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A
stellar group of NBA All-Stars was named to the US men’s
Olympic basketball team Monday, and most hoops junkies
in America, not surprisingly, claimed immediate victory
in Beijing. Never mind that the US team of National
Basketball Association (NBA) stars that played in the
world championships two years ago in Japan finished
third, or that the 2004 Olympic team in Athens lost
three games and finished third, or that the 2002 world
championship team lost three games and didn’t even
medal, or that the 1998 world championship team finished
third. If Kobe and LeBron and D. Wade are playing, then
the United States ought to win, right?
If the
reciting of names can win a championship, the US team is
a lock. Here’s the list, alphabetically: Carmelo
Anthony, Carlos Boozer, Chris Bosh, Kobe Bryant, Dwight
Howard, LeBron James, Jason Kidd, Chris Paul, Tayshaun
Prince, Michael Redd, Dwyane Wade and Deron Williams.
That’s 10 current or former league All-Stars. Williams,
who isn’t, was second-team all-NBA by the time the
season ended, which makes him, by acclaim, one of the
top 10 players in the league. And Prince, who isn’t, is
the one guy on the team who understands his entire value
is in his defense. If they’re awarding medals on name
value or shoe contracts the other teams might as well
stay home.
It
really is a glittering roster USA Basketball has put
together. Wade has already been Most Valuable Player
(MVP) of the NBA Finals. Kobe is the reigning MVP of the
league. James almost single-handedly led his Cleveland
team to the NBA Finals last year and surely is a future
league MVP. Kidd led his team twice to the Finals. Paul
and Williams appear to be the two best playmakers and
leaders of a new generation of players. Howard is the
most physically impressive low-post player America has
produced recently. If you could put this team of players
on the floor for an entire training camp and NBA regular
season, they might win 75 of 82 games.
But for
a month of international competition?
I’ve
covered too many US losses in international basketball
to presume anything, and perhaps I’m letting that
history overly influence my wait-and-see attitude about
this team. The domestic sentiment, almost unanimously,
about this collection of players even before it was
officially announced has been, “We’re back. We win.” In
a discussion about the team first thing Monday morning,
two of my dear friends and colleagues who know as much,
if not more, about basketball than I do, Tony Kornheiser
and David Aldridge, spoke of a US gold medal run as if
it was the lock of the century, as if this was the one
and only Dream Team descending on Barcelona in 1992.
Of
course, that team wasn’t just unbeatable it was
invincible; both in terms of competitive basketball and
as a tool that would change the global basketball
landscape. It accomplished everything the NBA and Fiba,
the sport’s world governing body, wanted to do to
showcase basketball at the highest level and seduce
every kid who ever dreamed of playing, from Africa to
Asia to Europe to South America. The world is still
thanking the United States, by beating our brains out
mostly. We keep sending star-studded but flawed teams
into international play, then cursing their effort and
heart when they don’t come back with gold because we
arrogantly decided they should be superior primarily
because we invented the game and monopolized it for so
long.
Okay,
this US team doesn’t seem to be fatally flawed. Howard,
Orlando’s six-foot-11 monster, is the only traditional
low-post player. The other true front-court players,
Boozer and Bosh, are tall but certainly not big men.
This appears to be a concession to the difficulty the
low-post, inside-out game that works so well in the NBA
has had being effective in international play. You need
big men who not only can pass and shoot (which Boozer
and Bosh can) but who can also go out and guard big
international players who can pass and shoot and never
even dream about camping out on the low block.
If, as
rumored, Detroit’s Prince was selected over the Hornets’
Tyson Chandler, that would seem to be a smart choice.
Prince can run his skinny six-foot-nine body all over
the court to defend; he can guard at least three
positions, probably four in international play. With any
number of combinations of players, the United States
seemingly would be at a distinct advantage in terms of
skill and versatility. With the exception of Kidd, the
players are young and determined to end this string of
international losing. I wouldn’t want to bet against
such a team, but I wouldn’t want to presume victory six
weeks before the tournament begins, either.
One
would think we, and by we I mean Americans, would learn
something from so much recent defeat. Actually, it’s
been 20-plus years of lesson-learning, going back to the
1987 Pan American Games team of collegiate stars that
lost to Brazil and the 1988 US Olympic team that lost to
the Soviet Union in Seoul and closed the curtain on
amateurs representing the US against other countries’
professionals.
The 2002
world championship team looked pretty good, too, when it
was named. Paul Pierce, MVP of the recently concluded
NBA Finals, was on that team. As was Jermaine O’Neal, as
was an in-his-prime Ben Wallace, as was Shawn Marion,
Baron Davis, Antonio Davis, Michael Finley, Elton Brand
and an extraordinary shooter by the name of Reggie
Miller. That team finished sixth.
The 2000
Olympic team in Sydney narrowly avoided a loss, and that
group included a 24-year-old Kevin Garnett, Kidd, Ray
Allen, Gary Payton, a healthy Alonzo Mourning, a healthy
Antonio McDyess and Vince Carter. There was zero doubt
expressed about that team before the competition began.
The 2004
Olympic team, criticized for who wasn’t playing,
nonetheless included James, Wade, Allen Iverson, Boozer,
Amare Stoudemire, Tim Duncan and a coach of some renown
by the name of Larry Brown.
No
doubt, the US team will be the favorite when competition
begins in Beijing, but opposing players and coaches
won’t be asking to pose for pictures with the Americans.
Certainly, the US team won’t be feared as was the case
in Barcelona. Coach Mike Krzyzewski and his assistants
will have relatively little time to turn a group of
superstars into a team, while true teams with few, if
any, household names will be looking to once again bag
the big game…us. |