The International Basketball Federation (FIBA /ˈfbə/ FEE-bə; French: Fédération internationale de basketball)[a][4] is an association of national organizations which governs the sport of basketball worldwide. FIBA defines the rules of basketball, specifies the equipment and facilities required, organizes international competitions, regulates the transfer of athletes across countries, and controls the appointment of international referees. A total of 212 national federations are members, organized since 1989 into five zones: Africa, Americas, Asia, Europe, and Oceania.

International Basketball Federation
Fédération internationale de basket-ball
(FIBA)
AbbreviationFIBA
PredecessorInternational Amateur Handball Federation
Formation18 June 1932; 91 years ago (1932-06-18)
Founded atGeneva, Switzerland
TypeSports federation
HeadquartersMies, Switzerland
Region served
Worldwide
Membership
212 national federations
Official languages
English
French[1]
President
Sheikh Saud Ali Al Thani
Secretary general
Andreas Zagklis[2]
Key people
Borislav Stanković
George Vassilakopoulos
Manfred Ströher
Revenue (2018)
US$102.2 million[3]
Expenses (2018)US$107.74 million[3]
WebsiteFIBA.basketball
FIBA headquarters in Mies, Switzerland

FIBA organizes both the men's and women's FIBA World Olympic Qualifying Tournament and the Summer Olympics Basketball Tournament, which are sanctioned by the IOC.[5] The FIBA Basketball World Cup is a world tournament for men's national teams held every four years. Teams compete for the Naismith Trophy, named in honor of basketball's Canadian-American creator James Naismith. The tournament structure is similar but not identical to that of the FIFA World Cup in association football; these tournaments occurred in the same year from 1970 through 2014, but starting in 2019, the Basketball World Cup will move to the year following the FIFA World Cup. A parallel event for women's teams, the FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup, is also held quadrennial; from 1986 through 2014, it was held in the same year as the men's event but in a different country.

History

1932–49; founding and early years

The association was founded in Geneva in 1932, two years after the sport was officially recognized by the IOC. Before 1934, basketball was under the umbrella of the International Amateur Handball Federation. Its original name was Fédération Internationale de basket-ball amateur. The eight nation's basketball federations that were the founding members of FIBA were: Argentina, Czechoslovakia, Greece, Italy, Latvia, Portugal, Romania, and Switzerland. In September 1934 the Protocol of Stockholm was passed and the FIBB became the only recognized authority responsible for basketball. During the 1936 Summer Olympics held in Berlin, the Federation named James Naismith (1861–1939), the founder of basketball, as its Honorary President.

Development (1950–2019)

FIBA has organized a world championship, known as World Cup, for men since 1950 and a women's world championship, known as the Women's World Cup, since 1953. From 1986 through 2014, both events were held every four years, alternating with the Olympics.[6] The men's World Cup was moved to a new four-year cycle, with tournaments in the year before the Summer Olympics, after 2014.

On 7 April 1989, at a special congress in Munich following the 1988–89 FIBA European Champions Cup finals, FIBA delegates voted, by a margin of 56 to 13, to allow professional basketball players to participate in its international events, including the World Cup and the Olympics. The decision led to professional players, particularly those from the United States' National Basketball Association, dominating the sport at the highest levels of international competition. The United States delegation opposed the change, but many other countries sought to benefit from it by recruiting NBA players who hailed from their countries. The change also warded off competition from the Goodwill Games, the biggest rival of the Olympics at the time, which was seeking to bring professional players into its basketball events.[7][8][9]

The Federation headquarters moved to Munich in 1956, then returned to Geneva in 2002. In 1991, it founded the FIBA Hall of Fame; the first induction ceremony was held on 12 September 2007, during EuroBasket 2007. During its 81st anniversary in 2013, FIBA moved into its new headquarters, "The House of Basketball", at Mies.[10] Andreas Zagklis became the Secretary-General of FIBA on 7 December 2018.

2020–present; suspensions of Russia and Belarus

In February 2022, Russia and Belarus were suspended from international competitions until further notice due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.[11][12] It also banned the two countries from hosting any competitions.[12]

Presidents

Presidents of FIBA
YearsName[13]
1932–1948 Leon Bouffard
1948–1960 Willard Greim
1960–1968 Antonio dos Reis Carneiro
1968–1976 Abdel Moneim Wahby
1976–1984 Gonzalo Puyat II
1984–1990 Robert Busnel
1990–1998 George E. Killian
1998–2002 Abdoulaye Seye Moreau
2002–2006 Ching Men-ky [zh]
2006–2010 Robert Elphinston
2010–2014 Yvan Mainini
2014–2019 Horacio Muratore
2019–2023 Hamane Niang
2023–present Sheikh Saud Ali Al Thani

During the 1936 Summer Olympics, the FIBA honored James A. Naismith, the founder of basketball, as their honorary President.[6]

Secretaries General

Secretaries General of FIBA
YearsName
1932–1976 Renato William Jones
1976–2003 / Borislav Stanković
2003–2018 Patrick Baumann
2018–present Andreas Zagklis

Structure

Five zones and 212 national federations

FIBA divides the world into 5 zones, each roughly based on a continent.

There are five zones, in which FIBA oversees the game in the different continents and regions of the world through its regional offices under its new governance structure, which was approved by the 2014 FIBA Extraordinary Congress in Istanbul.[14] National federations are members of FIBA and are provided for in FIBA's General Statutes with their assigned zones.[15] The Statutes also state that upon a national federation's admission into FIBA, it is assigned to a zone by the Central Board.[16]

FIBA recognizes 212 national federations; see the list of men's national basketball teams and the list of women's national basketball teams. Unlike other sports organizations, FIBA recognizes the British Basketball Federation as the lone governing body for basketball in Great Britain, as a result of a merger in 2016 between the basketball federations of two of the four Home Nations within the United Kingdom (England and Scotland).[17] Wales had rejected the proposed merger in 2012 but agreed in 2015. Several members of FIBA Oceania, notably Australia and New Zealand, also compete in Asian tournaments.

In 2021, Peru was disaffiliated from FIBA[18] after being suspended in 2018.[19]

The FIBA Men's World Ranking and FIBA Women's World Ranking are both updated after a FIBA competition or qualification window and are based on their performance, particularly in games, in those events. The men's ranking was updated on 10 September 2023 after the 2023 FIBA Basketball World Cup, while the latest women's ranking was updated on 21 August 2023 after the FIBA Women's Continental Cups, which took place in all FIBA zones.

Laws and governance

FIBA in Mies.

FIBA's headquarters is located in Mies, Switzerland and is known as the Patrick Baumann House of Basketball, named after the organization's former Secretary-General.

FIBA's supreme body is the FIBA Congress, an assembly of representatives from each affiliated national federation, with each having one vote. The Congress assembles every two years, either an elective or mid-term congress, and is the only body that can make modifications to FIBA's General Statutes. An elective congress elects the FIBA President, Treasurer, and members of the FIBA Central Board, and appoints members of their Ethics and Nominations Panels.[20] Two extraordinary congresses have been held since 1989, with the most recent held in 2014.

The FIBA Central Board is the organization's highest executive body. It comprises 29 people: the president; the secretary-general; the treasurer; 13 members elected by the FIBA Congress; the 5 presidents of each FIBA zone; up to six co-opted members; a representative each from the National Basketball Association and the players. The Board is the body that decides which countries will host the FIBA Basketball World Cup and the FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup. The Central Board for the term 2023-2027 comprises 27 members.

The president and the secretary general are the main office holders of FIBA and are in charge of its daily administration. Sheikh Saud Ali Al Thani was elected president on 23 August 2023 at the FIBA Congress. Andreas Zagklis was appointed secretary-general on 8 December 2018 following the death of Patrick Baumann.[21]

FIBA tournaments

World champions

TournamentFIBA World CupYearNext editionOlympicsYear
Men  Germany (1)20232027  United States (16)2020
Women  United States (11)20222026  United States (9)2020
U-19 Men  Spain (2)20232025  Argentina (1)2018
U-19 Women  United States (10)20232025  United States (2)2018
U-17 Men  United States (6)20222024N/A[A]
U-17 Women  United States (5)20222024

 A: The Youth Olympic Games are a U-19 event played in FIBA 3x3 format.

World club champions

Club competitionYearChampionTitleRunner-upNext edition
Intercontinental Cup2023-II Sesi Franca1st Telekom Baskets Bonn2024

Continental champions

National teamsFIBA AfricaYearNext editionFIBA AmericasYearNext editionFIBA AsiaYearNext editionFIBA EuropeYearNext editionFIBA OceaniaYearNext edition
Men  Tunisia (3)20212025  Argentina (3)20222025  Australia (2)20222025  Spain (4)20222025  Australia (19)2015N/A[B]
Women  Nigeria (6)20232025  Brazil (6)20232025  China (12)20232025  Belgium (1)20232025  Australia (15)2015
U-19 Men  Egypt (6)20222024  United States (10)20222024  South Korea (4)20222024  Serbia (5)20232024  New Zealand (1)2016
U-19 Women  Mali (8)20222024  United States (11)20222024  Australia (1)20222024  Slovenia (1)20232024  Australia (7)2016
U-17 Men  Guinea (1)20232025  United States (8)20232025  Australia (3)20232024  Spain (6)20232024  Australia (6)20222024
U-17 Women  Mali (8)20232025  United States (7)20232025  Australia (3)20232024  France (5)20232024  Australia (6)20222024

 B: FIBA Oceania no longer conducts senior-level championships for either sex. Since 2017, that region's members have competed for FIBA Asia senior championships. FIBA Oceania continues to hold age-grade championships.

Continental club champions

RegionCompetitionYearChampionTitleRunner-upNext edition
Men's club competitions
AfricaBasketball Africa League2023 Al Ahly1st AS Douanes2024
AmericasBasketball Champions League Americas2022–23 Sesi Franca1st Flamengo2023–24
AsiaBasketball Champions League Asia2019 Alvark Tokyo1st Al Riyadi Beirut2024
Europe[C]Basketball Champions League2022–23 Telekom Baskets Bonn1st Hapoel Jerusalem2023–24
Europe Cup2023–24 Niners Chemnitz1st Bahçeşehir Koleji2024–25
Women's club competitions
AfricaAfrica Women's Clubs Champions Cup2022 Sporting Alexandria1st Costa do Sol2023
EuropeEuroLeague Women (1st-tier)2023–24 Fenerbahçe2nd Villeneuve d'Ascq LM2024–25
EuroCup Women (2nd-tier)2023–24 London Lions1st Beşiktaş2024–25
SuperCup Women2023 Fenerbahçe1st ASVEL Féminin2024

 C: The top-tier European professional basketball club competitions are complex. The EuroLeague run by Euroleague Basketball and its EuroCup are competing with the FIBA Europe organized competitions. The best European clubs have joined the closed league EuroLeague.

3x3 world champions

TournamentFIBA 3x3 World CupYearOlympicsYear
Men  Serbia (6)2023  Latvia (1)2020
Women  United States (3)2023  United States (1)2020
U-23 Men  United States (1)2023 N/A
U-23 Women  Netherlands (1)2023
U-18 Men  Germany (1)2023
U-18 Women  United States (7)2023

Awards

Most Valuable Player

TournamentMost Recent AwardeeTeamYear
MenDennis Schröder  Germany2023
WomenA'ja Wilson  United States2022
U-19 MenIzan Almansa  Spain2023
U-19 WomenIyana Martín Carrión  Spain2023
U-17 MenIzan Almansa  Spain2022
U-17 WomenJuJu Watkins  United States2022

FIBA world rankings

Men's

The following table has the Top 32 men's basketball countries in the world.[22] The Top 32 is here due to the next iteration of the FIBA Basketball World Cup, the world's major tournament in men's basketball, anticipating to have 32 countries compete. As such, this table shows the projected teams in the next FIBA Men's WC based on the ranking's algorithm. This list does not consider berths given to countries based on hosting or region status.[23]

Top 20 Rankings as of 1 March 2024[24]
RankChangeTeamPoints
1  United States784.8
2  Spain773.9
3  Germany759
4 1  Serbia757.9
5 1  Australia756.3
6 2  Latvia750.6
7 1  Canada746.2
8 1  Argentina743.2
9  France737.1
10  Lithuania713.1
11  Slovenia703.6
12 1  Brazil660.4
13  Italy655.7
14  Greece641.6
15  Poland611.7
16  Puerto Rico608.4
17  Montenegro607.7
18 1  Czech Republic560.5
19 1  Dominican Republic556.3
20  Finland537.4
21 6  New Zealand507.2
22 4  Venezuela502.7
23 10  Georgia465.9
24 8  Turkey445.8
25 7  Mexico440.9
26 11  Japan432.2
27 4  Iran427.8
28 16  Lebanon423.3
29 1  China420.4
30 4  Croatia420.2
31 32  South Sudan375.5
32 1  Jordan374.6
*Change from 9 August 2021

Women's

The following table has the Top 16 women's basketball countries in the world.[25] The Top 16 is here due to the next iteration of the FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup, the world's major tournament in women's basketball, anticipating to have 16 countries compete. As such, this table shows the projected teams in the next FIBA Women's WC based on the ranking's algorithm. This list does not consider berths given to countries based on hosting or region status.[26]

Top 20 Rankings as of 15 February 2024[27]
RankChangeTeamPoints
1  United States834.8
2  China686
3  Australia668.8
4  Spain658.1
5  Canada653.4
6  Belgium652.8
7  France649.2
8  Brazil598
9  Japan594.2
10  Serbia580.3
11 1  Puerto Rico495.1
12 1  Nigeria490.1
13  South Korea444.8
14  Turkey405.5
15  Italy378.4
16 5  Hungary357.7
*Change from 9 August 2021

Sponsors of FIBA

As of April 2023

FIBA global partners

Notes

References

External links