2016 FIBA 3x3 U18 World Championships - Men's Pool D Preview

26 May 2016

MIES (FIBA 3x3 U18 World Championships) - With the 2016 FIBA 3x3 U18 World Championships taking place in Astana from 1-5 June, we preview the men's and women's tournament pool by pool.


Men's Pool D

Teams
Hungary (#4 seed), Brazil (#5), New Zealand (#12), Philippines (#13) and Spain (#20)

Story
When news broke reigning MVP Tai Wynyard would come to Kazakhstan, it became pretty clear New Zealand would be the favourites to defend their title. The mighty big man (2.05m, 110 kg) already promised "big dunks, hard work, hakas and excitement" and the supporting cast seems top notch once again, including the sharpshooting Samuel Waardenburg.

Spoiler alert: this pool is absolutely ridiculous. Each team played (and played well) at the event last season. Spain reached the semi-finals in 2015 and cracked the Top 10 in all three appearances. This year's squad features players from the most prestigious basketball academies in Spain. Keep an eye on FC Barcelona rising star Aleix Font.

Brazil had a nice run last season and finished 10th. The athletic Fabricio Verissimo is the only player back from last year and should combine nicely with big man Felipe Franklin Santos, who currently ranks 22nd in the world  in U18 category.

The last two teams in the Pool - Hungary and the Philippines - actually fought for a Last 16 spot last year in the pool stage (the Philippines won the game but Hungary qualified). The Magyars also have one player returning from last year with high-flying Krisztofer Durázi, who was the team's second top scorer in Debrecen.

The Philippines will make their first-ever appearance at the event without Kobe Paras. To bridge the huge gap, the Asian powerhouse called up two players who have recently shined in youth categories, playmaker Theo Flores and the promising Joshua Sinclair, who already ranks 19th in the world in U18 category after an eye-catching performance at the 2015 FIBA 3x3 World Tour.

Team Stats
Oldest/Youngest team: Spain (18)/Hungary (17)
Tallest/Shortest team: New Zealand (1.94m)/Philippines (1.91m) 
Heaviest/Lightest team: Spain (88kg)/New Zealand (83kg)


Player Stats
Oldest/Youngest player: Alberto Pérez, Spain (18)/Marcelo Duro, Brazil (17)
Tallest/Shortest player: Bernat Vanaclocha Sánchez, Spain (2.07m)/Dani García, Spain (1.80m)
Heaviest/Lightest player: Tai Wynyard, New Zealand (110kg)/ Hamish McDonald, New Zealand (70kg)

FIBA