A Bright Future in Xiamen, as Universities Battle for FISU 3x3 Basketball Title

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Xiamen; 26 October 2016: The finals of the 3x3 World University League have concluded in Xiamen, China, with 16 men’s teams and 16 women’s teams representing their universities and producing thrilling basketball action.

In the women’s bracket, the Lithuanian Sport University emerged victorious from its final with the University of Regina, as Chinese Culture University defeated the University of Sydney to take the remaining spot on the podium.

In the men’s bracket, McGill University beat the University of Bordeaux to win, with the University of Kragujevac taking third place.

"It was a great pleasure to personally experience the action in Xiamen this weekend, as universities from around the world came together and played some great basketball," said FISU President Oleg Matytsin.

"This event has further demonstrated FISU’s way forward for University sport, with athletes competing directly for their universities instead of competing for their countries. 3x3 is a great innovation on the part of FIBA and it is the ideal sporting format for a World University League."

As a more accessible basketball discipline, 3x3 tournaments consistently bring together diverse groups of players. At FISU’s 3x3 World University League finals, universities from five different countries shared the six podium places. In addition to relatively new institutions like host university Huaqiao University, the tournament also featured Oxford University – currently ranked first in the Times Higher Education rankings – and Indiana University, whose basketball history dates back almost to the invention of the sport in the 19th century.

"Making sport more attractive to young people is particularly important to us at FISU," President Matytsin added. "FISU has found that the combination of music, entertainment, social media and the opportunity to play sport informally is important in motivating the current generation of students to choose sport as a recreational activity. These factors are all present in 3x3 basketball. Following the success with 3x3, FISU is looking to expand the World University League concept to other team sports and expects to have positive news to announce in the coming months."

Ivan Jukić from the University of Split finished as the top scorer in the men’s competition with 42 points overall. And in the women’s competition it was Laura Svaryte from the Lithuanian Sport University who finished as top scorer with 53 points.

In the dunk contest, Tonny Drileba from Makerere University took the gold medal with Marcel Bray from the University of Sydney and Pedro Amoros Rittel from the National University of La Matanza taking silver and bronze respectively.

In the shoot-out contest, Ursa Zibert from the University of Ljubljana won the title, with Elena Kozheporova from Magnitogorsk State University taking silver and Zhang Jingyi from Beijing Normal University taking bronze.

-Ends-

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Contact: Jack Zorab

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The International University Sports Federation – FISU

Founded in 1949, FISU stands for Fédération Internationale du Sport Universitaire (International University Sports Federation). FISU was formed within university institutions in order to promote sports values and encourage sports practice in harmony with and complementary to the university spirit. Promoting sports values means encouraging friendship, fraternity, fair-play, perseverance, integrity and cooperation amongst students, who one day may have responsibilities and even key positions in politics, the economy, culture and industry.

Open to student-athletes aged between 17 and 25 (for events in 2016 and 2017 the upper age is still 28), FISU’s events consist of Summer and Winter Universiades and the World University Championships. Universiades are multisport events staged in odd-numbered years, while the World University Championships are single-sport events, staged in even-numbered years. Besides its sporting events, FISU stages educational events, such as the FISU Forum on University Sport, the FISU World Conference on Development through Sport, the FISU World Conference on Innovation - Education - Sport, the FISU Sport Education Summit and the FISU Seminars.

With FISU’s motto being "Excellence in Mind and Body", all events include educational and cultural aspects, bringing together sport and academia from all over the world to celebrate in a true spirit of friendship and sportsmanship. FISU cooperates in developing its events and programmes with all major international sports and educational organisations. As major outcomes of those collaborations, in 2015, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) proclaimed the International Day of University Sport to be celebrated on 20 September, and the Anti-Doping Textbook and teaching materials were developed with the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).

FISU is composed of 170 Member Associations (National University Sports Federations). The FISU General Assembly elects the members of the FISU Executive Committee, its board of directors. Fourteen permanent committees advise the Executive Committee in their specialised areas. For the daily administration of FISU, the FISU Executive Committee relies on the Secretary General, who is assisted by the FISU staff. FISU’s headquarters are in Lausanne, Switzerland.

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