EuroBasket 1967


The 1967 FIBA European Championship, commonly called FIBA EuroBasket 1967, was the fifteenth FIBA EuroBasket regional basketball championship, held by FIBA Europe.

Venues

First round

Group A – Helsinki

85–88
66–73
83–70
75–90
82–70
71–88
66–74
57–51
46–96
74–77
65–98
68–80
64–83
68–98
68–82
54–49
65–69
72–92
76–69
73–75
68–78
76–89
75–58
59–68
61–69
79–71
82–62
65–69

Pos.TeamMatchesWinsLossesResultsPointsDiff.
1.761550:46112+89
2.761554:48512+69
3.752479:44910+30
4.743493:4978−4
5.743523:5078+16
6.725526:5794−53
7.716500:5812−81
8.707454:5700−116

Group B – Tampere

66–58
65–93
65–55
78–69
64–66
60–56
67–83
47–42
56–68
85–54
75–75 aet. 91–81
73–71
69–60
108–52
67–70
68–66
65–67
73–80
74–67
41–82
75–68
55–59
61–84
74–58
56–51
78–61
69–56
91–105

Pos.TeamMatchesWinsLossesResultsPointsDiff.
1.770640:43114+209
2.743475:4758+2
3.743490:4808+10
4.743493:5138−20
5.734449:5096−60
6.734422:4806−58
7.725418:4644−46
8.716435:4722−37

Knockout stage

Places 13 – 16 in Tampere

Places 9 – 12 in Helsinki

Places 5 – 8 in Tampere

Places 1 – 4 in Helsinki

Finals

Final rankings

  1. Awards

All-Tournament Team
Sergei Belov
Modestas Paulauskas
Jiří Zedníček
Jiří Zídek
Veikko Vainio

Team rosters

1. Soviet Union: Sergei Belov, Modestas Paulauskas, Gennadi Volnov, Jaak Lipso, Anatoly Polivoda, Priit Tomson, Tõnno Lepmets, Alzhan Zharmukhamedov, Vladimir Andreev, Zurab Sakandelidze, Yuri Selikhov, Anatoli Krikun
2. Czechoslovakia: Jiří Zídek Sr., Jiří Zedníček, Jir i Ammer, Vladimir Pistelak, Frantisek Konvicka, Bohumil Tomasek, Robert Mifka, Jiri Ruzicka, Jan Bobrovsky, Karel Baroch, Jiří Marek, Celestyn Mrazek
3. Poland: Mieczysław Łopatka, Bohdan Likszo, Włodzimierz Trams, Grzegorz Korcz, Bolesław Kwiatkowski, Mirosław Kuczyński, Czesław Malec, Henryk Cegielski, Maciej Chojnacki, Waldemar Kozak, Kazimierz Frelkiewicz, Zbigniew Dregier
4. Bulgaria: Mincho Dimov, Ivan Vodenicharski, Cvjatko Barchovski, Georgi Khristov, Emil Mikhajlov, Slavejko Rajchev, Pando Pandov, Khristo Dojchinov, Georgi Genev, Boris Krastev, Temelaki Dimitrov, Bojcho Branzov
9. Yugoslavia: Borut Basin, Ljubodrag Simonović, Zoran Marojević, Dragan Kapičić, Vladimir Cvetković, Dragoslav Ražnatović, Ratomir Tvrdić, Krešimir Ćosić, Damir Šolman, Goran Brajković, Aljoša Žorga, Petar Skansi