2013 FIBA Asia Championship


The 2013 FIBA Asia Championship for Men was the intercontinental championship for basketball organized by FIBA Asia that served as the qualifying tournament for the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup in Spain. The tournament was held from August 1–11 in Metro Manila, Philippines. Beirut, Lebanon was supposed to host the tournament but the hosting rights was given to the Philippines citing the Syrian Civil War and security concerns in the Middle East in general. This was also the last Asian Championships that served as the qualifying round for the FIBA Basketball World Cup, as a qualifying window will be used starting 2019.

Hosting

During the 2012 FIBA Asia Cup in Japan, FIBA Asia accepted the bids of the Philippines, Lebanon and Iran to host the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship. The Philippines' bid, which was presented by Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas president Manuel V. Pangilinan, SBP secretary-general Sonny Barrios, Philippine Basketball Association commissioner Chito Salud and former FIBA Asia secretary general Moying Materlino, included hosting the games at the newly constructed Mall of Asia Arena. The Lebanese bid was presented by national team player Fadi El Khatib, which was a 10-minute video demonstration of the venues, of which Ghazir Club Court would be the primary arena. The FIBA Asia Executive Committee awarded the tournament to Lebanon, which shall be hosting its first championship.
Beirut was the host of the 2012 FIBA Asia Champions Cup, the Asian club championship. However, the final between Lebanese club Al-Riyadi and Mahram Tehran was put off due to political tension in the city. In a statement, FIBA Asia secretary general Hagop Khajirian said that "FIBA Asia will take a decision on holding the Final Game of the event very soon".
However, with the escalating Syrian civil war, FIBA Asia announced on January 2013 that they shall move the championship to the Philippines, after the SBP expressed willingly to still host the event. This would be the first time in 40 years that the Philippines hosted the championship.

Qualification

According to the FIBA Asia rules, the host nation Philippines and 2012 FIBA Asia Cup champions Iran automatically qualified. East Asia, West Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Gulf each had two berths while Central Asia and South Asia each had one slot allotted. The other four places are allocated to the zones according to performance in the 2012 FIBA Asia Cup. Therefore, with Japan, Qatar, China, and Chinese Taipei finishing in the top four in that tournament other than Iran and Philippines which were both direct qualifiers, East Asia gained another three berths while the Persian Gulf gained an additional slot.
Included are the teams' FIBA World Rankings prior to the tournament.
EventDateLocationVacanciesQualified
Host nation1
2012 FIBA Asia Cup14–22 September 2012 Tokyo1
Central Asia qualifying7 May 2013 Astana1
East Asian Basketball Championship16–21 May 2013 Incheon5



Gulf Basketball Championship30 September–6 October 2012 Manama3

South Asian Qualifying Round2–4 June 2013 New Delhi1
Southeast Asia Basketball Championship20–23 June 2013 Medan2
West Asia Basketball Championship7–9 February 2013 Tehran2 *

Among teams that participated in 2011, Uzbekistan and Indonesia failed to qualify, and Syria did not participate. Returnees include Kazakhstan, which skipped the 2011 tournament after finishing ninth in 2009, Saudi Arabia, which failed to qualify in 2009 and last participated in 2005, Thailand, which last participated in 2001, and Hong Kong, which returned after failing to qualify in 2009 and 2011.

Suspension of the Lebanese federation

originally qualified for the tournament after placing second in the 2013 West Asian Basketball Championship. However, after the country's basketball federation was suspended indefinitely by FIBA due to unresolved conflicts within the country's national basketball federation, they were replaced by fourth-placer Iraq, who declined due to lack of preparation time, and FIBA Asia instead invited the United Arab Emirates to replace them. After the United Arab Emirates declined the invitation for the same reason, and FIBA's confirmed the Lebanese federation's suspension, FIBA Asia decided not to invite any other team, reducing the total number of teams to 15. This left Group B with only three teams, and some games were moved from the Ninoy Aquino Stadium to compensate for the lost games involving Lebanon.
This meant all Group B teams thus automatically qualified for the second round, regardless of the outcome of their first round matches.

Venues

The Mall of Asia Arena was chosen as the main venue for the championship, while the Ninoy Aquino Stadium served as the second venue for the tournament. Treston College Gym, the University of Makati Gym, the Makati Coliseum and the Cuneta Astrodome were the designated practice venues.

PasayMetro Manila
Mall of Asia Arena
Capacity: 20,000
Manila
Ninoy Aquino Stadium
Capacity: 6,000

Draw

The draw was held at the Centennial Ballroom of the Manila Hotel on June 6. Unlike earlier championships where the draw favored stronger teams, FIBA Asia mandated that it will be a "pure draw", or the teams were not seeded, with the host country picking 13th. At the time of the draw, two participants from the SEABA region were yet to be determined and were designated as "Southeast Asia 1" and "Southeast Asia 2". A separate draw would later be held to determine which teams would be designated as "Southeast Asia 1" and "Southeast Asia 2".

Squads

Each team has a roster of twelve players. Only one naturalized player per team is allowed by FIBA.

Tournament format

Group A

Group B

Group C

Group D

Classification 13th–15th

Second round

Group F

Classification 9th–12th

Final round

Quarterfinals

5th–8th place semifinals

Semifinals

Seventh place game

FIfth place game

Third place game

Final

Final ranking

Awards

Player tournament averages

;Points
Pos.NamePPG
1 Hamed Haddadi18.8
2 Yi Jianlian17.4
3 Jarvis Hayes16.7
4 Aymam Almuwallad15.3
5 Quincy Davis14.7
6 Jimmy Baxter14.1
7 Wang Zhizhi13.4
8 Visresh Bhriguvanshi13.1
9 Mikhail Yevtigneyev12.9
10 Samad Nikkhah Bahrami12.8

;Rebounds
Pos.NameRPG
1 Hamed Haddadi10
1 Mohammed Almarwani10
3 Marcus Douthit9.4
3 J.R. Sakuragi9.4
5 Quincy Davis9
6 Yasseen Musa8.9
7 Fong Shing Yee8.7
8 Duncan Reid8.4
9 Anton Ponomarev7.8
10 Kosuke Takeuchi7.4

;Assists
Pos.NameAPG
1 Mehdi Kamrani6.6
2 Jerry Jamar Johnson5
3 Lin Chih-chieh4.9
4 Yang Dong-geun4.4
5 Marzouq Almuwallad4.3
6 Samad Nikkhah Bahrami4.2
7 Jimmy Baxter3.9
8 Daoud Mosa Daoud3.6
9 Visresh Bhriguvanshi3.5
10 Ryota Sakurai3.4

;Steals
Pos.NameSPG
1 Mehdi Kamrani1.56
2 Hamed Afagh1.33
2 Samad Nikkhah Bahrami1.33
4 Makoto Hiejima1.29
5 Wattana Suttisin1.33
6 Attaporn Lertmalaiporn1.2
7 Kim Tae-sul1
7 Mazrouq Almuwallad1
7 Jamer Kabe1
7 Sing Tee Ng1

;Blocks
Pos.NameBPG
1 Marcus Douthit2
2 Hamed Haddadi1.67
2 Lee Jong-hyun1.67
4 Ahmed Akber1.63
5 Amjyot Singh1.38
6 Kosuke Takeuchi1.29
7 Quincy Davis1.22
8 Darunong Apiromvilaichai1.2
9 Gabe Norwood1
9 Mohammad Hadrab1
9 Erfan Ali Saeed1

;Other statistical leaders
StatNameAvg.
Field goal percentage Quincy Davis73.7%
3-point FG percentage Gan Hong Hoong61.5%
Free throw percentage Mohammad Hadrab91.3%
Turnovers Ban Sin Ooi6
Fouls Mohammed Almarwani
Kuek Tian-yuan
4

Team tournament averages

;Points
Pos.NamePPG
186.8
279.9
379.6
379.6
578.1

;Rebounds
Pos.NameRPG
144.6
242.2
341.2
440.7
540.1

;Assists
Pos.NameAPG
120.9
220.7
318.2
416.4
515.7

;Steals
Pos.NameSPG
16.2
25.9
35.6
45.3
54.3
54.3

;Blocks
Pos.NameBPG
14.9
14.9
33.6
43.2
53

Tournament game highs

Marketing

Broadcasting

announced that Chinese state broadcaster China Central Television earned the rights to broadcast FIBA events in China from 2013 to 2016, and that a record number of Asian broadcasters are to telecast the event. At least some matches were broadcast in 40 countries and territories all over the world.
These are the broadcasters from the participating teams:
CountryBroadcaster
Al Jazeera Sports +1
CCTV-5
i-Cable Sports
Neo Sports
Channel 3
Fuji TV
Al Jazeera Sports +1
Astro
AksyonTV
Basketball TV
Hyper
TV5
Al Jazeera Sports +1
Al Jazeera Sports +1
SBS ESPN
Fox Sports Asia
CTH

In the Philippines, Solar Entertainment Corporation's Basketball TV is the official home broadcaster airing all matches from the Mall of Asia Arena. Solar has the rights to all FIBA telecasts in the Philippines until 2015. For free TV, ABC Development Corporation's flagship network, TV5, aired games involving the Philippines and the immediately preceding match, while AksyonTV aired the afternoon matches. BTV aired all games of the knockout round, while TV5 aired two quarterfinal games, the semifinals, third-place playoff and final, and AksyonTV aired a quarterfinal.
The TV5 airings of Philippines games were consistently among the top ten telecasts of the night throughout the tournament, and even beat shows from ABS-CBN and GMA in Mega Manila. According to Nielsen Media Research, TV5's Mega Manila audience share on 10 August was 33.1%, as against GMA's 30.1% and ABS-CBN's 24.3%; numbers for 11 August improved, with TV's 38.1% beating GMA's 31.5% and ABS-CBN's 18.3%. National audience share showed TV5 winning with a 35.3% share, or about 5.7 million people, against 28.1% of GMA and 25% of ABS-CBN.

Soundtrack

There were 2 main soundtracks made for the Asian Championship, which was heard over in Philippine TV Broadcast.

Match commissioners