Slovakia women's national basketball team

Slovakia are one of the newest national basketball teams in the world, having split from Czechoslovakia after the dissolution of the unified state in 1993, with both teams continuing as the successor state of Czechoslovakia.In the qualification for EuroBasket Women 2019, the team did not succeed and finished in third place in the group.Following the failure, the national team coach Peter Kováčik resigned and was replaced from February 2019 by Juraj Suja.[8] After the victory over Netherlands on 6 February 2021 in Piešťany 61:50, Slovaks won qualification group H and advanced to EuroBasket Women 2021.[9] Slovakia qualified for EuroBasket Women 2023 after finishing second in the Group H.[10] At the Eurobasket, Slovaks won one game in the Group phase and advanced to Quarterfinals qualification where they lost against Germany and finished in 12th place.
Zuzana Žirková , one of the best Slovak basketball players in history and country top-scorer at Eurobasket Women with 490 points [ 2 ]
Slovakia men's national basketball teamFIBA rankingFIBA EuropeOlympic GamesWorld CupAppearancesEuroBasketSlovakSlovakiawomen's basketballSlovak Basketball AssociationCzechoslovakiasuccessor stateZuzana ŽirkováEurobasket Women1994 Women's Basketball World Cup1998 Women's Basketball World Cup1993 European Championship1997 European ChampionshipSydney 2000Natália HejkováEuroBasket Women 2005EuroBasket Women 2007European Championships 2009EuroBasket Women 2019Peter KováčikNetherlandsPiešťanyEuroBasket Women 2021EuroBasket Women 2023Group HGermanyWomen's World CupAngers UFAB 49GiroLive Panthers OsnabrückTerézia PáleníkováUni Girona CBSabína OroszováPiešťanské ČajkyMBK RužomberokBarbora WrzesińskiArka GdyniaNikola DudášováKSC SzekszárdPokey ChatmanMarián SvobodaSlovakia women's national under-20 basketball teamSlovakia women's national under-18 basketball teamSlovakia women's national under-16 basketball teamwomen'sbasketballAlbaniaAndorraArmeniaAustriaAzerbaijanBelarusBelgiumBosnia and HerzegovinaBulgariaCroatiaCyprusCzech RepublicDenmarkEstoniaFinlandFranceGeorgiaGibraltarGreat BritainEnglandScotlandGreeceHungaryIcelandIrelandIsraelKosovoLatviaLithuaniaLuxembourgMoldovaMontenegroNorth MacedoniaNorwayPolandPortugalRomaniaRussiaSerbiaSloveniaSwedenSwitzerlandTurkeyUkraineEast GermanySoviet UnionYugoslaviaNational sports teamsBadmintonBaseballBeach soccerInline hockeyKorfballRugby unionSpeedwaySoftballOlympicsParalympicsEuropean GamesYouth Olympics