Basketball at the 1964 Summer Olympics

6th Olympic Basketball Tournament
Tokyo 1964
Tournament details
Olympics 1964 Summer Olympics
Host nation Japan
City Tokyo
Duration October 11–23
Men's tournament
Teams 16
Medals
1 Gold medalists  United States
2 Silver medalists Soviet Union
3 Bronze medalists  Brazil
Tournaments
 Rome 1960  Mexico City 1968 

Basketball contests at the 1964 Summer Olympics took place at the Yoyogi National Gymnasium in Tokyo, Japan from October 11 to October 23. The United States defeated the Soviet Union to win their sixth straight gold medal at this event, while Brazil earned the bronze against Puerto Rico.[1]

Results

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Men's basketball  United States
Jim Barnes
Bill Bradley
Larry Brown
Joe Caldwell
Mel Counts
Richard Davies
Walt Hazzard
Lucious Jackson
John McCaffrey
Jeff Mullins
Jerry Shipp
George Wilson
 Soviet Union
Valdis Muižnieks
Nikolay Bagley
Armenak Alachachian
Alexandr Travin
Viacheslav Khrynin
Jānis Krūmiņš
Levan Moseshvili
Yury Korneev
Alexsandr Petrov
Gennadi Volnov
Jaak Lipso
Juris Kalniņš
 Brazil

Amaury Antônio Pasos
Wlamir Marques
Ubiratan Pereira Maciel
Carlos Domingos Massoni
Friedrich Wilhem Braun
Carmo de Souza
Jatyr Eduardo Schall
Edson Bispo dos Santos
Antonio Salvador Sucar
Victor Mirshawka
Sergio de Toledo Machado
Jose Edvar Simoes

Qualification

Automatic qualifications were granted to the host country and the first eight places at the previous tournament. Additional spots were decided by various continental tournaments held by FIBA plus two additional intercontinental tournaments that granted six extra berths total, after the withdrawal of United Arab Republic and Czechoslovakia.

Means of qualification[2] Date Venue Berths Qualified
Host nation 1  Japan
1960 Summer Olympics 26 August–10 September 1960 Italy Rome 8  United States
 Soviet Union
 Brazil
 Italy
 Czechoslovakia[a]
 SFR Yugoslavia
 Poland
 Uruguay
1963 Pan American Games 23 April–3 May 1963 Brazil São Paulo 2  Puerto Rico
 Peru
FIBA Africa Championship 1964 4–8 March 1964 Morocco Casablanca 1  United Arab Republic[a]
European Pre-Olympic Tournament 4–13 June 1964 Switzerland Geneva 2  Finland
 Hungary
Pan-Continental Pre-Olympic Tournament 25 September–3 October 1964 Japan Yokohama 4  Mexico
 Australia
 Canada[b]
 South Korea[b]
Total 12

Format

Preliminary Round

The top two teams from each group advance to the semifinals, while the remaining teams compete for 5th through 16th places in separate brackets. Both group leaders, the United States and the Soviet Union advanced undefeated to the knockout stage.

Group A

Advanced to the semifinals
Team W L PF PA PD Pts Tie
 Soviet Union 7 0 562 424 +138 14
 Puerto Rico 5 2 493 454 +39 12
 Poland 4 3 467 448 +19 11 1W−0L
 Italy 4 3 495 480 +15 11 0W−1L
 Mexico 3 4 485 514 −29 10 1W−0L
 Japan 3 4 421 428 −7 10 0W−1L
 Hungary 2 5 407 469 −62 9
 Canada 0 7 408 521 −113 7

October 11


19:00
Soviet Union  8752  Canada

October 12


20:30
Canada  5970  Hungary

October 13


19:00
Canada  3758  Japan

October 14


16:00
Canada  5466  Italy

October 16


12:00
Mexico  7868  Canada

October 17


13:30
Puerto Rico  8869  Canada

October 18


10:00
Poland  7469  Canada

Group B

Qualified for the semifinals
Team W L PF PA PD Pts Tie
 United States 7 0 569 333 +236 14
 Brazil 5 2 473 452 +21 12 1W−0L
 SFR Yugoslavia 5 2 529 453 +76 12 0W−1L
 Uruguay 4 3 472 482 −10 11
 Finland 3 4 409 475 −66 10
 Australia 2 5 434 460 −26 9 1W−0L
 Peru 2 5 431 453 −22 9 0W−1L
 South Korea 0 7 432 641 −209 7

October 11


20:30
United States  7845  Australia

October 12


16:00
United States  7751  Finland

17:30
Australia  8162  Peru

October 13


9:00
United States  6045  Peru

13:30
Australia  7074  SFR Yugoslavia

October 14


10:30
United States  8328  Uruguay

19:00
Australia  6558  South Korea

October 16


9:00
Finland  6159  Australia

19:00
United States  6961  SFR Yugoslavia

October 17


19:00
United States  8653  Brazil

20:30
Uruguay  5857  Australia

October 18


10:30
United States  11650  South Korea

17:30
Brazil  6957  Australia

Knockout Stage

Championship playoffs

  Semifinals (October 23)
One-game playoff
                   
  A1  Soviet Union Soviet Union 53  
  B2  Brazil Brazil 47   Gold medal Final (October 23)
One-game playoff
      B1  United States United States 73
  Semifinals (October 23)
One-game playoff
  A1  Soviet Union Soviet Union 59
  B1  United States United States 62
  A2  Puerto Rico Puerto Rico 42   Bronze medal game (October 23)
One-game playoff
    A2  Puerto Rico Puerto Rico 60
    B2  Brazil Brazil 76

Classification brackets

5th–8th Place

  Semifinals (October 20)     5th place (October 22)
                 
  A3   Poland 82  
  B4   Uruguay 69    
      A3   Poland 59
      A5   Italy 79
  B3   SFR Yugoslavia 63    
  A4   Italy 75   7th place (October 22)
 
B3   SFR Yugoslavia 78
  B4   Uruguay 55

9th–12th Place

  Semifinals (October 21)     9th place (October 23)
                 
  A5   Mexico 58  
  B6   Australia 70    
      B6   Australia 64
      A6   Japan 57
  B5   Finland 45    
  A6   Japan 54   11th place (October 23)
 
A5   Mexico 72
  B5   Finland 73

13th–16th Place

  Semifinals (October 20)     13th place (October 22)
                 
  A7   Hungary 99  
  B8   South Korea 83    
      A7   Hungary 68
      A8   Canada 65
  B7   Peru 81    
  A8   Canada 82   15th place (October 22)
 
B7   South Korea 66
  B8   Peru 71

Final standings

Rank Team W L
1st, gold medalist(s)  United States 9 0
2nd, silver medalist(s)  Soviet Union 8 1
3rd, bronze medalist(s)  Brazil 6 3
4th  Puerto Rico 5 4
5th  Italy 6 3
6th  Poland 5 4
7th  SFR Yugoslavia 6 3
8th  Uruguay 4 5
9th  Australia 4 5
10th  Japan 4 5
11th  Finland 4 5
12th  Mexico 3 6
13th  Hungary 4 5
14th  Canada 1 8
15th  Peru 3 6
16th  South Korea 0 9

Awards

1964 Olympic Basketball Champions
United States
United States
Sixth title

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Basketball at the 1964 Summer Olympics.
  1. Basketball at the 1964 Tokyo Summer Games. sports-reference.com
  2. Velasco, Santiago. "VI Olympic Basketball Tournament (Tokyo 1964)". Lingua Sports. Retrieved 2 September 2015.

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