FIBA Africa Championship for Women 2005 | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
17th FIBA Africa Championship for Women | |||||||||||||
Tournament details | |||||||||||||
Host nation | Nigeria | ||||||||||||
Dates | December 20–28 | ||||||||||||
Teams | 10 | ||||||||||||
Venues | 1 (in 1 host city) | ||||||||||||
Champions | Nigeria (2nd title) | ||||||||||||
MVP | Mfon Udoka | ||||||||||||
Tournament leaders | |||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||
Official website | |||||||||||||
The 2005 FIBA Africa Championship for Women was the 17th FIBA Africa 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 Nigeria from December 20 to 28, with the games played at the Indoor Sports Hall in Abuja. [1]
Nigeria defeated Senegal 64–57 in the final to win their first title [2] with both teams securing a spot at the 2006 FIBA Women's World Cup.
Group A | Group B |
---|---|
Qualified for the semi-finals |
Team | Pts. | W | L | PF | PA | Diff |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Senegal | 8 | 4 | 0 | 267 | 169 | +98 |
Nigeria | 7 | 3 | 1 | 312 | 170 | +142 |
Mali | 6 | 2 | 2 | 259 | 202 | +57 |
Cape Verde | 5 | 1 | 3 | 209 | 298 | -89 |
Togo | 4 | 0 | 4 | 127 | 335 | -208 |
December 21 11:00 |
Mali | 41–51 | Senegal |
Scoring by quarter:10-8, 11-18, 17-12, 3-13 | ||
Pts: Maïga Ba 16 Rebs: Maïga Ba 9 Asts: Dia 3 | Pts: Ndeye Ndiaye 19 Rebs: Ndeye Ndiaye 11 Asts: A.Ndiaye 3 |
December 21 19:00 |
Cape Verde | 38–96 | Nigeria |
Scoring by quarter: 11-21, 15-25, 5-28, 7-22 | ||
Pts: Jade, Louisa 9 Rebs: Crispina 7 Asts: R.Lagos 3 | Pts: Udoka, Okorie 16 Rebs: Udoka 14 Asts: Ojelabi 7 |
December 22 16:30 |
Cape Verde | 76–44 | Togo |
Scoring by quarter:16-11, 17-11, 19-5, 24-17 | ||
Pts: Jade 17 Rebs: Crispina 17 Asts: Jade, Letícia 4 | Pts: Adjoussi 11 Rebs: Afanwoubo 11 Asts: Koagni 2 |
December 22 19:00 |
Nigeria | 55–65 (OT) | Senegal |
Scoring by quarter:9-8, 13-11, 18-19, 14-16, Overtime: 1-11 | ||
Pts: Sadiq 12 Rebs: Udoka 9 Asts: Udoka 4 | Pts: Gueye 17 Rebs: N.Ndiaye 7 Asts: D.Diouf 6 |
December 23 16:30 |
Cape Verde | 56–81 | Mali |
Scoring by quarter: 12-25, 7-17, 14-24, 23-15 | ||
Pts: Crispina, Jade 13 Rebs: Crispina, R.Lopes 5 Asts: Jade 3 | Pts: Maïga Ba 23 Rebs: Sininta 16 Asts: Dia, Drame 4 |
December 23 19:00 |
Nigeria | 92–23 | Togo |
Scoring by quarter:25-5, 25-7, 22-9, 20-2 | ||
Pts: Amachree 18 Rebs: Apiafi 11 Asts: Ojelabi 5 | Pts: Adjoussi 6 Rebs: Koagni 7 Asts:four players 1 |
December 24 16:30 |
Togo | 26–93 | Mali |
Scoring by quarter: 8-19, 8-25, 6-30, 4-19 | ||
Pts: Salami 6 Rebs: Afanwoubo 8 Asts: Salami 2 | Pts: Kanoute 18 Rebs: Diawara, Coulibaly 9 Asts: F.Toure, Drame 3 |
December 24 19:00 |
Senegal | 77–39 | Cape Verde |
Scoring by quarter:21-11, 20-8, 15-8, 21-12 | ||
Pts: As.Traoré 20 Rebs: As.Traoré 6 Asts: Ndialou Paye 6 | Pts: Crispina 14 Rebs: Crispina, Tatianne 10 Asts: Letícia 3 |
Qualified for the semi-finals |
Team | Pts. | W | L | PF | PA | Diff |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
DR Congo | 8 | 4 | 0 | 276 | 176 | +100 |
Mozambique | 7 | 3 | 1 | 228 | 190 | +38 |
Angola | 6 | 2 | 2 | 245 | 167 | +78 |
Niger | 5 | 1 | 3 | 165 | 280 | -115 |
Gabon | 4 | 0 | 4 | 145 | 246 | -101 |
December 21 13:00 |
DR Congo | 60–46 | Mozambique |
Scoring by quarter:19-9, 12-11, 20-14, 9-12 | ||
Pts: Nsimbo 26 Rebs: Nsimbo 15 Asts: Kalonda 6 | Pts: Wachena 9 Rebs: Iracema 6 Asts: Rute 4 |
December 22 16:30 |
Mozambique | 52–51 | Angola |
Scoring by quarter:19-13, 8-14, 10-8, 15-16 | ||
Pts: Iracema 10 Rebs: Iracema 13 Asts: Valerdina, Aleia 2 | Pts: Irene 16 Rebs: Bárbara, Luísa 6 Asts: Domitila 4 |
December 22 19:00 |
DR Congo | 75–38 | Gabon |
Scoring by quarter:31-10, 12-7, 13-9, 19-12 | ||
Pts: Mabika 17 Rebs: Nyama 13 Asts: Tshuina 3 | Pts: Cynthia Onangah 8 Rebs: Kopia 8 Asts:four players 1 |
December 23 16:30 |
DR Congo | 88–40 | Niger |
Scoring by quarter:15-14, 17-12, 28-10, 28-4 | ||
Pts: Nkoko 15 Rebs: Munono 8 Asts: Tshuina, Pikinini 4 | Pts: Karimou 12 Rebs: Adamou, Zakari 7 Asts: Karimou 3 |
December 23 19:00 |
Mozambique | 55–33 | Gabon |
Scoring by quarter:15-5, 14-14, 17-11, 9-3 | ||
Pts: Rute 17 Rebs: Rute 6 Asts: Rute 5 | Pts: Kopia 16 Rebs: Kopia 11 Asts: Moussonda 2 |
December 24 16:30 |
Gabon | 38–53 | Niger |
Scoring by quarter: 14-15, 6-15, 10-12, 8-11 | ||
Pts: Mebyame 9 Rebs: Kopia 8 Asts: Moussonda 3 | Pts: Adamou 14 Rebs: Eloga 13 Asts: Karimou 3 |
December 24 19:00 |
Angola | 52–53 | DR Congo |
Scoring by quarter:15-9, 13-16, 8-14, 16-14 | ||
Pts: Ernestina 19 Rebs: Ernestina 13 Asts: Domitila 3 | Pts: Mabika 18 Rebs: Nsimbo 13 Asts: Mabika 3 |
December 25 16:30 |
Niger | 26–79 | Angola |
Scoring by quarter: 3-20, 6-22, 13-11, 4-26 | ||
Pts: Eloga 10 Rebs: Eloga 16 Asts: 0 | Pts: Astrida 23 Rebs: Ernestina, Ângela 9 Asts: Bárbara 3 |
December 27 11:00 |
Gabon | 47–36 | Togo |
Scoring by quarter:12-6, 10-8, 16-8, 9-14 | ||
Pts: Ongadia 13 Rebs: Kopia 14 Asts: Nziengue 2 | Pts: Salami 11 Rebs: Afanwoubo 7 Asts: Salami 3 |
December 27 13:30 |
Niger | 51–56 | Cape Verde |
Scoring by quarter: 6-14, 20-16, 20-5, 5-21 | ||
Pts: Karimou 21 Rebs: Eloga 16 Asts: Harouna 3 | Pts: Crispina 16 Rebs: Crispina 14 Asts: R.Lagos 7 |
December 28 11:00 |
Angola | 50–55 | Mali |
Scoring by quarter: 10-12, 6-15, 18-16, 16-12 | ||
Pts: Irene 19 Rebs: Luísa 8 Asts: Bárbara 4 | Pts: Maïga Ba 14 Rebs: Sininta 12 Asts: Sininta 5 |
Semi-finals | Final | |||||
December 27 - 16:30 | ||||||
Senegal | 66 | |||||
December 28 - 19:00 | ||||||
Mozambique | 37 | |||||
Senegal | 57 | |||||
December 27 - 19:00 | ||||||
Nigeria | 64 | |||||
DR Congo | 66 | |||||
Nigeria | 78 | |||||
Third place | ||||||
December 28 - 16:30 | ||||||
DR Congo | 51 | |||||
Mozambique | 59 |
December 27 16:30 |
Senegal | 66–37 | Mozambique |
Scoring by quarter: 12-16, 20-3, 21-10, 13-8 | ||
Pts: As.Traoré 25 Rebs: As.Traoré 11 Asts: D.Diouf 3 | Pts: Rute 9 Rebs:three players 5 Asts:five players 1 |
December 27 19:00 |
DR Congo | 66–78 | Nigeria |
Scoring by quarter: 16-27, 17-15, 25-16, 8-20 | ||
Pts: Mabika 18 Rebs:three players 8 Asts: Tshuina 2 | Pts: Amachree 23 Rebs: Udoka 13 Asts: Amachree 4 |
December 28 16:30 |
DR Congo | 51–59 | Mozambique |
Scoring by quarter:18-12, 13-8, 10-17, 10-22 | ||
Pts: Pikinini 16 Rebs: Nsimbo 8 Asts: Tshuina 3 | Pts: Rute 19 Rebs: Gimo 12 Asts:five players 1 |
Qualified for the 2006 FIBA Women's World Cup |
| Nigeria roster |
2005 FIBA Africa Championship for Women winners |
---|
Nigeria Second title |
Most Valuable Player |
---|
Mfon Udoka |
This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (September 2013) |
Points
| Rebounds
| Assists
|
Steals
| Blocks
| Fouls
|
Department | Name | Total | Opponent |
---|---|---|---|
Points | Pauline Nsimbo | 26 | Mozambique |
Rebounds | Crispina Correia | 17 | Togo |
Assists | Funmilayo Ojelabi Letícia Oliveira | 7 | Cape Verde Niger |
Steals | Ndialou Paye | 7 | Cape Verde |
Blocks | Astou Ndiaye | 7 | Cape Verde |
2-point field goal percentage | Hamchétou Maïga | 100% (9/9) | Cape Verde |
3-point field goal percentage | Mfon Udoka | 100% (3/3) | Mali |
Free throw percentage | Mfon Udoka Ugo Oha | 100% (6/6) | Senegal Cape Verde |
Turnovers | Amah Adjoussi | 10 | Nigeria |
Points
| Rebounds
| Assists
|
Steals
| Blocks
| Fouls
|
2-point field goal percentage
| 3-point field goal percentage
| Free throw percentage
|
Department | Name | Total | Opponent |
---|---|---|---|
Points | Nigeria | 96 | Cape Verde |
Rebounds | Mali | 74 | Cape Verde |
Assists | Senegal | 23 | Togo |
Steals | Senegal | 27 | Cape Verde |
Blocks | Senegal | 9 | Cape Verde |
2-point field goal percentage | Senegal | 56.2% (27/48) | Togo |
3-point field goal percentage | Nigeria | 75% (6/8) | Togo |
Free throw percentage | Togo | 100% (3/3) | Senegal |
Turnovers | Cape Verde | 42 | Senegal |
The FIBA Basketball World Cup, also known as the FIBA World Cup of Basketball or simply the FIBA World Cup, between 1950 and 2010 known as the FIBA World Championship, is an international basketball competition contested by the senior men's national teams of the members of the International Basketball Federation (FIBA), the sport's global governing body. It is considered the flagship event of FIBA.
Olumide Oyedeji is a Nigerian professional basketball center who played in the National Basketball Association (NBA) for three seasons.
James Samuel Vincent is an American former professional basketball player and coach.
The Nigeria national basketball team represents Nigeria in men's international basketball and it is overseen by the Nigeria Basketball Federation (NBBF).
The Ivorian Coast national basketball team is the men's basketball side that represents Ivory Coast in international competition. The team competes regularly in the African Championship and is administered by the Fédération Ivoirienne de Basket-Ball.
The Nigeria women's national basketball team, also known as the D'Tigress, represents Nigeria in international women's basketball competition, and are regulated by the Nigeria Basketball Federation, the governing body for basketball in Nigeria. Nigeria has one of the most successful women's national teams on the African Continent, being the current African champions. They have won the Women's Afrobasket Championship consecutively for three times in a roll. They won in 2017 at Bamako, Mali, 2019 at Dakar, Senegal and in the year 2021 at Yaounder, Cameroun.
The AfroBasket Women is the women's basketball continental championship of Africa, played biennially under the auspices of FIBA, the world governing body for basketball, and the African zone thereof. The tournament also serves to qualify teams for participation in the quadrennial FIBA Women's World Cup and the Olympic Games.
The 2007 FIBA Africa Championship for Women was the 18th FIBA Africa 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 Senegal from September 20 to 30, with the games played at the Marius Ndiaye Stadium in Dakar and at the Stade Maniang Soumaré in Thiès.
The Senegal women's national basketball team is the national basketball team representing Senegal at world and continental basketball competitions for women. It is administered by the Fédération Sénégalaise de Basket-Ball.
The Nigerian Premier Basketball League, often abbreviated to the NPL, is the pre-eminent men's professional basketball league in Nigeria. The league consists of sixteen teams who are categorized into two conferences based on the geographical location. These conferences are Savannah and the Atlantic. The league was sponsored by the DSTV until 2017, who had both title and TV rights through the contract agreement. The league was then referred to as the DSTV Premier Basketball League.
2014 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
The Nigerian Basketball Federation (NBBF) is the governing body for men's and women's basketball in Nigeria. NBBF has been an affiliate of FIBA Africa since 1963, and its offices are located in Abuja and Lagos.
The DR Congo national basketball team represents DR Congo in men's international basketball competitions, it is controlled by the Basketball Federation of Democratic Republic of Congo.
The 2011 FIBA Africa Championship for Women was the 20th FIBA Africa Championship for Women, played under the auspices of the Fédération Internationale de Basketball, the basketball sport governing body, and the African zone thereof. At stake was the berth allocated to Africa in the 2012 Summer Olympics basketball tournament. The tournament was held from September 23–October 2 in Mali.
Aisha Mohammed is a Nigerian basketball player for Bursas BSB and the Nigerian national team.
The Angolan Basketball Federation is the governing body of official basketball competitions in Angola. FAB was founded in 1976, with Mr. José Jaime de Castro Guimarães serving as chairman. The federation was first housed at Rua Rainha Ginga and later moved to the current address on the ground floor of an apartment building located in the Cidadela Sports Compound. FAB oversees the activities of the 18 provincial basketball associations in the country. Typically the federation has a 42-member staff, including 3 members of the general assembly, 3 from the audit committee, 5 from the legal board, 5 from the disciplinary board and 16 collaborators while the management is made up of 10 members.
The FIBA U16 Women's African Championship is an under-16 basketball championship in the International Basketball Federation's FIBA Africa zone. The tournament is held biennially. The top two teams qualify directly to the FIBA Under-17 Women's World Cup.
The 2011 FIBA Africa Women's Clubs Champions Cup was an international basketball tournament that took place at the Indoor Sports Hall of the National Stadium in Surulele, Lagos, Nigeria, from December 5 to 11, 2011. The tournament, organized by FIBA Africa, and hosted by First Deepwater, was contested by 5 clubs in a round robin system followed by a third-place match played by the 3rd and 4th placed teams from the preliminary round and a final played by the two top teams from the same round.
The 2003 FIBA Africa Championship for Women was the 16th FIBA Africa 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 December 18 to 28, with the games played at the Pavilhão do Maxaquene in Maputo and in Nampula.
The 2000 FIBA Africa Championship for Women was the 15th FIBA Africa 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 Tunisia from November 5 to 12, 2000.