Croatia men's national basketball team

The Croatia men's national basketball team (Croatian: Hrvatska košarkaška reprezentacija)[3] represents Croatia in international basketball matches. The team is controlled by the Croatian Basketball Federation (HKS).[4]

Croatia
FIBA ranking21 (1 March 2022)[1]
Joined FIBA1992
FIBA zoneFIBA Europe
National federationHKS
CoachDamir Mulaomerović
Nickname(s)Kockasti
(The Chequered Ones)
Olympic Games
Appearances4
Medals Silver: (1992)
FIBA World Cup
Appearances3
Medals Bronze: (1994)
EuroBasket
Appearances13
Medals Bronze: (1993, 1995)
First international
 Germany 86–74 Croatia 
(Murcia, Spain; 22 June 1992)[2]
Biggest win
 Croatia 124–51 Iceland 
(Murcia, Spain; 24 June 1992)
Biggest defeat
 Croatia 70–103 United States 
(Barcelona, Spain; 27 July 1992)

The biggest success Croatia has achieved was at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics when the team reached the final against the United States and won the silver medal. Croatia has also won one bronze medal at the FIBA World Cup and two bronze medals at EuroBasket.

Croatia's Krešimir Ćosić, Dražen Petrović, Dino Rađa, Mirko Novosel and Toni Kukoč are members of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. Ćosić was inducted in 1996, Petrović in 2002, Rađa in 2018 and Kukoč in 2021, all as players. Novosel was inducted in 2007 as a coach. Petrović, Ćosić, Kukoč and Novosel are members of the FIBA Hall of Fame. Ćosić is also the only Croatian to have received the FIBA Order of Merit. Ćosić, however, never played for the Croatia national team. As he was only a member of the Yugoslavia national team, holding the record for number of medals (including Olyimpic gold) and the most games played by a player.

History

Prior to Croatian independence

Croatia played its first unofficial friendly game on 2 June 1964 in Karlovac.[5] Croatian team played against US All Star Team and lost 65–110 (31–50). USA players coached by Red Auerbach were Bob Cousy, Tom Heinsohn, K. C. Jones, Jerry Lucas, Bob Pettit, Oscar Robertson and Bill Russell and Croatian team was Giuseppe Gjergja, Nemanja Đurić, Živko Kasun, Zlatko Kiseljak, Slobodan Kolaković, Dragan Kovačić, Boris Križan, Stjepan Ledić, Mirko Novosel, Marko Ostarčević, Petar Skansi and Željko Troskot.[6][7]

Independent Croatia

After independence of Croatia in 1991, the first official tournament played by Croatians were the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona. Croatia defeated the CIS team 75–74 and reached the final against the USA Dream Team led by Michael Jordan. The USA won 85–117, but Croatia won its first medal at a major tournament in history.[8]

The next competition for Croatia was the 1993 EuroBasket in Germany. Tragically, before the tournament Dražen Petrović died in a car accident on 7 June 1993 at the age of 28. Croatia still managed to reach the bronze medal game to defeat Greece 99–59.[9]

Croatia earned its third medal at the 1994 FIBA World Cup in Canada. Croatia lost their semi-finals match against Russia 64–66, but beat Greece once again 78–60 for the bronze medal. A similar occurrence happened at the EuroBasket 1995 in Greece. Croatia lost in the semi-finals 80–90 against Lithuania, but beat Greece 73–68 for the third time in a row in a bronze medal match. That medal to date was the last Croatian medal from any major tournament. At the 1996 Summer Olympics Croatia finished in a subpar seventh place.[10]

Decline

At the EuroBasket 1997 in Spain, the new Croatian generation emerged, but ended in 11th place. Croatia failed to qualify for the 2000, 2004 and 2012 Summer Olympics, but finished sixth in 2008. Croatia also failed to qualify for the 1998, 2002 and 2006 World Cups. Although the team did manage to qualify in 2010, before falling in the Round of 16. However, at the EuroBasket 2013, Croatia had its best tournament appearance since 1995, where the team finished in fourth place.[11]

Competitive record

Medals table

Games Gold Silver Bronze Total
Summer Olympics 0101
FIBA World Cup 0011
EuroBasket 0022
Mediterranean Games 1102
Stanković Cup 2103
Grand Totals 3339

Team

Current roster

Roster for the 2023 FIBA World Cup Qualifiers matches on 25 and 28 February 2022 against Sweden.[12]

Croatia men's national basketball team roster
PlayersCoaches
Pos.No.NameAge – Date of birthHeightClubCtr.
PG 2 Goran Filipović 25 – (1996-11-26)26 November 1996 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in) Cedevita
SG 5 Filip Krušlin 32 – (1989-03-18)18 March 1989 1.98 m (6 ft 6 in) Sassari
G 9 Sven Smajlagić 31 – (1990-06-05)5 June 1990 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) Nevėžis
PG 10 Lovro Gnjidić 20 – (2001-04-18)18 April 2001 1.98 m (6 ft 6 in) Cibona
F/C 11 Tomislav Zubčić 32 – (1990-01-17)17 January 1990 2.11 m (6 ft 11 in) Tofaş
F/C 17 Karlo Matković 20 – (2001-03-30)30 March 2001 2.06 m (6 ft 9 in) Mega
C 22 Danko Branković 21 – (2000-11-05)5 November 2000 2.15 m (7 ft 1 in) Cibona
SG 23 Mateo Drežnjak 22 – (1999-03-08)8 March 1999 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) Cibona
F/C 24 Filip Bundović 28 – (1994-02-16)16 February 1994 2.06 m (6 ft 9 in) Cedevita
SF 27 Ivan Ramljak 31 – (1990-08-09)9 August 1990 2.03 m (6 ft 8 in) Śląsk
PG 32 Roko Rogić 29 – (1992-09-25)25 September 1992 1.87 m (6 ft 2 in) Toruń
PF 33 Željko Šakić 33 – (1988-04-14)14 April 1988 2.04 m (6 ft 8 in) Avtodor
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)
Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • Club – describes last
    club before the competition
  • Age – describes age
    on 25 February 2022

Depth chart

Pos. Starting 5 Bench 1 Bench 2 Bench 3
C Ivica Zubac Ante Žižić Ante Tomić Krešimir Nikić
PF Dario Šarić Dragan Bender Leon Radošević Danko Branković
SF Mario Hezonja Luka Šamanić Roko Prkačin Tomislav Zubčić
SG Bojan Bogdanović Lovro Gnjidić Dominik Mavra Boris Tišma
PG Kruno Simon Rok Stipčević Roko Ukić Miro Bilan

Head coaches

Past rosters

1992 Olympic Games: finished 2nd among 12 teams

4 Dražen Petrović, 5 Velimir Perasović, 6 Danko Cvjetićanin, 7 Toni Kukoč, 8 Vladan Alanović, 9 Franjo Arapović, 10 Žan Tabak, 11 Stojko Vranković, 12 Alan Gregov, 13 Arijan Komazec, 14 Dino Rađa, 15 Aramis Naglić (Coach: Petar Skansi)


1993 EuroBasket: finished 3rd among 16 teams

4 Velimir Perasović, 5 Alan Gregov, 6 Ivica Žurić, 7 Vladan Alanović, 8 Franjo Arapović, 9 Žan Tabak, 10 Stojko Vranković, 11 Danko Cvjetićanin, 12 Arijan Komazec, 13 Dino Rađa, 14 Emilio Kovačić 15 Veljko Mršić (Coach: Mirko Novosel)


1994 FIBA World Cup: finished 3rd among 16 teams

4 Josip Vranković, 5 Alan Gregov, 6 Arijan Komazec, 7 Toni Kukoč, 8 Vladan Alanović, 9 Ivica Žurić, 10 Davor Pejčinović, 11 Stojko Vranković, 12 Danko Cvjetićanin, 13 Miro Jurić, 14 Dino Rađa, 15 Veljko Mršić (Coach: Josip Gjergja)


1995 EuroBasket: finished 3rd among 14 teams

4 Josip Vranković, 5 Velimir Perasović, 6 Arijan Komazec, 7 Toni Kukoč, 8 Vladan Alanović, 9 Ivica Marić, 10 Ivica Žurić, 11 Stojko Vranković, 12 Alan Gregov, 13 Veljko Mršić, 14 Dino Rađa, 15 Davor Pejčinović (Coach: Aleksandar Petrović)


1996 Olympic Games: finished 7th among 12 teams

4 Josip Vranković, 5 Velimir Perasović, 6 Arijan Komazec, 7 Toni Kukoč, 8 Vladan Alanović, 9 Slaven Rimac, 10 Žan Tabak, 11 Stojko Vranković, 12 Damir Mulaomerović, 13 Veljko Mršić, 14 Dino Rađa, 15 Davor Marcelić (Coach: Petar Skansi)


1997 EuroBasket: finished 11th among 16 teams

4 Josip Sesar, 5 Damir Mulaomerović, 6 Gordan Giriček, 7 Damir Milačić, 8 Vladan Alanović, 9 Slaven Rimac, 10 Emilio Kovačić, 11 Davor Pejčinović, 12 Siniša Kelečević, 13 Nikola Prkačin, 14 Ivan Grgat, 15 Davor Marcelić (Coach: Petar Skansi)


1999 EuroBasket: finished 9th among 16 teams

4 Vladimir Krstić, 5 Damir Mulaomerović, 6 Veljko Mršić, 7 Toni Kukoč, 8 Nikola Prkačin, 9 Gordan Zadravec, 10 Gordan Giriček, 11 Joško Poljak, 12 Jurica Ružić, 13 Ivan Tomeljak, 14 Nikola Vujčić, 15 Hrvoje Henjak (Coach: Boško Božić)


2001 EuroBasket: finished 7th among 16 teams

4 Damir Mulaomerović, 5 Josip Vranković, 6 Josip Sesar, 7 Veljko Mršić, 8 Nikola Prkačin, 9 Vladimir Krstić, 10 Gordan Giriček, 11 Emilio Kovačić, 12 Mate Skelin, 13 Matej Mamić, 14 Nikola Vujčić, 15 Žan Tabak (Coach: Aleksandar Petrović)


2003 EuroBasket: finished 11th among 16 teams

4 Damir Mulaomerović, 5 Marino Baždarić, 6 Marko Popović, 7 Sandro Nicević, 8 Nikola Prkačin, 9 Zoran Planinić, 10 Gordan Giriček, 11 Hrvoje Perinčić, 12 Andrija Žižić, 13 Matej Mamić, 14 Dalibor Bagarić, 15 Mate Skelin (Coach: Neven Spahija)


2005 EuroBasket: finished 7th among 16 teams

4 Mario Kasun, 5 Roko Ukić, 6 Marko Popović, 7 Nikola Vujčić, 8 Nikola Prkačin, 9 Andrija Žižić, 10 Gordan Giriček, 11 Zoran Planinić, 12 Marko Tomas, 13 Matej Mamić, 14 Dalibor Bagarić, 15 Damir Rančić (Coach: Neven Spahija)


2007 EuroBasket: finished 6th among 16 teams

4 Roko Ukić, 5 Davor Kus, 6 Marko Popović, 7 Marin Rozić, 8 Nikola Prkačin, 9 Marko Tomas, 10 Zoran Planinić, 11 Mario Stojić, 12 Damir Markota, 13 Marko Banić, 14 Mario Kasun, 15 Stanko Barać (Coach: Jasmin Repeša)


2008 Olympic Games: finished 6th among 12 teams

4 Roko Ukić, 5 Davor Kus, 6 Marko Popović, 7 Marin Rozić, 8 Nikola Prkačin, 9 Marko Tomas, 10 Zoran Planinić, 11 Sandro Nicević, 12 Damjan Rudež, 13 Marko Banić, 14 Krešimir Lončar, 15 Stanko Barać (Coach: Jasmin Repeša)


2009 EuroBasket: finished 6th among 16 teams

4 Roko Ukić, 5 Davor Kus, 6 Marko Popović, 7 Nikola Vujčić, 8 Nikola Prkačin, 9 Marin Rozić, 10 Zoran Planinić, 11 Mario Stojić, 12 Krešimir Lončar, 13 Marko Banić, 14 Sandro Nicević, 15 Mario Kasun (Coach: Jasmin Repeša)


2010 FIBA World Cup: finished 14th among 24 teams

4 Roko Ukić, 5 Davor Kus, 6 Marko Popović, 7 Bojan Bogdanović, 8 Rok Stipčević, 9 Marko Tomas, 10 Zoran Planinić, 11 Ante Tomić, 12 Krešimir Lončar, 13 Marko Banić, 14 Luka Žorić, 15 Lukša Andrić (Coach: Josip Vranković)


2011 EuroBasket: finished 13th among 24 teams

4 Ante Tomić, 5 Lukša Andrić, 6 Marko Popović, 7 Bojan Bogdanović, 8 Rok Stipčević, 9 Marko Tomas, 10 Dontaye Draper, 11 Krunoslav Simon, 12 Damir Markota, 13 Damjan Rudež, 14 Luka Žorić, 15 Stanko Barać (Coach: Josip Vranković)


2013 EuroBasket: finished 4th among 24 teams

4 Ante Tomić, 5 Lukša Andrić, 6 Dontaye Draper, 7 Bojan Bogdanović, 8 Dario Šarić, 9 Damjan Rudež, 10 Roko Ukić, 11 Krunoslav Simon, 12 Damir Markota, 13 Mario Delaš, 14 Luka Žorić, 15 Ante Delaš (Coach: Jasmin Repeša)


2014 FIBA World Cup: finished 10th among 24 teams

4 Ante Tomić, 5 Lukša Andrić, 6 Oliver Lafayette, 7 Bojan Bogdanović, 8 Dario Šarić, 9 Damjan Rudež, 10 Roko Ukić, 11 Krunoslav Simon, 12 Damir Markota, 13 Mario Hezonja, 14 Luka Žorić, 15 Luka Babić (Coach: Jasmin Repeša)


2015 EuroBasket: finished 9th among 24 teams

4 Ante Tomić, 5 Damjan Rudež, 6 Rok Stipčević, 7 Bojan Bogdanović, 8 Dario Šarić, 9 Marko Tomas, 10 Roko Ukić (C), 11 Krunoslav Simon, 13 Dontaye Draper, 15 Miro Bilan, 21 Luka Žorić, 23 Mario Hezonja (Coach: Velimir Perasović)


2016 Olympic Games: finished 5th among 12 teams

4 Luka Babić, 5 Filip Krušlin, 6 Rok Stipčević, 7 Krunoslav Simon, 8 Mario Hezonja, 9 Dario Šarić, 10 Roko Ukić (C), 12 Darko Planinić, 15 Miro Bilan, 33 Željko Šakić, 35 Marko Arapović, 44 Bojan Bogdanović (Coach: Aleksandar Petrović)


2017 EuroBasket: finished 10th among 24 teams

5 Filip Krušlin, 6 Marko Popović, 7 Krunoslav Simon, 9 Dario Šarić, 10 Roko Ukić (C), 11 Luka Žorić, 12 Darko Planinić, 17 Dragan Bender, 25 Ivan Buva, 27 Ivan Ramljak, 33 Marko Tomas, 44 Bojan Bogdanović (Coach: Aleksandar Petrović)

Results and fixtures

  Win   Loss

2020

27 November 2020 Croatia  7962  Turkey Istanbul, Turkey* [note 1]
19:00 Scoring by quarter: 24–7, 21–17, 12–19, 22–19
Pts: Bilan 30
Rebs: Bilan 12
Asts: Ukić 5
Boxscore Pts: Mahmutoğlu 14
Rebs: Şengün 8
Asts: Larkin 5
Arena: Sinan Erdem Dome
Referees: Tomas Jasevičius (LTU), Fernando Calatrava (ESP), Alexandre Deman (FRA)
29 November 2020 Sweden  7287  Croatia Istanbul, Turkey* [note 1]
20:00 Scoring by quarter: 16–22, 15–26, 22–20, 19–19
Pts: Andersson 22
Rebs: Andersson 8
Asts: Massamba 5
Boxscore Pts: Marčinković 20
Rebs: Bilan 10
Asts: Ukić 5
Arena: Sinan Erdem Dome
Referees: Fernando Calatrava (ESP), Paulo Marques (POR), Tanel Suslov (EST)

2021

20 February 2021 Croatia  5765  Netherlands Istanbul, Turkey* [note 1]
20:00 Scoring by quarter: 19–11, 16–16, 13–22, 9–16
Pts: Šakić 17
Rebs: Bilan, Šakić 10
Asts: Krušlin 6
Boxscore Pts: Franke 15
Rebs: Kloof 9
Asts: Van der Vuurst de Vries 4
Arena: BJK Akatlar Arena
Referees: Manuel Mazzoni (ITA), Lorenzo Baldini (ITA), Ivor Matějek (CZE)
22 February 2021 Turkey  8478  Croatia Istanbul, Turkey* [note 1]
20:00 Scoring by quarter: 21–21, 21–19, 20–25, 22–13
Pts: Şanlı, Tuncer 17
Rebs: Şanlı 6
Asts: Larkin 7
Boxscore Pts: Gabrić 13
Rebs: Šakić 5
Asts: Prkačin 5
Arena: BJK Akatlar Arena
Referees: Manuel Mazzoni (ITA), Marius Ciulin (ROU), Lorenzo Baldini (ITA)
30 June 2021 Brazil  9467  Croatia Split, Croatia
20:00 CEST (UTC+2) Scoring by quarter: 25–20, 20–14, 26–21, 23–12
Pts: Hettsheimeir 20
Rebs: Caboclo 8
Asts: Huertas 8
Boxscore Pts: Bogdanović 16
Rebs: Bilan 7
Asts: Rogić, Ukić 4
Arena: Spaladium Arena
Referees: Ademir Zurapović (BIH), Matthew Kallio (CAN), Michael Weiland (CAN)
1 July 2021 Croatia  7570  Tunisia Split, Croatia
20:00 CEST (UTC+2) Scoring by quarter: 20–11, 22–17, 14–29, 19–13
Pts: Hezonja 27
Rebs: Žižić 12
Asts: Hezonja 3
Boxscore Pts: Slimane 15
Rebs: Slimane 7
Asts: Abada 7
Arena: Spaladium Arena
Referees: Eddie Viator (FRA), Andrés Gaston Bartel Maina (URU), Rabah Noujaim (LBN)
3 July 2021 Germany  8676  Croatia Split, Croatia
16:00 CEST (UTC+2) Scoring by quarter: 19–23, 24–22, 13–18, 30–13
Pts: 29
Rebs: Barthel 6
Asts: 8
Boxscore Pts: Bogdanović 38
Rebs: Hezonja, Žižić 6
Asts: Hezonja 3
Arena: Spaladium Arena
Referees: Matthew Kallio (CAN), Jorge Vázquez (PUR), Michael Weiland (CAN)
25 November 2021 (2021-11-25) Croatia  7476  Slovenia Zagreb
20:45 Scoring by quarter: 19–16, 20–25, 17–14, 18–21
Pts: Bundović 16
Rebs: Bundović 7
Asts: Bundović, Gnjidić 5
Boxscore Pts: Prepelič 16
Rebs: Murić 10
Asts: Nikolić 3
Arena: Dražen Petrović Basketball Hall
Attendance: 2,200
Referees: Yohan Rosso (FRA), Fernando Calatrava (ESP), Mārtiņš Kozlovskis (LAT)
Note:
28 November 2021 (2021-11-28) Finland  7771  Croatia Espoo
19:00 Scoring by quarter: 14–15, 20–19, 25–21, 18–16
Pts: Maxhuni 15
Rebs: Huff 9
Asts: Koponen, Maxhuni 5
Boxscore Pts: Bundović 16
Rebs: Gnjidić 7
Asts: Prkačin 5
Arena: Espoo Metro Areena
Attendance: 5,140
Referees: Nicolás Maestre (FRA), Zafer Yılmaz (TUR), Gatis Saliņš (LAT)
Note:

2022

25 February 2022 (2022-02-25) Croatia  6470  Sweden Zagreb
18:30 Scoring by quarter: 15–18, 20–17, 10–17, 19–18
Pts: Zubčić 20
Rebs: Krušlin 6
Asts: Gnjidić, Krušlin 2
Boxscore Pts: Gaddefors 16
Rebs: Birgander 12
Asts: Håkanson 6
Arena: Dražen Petrović Basketball Hall
Attendance: 2,000
Referees: Georgios Poursanidis (GRE), Marius Ciulin (ROU), Martin Horozov (BUL)
Note:
28 February 2022 (2022-02-28) Sweden  981050(2OT)  Croatia Norrköping
19:00 Scoring by quarter: 21–14, 20–12, 18–24, 20–29, Overtime: 9–9, 10–17
Pts: Håkanson 31
Rebs: Birgander 18
Asts: Håkanson 7
Boxscore Pts: Filipović 29
Rebs: Matković 13
Asts: Krušlin 6
Arena: Stadium Arena
Attendance: 2,683
Referees: Manuel Mazzoni (ITA), Tomas Jasevicius (LTU), Thomas Bissuel (FRA)
Note:
30 June 2022 (2022-06-30) Slovenia  vs.  Croatia
Boxscore
Note:
3 July 2022 (2022-07-03) Croatia  vs.  Finland
Boxscore
Note:

Notable players and coaches

Head-to-head record

Biggest tournament wins

20+ point difference

Olympic Games World Cup EuroBasket
  • +34 vs. Iran (91–57) 2008
  • +33 vs. Australia (98–65) 1992
  • +31 vs. China (109–78) 1996
  • +23 vs. Angola (71–48) 1996
  • +21 vs. Germany (99–78) 1992
  • +51 vs. South Korea (104–53) 1994
  • +32 vs. China (105–73) 1994
  • +31 vs. Canada (92–61) 1994
  • +26 vs. Greece (81–55) 1994
  • +21 vs. Iran (75–54) 2010
  • +20 vs. Cuba (85–65)1994
  • +20 vs. Tunisia (84–64) 2010
  • +50 vs. Turkey (113–63) 1993
  • +40 vs. Greece (99–59) 1993
  • +38 vs. Czech Republic (107–69) 2017
  • +32 vs. Belgium (106–74) 1993
  • +25 vs. Finland (88–63) 2013
  • +22 vs. Turkey (90–68) 1995
  • +22 vs. Czech Republic (86–64) 1999
  • +22 vs. Ukraine (93–71) 2003
  • +22 vs. Portugal (90–68) 2007
  • +21 vs. Bulgaria (104–83) 1993
  • +20 vs. Bosnia and Herzegovina (98–78) 1993
  • +20 vs. Germany (75–55) 1997

Biggest tournament losses

-20> point difference

Olympic Games World Cup EuroBasket
  • -33 vs. USA (70–103) 1992
  • -32 vs. USA (85–117) 1992
  • -31 vs. USA (71–102) 1996
  • -24 vs. Argentina (53–77) 2008
  • -28 vs. USA (78–106) 2010
  • -28 vs. Spain (40–68) 2013
  • -26 vs. Spain (66–92) 2013
  • -21 vs. Czech Republic (59–80) 2015

Biggest qualification wins

20+ point difference

Olympic qualification World Cup qualification EuroBasket qualification
  • +73 vs. Iceland (124–51) 1992
  • +52 vs. Portugal (109–57) 1992
  • +46 vs. Italy (108–62) 1992
  • +39 vs. Greece (102–63) 1992
  • +23 vs. Slovenia (93–70) 1992
  • +27 vs. Romania (63–90) 2018
  • +60 vs. Romania (115–55) 1997
  • +56 vs. Macedonia (128–72) 1993[15]
  • +40 vs. Belarus (112–72) 1993
  • +34 vs. Latvia (113–79) 1993
  • +33 vs. Romania (119–86) 1993
  • +29 vs. Ukraine (107–78) 1993

Statistics

Record against other teams

As of 18 Aug 2016, after 2016 Olympics

Key
Positive total balance (more wins)
Neutral total balance (equal W/L ratio)
Negative total balance (more losses)
National team Total Olympic Games World Cup EuroBasket Mediterranean
Games
Qualifications
Pld W L Pld W L Pld W L Pld W L Pld W L Pld W L
Albania 110 000 000 000 110 000
Angola 220 220 000 000
Argentina 422 312 110 000
Australia 431 321 110 000
Austria 220 000 000 000 220
Belarus 110 000 000 000 110
Belgium 330 000 000 110 220
Bosnia and
Herzegovina
743 000 000 321 000 422
Brazil 422 321 101 000
Bulgaria 431 000 000 220 211
Cameroon 110 000 000 110
Canada 220 000 110 110
China 330 220 110 000
Cuba 110 000 110 000
Cyprus 440 000 000 000 000 440
Czech Republic * 431 000 000 321 110
Denmark 220 000 000 000 220
England 220 000 000 220
Estonia 761 000 000 220 541
Finland 330 000 000 330 000
France 835 000 101 734 000 000
Georgia 211 000 000 211 000
Germany 1257 110 000 734 413
Great Britain 000 000 000 000 000
Greece 1596 000 321 835 220 220
Hungary 440 000 000 000 440
Iceland 330 000 000 000 330
Iran 220 110 110 000
Ireland 220 000 000 000 220
Israel 321 000 000 211 110
Italy 1082 000 000 651 110 321
Latvia 761 000 000 211 550
Lithuania 1129 312 000 505 312
Macedonia 651 000 000 321 000 330
Montenegro 110 000 000 110 000 000
Morocco 110 000 000 110 000
Netherlands 550 000 000 110 440
Nigeria 101 101 000 000
Philippines 110 000 110 000
Poland 211 000 000 211 000
Portugal 220 000 000 110 110
Puerto Rico 220 000 110 110
Romania 440 000 000 000 440
Russia ** 1376 220 101 734 321
Senegal 101 000 101 000
Serbia *** 514 101 101 202 110 000
Slovakia 440 000 000 000 440
Slovenia 844 000 101 532 000 211
South Korea 110 000 110 000
Spain 945 321 000 624 000 000
Sweden 431 000 000 000 431
Switzerland 220 000 000 000 220
Tunisia 220 000 110 000 110
Turkey 844 000 000 633 000 211
Ukraine 862 000 000 321 541
United States 404 303 101 000
Total (56) 23415777

* includes games against Czechoslovakia
** includes games against Soviet Union and CIS
*** includes games against Serbia and Montenegro

See also

Notes

  1. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, all matches in the November 2020 and February 2021 windows were played behind closed doors in select host cities.[14]

References

  1. "FIBA Ranking Presented by Nike". FIBA. 1 March 2022. Retrieved 1 March 2022.
  2. "XIII Olympic Basketball Tournament (Barcelona 1992) Qualifying stage". Linguasport. Retrieved 18 August 2017.
  3. "Croatia basketball news". eurobasket.com.
  4. Naslovnica – Hrvatski košarkaški savez
  5. "All Star NBA u Šancu 1964". kafotka.net. Retrieved 8 September 2012.
  6. "U Šancu haklale NBA zvijezde, a u Draganiću gradili naftnu bušotinu". www.kaportal.hr. Archived from the original on 19 July 2012. Retrieved 8 September 2012.
  7. "KARLOVAC: 40 GODINA NBA LIGE U KARLOVCU". Index.hr. Retrieved 21 August 2012.
  8. "Croatia at the 1992 Olympic Games". Archive.fiba.com. 8 August 1992.
  9. "Croatia v Greece EuroBasket 1993 Bronze medal game results". Archive.fiba.com. 3 July 1993.
  10. "Croatia at the 1996 Olympic Games". Archive.fiba.com. 2 August 1996.
  11. "Croatia at the EuroBasket 2013". Archive.fiba.com. 22 September 2013.
  12. "Croatia during the 2023 FIBA World Cup European Qualifiers in Feb. 2022". Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  13. "Aco Petrovic otišao, a Hrvatska ekspresno dobila novog izbornika". Jutarnji.hr. 15 September 2017.
  14. "Statement regarding the November 2020 and February 2021 Qualifiers". Retrieved 18 September 2020.
  15. "XXVIII European Championship (München 1993) Qualifying stage". Linguasport. Retrieved 18 August 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.