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Turkey Women's National Basketball Team
The Turkey women's national basketball team is the women's basketball side that represents Turkey in international tournaments. They have come away from the EuroBasket tournaments with a silver medal in 2011 and bronze medal in 2013. Competitive record Olympic Games FIBA Women's World Cup EuroBasket Women Mediterranean Games Team Current roster Roster for the EuroBasket Women 2025. Past rosters 2005 EuroBasket: finished 8th among 12 teams Şaziye İvegin-Karslı, Birsel Vardarlı, Müjde Yüksel, Nilay Yiğit, Şebnem Kimyacıoğlu, Esmeral Tunçluer, Aylin Yıldızoğlu, Nevriye Yılmaz, Serap Yücesir, Yasemin Horasan, Arzu Bildirir, Korel Engin, (Coach: Cem Akdağ) 2007 EuroBasket: finished 9th among 16 teams Şaziye İvegin-Karslı, Gülşah Akkaya, Birsel Vardarlı, Nilay Yiğit, Şebnem Kimyacıoğlu, Esmeral Tunçluer, Işıl Alben, Nevriye Yılmaz, Didem Sarıca, Yasemin Horasan, Bahar Çağlar, Korel Engin, (Coach: ...
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Ekrem Memnun
Ekrem Memnun (born 16 July 1969) is a Turkish basketball Head coach. He is the current head coach of Çukurova Basketbol of the Women's Basketball Super League. Coaching career Ekrem Memnun started his coaching career in the Galatasaray youth team in 1988. After serving as assistant coach of women's team and in charge of infrastructure, Memnun took over Yıldırım Spor in 1992 and stayed there for three years. In 1995, he returned to the Galatasaray Men's Basketball Team as assistant coach and became the head coach of Galatasaray women's basketball team between 1996 and 2002, and in the 1998-1999 season, he and his team won the third place in the Euroleague, one of the greatest achievements in women's basketball up to that date. During this time, three Turkish League (1996-1997, 1997-1998, 1999-2000) three President Cup (1996, 1997, 1998) and two in Turkey Cup (1997, 1998) was the head of the winning team. Working as assistant coach in the Galatasaray Men's Basketball Team u ...
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1959 FIBA World Championship For Women
The 1959 FIBA World Championship for Women (Russian: Чемпионат мира по баскетболу среди женщин 1959) was the third FIBA World Championship for Women basketball championship held by FIBA. It was held in the Soviet Union between 10 October and 18 October 1959. Eight national teams entered the event under the auspices of FIBA, the sport's governing body. The city of Moscow hosted the tournament. The Soviet Union won its first title after finishing in first place in round-robin group. The United States were the defending champions, but did not participate in the tournament. Squads Soviet Union * 3 Nina MAKSIMELIANOVA * 4 Skaidrite SMILDZINIA-BUDOVSKA * 5 Valentina KOSTIKOVA * 6 Maret-Mai Otsa * 7 Nina POZNANSKAYA * 8 Raisa KUZNETSOVA-MIKHAILOVA * 9 Ene Kitsing * 10 Jurate DOKTORAITE * 11 Nina ARCISEVSKAYA * 12 Nina EREMINA * 13 Galina JAROSEVSKAYA * 14 Helena BITNERE Results The tournament consis ...
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2010 FIBA World Championship For Women
The 2010 FIBA World Championship for Women, the 16th edition of International Basketball Federation, FIBA's premier tournament for women's national basketball teams, was held from September 23 to October 3, 2010 in the Czech Republic. Three cities, Ostrava, Brno and Karlovy Vary, hosted games. Four countries initially bid for the event but Australia, France and Latvia withdrew during the bidding process. The United States women's national basketball team, USA won its eighth title, extending its own record for the most wins in tournament history. The other medalists—the Czech Republic women's national basketball team, Czech Republic with silver and Spain women's national basketball team, Spain with bronze—had not previously medaled at a World Championship. The Czechoslovakia women's team had won six medals in previous World Championships, but FIBA considers the Czech Republic women's national basketball team, Czech Republic and Slovakia women's national basketball team, Slovakia ...
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2006 FIBA World Championship For Women
The 2006 FIBA World Championship for Women took place in Brazil from September 12 to September 23, 2006. It was co-organised by the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) and Confederação Brasileira de Basketball, the Brazilian national federation. Sixteen national teams competed for the championship. Australia came away with the gold medal by beating Russia 91–74. As of 2024 United states semi-final's loss to Russia remains the last one in the official game. Venues Competing nations Except Brazil, which automatically qualified as the host, and the United States, which automatically qualified as the reigning Olympic champion, the 14 remaining countries qualified through their continents’ qualifying tournaments: * FIBA Europe – Spain, France, Lithuania, Czech Republic (European Champion), Russia * FIBA Americas – Brazil (host), United States (Olympic Champion), Canada, Argentina, Cuba * FIBA Africa – Nigeria, Senegal * FIBA Asia – P.R. of China, Chinese T ...
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2002 FIBA World Championship For Women
The 2002 FIBA World Championship for Women () was hosted by China from September 14 to September 25, 2002. It was co-organised by the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) and the Chinese federation. The USA won the tournament, defeating Russia 79-74 for the gold medal. Venues Competing nations Except China, which automatically qualified as the host, and the United States, which automatically qualified as the reigning Olympic champion, the 14 remaining countries qualified through their continents' qualifying tournaments: Squads Preliminary round Group A September 14, 2002 September 15, 2002 September 16, 2002 Group B September 14, 2002 September 15, 2002 September 16, 2002 Group C September 14, 2002 September 15, 2002 September 16, 2002 Group D September 14, 2002 September 15, 2002 September 16, 2002 Eighth-final round Group E September 18, 2002 September 19, 2002 September 20, 2002 Group F September 18, 2002 Septembe ...
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1998 FIBA World Championship For Women
The 1998 FIBA Women's World Championship (German: 1998 FIBA Frauen-Weltmeisterschaft) was hosted by Germany from May 26 to June 7, 1998. The USA won the tournament, defeating Russia 71-65 in the final. Venues * Münster * Wuppertal * Rotenburg/Fulda * Karlsruhe * Dessau * Bremen * Berlin Competing nations Squads Preliminary round Group A Group B Group C Group D Second round ''Scores and results from the first round shall be carried over to the second round.'' Group E Group F Classification stage 13–16th place playoffs 9–12th place playoffs Final round Bracket Quarterfinals Classification 5th–8th Final standings Awards ReferencesResults
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1994 FIBA World Championship For Women
The 1994 FIBA Women's World Championship was the 12th edition of the FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup, FIBA Women's World Championship, an quadrennial international tournament played by women's basketball teams in FIBA. It was hosted in Australia from 2 to 12 June 1994 at five venues with the Sydney Entertainment Centre hosting the finals. The tournament consisted of 16 nations from five federations who competed through the regional qualifiers to get to the tournament. These teams were divided into four groups for the preliminary round. Based on the results of the Preliminary round, the teams were then resorted into groups for the quarter-final round, with the top two finishers in each Preliminary group placed into quarter-final Groups A and B, and the bottom two finishers placed into Groups C and D. Based on the placement in the quarter-final round, the teams were then sorted into groups of four, each of which played a two-round knockout draw to determine the final standings. ...
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1990 FIBA World Championship For Women
The 1990 FIBA World Championship for Women (Malay: Kejohanan Dunia FIBA 1990 untuk Wanita) was the 11th FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup, FIBA World Championship for Women. The tournament was hosted by Malaysia, from 12 to 22 July 1990. It was the first edition of the tournament to raise the number of participating teams to 16; prior editions had seen between 8 and 14 teams competing, but this and future editions (2022 excepted) would include 16. The United States won their fifth world championship, defeating Yugoslavia 88–78 in the final. Venues * Kuala Lumpur * Kuching * Kota Kinabalu * Kota Kinabalu, Kota Squads Preliminary round Group A Group B Group C Group D Quarterfinal round Group A Group B Group C Group D Knockout stage Championship Bracket 5–8th place Bracket 9–12th place Bracket 13–16th place Bracket 13–16th-place semifinals 9–12th-place semifinals 5–8th-place semifinals ...
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1986 FIBA World Championship For Women
The 1986 FIBA World Championship for Women (Russian:1986 Чемпионат мира ФИБА среди женщин) was the tenth FIBA World Championship for Women. The tournament was hosted by the Soviet Union, from 8 to 17 August 1986. The United States won their fourth world championship, defeating the Soviet Union 108–88 in the final. Venues *Olympic Stadium (Moscow) * Minsk Sports Palace (Minsk) * (Vilnius) Squads Preliminary round Group A Group B Final four Bronze medal game Final Final standings Awards References * External links 1986 FIBA World Championship for Women {{DEFAULTSORT:1986 Fiba World Championship For Women FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup International basketball competitions hosted by the Soviet Union FIBA FIBA The International Basketball Federation (FIBA ; French language, French: ) is an association of national organizations which governs the sport of basketball worldwide. FIBA defines the rules of basketball, speci ...
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1983 FIBA World Championship For Women
The 1983 FIBA World Championship for Women (Portuguese: Campeonato Mundial Feminino Fiba de 1983) was the ninth FIBA World Championship for Women. The tournament was hosted by Brazil, from 24 July to 6 August 1983. The Soviet Union won their sixth world championship, defeating the United States 84–82 in the final. Venues Participating nations Squads Preliminary round The top two teams in each group advance to the semifinal round, while the bottom two teams played in the classification round. Group A Group B Group C Classification round SourceFIBA Archives/small> Semifinal round The United States qualified for the semifinal round by the virtue of winning the previous world championship, while Brazil qualified as hosts. A total of 25 matches were played in the semifinal round. Results between two teams from the Preliminary Round carried over; teams only played teams they had not already played. ...
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1979 FIBA World Championship For Women
The 1979 FIBA World Championship for Women (Korean: 1979 FIBA 세계 여자 선수권 대회) was the eighth FIBA World Championship for Women. The tournament was hosted by South Korea, from 29 April to 13 May 1979. The United States won the world championship for the third time. Venues Competing nations Squads Preliminary round Group A (H) – host nation. Group B Group C Classification round Final round The United States qualified outright for the final round of the tournament by the virtue of silver medal finish at the 1976 Olympic Games. Final standings Awards ReferencesOfficial results and squads (FIBA)
2009-0 ...
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1975 FIBA World Championship For Women
The 1975 FIBA World Championship for Women (Spanish: 1975 Campeonato Mundial FIBA Femenino) was the seventh FIBA World Championship for Women. The tournament was hosted by Colombia, from 23 September to 4 October 1975. The Soviet Union won the world championship for the fifth time. Venues Preliminary round Group A Group B Group C Classification round Final round Final standings Awards ReferencesOfficial results and squads (FIBA)
2009-05-20)
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