Basketball at the 1972 Summer Olympics
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Final results for the Basketball competition at the 1972 Summer Olympics. It was held from August 27 to September 9 at the Rudi-Sedlmayer-Halle.

Contents

Medal summary

Games Gold Silver Bronze
Men's basketball Soviet Union
(victory appealed by the U.S. but rejected)
Anatoli Polivoda
Modestas Paulauskas
Zurab Sakandelidze
Alzhan Zharmukhamedov
Aleksandr Boloshev
Ivan Edeshko
Sergei Belov
Mikhail Korkiya
Ivan Dvorny
Gennadi Volnov
Aleksandr Belov
Sergei Kovalenko
United States
(refused to accept silver medal)
Kenneth Davis
Doug Collins
Tom Henderson
Mike Bantom
Robert Jones
Dwight Jones
James Forbes
Jim Brewer
Tommy Burleson
Tom McMillen
Kevin Joyce
Ed Ratleff
Cuba
Juan Carlos Domecq Fortuondo
Ruperto Herrera Tabio
Juan Roca Brunet
Pedro Chappe Garcia
Miguel Alvarez Pozo
Rafael Canizares Poey
Conrado Perez Armenteros
Miguel Calderon Gomez
Tomas Herrera Martinez
Oscar Varona Varona
Alejandro Urgelles Guibot
Franklin Standard Johnson

Final ranking

  1. Soviet Union Soviet Union (URS) (9-0)
  2. United States United States (USA) (8-1)
  3. Cuba Cuba (CUB) (7-2)
  4. Italy Italy (ITA) (5-4)
  5. Yugoslavia Yugoslavia (YUG) (7-2)
  6. Puerto Rico Puerto Rico (PUR) (6-3)
  7. Brazil Brazil (BRA) (5-4)
  8. Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia (TCH) (4-5)
  9. Australia Australia (AUS) (5-4)
  10. Poland Poland (POL) (3-6)
  11. Spain Spain (ESP) (4-5)
  12. West Germany West Germany (FRG) (3-6)
  13. Philippines Philippines (PHI) (3-6)
  14. Japan Japan (JPN) (2-7)
  15. Senegal Senegal (SEN) (0-8)
  16. Egypt Egypt (EGY) (0-8)

Tournament summary

Pool Play: Group A

Team P: W: L: F: A: Pts: Flag of the United States Flag of Cuba Flag of Brazil Flag of Czechoslovakia Flag of Spain Flag of Australia Flag of Japan Flag of Egypt
United States 7 7 0 542 312 14 67-48 61-54 66-35 72-56 81-55 99-33 96-31
Cuba 7 6 1 560 445 13 48-67 64-63 77-65 74-53 84-70 108-63 105-64
Brazil 7 4 3 561 490 11 54-61 63-64 83-82 72-69 69-75 110-55 110-84
Czechoslovakia 7 4 3 493 489 11 35-66 65-77 82-83 74-70 69-68 74-61 94-64
Spain 7 3 4 486 500 10 56-72 53-74 69-72 70-74 79-74 87-76 72-58
Australia 7 3 4 523 524 10 55-81 70-84 75-69 68-69 74-79 92-76 89-66
Japan 7 1 6 442 643 8 33-99 63-108 55-110 61-74 76-87 76-92 78-73
Egypt 7 0 7 440 644 7 31-96 64-105 84-110 64-94 58-72 66-89 73-78

Pool Play: Group B

Team P: W: L: F: A: Pts: Flag of the Soviet Union Flag of Italy Flag of Yugoslavia Flag of Puerto Rico Flag of West Germany Flag of Poland Flag of the Philippines Flag of Senegal
Soviet Union 7 7 0 639 479 14 79-66 74-67 100-87 87-63 94-64 111-80 94-52
Italy 7 5 2 547 471 12 66-79 78-85 71-54 68-57 71-59 101-81 92-56
Yugoslavia 7 5 2 582 484 12 67-74 85-78 74-79 81-56 85-64 117-76 73-57
Puerto Rico 7 5 2 570 531 12 87-100 54-71 79-74 81-74 85-83 92-72 92-57
West Germany 7 3 4 482 518 10 63-87 57-68 56-81 74-81 67-65 93-74 72-62
Poland 7 2 5 520 536 9 64-94 59-71 64-85 83-85 65-67 90-75 95-79
Philippines 7 1 6 526 666 8 80-111 81-101 76-117 72-92 74-93 75-90 68-62
Senegal 7 0 7 405 586 7 52-94 56-92 57-73 57-92 62-72 59-95 62-68

Semifinal

Egypt 0 - 2 Philippines (The Egyptian team forfeited as their entire team left the Games following the Munich Massacre)
September 5 West Germany 69 - 70 Australia
September 6 Japan 70 - 67 Senegal
Spain 76 - 87 Poland
September 7 Czechoslovakia 63 - 66 Yugoslavia
Soviet Union 67 - 61 Cuba
Puerto Rico 87 - 83 Brazil
Italy 38 - 68 United States

Final

Egypt 0 - 2 Senegal
September 8 Philippines 80 - 73 Japan
West Germany 83 - 84 Spain
Czechoslovakia 69 - 87 Brazil
Cuba 66 - 65 Italy
September 9 Australia 91 - 83 Poland
Yugoslavia 86 - 80 Puerto Rico
Soviet Union 51 - 50 United States

Gold Medal Match controversy

The 1972 Olympic men's basketball gold medal game, marking the first ever loss for Team USA in Olympic play, is arguably the most controversial in Olympic history. The United States rode their seven consecutive gold medals and 63-0 Olympic record to Munich for the 1972 Summer Olympics. The team won its first eight games in convincing fashion, setting up a final against the Soviet Union.

With three seconds left in the gold medal game, American guard Doug Collins sank two free throws to put the Americans up 50-49. The horn that would normally signal the end of the game erroneously sounded before Collins's second free throw. Immediately following Collins's free throws, the Soviets inbounded the ball and failed to score in those three seconds. But one official had whistled play to stop with one second remaining after hearing the earlier horn and seeing a disturbance near the scorers' table. The Soviets then argued that they had requested a timeout before Collins' foul shots. The referees ordered the clock reset and the game's final three seconds replayed. The clock was in the process of being reset when the referees put the ball in play. A length-of-the-court Soviet pass missed its mark, the horn sounded, and the USA again began celebrating.

However, R. William Jones, secretary general of FIBA, ordered the clock to be reset again at 0:03 and the game replayed from that point. Jones had no authority to make a ruling during a game, but his power in the sport was such that the officials complied with the order anyway. He was quoted later as saying, "The Americans have to learn how to lose." This time, the Soviet team's Ivan Edeshko threw the long pass. Aleksandr Belov and the USA's Kevin Joyce and Jim Forbes went up for the pass near the basket. Belov caught the ball, and both defenders landed out of position. Belov then made the uncontested layup, scoring the winning points as the horn sounded for the last time.

The U.S. team immediately filed a protest, which was heard by a five-man jury of appeal. In a 3-2 decision divided along Cold War lines (Puerto Rico and Italy voted to uphold the appeal, while Hungary, Cuba and Poland voted to reject it), the jury voted down the protest and awarded the gold medals to the Soviet team.1 The U.S. players voted unanimously to refuse their silver medals. The team and coaching staff refused to participate in the medals ceremony, and the public address announcer said over the loudspeaker that "The United States team refuses to accept the silver medal. They believe they deserve the gold." To this day, none of the players on that squad have requested their silver medals; in fact, several members have directed in their wills that their heirs are never to accept the medals, even posthumously.2

In recent years, FIBA has instituted more stringent rules for international competitions to attempt prevention of similar incidents again:

  • Only the coach may call the time-out.
    • Must be called to the scorer and not the referee.
    • Scorer will stop the clock and signal the time-out upon the dead ball or concession of field goal.
  • A time-out can only be awarded upon:
    • A dead ball
    • When the calling team concedes a field goal.
      • It will not be awarded if the team calling the time-out scores.
  • The game clock must register tenths of seconds in the final minute of a period.
  • Starting in 1992, a duplicate game clock must be on top of the shot clock.
    • As of 2004, the game shot clock must be seen by players and coaches on three sides.
  • A whistle-stop unit must be installed where the officials can stop the clock on the sound of their whistle, as of 2004.
  • As of 2006, the use of instant replay is permitted on last-second shots.

References

External links

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