Saturday, August 16, 2008

IF THIS WAS USA'S BIGGEST CHALLANGE, GOLD LOOKS CERTAIN


BEIJING -- Spain tried everything. Pretty much none of it worked.

The zone? Team USA shot over it, drove the baseline against it, picked it apart.

The pick-and-roll? Spain tried it a lot early, and you know how many points their best player,
Pau Gasol, had in the first 12 ½ minutes against it? Zero.

The press? Let's put it this way: If another team tries to use the full-court press against Team USA, they may as well just walk off the court and forfeit. Open up the court for the Americans, like the Greeks did two nights earlier and like the Spanish foolishly tried to in this one, and they'll crush you.

What made Saturday's 119-82 throttling of Spain so awesomely impressive was the way the Americans did everything so extraordinarily well. They're getting better each game, they're improving their few weak areas, and only thing that's scary about this 37-point beatdown is the notion that they might have peaked.

It's up to them to prove that they haven't, because the plane ride home is still more than a week away. But if they're going to keep bringing it like they brought it against the reigning world champions, there's no way they're going to lose.

"Twenty-eight turnovers is just a staggering number," said Gasol, whose team's field goal total matched its turnover total.

Another staggering number from the box score. The fast-break points were listed as 32-0.

"First time I've ever seen that happen,"
Carmelo Anthony said.

There was another astonishing number at halftime, when the U.S. team had already opened a 16-point lead despite Spain shooting 58 percent from the field. By then, the Americans had already forced 17 turnovers, and all 10 players Spain had used had at least one.

"The only place Spain is beating us tonight is at the ashtray," NBA and USA Basketball official Brian McIntyre said outside the media entrance, where Spain's nicotine addicts had the American media outnumbered something like 15-2.

It never got close in the second half, and
Jason Kidd even managed to attempt his first shot of the Olympics, a lefty layup off a feed from LeBron James on a 2-on-1 break after Dwight Howard had rejected Marc Gasol's shot at the other end.

"I thought he was going to give it back to me, because J never shoots the ball. Couldn't believe he laid the ball up. I thought he was going to give it back to me off the backboard," James said.

The victory clinched first place in Pool B for the Americans, who complete opening round play against Germany on Monday, then will likely face Australia in the quarterfinals, then Argentina or Lithuania in the semifinals.

James could find only one fault with Team USA's performance, saying they had three or four unforced errors when they tried to force outlet passes to the point guards when Spain hung back on defense. But he rated this performance, overall, as superior to the one two nights earlier against Greece.

"We didn't shoot the ball particularly well against Greece, from the free throw line or the 3-point line. But we shot 45 percent from 3 and almost 80 at the line, so that's a plus. We know we're going to defend, we know we're going to get fast break points, but when we can shoot the ball from the outside like that, and shoot free throws, it's going to be tough for anybody to beat us."

Gasol called it a statement game by the Americans. "They're for real. They're serious about this."

James? He didn't totally agree.

"Statement game? I don't know. It means nothing. It means that we're 4-0, but we've got to continue to play better," James said. "I'm the leader of the team, and I'll make sure there's no slippage."

Slippage is what tripped up the Americans two years ago in Japan -- slippage and panic. And when they fell behind by eight in the third quarter against Greece and started pressing and panicking, the deficit ballooned to 18 before they knew what had hit them.

So as much as it appears this Olympic basketball tournament is going to be a gimme, as much as it appears Team USA is going to be the 12-man version of Michael Phelps or Usain Bolt, the Americans can't allow themselves to let up, to be overconfident, to put any more stock into this victory than what it was -- a preliminary-round victory.

They've still never had to play from behind, they've still not had to deal with early foul trouble for their big men, they still haven't run across a referee who seems out to get them (although Spain did in its game against China).

They still haven't won anything.

"This was a good lesson for us to learn what we need to do to compete with a team that's at the U.S. level," Gasol said, "So hopefully we'll learn and put it behind us."

That's what the Americans need to do, too. Put it behind them.

The charter flight back to the good ol' U S of A doesn't go wheels up until a week from Monday, and the best thing they can do from here is fight off the mental and physical fatigue, keep their eye on the prize and forget about what happened against Spain. It's still too soon to feel too good about themselves, no matter how uncommonly awesome they looked. That's what they need to take away from this game.

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