The following are the basketball events of the year 1994 throughout the world.
| Years in basketball | 
|---|
| See also | 
  | 
Championships
World Championship
- Men
- United States 137, Russia 91
 
 - Women
- United States 100, Australia 95
 
 
Professional
- Men
 - Women
- Eurobasket Women: None
 
 
College
- Men
- NCAA
 - NAIA
- Division I Oklahoma City University 86, Georgetown College KY 80
 - Division II Eureka College IL 98, Northern State University SD 95 OT
 
 - NJCAA
- Division I Hutchinson Community College 78, Three Rivers Community College (MO) 74
 - Division II Joliet Junior College IL 85, Owens Technical College OH 80
 - Division III Gloucester County College 71, Sullivan County CC 69
 
 
 - Women
- NCAA
 - NAIA
- Division I: Southern Nazarene (Okla.) 97, David Lipscomb (Tenn.) 74
 - Division II Northern State University (S.D.) 48, Western Oregon 45
 
 - NJCAA
- Division I Trinity Valley CC 104, Westark Community College, Ark. 95
 - Division II Southwestern Michigan College 81, Chattahoochee Valley CC 72
 - Division III Anoka-Ramsey Community College 69, Triton College 62
 
 
 
Awards and honors
Professional
Collegiate
- Naismith College Player of the Year
- Men: Glenn Robinson, Purdue
 - Women: Lisa Leslie, USC
 
 - Naismith College Coach of the Year
- Men: Nolan Richardson Arkansas
 - Women: Pat Summitt Tennessee
 
 
Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame
- Class of 1994:[1]
 
Movies
Births
- March 6 — Awa Sissoko, French basketball player
 
Deaths
- March 13 — Sam Ranzino, All-American at NC State (born 1927)
 - May 3 — Vladimir Kostin, FIBA Hall of Fame Russian referee (born 1921)
 - June 25 — Katrín Axelsdóttir, Icelandic national team player (born 1956)
 - July 10 — Earl Strom, Hall of Fame NBA and ABA referee (born 1927)
 - September 3 — Glen Rose, American college player and coach (Arkansas) (born 1905)
 - November 11 — Frank McGuire, Hall of Fame coach of the undefeated 1957 National Champion North Carolina Tar Heels (born 1914)
 - November 20 — Jānis Krūmiņš, Latvian (Soviet) Olympic Silver medalist (1956, 1960, 1964) (born 1930)
 
References
- ↑ "Hall of Famers". Basketball Hall of Fame. Retrieved 12 Oct 2014.
 
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