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2009 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship

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2009 EuroBasket Under-18
26th FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship
Tournament details
Host countryFrance
Dates23 July-2 August 2009
Teams16
Venue(s)3 (in 2 host cities)
Final positions
Champions Serbia (3rd title)
Tournament statistics
MVPTurkey Enes Kanter
Top scorerCroatia Toni Prostran (20.9)
Top reboundsTurkey Enes Kanter (16.4)
Top assistsCroatia Toni Prostran (7.9)
PPG (Team) Lithuania (81.7)
RPG (Team) Lithuania (46.9)
APG (Team) Spain (18.0)
Official website
FIBA Europe

The 2010 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship was the 26th edition of the FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship. 16 teams featured the competition, held in France from July 23 to August 2. Serbia won the title after beating France in the final.

Venues

Metz Les Arènes (cap. : 4500)

Metz Palais des sports Saint Symphorien (cap. : 1800)

Hagondange Salle Paul Lamm (cap. :1500)


Preliminary Round

In this round, the sixteen teams were allocated in four groups of four teams each. The top three qualified for the Qualifying Round. The last team of each group played for the 13th–16th place in the classification games.

     Team advances to qualifying round
     Team will compete in 13-16th playoffs

Group A

Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Tiebreaker
 Serbia 3 2 1 207 174 +33 5 1-1, +14
 France 3 2 1 227 213 +24 5 1-1, +3
 Slovenia 3 2 1 207 221 −14 5 1-1; -17
 Czech Republic 3 0 3 194 227 −33 3

Group B

Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Tiebreaker
 Croatia 3 3 0 228 198 +30 6
 Spain 3 2 1 258 212 +46 5
 Germany 3 1 2 207 233 −26 4
 Ukraine 3 0 3 220 270 −50 3

Group C

Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Tiebreaker
 Turkey 3 3 0 237 182 +55 6
 Latvia 3 1 2 181 203 -22 4 1-1, +13
 Bulgaria 3 1 2 170 192 −22 4 1-1, -6
 Greece 3 1 2 200 211 −11 4 1-1, -7

Group D

Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Tiebreaker
 Lithuania 3 3 0 254 207 +47 6
 Italy 3 1 2 205 198 +7 4 1-1, +8
 Russia 3 1 2 186 193 −7 4 1-1, -0
 Israel 3 1 2 173 220 −47 4 1-1, -8

Qualifying Round

The twelve teams remaining were allocated in two groups of six teams each. The four top teams advanced to the quarterfinals. The last two teams of each group played for the 9th–12th place.

     Team advances to quarterfinals
     Team will compete in 9th–12th playoffs

Group E

Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Tiebreaker
 Spain 5 4 1 375 334 +41 9
 France 5 3 2 356 341 +15 8 2-0
 Serbia 5 3 2 358 321 +37 8 1-1
 Croatia 5 3 2 376 357 +19 8 0-2
 Germany 5 1 4 310 387 −77 6 1−0
 Slovenia 5 1 4 355 390 −35 6 0-1

Group F

Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Tiebreaker
 Lithuania 5 5 0 432 335 +97 10
 Italy 5 3 2 351 316 +35 8 1-1, +8
 Russia 5 3 2 361 317 +44 8 1-1, -1
 Turkey 5 3 2 373 338 +35 8 1-1, -7
 Latvia 5 1 4 289 359 −70 6 1−0
 Bulgaria 5 0 5 258 399 −141 5 0-1

Championship

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
July 31 – Metz
 
 
 Turkey76
 
August 1 – Metz
 
 Spain62
 
 Serbia66
 
July 31 – Metz
 
 Turkey61
 
 Serbia82
 
August 2 – Metz
 
 Italy74
 
 Serbia78
 
July 31 – Metz
 
 France72
 
 Lithuania74
 
August 1 – Metz
 
 Croatia55
 
 France68
 
July 31 – Metz
 
 Lithuania63 Third place
 
 France74
 
August 2 – Metz
 
 Russia61
 
 Lithuania74
 
 
 Turkey95
 

Final standings

Rank Team !
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Serbia
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  France
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Turkey
4th  Lithuania
5th  Spain
6th  Russia
7th  Italy
8th  Croatia
9th  Latvia
10th  Bulgaria
11th  Germany
12th  Slovenia
13th  Greece
14th  Ukraine
15th  Israel
16th  Czech Republic
     Team is relegated to Division B.

All Tournament Team

Player Position Team
Enes Kanter F/C  Turkey
Jonas Valanciunas F/C  Lithuania
Dejan Musli C  Serbia
Evan Fournier G  France
Toni Prostran F/C  Croatia