2020 FIBA Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournaments – Belgrade 2

The 2020 FIBA Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament in Foshan/Belgrade was one of four 2020 FIBA Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournaments. The tournament was planned to be held in Foshan, China, from 6 to 9 February 2020.[1][2] The tournament was played in Belgrade, Serbia due to concerns about the coronavirus pandemic.[3]

2020 FIBA World Olympic
Qualifying Tournament for Women
Belgrade, Serbia
Tournament details
Host nation Serbia
Dates6–9 February
Teams4 
(from 2 federations)
Venues1 
(in 1 host city)
Champions China
MVP Li Meng
Tournament leaders
PlayersTeams
Points Fagbenle (25.0)  China (83.3)
Rebounds Li Y. (8.0)  China (44.3)
Assists Leedham (7.3)  Spain (23.0)
Official website

China, Spain and South Korea qualified for the Olympics.[4][5]

Teams

TeamQualificationDate of qualificationFIBA World Ranking
 China1st at the Asia/Oceania Pre-Qualifying Tournaments–Group A17 November 20198th
 Spain1st at the EuroBasket Women 20194 July 20193rd
 Great Britain4th at the EuroBasket Women 20194 July 201918th
 South Korea2nd at the Asia/Oceania Pre-Qualifying Tournaments–Group A17 November 201919th

Venue

Belgrade
Belgrade
2020 FIBA Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournaments – Belgrade 2 (Serbia)
Aleksandar Nikolić Hall
Capacity: 8,000

Squads

Standings

Pos Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1  China 3 3 0 250 198 +52 6 Summer Olympics
2  Spain 3 2 1 224 179 +45 5
3  South Korea 3 1 2 188 262 74 4
4  Great Britain 3 0 3 224 247 23 3
Source: FIBA
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Head-to-head results; 3) Points difference; 4) Points scored.

Results

All times are local (UTC+1).

6 February 2020
12:00
China  8676  Great Britain
Scoring by quarter: 21–26, 22–20, 22–13, 21–17
Pts: three players 16
Rebs: Han, Wang 5
Asts: Shao 4
Pts: Fagbenle 26
Rebs: Leedham 5
Asts: Leedham 6
Aleksandar Nikolić Hall, Belgrade
Referees: Grant Todey (USA), Natalia Cuello (DOM), Julio Anaya (PAN)
6 February 2020
14:30
South Korea  4683  Spain
Scoring by quarter: 16–19, 9–24, 7–20, 14–20
Pts: Park H. 17
Rebs: Kim H. 6
Asts: Bae, Park H. 3
Pts: Rodríguez 14
Rebs: Ouviña 7
Asts: Domínguez 6
Aleksandar Nikolić Hall, Belgrade
Referees: Rabah Noujaim (LIB), Andrei Sharapa (BLR), Özlem Yalman (TUR)

8 February 2020
12:00
Spain  6264  China
Scoring by quarter: 15–12, 6–22, 17–18, 24–12
Pts: Torrens 17
Rebs: Nicholls 12
Asts: Palau 8
Pts: Li M., Li Y. 13
Rebs: Li Y. 15
Asts: Li M. 4
Aleksandar Nikolić Hall, Belgrade
Referees: Julio Anaya (PAN), Natalia Cuello (DOM), Arnaud Kom Njilo (CMR)
8 February 2020
14:30
Great Britain  7982  South Korea
Scoring by quarter: 19–25, 18–20, 17–25, 25–12
Pts: Fagbenle 28
Rebs: Samuelson 9
Asts: Leedham 10
Pts: Kang 26
Rebs: Park J. 9
Asts: Kim D., Park H. 6
Aleksandar Nikolić Hall, Belgrade
Referees: Rabah Noujaim (LIB), Grant Todey (USA), Andrei Sharapa (BLR)

9 February 2020
12:00
South Korea  60100  China
Scoring by quarter: 13–19, 11–28, 20–24, 16–29
Pts: Kang 17
Rebs: Kim H. 10
Asts: Park H. 5
Pts: Li M. 20
Rebs: Han 8
Asts: Yang 6
Aleksandar Nikolić Hall, Belgrade
Referees: Grant Todey (USA), Julio Anaya (PAN), Özlem Yalman (TUR)
9 February 2020
14:30
Great Britain  6979  Spain
Scoring by quarter: 16–18, 14–22, 19–20, 20–19
Pts: Fagbenle 21
Rebs: Leedham 12
Asts: Leedham 6
Pts: Conde 15
Rebs: Gil 7
Asts: Palau 8
Aleksandar Nikolić Hall, Belgrade
Referees: Rabah Noujaim (LIB), Andrei Sharapa (BLR), Arnaud Kom Njilo (CMR)

Statistics and awards

Statistical leaders

Players[6]

Teams[7]

Awards

The all star-teams and MVP were announced on 9 February 2020.[8]

All-Star Team
Guards Forwards Center
Park Hye-jin
Li Meng
Alba Torrens
Temi Fagbenle
Han Xu
MVP: Li Meng

References

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