Basketball at the 2011 Pan American Games

16th Pan American Games Basketball Tournament
Guadalajara 2011
Tournament details
Pan American Games 2011 Pan American Games
Host nation Mexico
City Guadalajara
Venue CODE Dome
Duration October 21 – October 30
Men's tournament
Teams 8
Medals
1 Gold medalists  Puerto Rico
2 Silver medalists Mexico
3 Bronze medalists  United States
Women's tournament
Teams 8
Medals
1 Gold medalists  Puerto Rico
2 Silver medalists Mexico
3 Bronze medalists  Brazil
Official website
www.guadalajara2011.org.mx/sports/discipline/basketball
Tournaments
 2007 Rio de Janeiro  2015 Toronto 

Basketball competitions at the 2011 Pan American Games in Guadalajara were held from October 21 to October 30 at the CODE Dome. Each team was allowed to enter a maximum of twelve athletes.[1] Puerto Rico won both the men's and women's competitions, with Mexico placing second in both competitions. The United States won bronze in the men's competition, while Brazil won bronze in the women's competition.

Medal summary

Medal table

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Puerto Rico2002
2 Mexico0202
3 Brazil0011
 United States0011
Totals (4 nations)2226

Events

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Men

 Puerto Rico (PUR)
Renaldo Balkman
José Juan Barea
Carlos Arroyo
Filiberto Rivera
Carlos Strong
Samuel Villegas
Miguel "Ali" Berdiel
Edwin Ubiles
Gabriel Colón
Luis Villafañe
Manuel Narvaez
Daniel Santiago
 Mexico (MEX)
Paul Stoll
Jovan Harris
Pedro Meza
Christopher Hernandez
Adam Parada
Michael Strobbe
Victor Mariscal
Omar Quintero
Hector Hernandez
Orlando Mendez
Lorenzo Real
Jesus Lopez
 United States (USA)
Blake Ahearn
Brian Butch
Justin Dentmon
Jerome Dyson
Moses Ehambe
Marcus Lewis
Leo Lyons
Renaldo Major
Donald Sloan
Greg Stiemsma
Curtis Sumpter
Lance Thomas
Women

 Puerto Rico (PUR)
Angelica Bermudez
Carla Cortijo
Carla Escalera
Michelle Gonzalez
Yolanda Jones
Angiely Morales
Michelle Pacheco
Mari Placido
Pamela Rosado
Jazmine Sepulveda
Cynthia Valentin
Esmary Vargas
 Mexico (MEX)
Marie Bibbs
Alexis Castro
Azucena Loudres
Abril Garcia
Monica Garcia
Sofia Garica
Erika Gomez
Fernanda Guitierrez
Laura Nuñez
Maylene Ornelas
Sonia Ortega
Brisa Silva
 Brazil (BRA)
Tassia Carcavalli
Damiris Dantas
Izabela De Andrade
Barbara De Queiroz
Carina De Souza
Erika De Souza
Clarissa Dos Santos
Gilmara Justino
Palmira Marcal
Iziane Marques
Jaqueline Silvestre
Silvia Valente

Qualification

An NOC may enter up to one men's team with 12 players and up to one women's team with 12 players. Canada, the United States and the host country qualify automatically, as do five other teams through regional tournaments.[1]

Basketball – Men

North AmericaSouth AmericaAutomatic qualifiers
 Puerto Rico
 Dominican Republic
 Brazil
 Argentina
 Uruguay
 Canada
 Mexico
 United States

Basketball – Women

North AmericaSouth AmericaAutomatic qualifiers
 Puerto Rico
 Jamaica
 Brazil
 Argentina
 Colombia
 Canada
 Mexico
 United States

Schedule

The competition will be spread out across nine days, with the women competing first, followed by the men.[2]

  Preliminary round   Semifinals  M Event finals
October21st
Fri
22nd
Sat
23rd
Sun
24th
Mon
25th
Tue
26th
Wed
27th
Thu
28th
Fri
29th
Sat
30th
Sun
Gold
medals
Men M 1
Women M 1

Controversy

The Mexican Olympic Committee (COM) refused to endorse the Mexican Sports Association (ADEMEBA), the body recognized by the International Basketball Federation (FIBA), because FIBA had threatened to suspend ADEMEBA membership which put the entire basketball tournament in jeopardy.[3] However, the Pan American Sports Organization (PASO) later confirmed that the basketball tournament would be held and the event would not be cancelled.[4]

References

  1. 1 2 "XVI Pan American Games: Technical Manual: Basketball" (PDF). Guadalajara2011.org.mx. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-11-25.
  2. "Basketball schedule".
  3. "FIBA Americas tries to save Pan American Games' basketball in Guadalajara 2011". FIBAAmericas.com. FIBA Americas. 2011-09-13.
  4. "There will be basketball in the 2011 Pan American Games in Guadalajara". FIBAAmericas.com. FIBA Americas. 2011-09-20.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.