2nd FIBA Africa Under-20 Championship for Women | |
---|---|
Tournament details | |
Host country | Mozambique |
Dates | December 2–9, 2006 |
Teams | 5 (from 1 confederation) |
Venue(s) | 1 (in 1 host city) |
Final positions | |
Champions | Mali (1st title) |
Tournament statistics | |
MVP | Anabela Cossa |
Top scorer | Sarr 13.7 |
Top rebounds | Coulibaly 13.3 |
Top assists | Anabela Cossa 3.8 |
PPG (Team) | Senegal 62.8 |
RPG (Team) | Angola 46.5 |
APG (Team) | Mozambique 10.8 |
Official website | |
2006 FIBA Africa U-20 Championship for Women | |
The 2006 FIBA Africa Under-20 Championship for Women was the second and last FIBA Africa Under-20 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 2 to 9 2006, with the games played at the Pavilhão do Maxaquene in Maputo.
Mali defeated Mozambique 49–47 in the final to win their first title. [1] and securing a spot at the 2007 U-21 Women's World Cup.
December 2 18:00 |
Senegal | 45–46 | Angola |
Scoring by quarter:21-10, 4-13, 9-7, 11-16 | ||
Pts: Sène 18 Rebs: Sarr 14 Asts: Diata 3 | Pts: C.Eusébio 16 Rebs: Nadir 10 Asts: C.Eusébio 3 |
December 2 20:45 |
Mozambique | 55–49 | South Africa |
Scoring by quarter:20-9, 12-11, 17-9, 6-20 | ||
Pts: A.Cossa 15 Rebs: Nádia 10 Asts: A.Cossa 5 | Pts: Ngcongo 9 Rebs: Mocholo 7 Asts: Moutlwatse 4 |
December 3 18:30 |
Mali | 57–49 | Angola |
Scoring by quarter:20-19, 13-7, 12-7, 12-16 | ||
Pts: Bagayoko 16 Rebs: N.Coulibaly 11 Asts: M.Traore 3 | Pts: C.Eusébio 12 Rebs: Nadir 11 Asts: Madalena 2 |
December 3 20:45 |
Mozambique | 58–55 | Senegal |
Scoring by quarter:17-16, 12-8, 16-24, 13-7 | ||
Pts: Gimo 19 Rebs: Gimo, Mafanela 8 Asts: A.Cossa 4 | Pts: Sène, S.Sy 14 Rebs: Diata 10 Asts: Sène 4 |
December 4 18:30 |
South Africa | 30–74 | Senegal |
Scoring by quarter: 5-29, 12-11, 11-19, 2-15 | ||
Pts: Moutlwatse 14 Rebs: Johnson, Mabuya 6 Asts: Johnson 2 | Pts: Diata, Sarr 15 Rebs: Sarr 11 Asts: Diame 4 |
December 4 20:45 |
Mali | 44–48 | Mozambique |
Scoring by quarter:14-11, 10-11, 12-18, 8-8 | ||
Pts: Toure 17 Rebs: N.Coulibaly 11 Asts: M.Traore, Goita 2 | Pts: Gimo 13 Rebs: Gimo 7 Asts: Gimo 3 |
December 5 18:30 |
South Africa | 50–58 | Mali |
Scoring by quarter: 9-12, 10-17, 10-15, 21-14 | ||
Pts: Mfamadi 17 Rebs: Mfamadi 7 Asts: Moutlwatse 3 | Pts: Bagayoko 16 Rebs: N.Coulibaly 17 Asts: Toure 2 |
December 5 20:45 |
Angola | 41–52 | Mozambique |
Scoring by quarter: 6-15, 14-12, 8-15, 13-10 | ||
Pts: Etelvina 9 Rebs: Nadir 8 Asts: Eva 2 | Pts: Gimo 12 Rebs: Vaneza 10 Asts: A.Cossa 5 |
Semi-finals | Final | |||||
December 8–20:45 | ||||||
Mozambique | 57 | |||||
December 9–20:45 | ||||||
South Africa | 48 | |||||
Mozambique | 47 | |||||
December 8–18:30 | ||||||
Mali | 49 | |||||
Mali | 72 | |||||
Senegal | 57 | |||||
Third place | ||||||
December 9–18:30 | ||||||
South Africa | 37 | |||||
Senegal | 80 |
December 8 18:30 |
Mali | 83–37 | Senegal |
Scoring by quarter:13-7, 20-12, 14-16, 25-22 | ||
Pts: N.Coulibaly 19 Rebs: N.Coulibaly 16 Asts: Toure 5 | Pts: Diame 17 Rebs: S.Sy 9 Asts: Diame 3 |
December 8 20:45 |
Mozambique | 57–48 | South Africa |
Scoring by quarter: 12-13, 16-10, 12-12, 17-13 | ||
Pts: A.Cossa 12 Rebs: Gimo 16 Asts: Vaneza 6 | Pts: Mfamadi 16 Rebs: Khoabane 12 Asts: Moutlwatse 3 |
December 9 18:30 |
South Africa | 37–80 | Senegal |
Scoring by quarter: 5-15, 16-23, 7-13, 9-29 | ||
Pts: Kermis 13 Rebs: Kermis, Mfamadi 3 Asts: Mfamadi 2 | Pts: S.Sy 19 Rebs: Sarr 9 Asts: Diame, Diata 4 |
December 9 20:45 |
Mozambique | 47–49 | Mali |
Scoring by quarter: 10-13, 10-12, 12-15, 15-9 | ||
Pts: A.Cossa 14 Rebs: Gimo 11 Asts: A.Cossa 3 | Pts: N.Coulibaly 12 Rebs: N.Coulibaly 21 Asts:four players 1 |
Qualified for the 2007 U-17 Women's World Cup |
Rank | Team | Record |
---|---|---|
Mali | 4–2 | |
Mozambique | 5–1 | |
Senegal | 3–3 | |
4 | South Africa | 1–5 |
5 | Angola | 1–3 |
2006 FIBA Africa U20 Championship for Women winners |
---|
Mali First title |
Most Valuable Player |
---|
Anabela Cossa |
Points
| Rebounds
| Assists
|
Steals
| Blocks
| Minutes
|
Department | Name | Total | Opponent |
---|---|---|---|
Points | Takalani Mfamadi | 23 | Angola |
Rebounds | Naignouma Coulibaly | 21 | Mozambique |
Assists | Vaneza Júnior | 6 | South Africa |
Steals | Takalani Mfamadi | 7 | Angola |
Blocks | seven players | 7 | |
2-point field goal percentage | Naignouma Coulibaly | 85.7% (6/7) | Mozambique |
3-point field goal percentage | three players | 100% (2/2) | |
Free throw percentage | Deolinda Gimo | 100% (6/6) | Angola |
Turnovers | Nene Diame | 9 | South Africa |
Points per Game
| Total Points
| Rebounds
|
Assists
| Steals
| Blocks
|
2-point field goal percentage
| 3-point field goal percentage
| Free throw percentage
|
Department | Name | Total | Opponent |
---|---|---|---|
Points | Senegal | 80 | South Africa |
Rebounds | Angola | 60 | Senegal |
Assists | Mozambique | 15 | South Africa |
Steals | South Africa | 20 | Angola |
Blocks | South Africa | 4 | Angola |
2-point field goal percentage | Senegal | 71.4% (25/35) | Mali |
3-point field goal percentage | Angola | 41.7% (5/12) | South Africa |
Free throw percentage | South Africa | 73.3% (11/15) | Senegal |
Turnovers | Angola | 32 | South Africa |
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 four times in a row and six times in total. They won in 2017 at Bamako, Mali, 2019 at Dakar, Senegal, 2021 at Yaounde, Cameroun, and 2023 at Kigali, Rwanda.
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.
AfroBasket 2009 was the 25th FIBA Africa Championship, played under the auspices of the Fédération Internationale de Basketball, the basketball sport governing body, and the African zone thereof. At stake were the three berths allocated to Africa in the 2010 FIBA World Championship. The tournament was hosted by Libya after Nigeria, the original host, withdrew from hosting after not conforming to FIBA Africa guidelines.
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.
The 2013 FIBA Africa Championship Qualification occurred on various dates between 8 July 2012 and 23 February 2013. It was used to determine which African national basketball teams would qualify for the 2013 FIBA Africa Championship. Teams competed with other teams in their respective "zones" for a spot in the Championship tournament.
The FIBA U18 Women's AfroBasket, previously known as the FIBA U18 Women's African Championship, is a biennial international youth basketball competition consisting of under-18 national teams organised by FIBA Africa.
The 2011 FIBA Africa Under-16 Championship for Women was the 2nd U-16 FIBA Africa championship, played under the auspices of the Fédération Internationale de Basketball, the basketball sport governing body and qualified for the 2012 World Cup. The tournament was held from July 22–30 in Alexandria, Egypt, contested by 6 national teams and won by Mali.
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 2013 FIBA Africa Under-16 Championship for Women was the 3rd 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 October 5 to 12, with the games played at the Pavilhão do Maxaquene in Maputo.
This article displays the rosters for the participating teams at the 2006 FIBA Africa Under-20 Championship for Women.
The 2010 FIBA Africa Under-18 Championship for Women was the 10th FIBA Africa Under-18 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 Egypt and ran from July 29 to August 6.
The 2008 FIBA Africa Under-18 Championship for Women was the 9th FIBA Africa Under-18 Championship for Women, organized by FIBA Africa and played under the auspices of the Fédération Internationale de Basketball, the basketball sport governing body and the African zone thereof and qualified for the 2009 World Cup. The tournament was held from October 3–12 in Rades and Ezzahra, Tunisia and won by Mali.
The 2006 FIBA Africa Under-18 Championship for Women was the 8th FIBA Africa Under-18 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 Benin from 8 to 16 September 2006.
The 1996 FIBA Africa Under-18 Championship for Women was the 4th FIBA Africa Under-18 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 September 25 to 28, 1996.
The 2014 FIBA Africa Under-18 Championship for Women was the 12th FIBA Africa U18 women's championship, played under the auspices of the Fédération Internationale de Basketball, the world basketball sport governing body. The tournament was held from September 19–28 in Cairo, Egypt, contested by 8 national teams and won by Mali.
The 2015 FIBA Africa Under-16 Championship for Women was the 4th 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 Madagascar from July 11 to 19, with the games played at the Palais des Sports Mahamasina in Antananarivo.
The 2017 FIBA Women's AfroBasket was the 23rd AfroBasket Women, played under the rules of FIBA, the world governing body for basketball, and FIBA Africa. The tournament was hosted by Mali from 18 to 27 August 2017, with games played in Bamako. The winners and runners-up qualified for the 2018 FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup.
The 2017 FIBA U16 Women's African Championship was the 5th FIBA U16 Women's African Championship, played under the rules of FIBA, the world governing body for basketball, and the FIBA Africa thereof. The tournament was hosted by Mozambique from 5 to 12 August 2017, with the games played in Beira.
Siriman Kanouté is a Malian professional basketball player. He has starred for the Malian national junior teams on several occasions and trains with French club SLUC Nancy Basket.