Reprezentacja Chin w koszykówce mężczyzn
Związek | Zhōngguó Lánqiú Xiéhuì (中国篮球协会)[1] | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Trener | Li Nan | ||||||
Skrót FIBA | CHN | ||||||
Ranking FIBA | 27. (407,7 pkt.)[a] | ||||||
Medale | |||||||
Mistrzostwa Azji | |||||||
| |||||||
|
Reprezentacja Chin w koszykówce mężczyzn – zespół koszykarski, reprezentujący Chiny w meczach i sportowych imprezach międzynarodowych, powoływany przez selekcjonera, w którym występować mogą wszyscy zawodnicy posiadający obywatelstwo chińskie, niezależnie od wieku, czy narodowości. Za jej funkcjonowanie odpowiedzialny jest Chiński Związek Koszykówki (中国篮球协会). Dziewięć razy wystąpiła na Igrzyskach Olimpijskich oraz w mistrzostwach świata. Zdobyła szesnaście razy mistrzostwo Azji.
Sukcesy
- 16-krotny mistrz Azji (1975, 1977, 1979, 1981, 1983, 1987, 1989, 1991, 1993, 1995, 1999, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2011, 2015)
- wicemistrz Azji (2009)
- 2-krotny brązowy medalista mistrzostw Azji (1985 1997)
Trenerzy i selekcjonerzy
- 1974 – 1978 Qian Chenghai
- 1978 – 1981 Ma Qingsheng
- 1981 – 1982 Qian Chenghai
- 1982 Liu Guiyi
- 1982 – 1988 Qian Chenghai
- 1989 – 1990 Sun Bang
- 1990 – 1991 Wang Zhangyou
- 1991 – 1995 Jiang Xingquan
- 1995 – 1996 Gong Luming
- 1996 – 1997 Zhang Bin
- 1997 – 1999 Wang Fei
- 1999 – 2001 Jiang Xingquan
- 2001 – 2002 Wang Fei
- 2003 Jiang Xingquan
- 2004 Del Harris
- 2005 – 2008 Jonas Kazlauskas
- 2009 – 2010 Guo Shiqiang
- 2010 – 2012 Bob Donewald Jr.
- 2013 – 2014 Panajotis Janakis
- 2014 – 2017 Gong Luming
- 2017 – Li Nan
Udział w międzynarodowych turniejach
Igrzyska olimpijskie
Mistrzostwa Świata
| Mistrzostwa Azji / Puchar Azji
|
Przypisy
- ↑ Basketball Association of the People's Republic of China. FIBA. [dostęp 2019-07-16]. (ang.).
Linki zewnętrzne
Media użyte na tej stronie
Pictograms of Olympic sports - Basketball. This is unofficial sample picture. Images of official Olympic pictograms for 1948 Summer Olympics and all Summer Olympics since 1964 can be found in corresponding Official Reports.
Icon representing steadiness, consisting of a blue rectangle. To be used in Template:Steady.
Keep it 300 x 300, do not resize it. Because that may cause some problem when using it, when it is the only element in a text line, the position of the these text lines may go wrong.
Autor:
- Kit_body_basketball.gif: Original uploader was Rolando at en.wikipedia
- derivative work: Ante Perkovic (talk)
This image is a GIF duplicate of kit_body_basketball.png, which does not work as a superimposed image on the template en:Template:Basketball kit.
Autor: kris krüg from Vancouver, Canada, Licencja: CC BY-SA 2.0
Team China - Men's Basketball - Beijing 2008 Olympics
The flag of Navassa Island is simply the United States flag. It does not have a "local" flag or "unofficial" flag; it is an uninhabited island. The version with a profile view was based on Flags of the World and as a fictional design has no status warranting a place on any Wiki. It was made up by a random person with no connection to the island, it has never flown on the island, and it has never received any sort of recognition or validation by any authority. The person quoted on that page has no authority to bestow a flag, "unofficial" or otherwise, on the island.
Flaga Finlandii
Flag of Canada introduced in 1965, using Pantone colors. This design replaced the Canadian Red Ensign design.
(c) I, Cmapm, CC-BY-SA-3.0
The flag of the Soviet Union (1955-1991) using a darker shade of red.
Autor: Pedro A. Gracia Fajardo, escudo de Manual de Imagen Institucional de la Administración General del Estado, Licencja: CC0
Flaga Hiszpanii
The national flag of Kingdom of Thailand since September 2017; there are total of 3 colours:
- Red represents the blood spilt to protect Thailand’s independence and often more simply described as representing the nation.
- White represents the religion of Buddhism, the predominant religion of the nation
- Blue represents the monarchy of the nation, which is recognised as the centre of Thai hearts.
The Flag of India. The colours are saffron, white and green. The navy blue wheel in the center of the flag has a diameter approximately the width of the white band and is called Ashoka's Dharma Chakra, with 24 spokes (after Ashoka, the Great). Each spoke depicts one hour of the day, portraying the prevalence of righteousness all 24 hours of it.