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Australia Basketball

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Established
1947 (78 years old)

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Competitions
FIBA Basketball World Cup
Olympics Basketball
FIBA Asia Cup

Last Edit
Ovokx: 06/Dec/24
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Upcoming
tiny league badge icon 26 Feb Guam Bask tiny home badge icon 11:00am tiny away badge icon Australia
tiny league badge icon 01 Mar Philippin tiny home badge icon 11:00am tiny away badge icon Australia
tiny league badge icon 03 Jul Australia tiny home badge icon 10:00am tiny away badge icon Guam Bask
tiny league badge icon 06 Jul Australia tiny home badge icon 10:00am tiny away badge icon Philippin

Results
tiny league badge icon 01 Dec New Zeala tiny home badge icon 77 - 79 tiny away badge icon Australia
tiny league badge icon 28 Nov Australia tiny home badge icon 84 - 79 tiny away badge icon New Zeala
tiny league badge icon 13 Aug Australia 84 - 60 Philippin
tiny league badge icon 10 Aug Qatar Bas tiny home badge icon 82 - 110 tiny away badge icon Australia
tiny league badge icon 08 Aug Lebanon B tiny home badge icon 80 - 93 tiny away badge icon Australia

Description british english flag icon
The Australian men's national basketball team, known as the Boomers, represents Australia in international basketball competition. The team is named after the slang term for a male kangaroo. Australia finished fourth at the 2016 Rio Olympic Games.

Australia is a regional power in basketball. Placed in the relatively weak FIBA Oceania region, the Boomers's qualification for the Summer Olympic Games and FIBA World Cup is often a three-match competition against the other regional power, the New Zealand Tall Blacks.
Boomers's old logo

Before the formation of the National Basketball League (NBL) in 1979, Boomers players were selected from state leagues around the country, with Victoria, South Australia, and to a lesser extent New South Wales the dominant states. After the formation of the NBL, players began to be selected almost exclusively from that competition during the 1980s and 1990s.

Occasionally players were selected from outside the NBL. Mark Bradtke made his Boomers debut in 1987 while attending the Australian Institute of Sport (AIS) before he entered the NBL. Luc Longley made his debut in 1988 while playing college basketball in the United States. Other Australian players enter the Euroleague and the National Basketball Association (NBA) in the U.S. The Boomers's roster for the 2014 World Cup included five NBA players: Cameron Bairstow with the Brisbane Bullets, Aron Baynes with the Boston Celtics, Matthew Dellavedova with the Milwaukee Bucks, and Dante Exum and Joe Ingles with the Utah Jazz. Three other players were ruled out of the World Cup due to injury play in the NBA, namely Andrew Bogut of the Los Angeles Lakers, rookie Ben Simmons of the Philadelphia 76ers and Patty Mills of the San Antonio Spurs.

Several players on youth national teams are student athletes at the AIS or in the US college basketball system. Some players (e.g. Longley) made the senior national team while at US schools. By the early 21st century, almost half of the squad was playing outside Australia. For the 2012 London Olympic Games, only two members of the Australian squad were based in the country – Peter Crawford and Adam Gibson, with the latter being the only Australia-based member of the 2014 World Cup squad. The AIS has helped Australia's popularity worldwide.

Australia has participated in the most Olympic men's basketball tournaments (14) without winning a medal. Australia has also participated in 11 FIBA World Cups without winning a medal, making Australia the nation with the second-most appearances at the tournament without winning a medal, behind Canada and Puerto Rico (both 13).
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2022
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FIBA Mens World Ranking



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