EuroBasket 1965
Encyclopedia

Venues

Moscow Tbilisi
Tbilisi
Tbilisi is the capital and the largest city of Georgia, lying on the banks of the Mt'k'vari River. The name is derived from an early Georgian form T'pilisi and it was officially known as Tiflis until 1936...

Palace of Sports
of the Central Lenin Stadium
Luzhniki Palace of Sports
Luzhniki Palace of Sports, formerly the Palace of Sports of the Central Lenin Stadium, is a sports palace in Moscow, Russia, a part of the Luzhniki Sports Complex. Built in 1956, it originally had a spectator capacity of 13,700...


Capacity 15 000
Tbilisi Sports Palace
Tbilisi Sports Palace
Tbilisi Sport Palace is an Indoor sports arena situated in Tbilisi, Georgia.The arena usually hosts basketball, handball, judo, tennis, boxing and other games and tournaments with high attendance...


Capacity 11 000

Final rankings



First round

Group A - Moscow
49-60
61-85
55-73
87-48
51-51 aet. 59-63
52-76
88-50
78-69
59-57
59-60
55-56
79-74
56-55
68-40
66-64
62-60
77-53
47-68
89-52
55-59
61-61 aet. 71-69
73-73 aet. 75-81
65-41
67-46
51-52
59-90
64-87
76-45

Pos. Team Matches Wins Loses Results Points Diff.
1. 7 7 0 546:370 14 +176
2. 7 5 2 487:466 10 +21
3. 7 5 2 522:443 10 +79
4. 7 4 3 395:439 8 -46
5. 7 3 4 394:458 6 -64
6. 7 2 5 389:454 4 -65
7. 7 2 5 477:464 4 +13
8. 7 0 7 364:478 0 -114


Group B - Tbilisi
74-57
69-71
80-54
82-57
86-58
113-56
76-68
72-53
63-64
92-64
78-74
89-69
72-49
67-70
74-62
65-113
83-41
56-115
65-59
77-90
47-74
46-91
89-82
75-63
81-72
61-90
79-56
69-78

Pos. Team Matches Wins Loses Results Points Diff.
1. 7 7 0 642:427 14 +215
2. 7 6 1 547:418 12 +129
3. 7 5 2 500:495 10 +5
4. 7 4 3 527:465 8 +62
5. 7 3 4 514:572 6 -58
6. 7 2 5 478:484 4 -6
7. 7 1 6 426:571 2 -145
8. 7 0 7 396:598 0 -202

Places 13 - 16

Team 1 Team 2 Res.
60-86
53-52

Places 9 - 12

Team 1 Team 2 Res.
52-42
69-69 aet. 76-78

Places 5 - 8

Team 1 Team 2 Res.
77-70
67-69

Places 1 - 4

Team 1 Team 2 Res.
61-75
83-82

Finals

Placement Team 1 Team 2 Res.
15th place 66-79
13th place 74-63
11th place 58-65
9th place 66-57
7th place 116-71
5th place 63-51
3rd place 86-70
Final 58-49

Team rosters

  1. Soviet Union: Gennadi Volnov
    Gennadi Volnov
    Gennadi Georgievich Volnov was a Russian basketball player who played for the Soviet Union national basketball team from the late 1950s to the early 1970s. He was born in Moscow....

    , Modestas Paulauskas
    Modestas Paulauskas
    Modestas Paulauskas is a retired Lithuanian basketball player who won gold with the Soviet basketball team in the 1972 Olympic basketball tournament. He also won a bronze medal with the team at the 1968 Summer Olympics. Paulauskas trained at VSS Žalgiris in Kaunas. He is known as one of the best...

    , Jaak Lipso, Armenak Alachachian
    Armenak Alachachian
    Armenak Alachachian is a retired Armenian basketball player. A creative point guard, he reached European stardom with CSKA Moscow and the Soviet Union national team....

    , Aleksander Travin, Aleksander Petrov, Zurab Sakandelidze
    Zurab Sakandelidze
    Zurab Aleksandrovich Sakandelidze was a Georgian basketball player who won gold with the Soviet basketball team in Basketball at the 1972 Summer Olympics. He trained at Dynamo club in Tbilisi....

    , Viacheslav Khrinin, Visvaldis Eglitis, Nikolai Baglei, Nikolai Sushak, Amiran Skhiereli (Coach: Alexander Gomelsky
    Alexander Gomelsky
    Alexander Yakovlevich Gomelsky was a great Soviet and Russian basketball coach.Gomelsky was Jewish. He began his coaching career in 1948 in Leningrad with LGS Spartak...

    )
  2. Yugoslavia: Radivoj Korać
    Radivoj Korac
    Radivoj Korać , sometimes also Radivoje, was a successful Serbian basketball player from Yugoslavia....

    , Ivo Daneu
    Ivo Daneu
    Ivo Daneu is a retired Slovenian basketball player and coach.He played for Branik Maribor and Olimpija Ljubljana , won Yugoslav league in 1957, 1959, 1961, 1962, 1966 and 1970)....

    , Petar Skansi
    Petar Skansi
    Petar Skansi is a former Croatian basketball player and coach. During his playing career he played for Jugoplastika and Scavolini Pesaro....

    , Slobodan Gordić, Trajko Rajković
    Trajko Rajkovic
    Trajko Rajković was a Yugoslavian basketball player. He was born in Leskovac, Kingdom of Yugoslavia.During the time of Rajković’s performance on the national team, Yugoslavia won two European silvers and one bronze , one Olympic silver in Mexico City, and one World Championship gold...

    , Josip Đerđa
    Josip Đerđa
    Josip Gjergja is a retired Croatian basketball player...

    , Nemanja Đurić, Vital Eiselt, Miloš Bojović, Dragan Kovačić, Zvonko Petričević, Dragoslav Ražnatović (Coach: Aleksandar Nikolić
    Aleksandar Nikolic
    Aleksandar "Aca" Nikolić was a renowned Bosnian Serb basketball player and coach from Yugoslavia. He is considered to be so instrumental and important to the game's development in the country that he is often referred to as the Father of Yugoslav basketball...

    )
  3. Poland: Mieczyslaw Lopatka, Bohdan Likszo, Andrzej Pstrokonski, Janusz Wichowski, Zbigniew Dregier, Kazimierz Frelkiewicz, Edward Grzywna, Wieslaw Langiewicz, Czeslaw Malec, Stanislaw Olejniczak, Andrzej Perka, Jerzy Piskun (Coach: Witold Zagórski
    Witold Zagórski
    Witold Zagórski is a Polish basketball player and coach.As a basketball player, Zagórski was a member of Poland national basketball team 49 times . He was a player of Polonia Warszawa and CWKS Legia Warszawa teams.In the years of 1961–1975 he was a coach of Poland national basketball team...

    )
  4. Italy: Massimo Masini, Giambattista Cescutti, Ottorino Flaborea, Gabriele Vianello, Sauro Bufalini, Gianfranco Lombardi, Giusto Pellanera, Massimo Cosmelli, Franco Bertini, Guido Carlo Gatti, Sandro Spinetti (Coach: Carmine "Nello" Paratore)
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