England women's national basketball team

The England women's national basketball team represents England in international basketball competitions. The team is organized by England Basketball, the sport's governing body in England. In 2005 England, along with the basketballscotland and their counterparts in Wales combined forces to form the Great Britain women's national basketball team, with the target goal to field a competitive team capable of winning medals at the London 2012 summer Olympics.

England
FIBA rankingNone
Joined FIBA1937
FIBA zoneFIBA Europe
National federationEnglish Basketball Federation
CoachPaul James
Olympic Games
AppearancesNone
Women's World Cup
AppearancesNone

Commonwealth Games

Melbourne 2006

The men’s and women’s teams were competing for the first time as England in a major multi-sport event, and it was the first Commonwealth Games in which basketball was featured.

The women’s team included Jane Thackray, who had more than 50 international appearances. Also on the squad was Andrea Congreaves, one of the most outstanding players produced by England, as well as some exciting up-and-coming talent.[1]

In the game for the bronze medal, England outscored Nigeria for the first three quarters, but was forced to withstand a sickening comeback when Nigeria shot 29 points to England's 23 in the last quarter. The top scorer for England was Andrea Congreaves with 21 points, Shelly Boston scored 14 and Rosalee Mason with 12 points.[2]

Team

Coaching Staff

  • Coach - Bazany, Branislav
  • Assistant Coach - Clark, Mark[3]
gollark: Even my Lightweight Messaging Service would probably be really annoying to type out.
gollark: On the server.
gollark: Yes, to copy programs you already wrote.
gollark: I think this is a bad idea. You would end up with not very many programs on it.
gollark: Nobody uses floppy disks, possibly partly due to potatOS.

See also

References

  1. "Sport england". Archived from the original on 16 July 2012. Retrieved 12 March 2010.
  2. "Melbourne 2006 Report". Archived from the original on 5 April 2015. Retrieved 12 March 2010.
  3. "Melbourne 2006". Archived from the original on 9 August 2008. Retrieved 12 March 2010.
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