This Dream Team turns back time
by Steve Kerr, Yahoo! Sports
August 15, 2004
The last time an American basketball team lost a game in the Olympics, the year was 1988 and David Robinson was the star of a squad made up of college standouts. John Thompson was the coach, and although the team played well defensively and competed hard, it couldn't shoot or pass well enough to beat the skilled teams from Yugoslavia and Russia.
I tried out for that team and almost made it, but I was cut late in the process. I wasn't nearly as talented as the players who made the squad, so I couldn't complain.
Still, I felt I could have been a factor for that team. It was short on outside shooters, and it was clear afterwards that it wasn't suited for the international game.
The team had plenty of talent, but not enough skill and teamwork. And too few role players.
Sound familiar?
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Sixteen years later, the same story is developing, only this time it's a team of NBA stars that is getting exposed, not a bunch of college kids. After the original Dream Team crushed everyone in its path in 1992, the international game of basketball has gotten better and better, to the point where it should be no surprise that the American national team can lose.
NBA players are scattered on rosters all over the Olympic basketball tournament, and there no longer is a sense of doom for the teams getting ready to play the U.S. These teams can play, and they play together and with confidence.
The surprise Sunday wasn't that the U.S. team lost. After all, last year's national team lost three games in the World Championships on our home turf, and this year's squad already was beaten in a preliminary exhibition by the Italians.
No, the surprise was that the Americans were beaten by Puerto Rico. This is a team that hasn't given USA basketball any trouble over the years, and it didn't figure to pose much of a threat. But the Puerto Ricans out-hustled, out-coached and outplayed a confused bunch of NBA players who looked very uncomfortable on the floor.
Carlos Arroyo of the Utah Jazz penetrated at will against the U.S. defense and poured in 24 points while continuously finding open teammates for easy shots. The Americans, meanwhile, shot 3-of-24 from three-point range and lacked any confidence whatsoever from the perimeter.
Suddenly, what seemed like an easy jaunt through Pool B – with games against Angola, Australia, Greece and Lithuania – looks like a minefield for the U.S. team. Tuesday's atmosphere at Indoor Arena against the host Greeks will make Arco Arena in Sacramento look like a YMCA men's league gym.
And while one would expect the United States to bounce back and compete, the Greeks will be playing with confidence and emotion in front of their home crowd.
A loss would put the Americans at 0-2 with an upcoming game against Lithuania, which almost beat the United States in Sydney's gold-medal game in 2000. But with the top four of the six teams in the pool all qualifying for the quarterfinals, the Americans should be able to get on track and make it into next week.
If they do get that far, they will face some stiff competition from Pool A in the medal round. If you saw Manu Ginobili beat Serbia and Montenegro with his banked runner Sunday, you witnessed two teams that the U.S. will be hard pressed to beat.
The Argentineans are big, quick, skilled and competitive, and they've been playing together for years. They move beautifully without the ball and play with flair and emotion.
The Serbians showed their mettle Sunday, bouncing back from a big first-quarter deficit and almost catching Argentina. They too play an entertaining game, sharing and moving the ball and shooting and passing with skill.
Spain looks like it will advance as well, if Sunday's trouncing of China was any indication.
So a U.S. team that must be questioning itself has a major job ahead.
Coach Larry Brown must find a way to get his guys to play together and play with confidence. They have to defend, compete and play with the pressure that comes with being expected to win. And they must do it with a roster full of talented yet poor-shooting athletes who have played together for two weeks.
A daunting task indeed. Seems like 1988 all over again.
Steve Kerr is Yahoo! Sports' NBA analyst. Send him a question or comment for potential use in a future column or webcast.
Updated on Monday, Aug 16, 2004 2:02 am EDT