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2017 FIBA Asia Cup


Column 1
Lebanon
Zouk Mikael
8–20 August
16
1 (in 1 host city)
Australia (1st title)
Iran
South Korea
New Zealand
Hamed Haddadi
Fadi El Khatib (25.9 points per game)

The 2017 FIBA Asia Cup (formerly known as the FIBA Asia Championship) was the 29th continental basketball championship in Asia. The tournament was organised by FIBA Asia. It took place from 8 to 20 August 2017, a week earlier from the initial scheduled date, in Lebanon. The Nouhad Nawfal Arena with a capacity of 8,000 seats hosted the tournament's matches.

All 16 teams who qualified for the tournament also qualified for the first round of the FIBA Asia and FIBA Oceania qualifiers for the 2019 FIBA World Cup. The top five teams in the 2016 FIBA Asia Challenge earned an extra berth in the 2017 FIBA Asia Cup for their respective sub-zones. Australia and New Zealand participated for the first time in this tournament.

Australia won their first title by defeating Iran 79–56. South Korea finished third after beating New Zealand 80–71.

One playoff berth each was allocated to the Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Gulf subzones, while two berths were allocated to the West Asia subzone and three berths were allocated to the East Asia subzone. The top five teams of the 2016 FIBA Asia Challenge earned an extra berth for their subzones. Iran, Jordan, and Iraq earned three extra berths for the West Asia subzone, while South Korea and China earned two extra berths for the East Asia subzone. Australia and New Zealand from FIBA Oceania made their debut at the FIBA Asia Cup in 2017 as wild cards. Lebanon as the hosts clinched one of the five berths allocated to West Asia.

Means of QualificationDatesVenueBerthsQualifiers
Host Nation20 January 20171Lebanon
Central Asian Qualifying Round1 June 2017Almaty1Kazakhstan
East Asian Basketball Championship3–7 June 2017Nagano5Chinese Taipei South Korea Japan China Hong Kong
Gulf Basketball Championship28 August – 4 September 2016Sharjah1Qatar
West Asian Basketball Championship29 January – 2 February 2017Amman4Iran Jordan Iraq Syria
Southeast Asian Basketball Championship12–18 May 2017Quezon City1Philippines
South Asian Basketball Championship19–23 May 2017Malé1India
Wild Cards (Oceania)18 September 2016—.mw-parser-output .sr-only{border:0;clip:rect(0,0,0,0);clip-path:polygon(0px 0px,0px 0px,0px 0px);height:1px;margin:-1px;overflow:hidden;padding:0;position:absolute;width:1px;white-space:nowrap}N/a2Australia New Zealand

The 2017 edition would have a different format as compared to what was used since 2009. While there would still be a preliminary round robin of four groups of four teams, the single-elimination final round immediately follows the preliminary round. In the final round, the teams that finished second and third in their respective groups would play in the qualifications to quarterfinals of the final round, while the group winners automatically qualify to the quarterfinals proper.

The official draw was held on May 30, 2017 at the Le Royal Hotel Dbayeh. Hosts Lebanon had the right to choose their group. At the time of the draw teams from East Asia and Central Asia have yet to secure their qualification for the 2017 FIBA Asia Cup. China, Hong Kong, South Korea, Chinese Taipei, Japan, and Kazakhstan, all of which later secured qualification, were part of the official draw.

Pot 1Pot 2Pot 3Pot 4
Australia (10)
 China (14)
 New Zealand (20)
 Iran (25)Philippines (27)
 Jordan (28)
 South Korea (30)
 Chinese Taipei (T-48)Japan (T-48)
 Qatar (50)
 India (53)
 Kazakhstan (56)Lebanon (43)
 Hong Kong (65)
 Syria (72)
 Iraq (92)

Each team has a roster of twelve players. A team may opt to allocate a roster spot to a naturalized player.

The following referees were selected for the tournament:

All times are local (UTC+3)

PosTeamPldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification
1330271188+836Quarterfinals
2321200203−35Playoffs
3312216233−174
4303186249−633
PosTeamPldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification
1330260229+316Quarterfinals
2321240223+175Playoffs
3312203211−84
4303207247−403
PosTeamPldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification
1321231207+245Quarterfinals
2321250226+245Playoffs
3321258202+565
4303178282−1043
PosTeamPldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification
1330273176+976Quarterfinals
2321247192+555Playoffs
3312176239−634
4303179268−893

Classification 5th–8th

Column 1Column 2Column 3Column 4Column 5Column 6Column 7
Classification semifinalsFifth place game
Lebanon106
Philippines87
Lebanon78
China79
Jordan55
China86
Seventh place game
Philippines75
Jordan70

Ox the Fox

The official logo and mascot of the competition was unveiled on May 30, 2017. The logo was derived from the Lebanese flag described by designers as "flapping like the wings of the phoenix". The red stripes of the logo forms an image of the ball with an image of the tournament cup in its center.

The official mascot of the competition is named Ox the Fox. Ox represents "great team spirit" and is characterized as quick, agile, and smart. These are three qualities which the designers of the mascot as essential for "any basketball player".

RankTeamRecord
Australia6–0
Iran5–1
South Korea5–2
4New Zealand3–3
5China5–2
6Lebanon4–3
7Philippines4–2
8Jordan3–4
9Japan2–2
10Syria1–3
11Iraq1–3
12Chinese Taipei1–3
13Qatar0–3
14India0–3
15Hong Kong0–3
16Kazakhstan0–3
2017 Asian champions
Australia1st title
  • Most Valuable Player: Hamed Haddadi
  • All-Star Team:
    • PG – Shea Ili
    • SG – Mohammad Jamshidi
    • SF – Fadi El Khatib
    • PF – Oh Se-keun
    • C – Hamed Haddadi
CategoryPlayer game highTotalOpponent (date)Team game highTotalOpponent (date)
PointsFadi El Khatib36Philippines (19 August)South Korea118Philippines (16 August)
ReboundsHamed Haddadi20Lebanon (16 August)Syria52India (13 August)
AssistsPark Chan-hee14Kazakhstan (10 August)South Korea38Kazakhstan (10 August)
StealsKevin Galloway Kim Sun-hyung Sajjad Mashayekhi Ali Mezher6Jordan (15 August) New Zealand (20 August) India (9 August) Kazakhstan (12 August)Iraq19Jordan (15 August)
BlocksNorvel Pelle9Philippines (19 August)Iraq19Jordan (15 August)
  • Official website
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