GSSE Basketball | 05/30 18:00 | - | 아이슬란드 v 몬테네그로 | W | 86-92 | |
GSSE Basketball | 05/29 18:00 | - | 몬테네그로 v 사이프러스 | W | 99-56 | |
FIBA 월드컵, 아메리카 예선, 그룹 F | 02/25 18:00 | 6 | [3] 몬테네그로 v 라트비아 [4] | L | 74-80 | |
FIBA 월드컵, 아메리카 예선, 그룹 F | 02/22 17:00 | 5 | [5] 우크라이나 v 몬테네그로 [4] | W | 74-76 | |
FIBA 월드컵, 아메리카 예선, 그룹 F | 12/02 18:00 | 4 | [5] 몬테네그로 v 터키 [1] | W | 71-66 | |
FIBA 월드컵, 아메리카 예선, 그룹 F | 11/29 17:30 | 3 | [3] 라트비아 v 몬테네그로 [4] | W | 75-84 | |
FIBA 월드컵, 아메리카 예선, 그룹 F | 09/17 18:15 | 2 | [5] 몬테네그로 v 우크라이나 [4] | W | 90-84 | |
FIBA 월드컵, 아메리카 예선, 그룹 F | 09/14 17:00 | 1 | [2] 터키 v 몬테네그로 [4] | L | 79-69 | |
남자 국제경기 | 09/08 16:00 | 1 | 몬테네그로 v 그리스 | L | 76-87 | |
남자 국제경기 | 09/07 18:30 | 1 | 프랑스 v 몬테네그로 | L | 83-66 | |
FIBA 월드컵, 아메리카 예선, 그룹 F | 07/01 18:00 | 6 | [2] 슬로베니아 v 몬테네그로 [3] | W | 74-87 | |
FIBA 월드컵, 아메리카 예선, 그룹 F | 06/28 19:00 | 5 | [3] 몬테네그로 v 벨라루시 [4] | W | 80-69 | |
FIBA 월드컵, 아메리카 예선, 그룹 F | 02/26 18:00 | 4 | [1] 스페인 v 몬테네그로 [3] | L | 79-67 | |
FIBA 월드컵, 아메리카 예선, 그룹 F | 02/23 19:00 | 3 | [2] 몬테네그로 v 슬로베니아 [3] | L | 63-75 | |
FIBA 월드컵, 아메리카 예선, 그룹 F | 11/26 18:00 | 2 | [3] 벨라루시 v 몬테네그로 [4] | W | 67-91 | |
FIBA 월드컵, 아메리카 예선, 그룹 F | 11/24 19:00 | 1 | 몬테네그로 v 스페인 | L | 66-79 | |
남자 유로피언 챔피언쉽, 결승전 | 09/10 09:30 | 4 | [2] 라트비아 v 몬테네그로 [3] | L | 100-68 | |
남자 유로피언 챔피언쉽, 결승전 | 09/07 17:45 | 5 | [4] 몬테네그로 v 루마니아 [6] | W | 86-69 | |
남자 유로피언 챔피언쉽, 결승전 | 09/05 12:00 | 4 | [5] 체코 v 몬테네그로 [3] | W | 75-88 | |
남자 유로피언 챔피언쉽, 결승전 | 09/04 14:45 | 3 | [3] 몬테네그로 v 크로아티아 [2] | L | 72-76 | |
남자 유로피언 챔피언쉽, 결승전 | 09/02 12:00 | 2 | [6] 몬테네그로 v 헝가리 [4] | W | 72-48 | |
남자 유로피언 챔피언쉽, 결승전 | 09/01 14:45 | 1 | [3] 스페인 v 몬테네그로 [3] | L | 99-60 | |
남자 국제경기 | 08/26 17:00 | 1 | 터키 v 몬테네그로 | L | 84-70 | |
남자 국제경기 | 08/25 17:00 | 1 | 우크라이나 v 몬테네그로 | W | 62-75 | |
남자 국제경기 | 08/20 16:00 | 1 | 몬테네그로 v 벨기에 | W | 78-64 | |
남자 국제경기 | 08/19 18:30 | 1 | 프랑스 v 몬테네그로 | L | 100-70 | |
남자 국제경기 | 08/18 16:00 | 1 | 이탈리아 v 몬테네그로 | L | 67-66 | |
남자 국제경기 | 08/13 19:00 | 1 | 세르비아 v 몬테네그로 | L | 82-71 | |
남자 국제경기 | 08/11 19:00 | 1 | 몬테네그로 v 그리스 | L | 81-83 | |
GSSE Basketball | 06/03 13:00 | 1 | 아이슬란드 v 몬테네그로 | W | 61-86 |
The Montenegro men's national basketball team (Montenegrin: Кошаркашка репрезентација Црне Горе, romanized: Košarkaška reprezentacija Crne Gore) represents Montenegro in international basketball tournaments. The supervising body is the Basketball Federation of Montenegro.
Montenegro joined FIBA in 2006, following the restoration of Montenegrin independence in the same year. Since 2006, the national team has qualified for EuroBasket on four occasions (2011, 2013, 2017, 2022). Montenegro has qualified for the FIBA World Cup twice, in 2019 and 2023. The team has also taken part in smaller tournaments such as the Games of the Small States of Europe.
In 2006, the Basketball Federation of Montenegro along with this team joined the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) on its own following the Independence of Montenegro.
The Montenegrin national team entered international competition in 2008, and appointed Duško Vujošević as the national coach. Montenegro started from FIBA Division B, where they won first place in their first competitive season. Since becoming a separate team, Montenegro has won 13 official games in a row, until losing to Israel in August 2010.
At that time, NBA players like Nikola Vučević and Nikola Peković became the most known players of Montenegrin national team.
In their first qualifiers for EuroBasket, Montenegro finished first in the group. So, the team qualified for Eurobasket 2011, where they played five games in the first phase – with one win and four losses. The Coach of Montenegro at their first-ever EuroBasket was Dejan Radonjić.
In August 2012, with the new coach Luka Pavićević, Montenegro started qualifiers for Eurobasket 2013. Again, they won first place, but without any defeat from 10 matches. Notable matches were against Serbia, first after the two countries separated. Montenegro won both games, and victory in Belgrade (73:71), in front of 18,000 spectators, is gained by Nikola Ivanović three-point shot from the center, one second before the end of the match.
As the first-place team in qualifiers, Montenegro participated at Eurobasket 2013 in Slovenia. They made better results than 2011, with two wins and three defeats, but that was not enough for the second phase of EuroBasket.
First unsuccessful qualifying campaign since independence, Montenegro had during the 2014. Surprisingly, group stage at the EuroBasket 2015 qualification, Montenegro finished third, so they failed to qualify for the final tournament.
In 2015, Montenegro named Bogdan Tanjević new head coach of the national team. Prior to taking the reins of the national team, he was the head coach of Fenerbahçe. As the national team earlier failed to qualify for EuroBasket 2015, they participated in the Games of the Small States of Europe (European countries with less than a million citizens) in Iceland and easily won the gold medal.
In summer 2016, Montenegro started competition in EuroBasket 2017 qualifiers, with the only ambition to qualify for their third final tournament since independence. In a group with Georgia, Slovakia and Albania, Montenegro finished as a second-place team, with one defeat, and qualified for EuroBasket 2017.
For the first time in their history, in Eurobasket 2017, Montenegro finished as a third-place team in the group stage and qualified to the knockout stage. At that time, that was the biggest success of the Montenegrin national team since its independence in 2006. Two years later, Montenegro qualified for the 2019 FIBA World Cup for the first time, after a winner-take-all game in Podgorica against Latvia. Montenegro lost the game 80–74 but still went through as they had won the away game 84–75, thus holding the tiebreaker on points difference. With that result, Montenegro became the smallest state by population and territory to qualify for the FIBA World Cup since the establishing of competition.