2009 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship for Women Division B

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2009 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship for Women
Division B
Tournament details
Host countryRepublic of Macedonia
CityOhrid
Dates6–15 July 2009
Teams11 (from 1 confederation)
Venue(s)1 (in 1 host city)
Final positions
Champions Netherlands (1st title)
Runners-up Romania
Third place Belgium
Official website
www.fibaeurope.com
2008
2010

The 2009 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship for Women Division B was the fifth edition of the Division B of the Women's European basketball championship for national under-20 teams. It was held in Ohrid, Republic of Macedonia, from 6 to 15 July 2009.[1][2] The Netherlands women's national under-20 basketball team won the tournament.

Participating teams[edit]

First round[edit]

In the first round, the teams were drawn into two groups. The first four teams from each group advance to the quarterfinals, the other teams will play in the classification round for 9th to 11th place.

Group A[edit]

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1  Belgium 5 5 0 359 298 +61 10 Quarterfinals
2  Hungary 5 4 1 334 272 +62 9
3  Greece 5 2 3 282 300 −18 7
4  Portugal 5 2 3 280 286 −6 7
5  Great Britain 5 2 3 289 294 −5 7 Classification round for 9th–11th place
6  Austria 5 0 5 233 327 −94 5
Source: FIBA Archive
6 July 2009
Portugal  71–46  Austria
6 July 2009
Greece  71–59  Great Britain
6 July 2009
Hungary  68–74  Belgium
7 July 2009
Austria  41–44  Greece
7 July 2009
Belgium  64–56  Portugal
7 July 2009
Great Britain  47–63  Hungary
8 July 2009
Belgium  80–48  Austria
8 July 2009
Hungary  66–53  Greece
8 July 2009
Portugal  47–53  Great Britain
10 July 2009
Austria  52–68  Hungary
10 July 2009
Great Britain  66–67  Belgium
10 July 2009
Greece  54–60  Portugal
11 July 2009
Great Britain  64–46  Austria
11 July 2009
Portugal  46–69  Hungary
11 July 2009
Belgium  74–60  Greece

Group B[edit]

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1  Slovakia 4 4 0 346 288 +58 8 Quarterfinals
2  Romania 4 3 1 324 281 +43 7
3  Netherlands 4 2 2 324 271 +53 6
4  Israel 4 1 3 296 333 −37 5
5  Macedonia 4 0 4 227 344 −117 4 Classification round for 9th–11th place
Source: FIBA Archive
6 July 2009
Netherlands  63–79  Romania
6 July 2009
Israel  83–94  Slovakia
7 July 2009
Macedonia  60–76  Israel
7 July 2009
Slovakia  88–78  Netherlands
8 July 2009
Romania  72–73  Slovakia
8 July 2009
Netherlands  84–36  Macedonia
10 July 2009
Israel  68–99  Netherlands
10 July 2009
Macedonia  76–93  Romania
11 July 2009
Slovakia  91–55  Macedonia
11 July 2009
Romania  80–69  Israel

Classification round for 9th–11th place[edit]

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts
9  Great Britain 2 2 0 149 103 +46 4
10  Austria 2 1 1 114 126 −12 3
11  Macedonia 2 0 2 119 153 −34 2
Source: FIBA Archive
13 July 2009
Austria  68–62  Macedonia
14 July 2009
Macedonia  57–85  Great Britain

Championship playoffs[edit]

Fifth placeConsolation semifinalsQuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal
A1 Belgium85
B4 Israel73
B4 Israel71A1 Belgium67
A3 Greece73B2 Romania81
B2 Romania64
A3 Greece56
A3 Greece47B2 Romania53
A4 Portugal42B3 Netherlands59
B1 Slovakia58
A4 Portugal48
Seventh placeA4 Portugal57B1 Slovakia66Third place
A2 Hungary56B3 Netherlands75
B4 Israel64A2 Hungary63A1 Belgium94
A2 Hungary83B3 Netherlands74B1 Slovakia81

Quarterfinals[edit]

13 July 2009
Belgium  85–73  Israel
13 July 2009
Hungary  63–74  Netherlands
13 July 2009
Slovakia  58–48  Portugal
13 July 2009
Romania  64–56  Greece

5th–8th place playoffs[edit]

14 July 2009
Israel  71–73  Greece
14 July 2009
Portugal  57–56  Hungary

Semifinals[edit]

14 July 2009
Belgium  67–81  Romania
14 July 2009
Slovakia  66–75  Netherlands

7th place match[edit]

15 July 2009
Israel  64–83  Hungary

5th place match[edit]

15 July 2009
Greece  47–42  Portugal

3rd place match[edit]

15 July 2009
Belgium  94–81  Slovakia

Final[edit]

15 July 2009
Romania  53–59  Netherlands

Final standings[edit]

Team promoted to the 2010 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship for Women Division A
Rank Team
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Netherlands
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Romania
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Belgium
4  Slovakia
5  Greece
6  Portugal
7  Hungary
8  Israel
9  Great Britain
10  Austria
11  Macedonia

References[edit]