8.15.2012

US Men's Basketball Team Wins The Gold and The Glory


From the Washington Post, "U.S. men’s basketball team restores pride in gold-medal win against Spain: U.S. men win gold in Olympic basketball: In a close game, the Americans beat Spain 107-100 on the final day of the Olympic games," by Barry Svrluga, on 12 August 2012  --  LONDON — They were pushed, because Spain boasts an outstanding basketball team and Americans long ago lost the ability to just to roll the ball out to the middle of the floor, chuck up some shots and assume they’ll win. They could do that 20 years ago, when the “Dream Team” celebrated at the Olympics with emphatic blowouts that became iconic statements, wresting basketball back from the rest of the world.


This U.S. men’s basketball team is not that one, regardless of any manufactured pre-Olympic debate. But what it did in winning the gold medal here Sunday, and over the past seven years, is indeed remarkable. Throw in Sunday’s hard-fought 107-100 victory over Spain with the run to gold in Beijing four years ago, and LeBron James, Kobe Bryant and newcomer Kevin Durant have done what the “Dream Team” did a generation ago: restored U.S. basketball to a dominant spot.

Along the way, a group of players from the NBA, a league that is often criticized for an emphasis on individualism over team play, became a fun-loving, ball-sharing team.

“This is the funnest time of my life,” point guard Chris Paul said. “’08 was all good and well, but there was something about this 2012 team that was just special. I hate that this was our last game playing together.”

Durant, the Suitland native who is one of the world’s brightest stars, led the way with 30 points. James added 19 with seven rebounds, putting a second gold medal alongside the NBA championship he won this spring. Bryant, the old head by now, played his best in the final two games, adding 17 points and embracing Spanish star Pau Gasol, his Los Angeles Lakers teammate, at the end. This tournament meant enough that Gasol, in that hug, shed tears.


“It’s a heck of a thing,” U.S. Coach Mike Krzyewski said. “I love the way my guys responded today.”

Today? Since Krzyzewski took over in 2006, when America’s basketball reputation was bruised, the national team has gone 62-1. This after Argentina won gold in 2004, when the rest of the world came to expect that they were contenders, too.

“The result is what is important,” said Spanish captain Juan-Carlos Navarro, who scored 21 points, “which really hurts.”

It hurts because the Spanish contended. Midway through the third quarter, when Gasol scored and was fouled, Spain led 71-70. That advantage was immediately erased by a three-pointer by Bryant. With 1:51 left in the third, Spain tied the score at 80 on an inside bucket from Serge Ibaka. On the Americans’ next possession, Durant buried another three.


“The closer the game got,” Bryant said, “the more intense we got.”

But the lead was just one entering the fourth quarter. Then Paul, another in the Americans’ seemingly endless list of options, hit one three-pointer and later drove the lane for a six-point advantage. When James, who spent part of the fourth on the bench with foul trouble, dunked and hit a three on consecutive possessions, Spain was done.


“He’s the best player, and he’s the best leader, and he’s as smart as anybody playing the game right now,” Krzyzewski said of James. “We’ve developed a really close bond because I rely on him to do that for me.” (source: The Washington Post)

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