![]() | |
FIBA ranking | N/A |
---|---|
Joined FIBA | N/A |
FIBA zone | N/A |
National federation | Korea Basketball Association / Amateur Basketball Association of DPR of Korea |
Coach | Lee Moon-kyu |
Olympic Games | |
Appearances | None |
World Cup | |
Appearances | None |
Asian Games | |
Appearances | 1 |
Medals | ![]() |
First international | |
![]() ![]() (Jakarta, Indonesia; 15 August 2018) | |
Biggest win | |
![]() ![]() (Jakarta, Indonesia; 15 August 2018) | |
Biggest defeat | |
![]() ![]() (Jakarta, Indonesia; 1 September 2018) |
The Korea women's national basketball team is a combined representative team composed of players from both South Korea and North Korea. The team competed in the 2018 Asian Games in Indonesia.
The team competed in the 2018 Asian Games. [1] South Korea and North Korea will compete as one in select events in the Asian Games. The composition of the 12-player team roster will be largely South Korean with 3 players being North Korean. [2] The team will be led by South Korea's head coach Lee Moon-kyu. [3]
South Korea and North Korea held exhibition games in men's and women's basketball at the Ryugyong Jong Ju Yong Gymnasium in the latter's capital of Pyongyang in July 2018. [4] Two of the games featured mixed-teams with players from both countries; Team Prosperity and Team Peace while the other two games featured the national teams of both countries. [5] Head coach Lee Moon-kyu used the exhibition matches by the women's teams to scout for possible North Korean players who may be included in the unified Korea team. [6]
In the group stage of the women's basketball competition, the unified Korea was drawn in Group X with Kazakhstan, Indonesia and India. [6]
In April 2019, the FIBA Central Board approved their participation "in principle" at the 2019 FIBA Women's Asia Cup. [7] However such plan did not materialize with the Korean peninsula represented solely by South Korea in the tournament.
The unified Korean team had a local Korean manufacturer as their kit supplier instead of the Nike, the kit-supplier of the South Korea women's national team to avoid violating sanctions imposed on North Korea banning the importation of luxury goods including sports equipment. [8]
The Korean Unification Flag, also known as the Flag of the Korean Peninsula, is a flag used to represent all of Korea. When North Korea and South Korea participate as one team at international sporting events, the flag is carried by the unified team. It was introduced at the 1990 Asian Games but not used by a unified team until the 1991 World Table Tennis Championships. It is a white field charged with a sky blue silhouette of the Korean Peninsula, Jeju Island, and Ulleungdo. The flag's depiction of Korean territorial claims has earned it the chagrin of Japan, which claims the Liancourt Rocks. The disputed islets were added to the flag in 2003 but removed in 2018 upon the request of the International Olympic Committee (IOC). Outside of sports, the flag has been used, particularly in North Korea, to express support for Korean reunification.
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