2017 FIBA Under-16 Women's African Championship

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2017 FIBA Africa U-16 Championship 
for Women
5th FIBA Africa Under-16 Championship for Women
Tournament details
Host nation Mozambique
DatesAugust 5–12
Teams5
Venues1 
(in 1 host city)
Champions Mali
(5th title)
MVPMali
Tournament leaders
PlayersTeams
Points Mali (21.8)  Mali (74.2)
Rebounds Zimbabwe (10.3)   (33.8)
Assists Mali (4.0)  Mali (14.8)
Official website
2015
2019 >

The 2017 FIBA Africa Under-16 Championship for Women was the 5th FIBA Africa U16 Championship for Women, played under the rules of FIBA, the world governing body for basketball, and the FIBA Africa thereof. The tournament was hosted by Mozambique from August 5 to 12, with the games played in Beira.[1]

Mali claimed their record fifth straight continental title by trouncing Angola in the Finals, 68–29. Both teams will represent FIBA Africa to the 2018 FIBA Under-17 Women’s Basketball World Cup.[2]

Hosts Selection[]

On 25 March 2016, FIBA Africa announced that Mozambique will host the tournament.[3]

Venue[]

Beira

Qualification[]

Event Date Location Vacancies Qualified
2017 AfroBasket U16 Women Preliminaries Zone 1 12–16 June 2017[notes 1] Morocco NA 1 N/A
2017 AfroBasket U16 Women Preliminaries Zone 2 Cancelled[notes 2] NA 1  Mali
2017 AfroBasket U16 Women Preliminaries Zone 3 9–14 June 2017[notes 3] Togo Lomé 1 N/A
2017 AfroBasket U16 Women Preliminaries Zone 4 Cancelled[notes 4] NA 1 N/A
2017 AfroBasket U16 Women Preliminaries Zone 5 1–6 June 2017[notes 5] Kenya Mombasa 1  Egypt
2017 AfroBasket U16 Women Preliminaries Zone 6 TBD[notes 6] Zimbabwe Harare 3  Mozambique
 Angola
 
2017 AfroBasket U16 Women Preliminaries Zone 7 Cancelled[notes 7] NA 1 N/A
Total 5

Squads[]

Participating teams[]

Format[]

The first round will be played in a round-robin format. The top four teams will advance to the Final Phase which will be played in a knockout format (Semi-Finals, Final). The Third-Place Game and the Final will be played on the last day of the tournament (August 12).[11]

Group phase[]

All times are in Central Africa Time (UTC+2:00)

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1  Mali 4 4 0 314 131 +183 8 Advanced to Semi-finals
2  Egypt 4 3 1 208 216 −8 7
3  Angola 4 2 2 202 202 0 6
4  Mozambique (H) 4 1 3 199 243 −44 5
5   4 0 4 136 267 −131 4 Eliminated
Source: FIBA Africa
(H) Host
5 August
15:00
Egypt  33–66  Mali
Scoring by quarter: 14–15, 4–14, 9–13, 6–24
Pts: 12
Rebs: 5
Asts: 3
Pts: 23
Rebs: 11
Asts: 4
Ferroviario da Beira Stadium, Beira
Referees: Walelign Fikadu Gebeto (ETH), Joyce Muchenu (ZIM), Francisco Tando (ANG)
5 August
18:00
  39–48  Mozambique
Scoring by quarter: 3–10, 10–16, 11–10, 15–12
Pts: 12
Rebs: 7
Asts: 2
Pts: 20
Rebs: , 7
Asts: 3
Ferroviario da Beira Stadium, Beira
Referees: Aya Khaled Abdelmohsed Ahmed (EGY), Youssouf Maiga (MLI), Dorothy Judy Okatch (BOT)
6 August
16:00
Egypt  55–46  
Scoring by quarter: 12–9, 10–14, 17–10, 16–13
Pts: 11
Rebs: , , 5
Asts: 4
Pts: 16
Rebs: 19
Asts: 2
Ferroviario da Beira Stadium, Beira
Referees: Dorothy Judy Okatch (BOT), Francisco Tando (ANG), Buyiswa Tshemese (RSA)
6 August
18:00
Angola  64–57  Mozambique
Scoring by quarter: 13–18, 12–13, 25–9, 14–17
Pts: , 14
Rebs: , , 4
Asts: 1
Pts: 18
Rebs: , , 6
Asts: , , 1
Ferroviario da Beira Stadium, Beira
Referees: Walelign Fikadu Gebeto (ETH), Youssouf Maiga (MLI), Joyce Muchenu (ZIM)
7 August
16:00
Mali  112–22  
Scoring by quarter: 23–7, 39–3, 23–9, 27–3
Pts: 26
Rebs: 8
Asts: , 6
Pts: 10
Rebs: 7
Asts: 1
Ferroviario da Beira Stadium, Beira
Referees: Aya Khaled Abdelmohsed Ahmed (EGY), Francisco Tando (ANG), Buyiswa Tshemese (RSA)
7 August
18:00
Angola  43–56  Egypt
Scoring by quarter: 11–13, 8–23, 16–8, 8–12
Pts: 15
Rebs: , 5
Asts: , 2
Pts: 22
Rebs: 9
Asts: 3
Ferroviario da Beira Stadium, Beira
Referees: Youssouf Maiga (MLI), Joyce Muchenu (ZIM), Dorothy Judy Okatch (BOT)
8 August
16:00
  29–52  Angola
Scoring by quarter: 8–13, 9–10, 6–16, 6–13
Pts: 8
Rebs: 12
Asts: 2
Pts: 14
Rebs: 8
Asts: 3
Ferroviario da Beira Stadium, Beira
8 August
18:00
Mozambique  33–76  Mali
Scoring by quarter: 6–19, 7–9, 14–19, 6–29
Pts: 8
Rebs: 12
Asts: 4
Pts: 27
Rebs: 8
Asts: , 4
Ferroviario da Beira Stadium, Beira
9 August
16:00
Mali  60–43  Angola
Scoring by quarter: 15–6, 14–8, 15–16, 16–13
Pts: 19
Rebs: 9
Asts: 6
Pts: 10
Rebs: 5
Asts: 3
Ferroviario da Beira Stadium, Beira
9 August
18:00
Mozambique  61–64  Egypt
Scoring by quarter: 20–9, 14–13, 14–16, 13–26
Pts: 18
Rebs: 10
Asts: 5
Pts: 15
Rebs: 5
Asts: , , 1
Ferroviario da Beira Stadium, Beira

Final round[]

Finalists qualified for the 2018 FIBA Under-17 Women’s Basketball World Cup.

 
SemifinalsFinal
 
      
 
11 August
 
 
 Mali63
 
12 August
 
 Mozambique39
 
 Mali68
 
11 August
 
 Angola29
 
 Egypt42
 
 
 Angola59
 
Third place
 
 
12 August
 
 
 Mozambique38
 
 
 Egypt56

Semi-finals[]

11 August
16:00
 Egypt 42–59  Angola
Scoring by quarter: 7–11, 10–25, 14–15, 11–8
Pts: 15
Rebs: 4
Asts: 3
Pts: 16
Rebs: , 5
Asts: 3
Ferroviario da Beira Stadium, Beira
11 August
18:00
 Mali 63–39  Mozambique
Scoring by quarter: 15–8, 16–13, 15–5, 17–13
Pts: 17
Rebs: 7
Asts: 4
Pts: 11
Rebs: 12
Asts: , , 2
Ferroviario da Beira Stadium, Beira

Bronze medal match[]

12 August
14:00
 Mozambique 38–56  Egypt
Scoring by quarter: 10–13, 9–10, 9–20, 10–13
Pts: 9
Rebs: 7
Asts: 3
Pts: 16
Rebs: 6
Asts: , 2
Ferroviario da Beira Stadium, Beira

Final[]

12 August
16:00
 Mali 68–29  Angola
Scoring by quarter: 16–11, 17–4, 21–7, 14–7
Pts: 25
Rebs: 9
Asts: 6
Pts: 13
Rebs: 7
Asts: 3
Ferroviario da Beira Stadium, Beira

Statistical Leaders[]

Final statistics at the end of the tournament:[12]

Players[]

Awards[]

 2017 Under-16 African Champions 

Mali
Fifth title
  • Most Valuable Player: Mali Aissetou Coulibaly[13]

The All-Star Five:[13]

Position Player Country Origin
PG Noemia Alexandre Massingue Mozambique Mozambique
SG Habiba Elgizawy Egypt Egypt
SF Aissetou Coulibaly  Mali
PF Cacia Antonio  Angola
C Sika Kone  Mali

Final ranking[]

Qualified to the 2018 FIBA Under-17 Women’s Basketball World Cup.
Rank Team Record
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Mali 6–0
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Angola 5–1
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Egypt 4–2
4  Mozambique 1–5
5   0–4

Notes[]

  1. ^ Four countries will participate: hosts Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia. The qualifier will be played in a round-robin format.[4]
  2. ^ Competition was cancelled. The qualifiers of this zone are cancelled as no team registered for the regional tournament. Mali was added later.[5]
  3. ^ Four countries will participate: hosts Togo, Benin, Burkina Faso and Ivory Coast. The qualifier will be played in a round-robin format. Nigeria was added later.[6]
  4. ^ Competition was cancelled. The qualifiers of this zone are cancelled as no team registered for the regional tournament.[7]
  5. ^ Four countries participated: hosts Kenya, Tanzania, Rwanda and the eventual zone winner Egypt. The tournament was played in round-robin format.[8]
  6. ^ Two teams will participate: hosts Zimbabwe and Mozambique. Mozambique already qualified as the tournament hosts. The tournament will be played over two games. Angola and Zimbabwe were added later.[9]
  7. ^ Competition was cancelled. The qualifiers of this zone are cancelled as no team registered for the regional tournament.[10]

References[]

  1. ^ FIBA Calendar
  2. ^ "Mali claim fifth straight FIBA U16 Women's African Championship title". FIBA Africa. 12 August 2017. Retrieved 23 September 2017.
  3. ^ "Mozambique to host FIBA U16 Women's African Championship 2017". FIBA Africa. 25 March 2016. Retrieved 28 July 2017.
  4. ^ "Zone I Preliminaries". FIBA Africa. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  5. ^ "Zone II Preliminaries". FIBA Africa. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  6. ^ "Zone III Preliminaries". FIBA Africa. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  7. ^ "Zone IV Preliminaries". FIBA Africa. Retrieved 19 July 2017.
  8. ^ "Zone V Preliminaries". FIBA Africa. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  9. ^ "Zone VI Preliminaries". FIBA Africa. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  10. ^ "Zone VII Preliminaries". FIBA Africa. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  11. ^ "Competition System". FIBA Africa. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  12. ^ "Player Statistics". FIBA.com. Retrieved 21 August 2017.
  13. ^ a b "Coulibaly named MVP, headlines All-Star Five". FIBA.basketball. FIBA.com. 12 August 2017. Retrieved 22 August 2017.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""