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Posted 119d 4h ago created by Lucious Commissioner More Headlines     Add to Favorites
Team USA's flaws exposed in ugly win over Australia
SHANGHAI -- If that had been Spain, the U.S. would have lost by 20. Dream Team II? Not after this splash of cold water in the face. What transpired Tuesday night against Australia will go down as one of two things: The night Team USA was exposed as a flawed, overconfident team, or the night Team USA received a wake-up call. Porous defense, inside and outside. Abysmal 3-point shooting. Bad free-throw shooting. Sloppiness with the ball. Even a never-before-seen inability to contend with speed. Backup Aussie point guard Paddy Mills was a blur, the fastest player I've seen since Allen Iverson was a rookie. He plays Division I ball in the U.S. for St. Mary's (Calif.), where he just finished his freshman season, and he told ESPN.com he has run 400 meters in 49 seconds. "I was concerned after the last game that they were already in Beijing," coach Mike Krzyzewski said of the team's mental state. "They'll be OK, but obviously this was not a good performance." The truly stunning thing about the Americans' 87-76 victory was that it came against an Australian team that didn't even have its best player, since Andrew Bogut sat out to rest a sprained right ankle. The Boomers, as they're known Down Under, are setting their sights merely on making it into the medal round, with no illusions about where they stand in the worldwide pecking order -- somewhere between sixth and eighth, nowhere near the likes of Spain, Argentina and Greece, the three teams who will wake up Wednesday morning with a heightened sense of hope after seeing how the U.S. team struggled in its final pre-Olympic tune-up. "The three days that we can have practice in Beijing have to be three good practice days in order to get us going, because we've been playing outstanding basketball, and tonight I didn't think we played very well," Krzyzewski said. "I'd be much happier if we had played great, but I'd be sadder if we lost." Before we look at the numbers, let's make sure to highlight the biggest weakness on display: Team USA's defense was just plain awful, with Australia spreading the floor, moving the ball and repeatedly finding itself able to score on uncontested shots from both inside and beyond the 3-point line. Even when the inside shots were contested, they were too often being contested by a player several inches shorter. Remember last summer when Mexico scored 100 against Team USA in the Tournament of the Americas and the players shrugged it off as nothing? Well, it wasn't nothing. It was a sign that too often they are beaten for open looks, and they should have taken it as a warning sign. "I think a lot of teams get intimidated by that team, but basketball around the world is getting stronger. On paper they are [a lock], but I don't know," Australia's Chris Anstey said. "I don't think they've been a lock for the last eight years. That's nothing against them, that's just a credit to everyone else around the world. Every now and again, some people are going to catch up. [+] EnlargeAP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko D-Wade continued his hot shooting and led Team USA with 22 points. "We made them take a lot of contested shots, we didn't give them anything easily. And they're the best athletes in the world, so we wanted to try to make them beat us from the perimeter." But the Americans shot just 3-for-18 from 3-point range, scored only 10 points on the fast break, missed 13 of 33 free throws (Dwight Howard was 0-for-6) and needed a clutch leadership performance down the stretch by Chris Paul (with lots of help from Dwyane Wade) to finish off an opponent -- again, without its best player -- that trailed by a mere seven points with just more than 5 minutes remaining. "We think we're a pretty good team," Anstey said. "We play hard, we should have beaten Argentina [last weekend in the DiamondBall tournament]. Not many people expect us to do a lot at the Olympics, but we think we could cause some upsets. We'd like to do something special. We've never won a medal." Coach K said his team seemed flat after having a day off on Monday to enjoy Shanghai, and he was especially looking forward to getting in three days of practice prior to the opener Sunday night against China -- a game U.S. President George Bush is planning to attend. The Americans are about 99 percent certain to get a W for "W" -- the betting line on that game moved from 25 to 33 points on international sports gambling Web sites over the past week -- and they're 99.999 percent certain to put a whupping on Angola in their second preliminary-round game. But then comes Greece, which beat the U.S. two years ago and can control the tempo of a game better than any team in the tournament. After that, the U.S will play the reigning FIBA world champion, Spain, which goes nine deep with players who can beat you from inside, outside and in-between.


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THE USA WILL BE OKAY IF THEY DO NOT BURN OUT. MOST OF THESE GUYS HAVE PLAYED OVER A HUNDRED GAMES THIS YEAR THERE IS ONLY SO MUCH BASKETBALL YOU CAN PLAY IN ONE YEAR WITHOUT GETTING BURNT. LETS JUST HOPE THIS DOESNT HAPPEN TO THEM.
cemcelr  All-Star 
 AVG:
5
Ratings: 1
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8/6/2008 2:50 PM ET

yea good point cemcelr these guys might burn out especially with their run and gun style. What they need to do is use more of the perimeter jumper so their not running up and down the court all game and they need to slow the games down when they have a big lead. I think coach K will do a good job of keeping these guys refreshed.
Steelcurtain  MVP 
 AVG:
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8/6/2008 9:22 PM ET

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