2001 Tournament of the Americas

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FIBA Americas Championship 2001
10th FIBA American Basketball Championship
Tournament details
Host nation Argentina
Dates 16–26 August
Teams 10 (from 43 federations)
Venues (in 1 host city)
Champions  Argentina (1st title)
MVP Argentina Manu Ginóbili
1999
2003 >

The 2001 COPABA Tournament of the Americas, known now as the FIBA Americas Championship (or as well Championship of the Americas for Men) was hosted by Argentina from 16 August to 26 August 2001. The games were played at the Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén. This COPABA championship was to earn berths at the 2002 FIBA World Championship in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States. Argentina won the tournament, the country's first Americas championship.

Venue

Neuquén
2001 Tournament of the Americas is located in Argentina
Neuquén
Neuquén
2001 Tournament of the Americas (Argentina)
Estadio Ruca Che
Capacity: 8,000

Qualification

Eight teams qualified during the qualification tournaments held in their respective zones in 2001; two teams (USA and Canada) qualified automatically since they are the only members of the North America zone.

The draw split the tournament into two groups:

Format

  • The top four teams from each group advance to the quarterfinals.
  • Results and standings among teams within the same group are carried over.
  • The top four teams at the quarterfinals advance to the semifinals (1 vs. 4, 2 vs. 3).
  • The top five teams from the quarterfinals stage where granted berths in the 2002 FIBA World Championship in Indianapolis. Since the United States were already qualified as Olympic Champions, should they reach the semifinals stage, the sixth best team from the quarterfinals also qualified to the World Championship.
  • The winners in the knockout semifinals advance to the Final. The losers figure in a third-place playoff.

Squads

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Preliminary round

Qualified for the quarterfinals

Group A

Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts
 Puerto Rico 4 4 0 427 368 +59 8
 Canada 4 3 1 399 372 +27 7
 Panama 4 2 2 361 400 −39 6
 U.S. Virgin Islands 4 1 3 362 364 −2 5
 Mexico 4 0 4 362 407 −45 4
16 August
 Canada 108–97 (OT)  U.S. Virgin Islands
16 August
 Puerto Rico 117–80  Panama
17 August
 Mexico 106–109  Panama
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
17 August
 Puerto Rico 101–98  Canada
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
18 August
 Panama 90–88  U.S. Virgin Islands
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
18 August
 Mexico 97–110  Puerto Rico
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
19 August
 Panama 82–89  Canada
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
19 August
 U.S. Virgin Islands 84–67  Mexico
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
20 August
 Canada 104–92  Mexico
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
20 August
 U.S. Virgin Islands 93–99  Puerto Rico
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén

Group B

Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts
 Argentina 4 4 0 409 303 +106 8
 Brazil 4 3 1 396 342 +54 7
 Venezuela 4 2 2 360 346 +14 6
 Uruguay 4 1 3 315 377 −62 5
 United States 4 0 4 323 435 −112 4
16 August
 United States 78–116  Brazil
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
16 August
 Argentina 103–63  Uruguay
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
17 August
 Brazil 92–89  Venezuela
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
17 August
 Argentina 108–69  United States
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
18 August
 Venezuela 107–83  United States
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
18 August
 Uruguay 67–90  Brazil
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
19 August
 United States 93–104  Uruguay
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
19 August
 Argentina 90–73  Venezuela
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
20 August
 Uruguay 81–91  Venezuela
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
20 August
 Argentina 108–98 (OT)  Brazil
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén

Quarterfinal Group

Qualified for the semifinals
Fifth place

The top four teams in both Group A and Group B advanced to the quarterfinal group. Then, each team played the four from the other group once to complete a full round robin. However, the game between Argentina and Panama and the game between Puerto Rico and Venezuela were cancelled as Tropical Storm Dean hit Puerto Rico. Thus, the standings did not reflect the order of points earned by the teams. Records from the preliminary groups carried over.

Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Tie
 Argentina 7 7 0 687 526 +161 14  
 Brazil 8 6 2 759 665 +94 14  
 Puerto Rico 7 5 2 670 622 +48 12  
 Canada 8 5 3 753 712 +41 13  
 Venezuela 7 4 3 657 621 +36 11 1–0
 Panama 7 4 3 656 674 −18 11 0–1
 U.S. Virgin Islands 8 2 6 696 746 −50 10  
 Uruguay 8 1 7 627 782 −155 9  
21 August
 Canada 108–100  Venezuela
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
21 August
 Brazil 94–102  Panama
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
21 August
 Puerto Rico 90–70  Uruguay
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
21 August
 Argentina 98–77  U.S. Virgin Islands
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
22 August
 Uruguay 77–101  Canada
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
22 August
 U.S. Virgin Islands 69–102  Brazil
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
24 August
 Venezuela 91–75  U.S. Virgin Islands
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
24 August
 Panama 101–74  Uruguay
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
24 August
 Brazil 89–83 (OT)  Puerto Rico
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
24 August
 Argentina 85–76  Canada
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
25 August
 U.S. Virgin Islands 113–91  Uruguay
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
25 August
 Panama 92–106  Venezuela
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
25 August
 Canada 69–78  Brazil
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén
25 August
 Argentina 95–70  Puerto Rico
Estadio Ruca Che, Neuquén

Knockout stage

Semi-finals Final
26 August
 Brazil Brazil  98  
 Puerto Rico Puerto Rico  94  
 
26 August
     Brazil Brazil  59
   Argentina Argentina  78
Third place
26 August 26 August
 Argentina Argentina  97  Puerto Rico Puerto Rico  95
 Canada Canada  76    Canada Canada  102

Awards

 2001 Tournament of the Americas Winners 

Argentina
First title
Most Valuable Player
Argentina Manu Ginóbili

Final standings

Qualified for the 2002 FIBA World Championship
Qualified for the 2002 FIBA World Championship as Olympic Champions and hosts
Rank Team Record
1st  Argentina 9–0
2nd  Brazil 7–3
3rd  Canada 6–4
4  Puerto Rico 5–4
5  Venezuela 4–3
6  Panama 4–3
7  U.S. Virgin Islands 2–6
8  Uruguay 1–7
9  Mexico 0–4
10  United States 0–4
1st
2nd
3rd
 Argentina
Juan Ignacio Sánchez
Gabriel Fernández
Manu Ginóbili
Fabricio Oberto
Lucas Victoriano
Daniel Farabello
Hugo Sconochini
Luis Scola
Leonardo Gutiérrez
Andrés Nocioni
Leandro Palladino
Rubén Wolkowyski
 Brazil
Marcelinho Machado
Alex Garcia
Vanderlei Mazzuchini
Tiago Valentim de Lima
Sandro França Varejão
Demétrius Ferraciú
Hélio Rubens Filho
Estevam Ferreira
Guilherme Giovannoni
Nenê
Anderson Varejão
Márcio Dornelles
 Canada
David Daniels
Sherman Hamilton
Dean Walker
Steve Nash
Shawn Swords
Prosper Karangwa
Jerome Robinson
Todd MacCulloch
Andrew Kwiatkowski
Peter Guarasci
Michael Meeks
Kevin Jobity

External links