International Hoops

A unique Eurobasket – BallinEuropeBallinEurope

A unique Eurobasket - BallinEuropeBallinEurope

After a five year wait, EuroBasket 2022 is almost here. Emmet Ryan explains why this edition of the tournament promises to be a memorable entity for all sorts of reasons

What have Malta, Ireland, and Armenia all got in common? They’ve all won men’s senior European titles since the last edition of EuroBasket. That’s just one of the oddities of the upcoming edition, across Berlin, Cologne, Milan, Prague, and Tbilisi in September.

The three aforementioned nations won editions of the European championships for Small Countries in 2018, 2021, and 2022, respectively with the middle one taking place under heavy pandemic protocols.

EuroBasket could, in theory, have undergone a similar process a year ago but that would rather miss the entire point of the event which is meant to be a festival of basketball. Germany’s restrictions meant there was never a hope of fans being allowed anywhere near the Mercedes-Benz Arena for the knockout stages and, while a champion would have been crowned, it wouldn’t have felt anywhere near the same.

The pandemic, of course, isn’t the only factor at play. Long before the average person knew terms like Covid-19, contact tracing, or mRNA even existed, this was set to be the longest gap between editions of EuroBasket since World War II.

FIBA’s calendar switch to make the event quadrennial took away the almost rushed nature of the competition. Every two years, a new champion would be crowned even if there was a while where that inevitably felt like Spain (despite the fact that La Roja only won two of their three titles since 2009 in consecutive editions).

The packed impact that had on the international calendar meant that who would be available proved to be a debate around every competition. Granted, that hasn’t exactly died down for this edition but the breathing room means that the top stars recognise its importance as a standalone event compared the uneven nature of competitions past where editions with Olympic qualification being involved carried a touch more weight.

EuroBasket, today, is now purely about being the champions of Europe and its a moniker the champion will hold for four years. Or rather it will be for whoever wins in 2025 as there pandemic delay means there’s only a three year gap.

It also means the planned built-in summer off from international tournament play also moved significantly. This was meant to be the year in this cycle without a major tournament, with the World Cup having…

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