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Wheelchair Basketball World Championship

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Wheelchair Basketball World Championship
SportWheelchair basketball
Founded1973 M / 1990 W
CountryIWBF members
ContinentIWBF (International)

The IWBF World Wheelchair Basketball Championship (World Championships from 1973 to 2002 (2006) known as Gold Cup) is an international wheelchair basketball competition contested by the men's and the women's national teams of the members of the International Wheelchair Basketball Federation (IWBF), the sport's global governing body.

The first unofficial Wheelchair Basketball World Championships for men was held in 1973,[1] with Bruges, Belgium being the first host city. The unofficial world championship for men was won by Great Britain, with a team that included Philip Craven,[2] who would later become the President of the International Paralympic Committee (IPC). Bruges, Belgium also hosted the first official World Championships, known as the Gold Cup tournament, in 1975.

The men's world championships has been won 7 times by the United States, twice each by Australia and Great Britain (one of which being the unofficial Championship in 1973), and once each by Israel, France and Canada. Wheelchair basketball world championships for women have been held since 1990. In the first 6 women's world championships, Canada has won four world titles, and the United States two world titles.

Winners

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Number Year Host Men Women
1 1973* Bruges (Belgium)  Great Britain
2 1975 Bruges (Belgium)  Israel
3 1979 Tampa (United States)  United States
4 1983 Halifax (Canada)  United States
5 1986 Melbourne (Australia)  United States
6 1990 Bruges (Belgium)  France
Saint-Étienne (France)  United States
7 1994[3] Edmonton (Canada)  United States
Stoke Mandeville (Great Britain)  Canada
8 1998[3] Sydney (Australia)  United States  Canada
9 2002[3] Kitakyushu (Japan)  United States  Canada
10 2006[3] Amsterdam (Netherlands)  Canada  Canada
11 2010[3] Birmingham (United Kingdom)  Australia  United States
12 2014 [4][5] Incheon (South Korea)  Australia
Toronto (Canada)  Canada
13 2018 Hamburg (Germany)  Great Britain  Netherlands
14 2022 Dubai (United Arab Emirates)  United States  Netherlands
15 2026 Ottawa (Canada)

* Unofficial Championship

Results

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Men

[edit]
Year Dates Host (final location) Gold medal game Bronze medal game
Gold Score Silver Bronze Score Fourth place
1973*
Details
Belgium (Bruges)
Great Britain
50–37
France

Netherlands

Germany
1975
Details
28-31 July
16 Sept (Finals)
Belgium (Bruges)
Israel
50–47
United States

Great Britain

Netherlands
1979
Details
9-13 May United States (Tampa)
United States
60–49
Netherlands

France

Israel
1983
Details
23-28 May Canada (Halifax)
United States
86–67
France

Sweden

Israel
1986
Details
6-12 April Australia (Melbourne)
United States
61–40
Canada

Netherlands

France
1990[6]
Details
5-10 August Belgium (Bruges)
France
62–61
United States

Canada

Netherlands
1994[3]
Details
21-30 July Canada (Edmonton)
United States
67–53
Great Britain

Canada
72–62
France
1998[3]
Details
23-30 October Australia (Sydney)
United States
61–59
Netherlands

Canada
63–56
Australia
2002[3]
Details
23-31 August Japan (Kitakyushu)
United States
64–55
Great Britain

Canada
58–47
Australia
2006[3]
Details
6-15 July Netherlands (Amsterdam)
Canada
59–41
United States

Australia
80–53
Netherlands
2010[3]
Details
7-17 July Great Britain (Birmingham)
Australia
79–69
France

United States
71–42
Italy
2014
Details
5-14 July South Korea (Incheon)
Australia
63–57
United States

Turkey
68–63
Spain
2018
Details
16-26 August Germany (Hamburg)
Great Britain
79–62
United States

Australia
68–57
Iran
2022
Details
9–20 June 2023 United Arab Emirates (Dubai)
United States
67–66
Great Britain

Iran
72–54
Netherlands
2026
Details
9–19 September Canada (Ottawa)

* Unofficial Championship

Women

[edit]
Year Dates Host (final location) Gold medal game Bronze medal game
Gold Score Silver Bronze Score Fourth place
1990[6]
Details
5-11 July France (Saint-Étienne)
United States
58–55
Germany

Canada

Netherlands
1994[3]
Details
6-13 August Great Britain (Stoke Mandeville)
Canada
45–34
United States

Australia
38–36
Netherlands
1998[3]
Details
26-30 Oct Australia (Sydney)
Canada
54–38
United States

Australia
40–35
Japan
2002[3]
Details
26-31 August Japan (Kitakyushu)
Canada
51–46
United States

Australia
43–39
Japan
2006[3]
Details
8-14 July Netherlands (Amsterdam)
Canada
58–50
United States

Germany
52–48
Australia
2010[3]
Details
7-16 July Great Britain (Birmingham)
United States
55–53
Germany

Canada
59–49
Australia
2014[7]
Details
20-28 July Canada (Toronto)
Canada
54–50
Germany

Netherlands
74–58
United States
2018
Details
16-26 August Germany (Hamburg)
Netherlands
56–40
Great Britain

Germany
44–43
China
2022
Details
9–20 June 2023 United Arab Emirates (Dubai)
Netherlands
57–34
China

United States
57–42
Germany
2026
Details
9–19 September Canada (Ottawa)

Medals

[edit]

Men (1973-2022)

[edit]
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 United States75113
2 Great Britain2316
3 Australia2024
4 France1315
5 Canada1146
6 Israel1001
7 Netherlands0224
8 Iran0011
 Sweden0011
 Turkey0011
Totals (10 entries)14141442

Women (1990-2022)

[edit]
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Canada5027
2 United States2417
3 Netherlands2013
4 Germany0325
5 China0101
 Great Britain0101
7 Australia0033
Totals (7 entries)99927

Nations

[edit]

Men

[edit]
Year 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th 13th 14th 15th 16th
1973 GBR FRA NED GER BEL SWE ESP  SUI
1975 ISR USA GBR NED SWE ITA CAN GER BEL  SUI POL
1979 USA NED FRA ISR CAN SWE ESP GBR BEL
1983 USA FRA SWE ISR NED CAN GER GBR JPN BEL AUS
1986 USA CAN NED FRA ISR SWE YUG ITA GER AUS GBR
1990 FRA USA CAN NED AUS GER JPN SWE BEL ITA AUT GBR
1994 USA GBR CAN FRA NED AUS ESP SWE GER ARG JPN ISR
1998 USA NED CAN AUS GBR ESP FRA FIN JPN MEX KOR EGY
2002 USA GBR CAN AUS GER FRA NED JPN ISR BRA KOR RSA
2006 CAN USA AUS NED GBR SWE JPN ITA BRA ISR FRA RSA
2010 AUS FRA USA ITA GBR POL CAN TUR MEX JPN KOR ALG
2014 AUS USA TUR ESP ITA KOR GBR IRI JPN COL GER ARG SWE MEX NED ALG
2018 GBR USA AUS IRI ESP POL ARG TUR JPN NED ITA CAN GER KOR BRA MAR
2022 USA GBR IRI NED ITA CAN AUS GER FRA BRA ARG THA KOR EGY IRQ UAE

Women

[edit]
Year 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th
1990 USA GER CAN NED FRA AUS GBR ESP
1994 CAN USA AUS NED GER GBR JPN FRA ISR ESP
1998 CAN USA AUS JPN GER NED GBR MEX
2002 CAN USA AUS JPN MEX NED GER GBR
2006 CAN USA GER AUS NED JPN MEX FRA
2010 USA GER CAN AUS NED GBR JPN CHN MEX BRA
2014 CAN GER NED USA GBR AUS CHN FRA JPN MEX BRA PER
2018 NED GBR GER CHN CAN USA ESP FRA AUS BRA ARG ALG
2022 NED CHN USA GER CAN AUS JPN ESP GBR BRA THA ALG

Events

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ History of the Game Archived April 30, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, International Wheelchair Basketball Federation (IWBF)
  2. ^ Sir Philip CRAVEN, MBE, Official website of the Olympic Movement
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "World Championships - Results". International Wheelchair Basketball Federation. Archived from the original on 2014-07-09.
  4. ^ "2014 Incheon World Wheelchair Basketball Championship > Schedule & Result". 2014 Incheon World Wheelchair Basketball Championship Organizing Committee. Archived from the original on 2014-07-14. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
  5. ^ "2014 Women's World Wheelchair Basketball Championship - Schedule & Results". Wheelchair Basketball Canada. Archived from the original on 17 August 2014. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
  6. ^ a b Armand Thiboutot, Philip Craven (1996). The 50th Anniversary of Wheelchair Basketball: A History. Waxmann Verlag. p. 80. ISBN 3830954417.
  7. ^ "Schedule & Results - 2014 WWWBC". Wheelchair Basketball Canada. Archived from the original on 17 August 2014. Retrieved 28 June 2014.
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