The Basketball World Cup has used various forms of qualification throughfive tournaments were held in South America and participation was dominated by teams from the Americas. At the first tournament, FIBA intended for the three Olympic medalists to compete, plus the host Argentina and two teams each from Europe, Asia, and South America. However, no Asian team was willing to travel to the event, so six of the ten teams were from the Americas (all three Olympic medalists were from the Americas, plus the zone received two continental berths and an Asia's berth). The former European powerhouse
Soviet Union, later made their first tournament appearance in
1959, after missing the first two events. In the tournament's early years, only
Europe and
South America had established continental tournaments, so participation in the tournament was largely by invitation. Later,
Asia added a continental championship in 1960, followed by
Africa in 1962,
Central America in 1965, and
Oceania in 1971, As a result of these changes, qualification became more formalized starting with the
1967 tournament. In that year, the Asian champion received an automatic berth in the tournament, joining the top European and South American teams. In
1970, the African and Oceanian champion each received a berth, while the Centrobasket champion and runner-up were each invited. For most of these years, the tournament host, defending World Champion, and top
Olympic basketball tournament finishers also qualified for the event. From 1970 through the 2014 World Cup, qualification continued to be based on the continental competitions and the Olympic tournament. The only major change came in the
1990 FIBA World Championship, when the tournament started taking qualifiers from the newly redesigned
FIBA Americas Championship rather than from North, Central, and South America individually. After the tournament expanded to 24 teams in
2006, the tournament allocated qualification as follows: •
FIBA EuroBasket (Europe) – 6 berths •
FIBA AfroBasket (Africa) – 3 berths •
FIBA Asia Cup (Asia) – 3 berths •
FIBA AmeriCup (Americas) – 5 berths •
FIBA Oceania Championship (Oceania) – 2 berths •
Defending Olympic Champion – 1 berth, removed from the zone of the Olympic champion •
Host team – 1 berth •
FIBA-selected wild cards – 4 berths Each of the five continental championships also served as qualification for the Olympics, so all were held every two years. The year immediately preceding the World Championship was used to determine the berths at the tournament. For example, all of the berths at the
2010 FIBA World Championship were determined by continental championships held in
2009. After the first 20 teams qualified, FIBA then selected four wild card teams, based on sporting, economic, and governance criteria, as well as a required registration fee from each team to be considered by the FIBA board. Of the four wild cards, only three could come from one continental zone. In each of the two tournaments that the wild card system was in place, FIBA selected the maximum three European teams to compete in the event. FIBA instituted major changes to its competition calendar and the qualifying process for both the World Cup and Olympics in 2017. First, the continental championships are now held once every four years, specifically in years that immediately follow the Summer Olympics. The continental championships no longer play a role in qualifying for either the World Cup or Olympics. The
2019 World Cup qualifying process, which began in 2017, is the first under a new format. Qualifying takes place over a two-year cycle, involving six windows of play. Qualifying zones mirror the FIBA continental zones, except that FIBA Asia and FIBA Oceania are now combined into a single Asia-Pacific qualifying zone. In each qualifying zone, nations are divided into Division A and Division B, with
promotion and relegation between the two. FIBA did not initially reveal full details of the new process, but announced that at least in opening phases, it would feature groups of three or four teams, playing home-and-away within the group. Below is the list of distribution of berths according to each FIBA qualifying zone. •
FIBA Europe – 12 berths •
FIBA Americas – 7 berths •
FIBA Africa – 5 berths •
Asia-Pacific (FIBA Asia and FIBA Oceania) – 7 berths •
Host team – 1 berth ==Tournament format==