first appearance, since it had been a Soviet Republic. But politics came into play with the crowd protesting "Lithuania is the champions", while the Croatian team who had defeated Greece for bronze step down from the podium in protest of the war that was happening at the time. Nevertheless, FR Yugoslavia managed to repeat their success in 1997 after victory over Italy in the final match.

Italy managed to win the last title of the 20th century, defeating Spain in the 1999 final. In 2001, FR Yugoslavia regained European title but it was their last victory at the EuroBasket. In 2003, Lithuania defeated Spain in the final match and won their first European trophy since 1939. In 2005, Greece repeated success of 1987 after beating Germany in the final match.

2007 saw a shock winner, with Russia taking their first EuroBasket title since the dissolution of the Soviet Union with a one-point victory over heavily favored Spanish hosts in Madrid. However, the next tournaments were dominated by Spain who finally gained their maiden European title in 2009 and then won 3 of 5 next editions. In 2013, France won their first European title. In 2017, Slovenia won the trophy, becoming the 14th country to win the EuroBasket. But in general, the first decades of the 21st century have been characterized by the dominance of Spanish team who has reached at least the semifinals of the 11 last tournaments, obtaining at these editions a total of four gold, three silver and three bronze medals, including the current title of 2022.

Qualification

24 European teams take part in the final competition. The qualification format that existed until the 2011 EuroBasket permitted 16 teams to compete. Eight spots were determined by the host nation and the top seven finishers of the previous EuroBasket. The remaining Division A teams compete in a qualification tournament. There, they were divided into four groups. Each group played a double round-robin. The top team in each group qualified for EuroBasket. The best three of the four runners-up also qualified.

Of the ten teams that did not qualify in the qualification tournament, the six best got another chance in the additional qualification round. The remaining four competed in a relegation round, with two being sent to Division B for the next qualification cycle (and replaced by the two best teams from Division B).

The final spot was determined by the additional qualifying round. The six teams were divided into two groups of three, with each group playing a double round-robin. The top team in each group played in the final against the other group's top team; the winner of that game received the final EuroBasket qualification spot.

In 2015, the national team of Iceland became the smallest nation to ever qualify for a EuroBasket final stage at the population of around 330.000 people. The team was led by the former Dallas Maverick, Jón Arnór Stefánsson followed by a great performance which drove them through the qualifiers. In 2017, Iceland made back to back qualification to a EuroBasket final stage, then led by the young Martin Hermannsson.

Competition format

EuroBasket has used a number of different formats, ranging from the simple round-robin used in 1939, to a three-stage tournament, and now a two-stage tournament that is currently in use.

The current format begins with a preliminary round. The twenty-four qualified teams are placed into four groups of six, and each group plays a round-robin tournament. The top four teams in each group (16 overall) advance to the knockout stage. The knockout stage is a 16-team single-elimination tournament, with a bronze medal game for semi-final losers and classification games for the quarterfinal losers to determine fifth to eighth places.

Results

#YearHostsGold medal gameBronze medal gameTeams
GoldScoreSilverBronzeScoreFourth place
11935SwitzerlandLatvia24–18SpainCzechoslovakia25–23Switzerland10
21937LatviaLithuania24–23ItalyFrance27–24Poland8
31939LithuaniaLithuaniaNo playoffsLatviaPolandNo playoffsFrance8
-1941LithuaniaCancelled due to World War II
41946SwitzerlandCzechoslovakia34–32ItalyHungary38–32France10
51947CzechoslovakiaSoviet Union56–37CzechoslovakiaEgypt50–48Belgium14
61949EgyptEgyptNo playoffsFranceGreeceNo playoffsTurkey7
71951FranceSoviet Union45–44CzechoslovakiaFrance55–52Bulgaria18
81953Soviet UnionSoviet UnionNo playoffsHungaryFranceNo playoffsCzechoslovakia17
91955HungaryHungaryNo playoffsCzechoslovakiaSoviet UnionNo playoffsBulgaria18
101957BulgariaSoviet UnionNo playoffsBulgariaCzechoslovakiaNo playoffsHungary16
111959TurkeySoviet UnionNo playoffsCzechoslovakiaFranceNo playoffsHungary17
121961YugoslaviaSoviet Union60–53YugoslaviaBulgaria55–46France19
131963PolandSoviet Union61–45PolandYugoslavia89–61Hungary16
141965Soviet UnionSoviet Union58–49YugoslaviaPoland86–70Italy16
151967FinlandSoviet Union89–77CzechoslovakiaPoland80–76Bulgaria16
161969ItalySoviet Union81–72YugoslaviaCzechoslovakia77–75Poland12
171971West GermanySoviet Union69–64YugoslaviaItaly85–67Poland12
181973SpainYugoslavia78–67SpainSoviet Union90–58Czechoslovakia12
191975YugoslaviaYugoslaviaNo playoffsSoviet UnionItalyNo playoffsSpain12
201977BelgiumYugoslavia74–61Soviet UnionCzechoslovakia91–81Italy12
211979ItalySoviet Union98–76IsraelYugoslavia99–92Czechoslovakia12
221981CzechoslovakiaSoviet Union84–67YugoslaviaCzechoslovakia101–90Spain12
231983FranceItaly105–96SpainSoviet Union105–70Netherlands12
241985West GermanySoviet Union120–89CzechoslovakiaItaly102–90Spain12
251987GreeceGreece103–101 overtimeSoviet UnionYugoslavia98–87Spain12
261989YugoslaviaYugoslavia98–77GreeceSoviet Union104–76Italy8
271991ItalyYugoslavia88–73ItalySpain101–83France8
281993GermanyGermany71–70RussiaCroatia99–59Greece16
291995GreeceYugoslavia96–90LithuaniaCroatia73–68Greece14
301997SpainYugoslavia61–49ItalyRussia97–77Greece16
311999FranceItaly64–56SpainYugoslavia74–62France16
322001TurkeyYugoslavia78–69TurkeySpain99–90Germany16
332003SwedenLithuania93–84SpainItaly69–67France16
342005Serbia and MontenegroGreece78–62GermanyFrance98–68Spain16
352007SpainRussia60–59SpainLithuania78–69Greece16
362009PolandSpain85–63SerbiaGreece57–56Slovenia16
372011LithuaniaSpain98–85FranceRussia72–68Macedonia24
382013SloveniaFrance80–66LithuaniaSpain92–66Croatia24
392015France Croatia Germany LatviaSpain80–63LithuaniaFrance81–68Serbia24
402017Finland Israel Romania TurkeySlovenia93–85SerbiaSpain93–85Russia24
412022Czech Republic Georgia Italy GermanySpain88–76FranceGermany82–69Poland24
422025Cyprus Finland Poland LatviaGermany88–83TurkeyGreece92–89Finland24
432029Estonia Greece Slovenia Spain24

Medal table

The medal table below lists the national teams according to the respective table published by FIBA.

  • Countries in italics no longer compete at the EuroBasket.
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1Soviet Union143421
2Yugoslavia / Yugoslavia85417
3Spain46414
4Lithuania3317
5Italy24410
6Greece2136
7Germany2114
8Czechoslovakia16512
9France13610
10Russia1124
11Hungary1113
12Latvia1102
13Egypt1012
14Slovenia1001
15Serbia0202
Turkey0202
17Poland0134
18Bulgaria0112
19Israel0101
20Croatia0022
Totals (20 entries)424242126

Notes

Participating nations

Total108810147181718161719161616121212121212
TeamSwitzerland 1935Latvia 1937Lithuania 1939Switzerland 1946Czech Republic 1947Egypt 1949France 1951Soviet Union 1953Hungary 1955Bulgaria 1957Turkey 1959Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1961Poland 1963Soviet Union 1965Finland 1967Italy 1969West Germany 1971Spain 1973Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1975Belgium 1977Italy 1979
Albania----14th----16th-----------
Austria----12th-11th-13th14th16th--------12th-
Belgium6th--7th4th-7th10th-12th7th8th8th-15th----8th12th
Bosnia and HerzegovinaPart of Yugoslavia
Bulgaria8th---8th-4th9th4th2nd5th3rd5th5th4th7th6th6th5th6th11th
CroatiaPart of Yugoslavia
Cyprus---------------------
Czech RepublicPart of Czechoslovakia
Czechoslovakia3rd7th-1st2nd-2nd4th2nd3rd2nd5th10th7th2nd3rd5th4th6th3rd4th
Denmark------14th16th18th------------
East GermanyXXXXXX----14th12th6th10th14th------
Egypt-8th--3rd1st-8th-------------
England---10th----12th--19th---------
Estonia-5th5thPart of Soviet Union
Finland--8th---9th12th10th11th13th14th14th12th6th----10th-
France5th3rd4th4th5th2nd3rd3rd9th8th3rd4th13th9th11th-10th10th-11th8th
GeorgiaPart of Soviet Union
West Germany/ Germany------12th14th17th13th-16th-14th--9th----
Great Britain---------------------
Greece-----3rd8th----17th-8th12th10th-11th12th-9th
Hungary9th-7th3rd7th--2nd1st4th4th6th4th15th13th8th-----
Iceland---------------------
Iran----------17th----------
IsraelXXXXX--5th--11th11th9th6th8th11th11th7th7th5th2nd
Italy7th2nd6th2nd9th-5th7th6th10th10th-12th4th7th6th3rd5th3rd4th5th
Latvia1st6th2ndPart of Soviet Union
Lebanon-----7th-15th-------------
Lithuania-1st1stPart of Soviet Union
Luxembourg---8th--17th-15th------------
MontenegroPart of Yugoslavia
Netherlands---6th11th5th10th----15th16th-16th---10th7th10th
North MacedoniaPart of Yugoslavia
Poland-4th3rd9th6th---5th7th6th9th2nd3rd3rd4th4th12th8th-7th
Portugal------15th--------------
Romania10th---10th-18th13th7th5th8th7th11th13th5th9th8th9th11th--
RussiaPart of Soviet Union
Scotland------16th--15th-----------
SerbiaPart of Yugoslavia
Serbia and MontenegroPart of Yugoslavia
SloveniaPart of Yugoslavia
Soviet Union----1st-1st1st3rd1st1st1st1st1st1st1st1st3rd2nd2nd1st
Spain2nd---------15th13th7th11th10th5th7th2nd4th9th6th
Sweden-------17th16th--18th-16th-12th-----
Switzerland4th--5th--13th11th14th------------
Syria-----6th---------------
Turkey-----4th6th-11th9th12th10th15th---12th8th9th--
UkrainePart of Soviet Union
Yugoslavia----13th--6th8th6th9th2nd3rd2nd9th2nd2nd1st1st1st3rd
Total121212128816141616161616161624242424242424
TeamCzechoslovakia 1981France 1983West Germany 1985Greece 1987Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1989Italy 1991Germany 1993Greece 1995Spain 1997France 1999Turkey 2001Sweden 2003Serbia and Montenegro 2005Spain 2007Poland 2009Lithuania 2011Slovenia 2013France Croatia Germany Latvia 2015Turkey Finland Israel Romania 2017Germany Czech Republic Georgia (country) Italy 2022Latvia Cyprus Finland Poland 2025Spain Estonia Greece Slovenia 2029Total
Albania---------------------2
Austria---------------------6
Belgium------12th--------21st9th13th19th14th18th19
Bosnia and HerzegovinaPart of Yugoslavia8th-15th15th13th15th13th--17th13th23rd-18th13th11
Bulgaria--8th-7th8th14th-----13th-13th13th---20th-25
CroatiaPart of Yugoslavia3rd3rd11th11th7th11th7th6th6th13th4th9th10th11th-14
Cyprus--------------------24th1
Czech RepublicPart of Czechoslovakia---12th---13th--13th7th20th16th23rd7
Czechoslovakia3rd10th2nd8th-6thXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX24
Denmark---------------------3
East Germany-----XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX5
Egypt----------------------4
England12th---------------------4
EstoniaPart of Soviet Union-6th---14th------20th-19th19thQ8
Finland-------14th-------9th9th16th11th8th4th18
France8th5th6th9th6th4th7th8th10th4th6th4th3rd8th5th2nd1st3rd12th2nd9th40
GeorgiaPart of Soviet Union---------11th17th15th17th21st8th6
West Germany/ Germany10th8th5th6th--1st10th12th7th4th9th2nd5th11th9th17th18th7th3rd1stQ26
Great Britain--------------13th13th13th-22nd24th21st6
Greece9th11th-1st2nd5th4th4th4th16th9th5th1st4th3rd6th11th5th8th5th3rdQ39
Hungary---------14th--------16th23rd-16
Iceland-----------------24th24th-22nd3
Iran---------------------1
Israel6th6th9th11th--15th9th9th9th10th7th9th11th13th13th21st10th21st17th14th31
Italy5th1st3rd5th4th2nd9th5th2nd1st11th3rd9th9th-17th8th6th6th7th11th39
LatviaPart of Soviet Union-10th-16th-8th13th13th13th13th21st10th8th5th-12th15
Lebanon---------------------2
LithuaniaPart of Soviet Union--2nd6th5th12th1st5th3rd11th5th2nd2nd9th15th5th16
Luxembourg---------------------3
MontenegroPart of YugoslaviaPart of Serbia and Montenegro--21st17th-13th13th20th5
Netherlands-4th12th10th8th------------21st-22nd-16
North MacedoniaPart of Yugoslavia---13th----9th4th21st19th---5
Poland7th9th11th7th-7th--7th----13th9th17th21st11th18th4th6th30
Portugal-------------9th-21st----15th4
Romania--10th12th--------------23rd--18
RussiaPart of Soviet Union2nd7th3rd6th5th8th8th1st7th3rd21st17th4thDQDQ13
Scotland----------------------2
SerbiaPart of YugoslaviaPart of Serbia and Montenegro13th2nd8th7th4th2nd9th10th8
Serbia and MontenegroPart of YugoslaviaDQ1st1st3rd1st6th9thXXXXXXXXX2
SloveniaPart of Yugoslavia14th12th14th10th15th10th6th7th4th7th5th12th1st6th7thQ16
Soviet Union1st3rd1st2nd3rd-XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX21
Spain4th2nd4th4th5th3rd5th6th5th2nd3rd2nd4th2nd1st1st3rd1st3rd1st17thQ34
Sweden-12th----13th11th---16th----13th---16th11
Switzerland---------------------5
Syria----------------------1
Turkey11th-----11th13th8th8th2nd12th9th11th8th11th17th14th14th10th2nd26
UkrainePart of Soviet Union--13th-16th14th13th--17th6th22nd15th12th-9
Yugoslavia2nd7th7th3rd1st1stXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX25

Notes

  • According to FIBA, Yugoslavia competed until 2001.

Debut of teams

A total of 46 national teams have appeared in at least one FIBA EuroBasket in the history of the tournament through the 2025 competition. Each successive EuroBasket has had at least one team appearing for the first time. Countries competing in their first EuroBasket are listed below by year.

YearDebutantsNumber
1935Belgium, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, France, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Romania, Spain, Switzerland10
1937Egypt, Estonia, Lithuania, Poland13
1939Finland14
1946England, Luxembourg, Netherlands17
1947Albania, Austria, Soviet Union, Yugoslavia21
1949Greece, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey25
1951Denmark, Germany, Portugal, Scotland29
1953Israel, Sweden31
1955None
1957
1959East Germany, Iran33
1961None
1963
1965
1967
1969
1971
1973
1975
1977
1979
1981
1983
1985
1987
1989
1991
1993Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Russia, Slovenia37
1995None
1997Ukraine38
1999Czech Republic, North Macedonia40
2001None
2003
2005
2007Serbia41
2009Great Britain42
2011Georgia, Montenegro44
2013None
2015Iceland45
2017None
2022
2025Cyprus46
2029TBD
Total46

Most successful players

Boldface denotes active basketball players and highest medal count among all players (including these who not included in these tables) per type.

Multiple gold medalists

RankPlayerCountryFromToGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1Gennadi VolnovSoviet Union1959196966
2Sergei BelovSoviet Union196719794217
3Rudy FernándezSpain200720224116
4Predrag DanilovićYugoslavia Yugoslavia19891999415
Modestas PaulauskasSoviet Union19651973415
Zurab SakandelidzeSoviet Union19651973415
7Armenak AlachachianSoviet Union1953196544
Aleksandr PetrovSoviet Union1959196544
9Krešimir ĆosićYugoslavia196919813317
10Pau GasolSpain200120173227

Multiple medalists

The table shows players who have won at least 6 medals in total at the EuroBasket.

RankPlayerCountryFromToGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1Sergei BelovSoviet Union196719794217
2Krešimir ĆosićYugoslavia196919813317
3Pau GasolSpain200120173227
4Gennadi VolnovSoviet Union1959196966
5Rudy FernándezSpain200720224116
6Felipe ReyesSpain200120153216
7Alexander BelostennySoviet Union197719893126
8Valdemaras ChomičiusSoviet Union Lithuania197919952226
Juan Carlos NavarroSpain200120172226

Awards

Below are the lists of all players voted as the MVPs and the Top Scorers of each EuroBasket edition. Krešimir Ćosić and Pau Gasol are the only players to win the MVP award twice. Nikos Galis and Radivoj Korać were the Top Scorers 4 times each.

BronzeMember of the FIBA Hall of Fame.
SilverMember of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.
GoldMember of both the FIBA Hall of Fame and the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.
Player (X)Denotes the number of times the player was selected the MVP or was the Top Scorer.
TournamentMVPTop ScorerPPG
EuroBasket 1935Spain Rafael MartínItaly Livio Franceschini16.5
EuroBasket 1937Lithuania Pranas TalzūnasLatvia Rūdolfs Jurciņš12.5
EuroBasket 1939Lithuania Mykolas Ruzgys (de facto: Lithuania Pranas Lubinas)‡Estonia Heino Veskila16.7
EuroBasket 1946Hungary Ferenc NémethPoland Paweł Stok12.6
EuroBasket 1947Soviet Union Joann LõssovFrance Jacques Perrier13.7
EuroBasket 1949Turkey Hüseyin ÖztürkTurkey Hüseyin Öztürk19.3
EuroBasket 1951Czechoslovakia Ivan MrázekCzechoslovakia Ivan Mrázek17.1
EuroBasket 1953Soviet Union Anatoly KonevLebanon Ahmed Idlibi15.9
EuroBasket 1955Hungary János GremingerCzechoslovakia Miroslav Škeřík19.1
EuroBasket 1957Czechoslovakia Jiří BaumrukBelgium Eddy Terrace24.4
EuroBasket 1959Soviet Union Viktor ZubkovSocialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Radivoj Korać28.1
EuroBasket 1961Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Radivoj KoraćSocialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Radivoj Korać (2)24.0
EuroBasket 1963Spain Emiliano RodríguezSocialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Radivoj Korać (3)26.6
EuroBasket 1965Soviet Union Modestas PaulauskasSocialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Radivoj Korać (4)21.9
EuroBasket 1967Czechoslovakia Jiří ZedníčekGreece Giorgos Kolokithas26.7
EuroBasket 1969Soviet Union Sergei BelovGreece Giorgos Kolokithas (2)23.5
EuroBasket 1971Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Krešimir ĆosićPoland Edward Jurkiewicz22.6
EuroBasket 1973Spain Wayne BrabenderBulgaria Atanas Golomeev22.3
EuroBasket 1975Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Krešimir Ćosić (2)Bulgaria Atanas Golomeev (2)22.9
EuroBasket 1977Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Dražen DalipagićNetherlands Kees Akerboom27.0
EuroBasket 1979Israel Miki BerkovichPoland Mieczysław Młynarski26.6
EuroBasket 1981Soviet Union Valdis ValtersPoland Mieczysław Młynarski (2)23.1
EuroBasket 1983Spain Juan Antonio CorbalánGreece Nikos Galis33.0
EuroBasket 1985Soviet Union Arvydas SabonisIsrael Doron Jamchi28.1
EuroBasket 1987Greece Nikos GalisGreece Nikos Galis (2)37.0
EuroBasket 1989Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Dražen PetrovićGreece Nikos Galis (3)35.6
EuroBasket 1991Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Toni KukočGreece Nikos Galis (4)32.4
EuroBasket 1993Germany Chris WelpBosnia and Herzegovina Sabahudin Bilalović24.1
EuroBasket 1995Lithuania Šarūnas MarčiulionisLithuania Šarūnas Marčiulionis22.5
EuroBasket 1997Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Saša ĐorđevićIsrael Oded Kattash22.0
EuroBasket 1999Italy Gregor FučkaSpain Alberto Herreros19.2
EuroBasket 2001Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Peja StojakovićGermany Dirk Nowitzki28.7
EuroBasket 2003Lithuania Šarūnas JasikevičiusSpain Pau Gasol25.8
EuroBasket 2005Germany Dirk NowitzkiGermany Dirk Nowitzki (2)26.1
EuroBasket 2007Russia Andrei KirilenkoGermany Dirk Nowitzki (3)24.0
EuroBasket 2009Spain Pau GasolSpain Pau Gasol (2)18.7
EuroBasket 2011Spain Juan Carlos NavarroFrance Tony Parker22.1
EuroBasket 2013France Tony ParkerFrance Tony Parker (2)19.0
EuroBasket 2015Spain Pau Gasol (2)Spain Pau Gasol (3)25.6
EuroBasket 2017Slovenia Goran DragićRussia Alexey Shved24.3
EuroBasket 2022Spain Willy HernangómezGreece Giannis Antetokounmpo29.3
EuroBasket 2025Germany Dennis SchröderSlovenia Luka Dončić34.7

MVP and Top scorer by country

CountryTimes MVPYearsCountryTimes Top ScorerYears
Spain81935, 1963, 1973, 1983, 2009, 2011, 2015, 2022Greece71967, 1969, 1983, 1987, 1989, 1991, 2022
Soviet Union71947, 1953, 1959, 1965, 1969, 1981, 1985Spain41999, 2003, 2009, 2015
Yugoslavia61961, 1971, 1975, 1977, 1989, 1991Poland41946, 1971, 1979, 1981
Lithuania41937, 1939, 1995, 2003Yugoslavia41959, 1961, 1963, 1965
Czechoslovakia31951, 1957, 1967France31947, 2011, 2013
Germany31993, 2005, 2025Germany32001, 2005, 2007
Yugoslavia21997, 2001Czechoslovakia21951, 1955
Hungary21946, 1955Bulgaria21973, 1975
Turkey11949Israel21985, 1997
Israel11979Italy11935
Greece11987Latvia11937
Italy11999Estonia11939
Russia12007Turkey11949
France12013Lebanon11953
Slovenia12017Belgium11957
Netherlands11977
Bosnia and Herzegovina11993
Lithuania11995
Russia12017
Slovenia12025

Most times MVP and Top scorer by players

PlayerTimes MVPYearsPlayerTimes Top ScorerYears
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Krešimir Ćosić21971, 1975Greece Nikos Galis41983, 1987, 1989, 1991
Spain Pau Gasol22009, 2015Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Radivoj Korać41959, 1961, 1963, 1965
One time MVP, earned by 36 playersGermany Dirk Nowitzki32001, 2005, 2007
Spain Pau Gasol32003, 2009, 2015
Greece Giorgos Kolokithas21967, 1969
Bulgaria Atanas Golomeev21973, 1975
Poland Mieczysław Młynarski21979, 1981
France Tony Parker22011, 2013

Player scoring records

Most career points scored

  • Counting all games played through the end of EuroBasket 2022, and not counting qualification games.
List of all-time scorers (overall)
PlayerPoints scoredGames playedScoring average
Spain Pau Gasol1,1835820.4
France Tony Parker1,1046616.7
Germany Dirk Nowitzki1,0524921.4
Greece Nikos Galis1,0313331.2
Czechoslovakia Kamil Brabenec9186015.3
Israel Miki Berkovich9174918.7
Spain Juan Antonio San Epifanio8945217.2
Spain Emiliano Rodríguez8645316.3
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Radivoj Korać8443424.8
Greece Panagiotis Giannakis7695813.3

Highest career points per game average

  • Counting all games played through the end of EuroBasket 2022, and not counting qualification games.
List of all-time top 10 scorers (by average)
PlayerPoints scoredGames playedScoring average
Greece Nikos Galis1,0313331.2
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Radivoj Korać8443424.8
United Kingdom Luol Deng123524.6
Belgium Eddy Terrace220924.4
Bosnia and Herzegovina Sabahudin Bilalović217924.1
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Dražen Petrović6042623.2
Germany Dennis Schröder4482022.4
Netherlands Rik Smits154722.0
Poland Mieczysław Młynarski4822221.9
Germany Michael Jackel3471621.6

FIBA EuroBasket 2000–2020 Dream Team

PositionFIBA EuroBasket Dream TeamYears
PGLithuania Šarūnas Jasikevičius2000–2020
SGGreece Vassilis Spanoulis2000–2020
SFGreece Dimitris Diamantidis2000–2020
PFGermany Dirk Nowitzki2000–2020
CSpain Pau Gasol2000–2020

See also

External links