2011 FIBA Asia Championship
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2011 FIBA Asia Championship
Summary
2011 FIBA Asia Championship is a FIBA Asia Cup[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- 2011 FIBA Asia Championship is in the country of People's Republic of China[3].
- 2011 FIBA Asia Championship's instance of is recorded as FIBA Asia Cup[4].
- 2011 FIBA Asia Championship's instance of is recorded as sports season[5].
- 2011 FIBA Asia Championship took place at Wuhan[6].
- 2011 FIBA Asia Championship's edition number is recorded as 26[7].
- 2011 FIBA Asia Championship began on September 15, 2011[8].
- 2011 FIBA Asia Championship ended on September 25, 2011[9].
- 2011 FIBA Asia Championship took place on 2011[10].
- 2011 FIBA Asia Championship's sport is recorded as basketball[11].
- 2011 FIBA Asia Championship's organizer is recorded as FIBA Asia[12].
- 2011 FIBA Asia Championship's official website is recorded as http://wuhan2011.fibaasia.net/[13].
- 2011 FIBA Asia Championship's topic's main category is recorded as Category:2011 FIBA Asia Championship[14].
- 2011 FIBA Asia Championship involved {'amount': '+16'} participants[15].
- 2011 FIBA Asia Championship's number of matches played/races/starts is recorded as {'amount': '+62'}[16].
- 2011 FIBA Asia Championship's competition class is recorded as men's basketball[17].
- 2011 FIBA Asia Championship's statistical leader is recorded as Marcus Douthit[18].
- 2011 FIBA Asia Championship's sports season of league or competition is recorded as FIBA Asia Cup[19].
Body
When and Where
2011 FIBA Asia Championship took place on 2011[10]. It began on September 15, 2011[8]. It ended on September 25, 2011[9]. The location of it was Wuhan[6]. It is in the country of People's Republic of China[3].
Context
Recorded instance of include FIBA Asia Cup[4] and sports season[5].
Participants
2011 FIBA Asia Championship involved {'amount': '+16'} participants[15].
Why It Matters
2011 FIBA Asia Championship has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]