The 1961 FIBA European Championship , commonly called FIBA EuroBasket 1961 , was the twelfth FIBA EuroBasket regional basketball championship, held by FIBA Europe . Nineteen national teams affiliated with the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) entered the competition. The tournament was hosted by Yugoslavia , and was held at the Belgrade City Fair .
First round
Group A
Pos. Team Matches Wins Losses Results Points Diff. 1 Yugoslavia 3 3 0 280:182 6 +98 2 Poland 3 2 1 222:152 5 +70 3 Greece 3 1 2 181:206 4 −25 4 England 3 0 3 135:278 3 −143
Group B
Pos. Team Matches Wins Losses Results Points Diff. 1 East Germany 2 2 0 141:127 4 +14 2 Hungary 2 1 1 128:122 3 +6 3 Finland 2 0 2 122:142 2 −20
Group C
Pos. Team Matches Wins Losses Results Points Diff. 1 Soviet Union 2 2 0 171:97 4 +74 2 Belgium 2 1 1 118:156 3 −38 3 Spain 2 0 2 116:152 2 −36
Group D
Pos. Team Matches Wins Losses Results Points Diff. 1 Bulgaria 2 2 0 118:89 4 +29 2 Israel 2 1 1 112:89 3 +23 3 West Germany 2 0 2 88:140 2 −52
Group E
Pos. Team Matches Wins Losses Results Points Diff. 1 Turkey 2 2 0 132:110 4 +22 2 Czechoslovakia 2 1 1 128:110 3 +18 3 Sweden 2 0 2 73:113 2 −40
Group F
Pos. Team Matches Wins Losses Results Points Diff. 1 Romania 2 2 0 152:132 4 +20 2 France 2 1 1 157:122 3 +35 3 Netherlands 2 0 2 120:175 2 −55
Second round
Group 1
Group 2
Classification round
Group 1
Group 2
Pos. Team Matches Wins Losses Results Points Diff. 1 Spain 3 3 0 271:149 6 +122 2 Finland 3 2 1 201:208 5 −7 3 Greece 3 1 2 195:193 4 +2 4 England 3 0 3 131:248 3 −117
13th-16th place classification playoffs
17th-19th place classification playoffs
Final round
Medals round
5th-8th place playoffs
9th-12th place playoffs
Final standings Host team Yugoslavia—shown here lining up before a game at the tournament—lost the final versus the Soviet Union, finishing EuroBasket 1961 in second place, its first ever medal at a major international competition. Soviet Union Yugoslavia Bulgaria France Czechoslovakia Hungary Romania Belgium Poland Turkey Israel East Germany Spain Finland Netherlands West Germany Greece Sweden England
Team rosters 1. Soviet Union: Jānis Krūmiņš , Gennadi Volnov , Valdis Muižnieks , Maigonis Valdmanis , Viktor Zubkov , Armenak Alachachian , Yuri Korneev , Vladimir Ugrekhelidze , Aleksander Petrov , Aleksandr Kandel, Viacheslav Novikov, Albert Valtin (Coach: Stepan Spandaryan )
2. Yugoslavia: Radivoj Korać , Ivo Daneu , Slobodan Gordić , Radovan Radović , Nemanja Đurić , Vital Eiselt , Sreten Dragojlović , Marjan Kandus , Miha Lokar , Miodrag Nikolić , Zvonko Petričević , Željko Troskot (Coach: Aleksandar Nikolić )
3. Bulgaria: Viktor Radev , Mincho Dimov , Ljubomir Panov , Georgi Panov , Atanas Atanasov , Ilija Mirchev, Petko Lazarov , Tsvetko Savov , Khristo Tsvetkov , Khristo Donev, Radko Zlatev, Stefan Stojkov (Coach: Veselin Temkov)
4. France: Jean-Paul Beugnot , Henri Grange , Christian Baltzer , Bernard Mayeur , Michel Rat, Lucien Sedat, Jerome Christ , Michel House, Michel le Ray, Andre Goisbault, Jean-Claude Vergne, Andre Souvre (Coach: André Buffière )
References
External links