Bosnia and Herzegovina national basketball team

Bosnia and Herzegovina national basketball team

Infobox national basketball team
country=Bosnia and Herzegovina
country_alt=Босна и Херцеговина| color1=161796
color2=FFCD00
nickname=Plavo Žuti, Žuto Plavi| fiba_zone=FIBA Europe
national_fed=Basketball Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
coach=Mensur Bajramović
joined_fiba=1992
fiba_ranking=38th
oly_appearances=None
oly_medals=For achievements before 1992 see Yugoslavia national basketball team

wc_appearances=None
wc_medals=For achievements before 1992 see Yugoslavia national basketball team
zone_championship=European Championships
zone_appearances=6
zone_medals=None
"(Best Finish - 8th, 1993)"
h_pattern_b=|h_body=|h_shorts=|h_pattern_s=
a_pattern_b=|a_body=|a_shorts=|a_pattern_s=
The Bosnia and Herzegovina national basketball team represents Bosnia and Herzegovina in international basketball matches and competitions.

History

Bosnia and Herzegovina was part of Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia until 1992, therefore players born in Bosnia and Herzegovina played for the Yugoslav national basketball team. Notable players who played for Yugoslavia include Predrag Danilović, Zoran Savić, Aleksandar Nikolić, Borislav Stanković, Dražen Dalipagić and Mirza Delibašić. Most of these players are widely considered to be some of the best ever to emerge from the former Yugoslavia.

Current Squad

National Coach: *Mensur Bajramović

Rosters

1993 EuroBasket: finished 8th among 16 teams

Sabahudin "Dino" Bilalović, Emir Mutapčić, Gordan Firić, Adis Bećiragić, Samir Avdić, Mario Primorac, Emir Halimić, Samir Selešković, Senad Begović, Ilijaš Masnić (Coach: Ibrahim Krehić)

1997 EuroBasket: finished 15th among 16 teams

Nenad Marković, Gordan Firić, Adis Bećiragić, Samir Avdić, Elvir Ovčina, Dževad Alihodžić, Haris Mujezinović, Samir Selešković, Sejo Bukva, Adnan Hodžić, Samir Lerić, Azur Korlatović (Coach: Sabit Hadžić)

1999 EuroBasket: finished 15th among 16 teams

Nenad Marković, Gordan Firić, Adis Bećiragić, Haris Mujezinović, Jasmin Hukić, Dževad Alihodžić, Elvir Ovčina, Samir Lerić, Abdurahman Kahrimanović, Damir Mirković, Tarik Valjevac, Ivan Opačak (Coach: Sabit Hadžić)

2001 EuroBasket: finished 15th among 16 teams

Damir Mršić, Nenad Marković, Gordan Firić, Haris Mujezinović, Elvir Ovčina, Jasmin Hukić, Samir Lerić, Bariša Krasić, Siniša Kovačević, Goran Terzić, Ivan Opačak, Ramiz Suljanović (Coach: Sabit Hadžić)

2003 EuroBasket: finished 15th among 16 teams

Damir Mršić, Terrell Castle, Haris Mujezinović, Kenan Bajramović, Jasmin Hukić, Elvir Ovčina, Mirza Teletović, Damir Krupalija, Bariša Krasić, Samir Lerić, Siniša Kovačević, Želimir Stevanović (Coach: Draško Prodanović)

2005 EuroBasket: finished 15th among 16 teams

Henry Domercant, Damir Mršić, Aleksandar Radojević, Kenan Bajramović, Mirza Teletović, Jasmin Hukić, Elvir Ovčina, Edin Bavčić, Siniša Kovačević, Samir Lerić, Mujo Tuljković, Vedran Princ (Coach: Mensur Bajramović)

2007 EuroBasket: did not qualify

External links

* [http://www.basket.ba/ Basketball Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Bosnia and Herzegovina — Bosnia redirects here. For other uses, see Bosnia (disambiguation). Not to be confused with Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina or Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosna i Hercegovina Босна и Херцеговина …   Wikipedia

  • List of Bosnia and Herzegovina-related topics — This is a list of topics related to Bosnia and Herzegovina. Those interested in the subject can monitor changes to the pages by clicking on Related changes in the sidebar.Bosnia and Herzegovina* Bosnia and Herzegovina * Republika Srpska*… …   Wikipedia

  • Yugoslavia national basketball team — represented the Kingdom and socialist Yugoslavia. It was administrated by Košarkaški savez Jugoslavije. The seat of the governing body was in Belgrade. After the dissolution of Yugoslavia in 1990s, national teams of Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and… …   Wikipedia

  • Basketball Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina — (Bosnian and Croatian: Košarkaški savez Bosne i Hercegovine , Serbian: Кошаркашки савез Босне и Херцеговине ) is the highest basketball governing body in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It organizes the Bosnian Basketball Championship and the Bosnian Cup …   Wikipedia

  • Culture of Bosnia and Herzegovina — This article is part of the series: Bosnia and Herzegovina History Politics Political parties President Chairman: Željko Komšić Nebojša Radmanović …   Wikipedia

  • Handball Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina — (Bosnian, Croatian: Rukometni savez Bosne i Hercegovine , Serbian: Рукометни савез Босне и Херцеговине ) is the highest handball governing body in the country. It organizes the Premier league of Bosnia Herzegovina and Cup of Bosnia Herzegovina.… …   Wikipedia

  • Bosnia and Herzegovina — a republic in S Europe: formerly (1945 92) a constituent republic of Yugoslavia. 2,607,734; 19,909 sq. mi. (51,565 sq. km). Cap.: Sarajevo. * * * Bosnia and Herzegovina Introduction Bosnia and Herzegovina Background: Bosnia and Herzegovina s… …   Universalium

  • Montenegro women's national basketball team — Montenegro Montenegro FIBA Ranking FIBA Zone FIBA Europe Coach …   Wikipedia

  • Croatia women's national basketball team — Croatia FIBA ranking 54th FIBA zone FIBA Europe Coach Stipe Bralić …   Wikipedia

  • Netherlands national basketball team — Netherlands Nederland FIBA Ranking …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”