Threatened by Australia in its previous game, the U.S.
men's team survived a heart-racing final seconds to
defeat disciplined and experienced Serbia 94-91 on
Friday night and extend its winning streak in
international tournaments to 49 games.
No. 50 is no given, and suddenly, a gold medal that
seemed a formality just a few days ago is anything but
certain.
The Americans, boasting a roster stuffed with NBA All-
Stars, elite outside shooters but only two former
Olympians, look very vulnerable and somewhat lost on
the world's hardwood stage.
"We do have more talent," said U.S. coach Mike
Krzyzewski, who has been warning about
overconfidence since his team's arrival in Brazil. "We
have to get our talent playing even much better as a
team."
Despite a ferocious start, the Americans couldn't put
away the underdog Serbs, who ran their cut-and-cut-
again offense with precision and had a chance to tie it
in the final seconds. But guard Bogdan Bogdanovic's 3-
pointer from the left wing was a little long and Kevin
Durant secured the rebound and the relieved
Americans walked off the floor with their streak intact
but their standing shaken.
Kyrie Irving scored 15 points and Durant and Carmelo
Anthony added 12 apiece for the U.S. team, which
arrived in South American lauded as the latest version
of an American super squad. However, after their 10-
point win over the Aussies earlier this week and now a
nail-biter against the Serbs, the rest of the field might
be starting to believe the U.S. can be taken.
"We got in our own heads," Durant said. "We had a
great start, great start. We were up almost 20 points. We
should have held the lead and we just got sidetracked
by stupid stuff, from the calls to the physicality, the
extra plays. We got to stay with it. That's the way it's
going to be out here."
Nikola Jokic, who plays for the Denver Nuggets, scored
25 and Milos Teodosic and Miroslav Raduljica 18 each
for the Serbs, who fell to 1/3 but left the building
feeling confident after making the Americans sweat.
Paul George said Serbia's systematic offense was unlike
anything he and his teammates have faced.
"Once again, we relied on natural talent," George said.
"This is why these guys are special in our league. These
international guys really know how to move and really
know how to cut. It's more about how they're running
their offense. It's wearing us down.
"It's like they don't get tired."
It was the first Olympic game between the nations, and
a rematch of the 2014 Basketball World Cup
championship won by the U.S. 129-92. However, this
never resembled that track meet as the Serbs slowed
the tempo and forced the Americans into turnovers and
rushed possessions. The world's best team certainly
didn't look or play like it for long stretches.
The U.S., which will wrap up preliminary-round play
against France on Sunday, led 94-87 with 2:11 left on a
basket by Anthony. But the Serbs got a basket by Jokic
and two free throws Teodosic to get within three.
Durant, who only attempted four shots, misfired with
eight seconds left giving Serbia one last chance. After a
timeout, the ball wound up with Bogdanovic, who had
a great look from 22 feet but was just off the mark.
"We are that kind of a team that we never give up and
we showed this today," said Teodosic, one of Europe's
craftiest guards for the past decade. "This is third game
in a row that we have a very bad beginning, and
especially [against] the teams like the United States, it's
very tough to get back in the game when you are losing
by 10 or 15 in the beginning."
The 10-point win over Australia -- just the fifth time the
U.S. has won by 10 or fewer since 2006 -- raised the
possibility that this American team might not be as
golden as previous ones.
Krzyzewski, though, insists there is more global balance
in hoops.
"We don't give enough credit to the talent level on the
other team," he said. "Australia is talented. Serbia is
talented. They are one of the top teams in the world,
but they've played together for a long time. We played
them two years ago and had a great game and
everything went well for us. All of those guys are back
and I'm sure they wanted to make up for that, too.
"Our guys are playing as a team, and I think we just
haven't had that experience of playing that long
together and hopefully these games will help us and the
game against France will also."
The Americans had better learn or they'll be going
home with a less shiny medal.
No comments:
Post a Comment