Wheelchair_basketball_womenJanuary 9 - The draw for the European Wheelchair Basketball Championships, due to be held in Galilee later this year, has taken place.


Nineteen European national teams - 12 men's and seven women's – will make their way to Israel for the tournaments, which will be held between September 6 and 18.

The games will take place in Gan Ner and Afula.

"This will be the first time that Israel has hosted a sporting event of this magnitude," said Danny Ben-Abu, President of the Israel Sports Association for the Disabled.

"And for it to be in the north, with its warmth and its bridges between so many types of people, makes it all the more special."

In addition to Britain's men's and women's teams, five men's and four women's teams will advance from the Championships to the 2012 Paralympics in London.

"We need to take advantage of being the hosts," said Israel men's coach Arik Pinto.

"I believe we can get a Euro medal. And the fact that we're hosting the games here is proof of our abilities."

Israel's men's team, which won the gold medal at the 1980 Paralympics in Arnhem, the Netherlands, and finished sixth at the 2008 Games in Beijing, will face Italy, Britain, Turkey, Belgium and Switzerland in Group-B following the draw in Nazareth.

Group-A will consist of France, Poland, Sweden, Germany, the Netherlands and Spain.

In the women's competition - which consists of only seven teams after Italy backed out - Israel will face Spain, the Netherlands, Britain, Germany, France, and Turkey.

Jan Berteling, President of the International Wheelchair Basketball Federation (IWBF), said that he "was aware that we are angering some people" by holding the Championships in Israel.

"There was a lot of discussion about whether Israel could [host the games]," Berteling said.

"But Israel is a regular member in quite good standing with the IWBF, and they deserve a chance."

The decision to hold the games in the north – the teams will be based in Nazareth and practices will take place in surrounding towns – was also made following lots of dileberation.

"Nazareth is a much more integrated city than what you have in the centre of the country," Berteling said.

Tel Aviv hosted the third Paralympic Games in 1968, but organisers and many of the officials at the draw were convinced that September's championships will be the biggest sporting event in the country's history.

"It's a big event," Berteling said.

"We'll have 74 games, which is more than you had at the World Cup last summer.

"It's a wide-ranging competition.

And we believe Israel will do a great job putting it together."