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Southeast Asia Basketball Association

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The Southeast Asia Basketball Association ( SEABA ) is a subzone of FIBA Asia consisting of countries from Southeast Asia . The ASEAN Basketball League (ABL), a professional league, is the top level of club competition run by the SEABA.

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8-585: The SEABA Championship is a tournament between national teams. It was first held in Segamat in 1994, and every two years thereafter. The fourth edition, which was held in Manila in 2001, changed the year of the subzone qualifiers in odd-numbered years, beginning that same year; and directly it became the main qualifying tournament for the FIBA Asia Championship . The SEABA Cup is the qualifying tournament for

16-1033: Is a basketball tournament national teams organized by the Southeast Asia Basketball Association , a sub-zone of the FIBA Asia . It serves as a qualifier for the FIBA Asia Cup . Summary [ edit ] Year Hosts Final Third Place Game Champions Score Runners-up Third Place Score Fourth Place 1994 Details [REDACTED] Segamat [REDACTED] Malaysia N/A [REDACTED] Thailand [REDACTED] Indonesia N/A [REDACTED] Philippines U19 1996 Details [REDACTED] Surabaya [REDACTED] Indonesia 88 –81 [REDACTED] Philippines [REDACTED]   Malaysia and [REDACTED]   Thailand (a third place game took place but

24-726: Is a tournament among professional club teams. The winner goes to the FIBA Asia Champions Cup . Formerly, from 2000 until 2008, SEABA held a club tournament known as SEABA Champions Cup . SEABA Championship Basketball tournament SEABA Championship Most recent season or competition: 2017 SEABA Championship Founded 1994 Country SEABA member nations Continent FIBA Asia ( Asia ) Most recent champion(s) [REDACTED]   Philippines (8th title) Most titles [REDACTED]   Philippines (8 titles) The SEABA Championship

32-675: Is organized and run by the Malaysia Basketball Association (MABA); (Malay: Persatuan Bola Keranjang Malaysia ). The team had its prime time between 1960 and 1995 when it qualified for the FIBA Asia Championship , Asia's most prestigious basketball tournament, 18 times in a row. In 1986 it qualified for the World Cup , its most noteworthy accomplishment to date. Petronas is the major sponsor for MABA. The women's national team has more successes internationally compared to

40-668: The FIBA Asia Challenge , and is held in even-numbered years. The SEABA Championship for Women is a tournament between national teams. The SEABA Under-18 Championship is a tournament between national teams. The highest placers go to the FIBA Asia Under-18 Championship . The SEABA Under-16 Championship is a tournament between national teams. The highest placers go to the FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship . The ASEAN Basketball League

48-1888: The FIBA Asia Championship are in boldface . Team [REDACTED] 1994 [REDACTED] 1996 [REDACTED] 1998 [REDACTED] 2001 [REDACTED] 2003 [REDACTED] 2005 [REDACTED] 2007 [REDACTED] 2009 [REDACTED] 2011 [REDACTED] 2013 [REDACTED] 2015 [REDACTED] 2017 Years [REDACTED]   Brunei 7th DNP 5th/6th 7th – – – – – – 6th – 4 [REDACTED]   Cambodia 8th 5th 7th – – – – – – – – – 3 [REDACTED]   Indonesia 3rd 1st – 4th – 2nd 2nd 2nd 2nd 4th 4th 2nd 10 [REDACTED]   Laos – – 8th – – – – – – – 5th – 2 [REDACTED]   Malaysia 1st 3rd/4th 3rd 5th 2nd 1st 3rd 3rd 3rd 2nd 2nd 4th 12 [REDACTED]   Myanmar 6th – – – – – – – – – – 7th 2 [REDACTED]   Philippines 4th 2nd 1st 1st 1st – 1st 1st 1st – 1st 1st 10 [REDACTED]   Singapore 5th – 4th 3rd – 4th 5th 4th 4th 3rd 3rd 5th 10 [REDACTED]   Thailand 2nd 3rd/4th 2nd 2nd 3rd 3rd 4th – – 1st – 3rd 9 [REDACTED]   Vietnam – – 5th/6th 6th 4th 5th – – – – – 6th 5 Participating teams 8 5 8 7 4 5 5 4 4 4 6 7 National basketball federation

56-2894: The result is unknown) 1998 Details [REDACTED] Manila [REDACTED] Philippines 90 –69 [REDACTED] Thailand [REDACTED] Malaysia N/A [REDACTED] Singapore 2001 Details [REDACTED] Manila [REDACTED] Philippines 90 –73 [REDACTED] Thailand [REDACTED] Singapore 81 –78 OT [REDACTED] Indonesia 2003 Details [REDACTED] Kuala Lumpur [REDACTED] Philippines No playoffs [REDACTED] Malaysia [REDACTED] Thailand No playoffs [REDACTED] Vietnam 2005 Details [REDACTED] Kuala Lumpur [REDACTED] Malaysia No playoffs [REDACTED] Indonesia [REDACTED] Thailand No playoffs [REDACTED] Singapore 2007 Details [REDACTED] Ratchaburi [REDACTED] Philippines No playoffs [REDACTED] Indonesia [REDACTED] Malaysia No playoffs [REDACTED] Thailand 2009 Details [REDACTED] Medan [REDACTED] Philippines 98 –68 [REDACTED] Indonesia [REDACTED] Malaysia No playoffs [REDACTED] Singapore 2011 Details [REDACTED] Jakarta [REDACTED] Philippines 89 –50 [REDACTED] Indonesia [REDACTED] Malaysia No playoffs [REDACTED] Singapore 2013 Details [REDACTED] Medan [REDACTED] Thailand 73 –63 [REDACTED] Malaysia [REDACTED] Singapore No playoffs [REDACTED] Indonesia 2015 Details [REDACTED] Singapore [REDACTED] Philippines No playoffs [REDACTED] Malaysia [REDACTED] Singapore No playoffs [REDACTED] Indonesia 2017 Details [REDACTED] Quezon City [REDACTED] Philippines No playoffs [REDACTED] Indonesia [REDACTED] Thailand No playoffs [REDACTED] Malaysia Medal table [ edit ] Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total 1 [REDACTED]   Philippines 8 1 0 9 2 [REDACTED]   Malaysia 2 3 4 9 3 [REDACTED]   Indonesia 1 5 1 7 4 [REDACTED]   Thailand 1 3 3 7 5 [REDACTED]   Singapore 0 0 3 3 Totals (5 entries) 12 12 11 35 Performance by teams [ edit ] Teams that qualified to

64-2644: Was awarded a wildcard following the pullout of North Korea and Kazakhstan . National basketball federation qualified, but later was suspended. National basketball federation took over the spot for the Philippines . National basketball federation was suspended. National basketball federation was host of the FIBA Asia Championship. External links [ edit ] v t e SEABA Championship Segamat 1994 Surabaya 1996 Manila 1998 Manila 2001 Kuala Lumpur 2003 Kuala Lumpur 2005 Ratchaburi 2007 Medan 2009 Jakarta 2011 Medan 2013 Singapore 2015 Quezon City 2017 v t e Southeast Asian sports championships Team sports Basketball ( Men , Women ) 3x3 basketball Beach handball Beach soccer Football ( Men , Women ) Futsal ( Men , Women ) Ice hockey Indoor hockey Volleyball Beach volleyball Individual sports Athletics (Youth) Badminton Bodybuilding Bowling Canoe–kayak Chess Cross country Cycling Equestrian Fencing Golf Gymnastics Judo Karate Kickboxing Kurash Muaythai Pencak Silat Rowing Sambo Sailing Snooker Swimming Swimming Age Groups Table Tennis Table Tennis Junior and Cadet Tennis Taekwondo Triathlon Weightlifting Wrestling Wushu Club sports Club basketball Club football Club futsal Women's club futsal Southeast Asian Games - ASEAN Para Games - ASEAN Deaf Games - ASEAN University Games - ASEAN School Games - BIMP-EAGA Friendship Games Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=SEABA_Championship&oldid=1259947424 " Categories : SEABA Championship Basketball competitions in Asia between national teams 1994 establishments in Southeast Asia Recurring sporting events established in 1994 Biennial sporting events Hidden categories: Articles with short description Short description matches Wikidata Malaysia men%27s national basketball team The Malaysia men's national basketball team represents Malaysia at international basketball competitions. It

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