2004 Olympics: Basketball

Advertising

Texas

Customize | Make This Your Home Page | E-mail Newsletters | MySpecialsDirect

[an error occurred while processing this directive]
A character-builder: U.S. men defeat Lithuania to claim bronze

01:45 AM CDT on Sunday, August 29, 2004

By BRAD TOWNSEND / The Dallas Morning News

ATHENS, Greece – Postmortem began before the United States men's basketball team breathed its last gasp in these Olympics on Saturday night.

The nagging question – what happened? – was being posed even as Team USA, to its credit, rebounded from Friday's semifinal loss to Argentina by outgunning Lithuania, 104-96, in the bronze-medal game at Olympic Indoor Hall.

Actually, it's been eating at USA Basketball officials since the team opened Olympic play with a 19-point loss to Puerto Rico two weeks ago. And with their gold-medal chances gone, it weighed heavily on the minds of players and coaches all day Saturday.

"This probably was the hardest game I've ever been involved in as a coach," USA coach Larry Brown said. "And I think my players probably would say the same thing.

"To come back after that loss with the expectations people have for us, this game to me was a very good thing for American basketball. These guys showed a lot of class and a lot of character."

The Americans certainly had to play inspired basketball to beat a Lithuanian team that was 21-of-37 from 3-point range.

Lithuania, which handed the U.S. one of its three defeats in these Olympics, seemed poised to shut the United States out of a medal – something that has never happened in America's 15 Olympic basketball appearances.

"We're professionals at the highest level," guard Richard Jefferson said. "And even though we didn't win the gold, and people want to talk a lot about us, we gave our all every single game."

Brown praised his players Saturday and suggested that fans and media should appreciate – not condemn – the fact that they came to Athens, while at least 14 other NBA players pulled out or declined invitations.

"It's not about who didn't come," NBA commissioner David Stern said. "We're all in sports. You take your team to the gym, and you play with who you've got, and you either win or you lose.

Smiley N. Pool / DMN
LeBron James slams home two points during Saturday's win over Lithuania.

"This carping and whining is not fair to the young men and young women who are representing our country very well."

Stern was asked whether some of the negative media and public sentiment was partly a result of taking cues from Brown.

Throughout the Olympics, Brown noted that USA Basketball's selection process needs to be tweaked to allow for the inclusion of two or three role players.

"I just think it's fair to say, sometimes the way the leader's traditional ways to motivate a team doesn't quite play out as well when you're in an international setting," Stern said.

After the bronze-medal victory, Brown declined to offer specific ideas for how to improve the selection process. But he did say that he hopes there will be a day when NBA and international FIBA rules are standardized, so that everyone in the world plays by the same rules.

Stu Jackson, the NBA senior vice president of operations who chairs the 10-member USA Basketball Senior National Team Committee, said Saturday that he believes that rules eventually will be standardized, but said it wasn't a major problem in these Games.

Stern, Jackson and Brown agree that Team USA would have fared better in Athens with more training time. They say USA Basketball must find a solution to that problem, if not before the 2006 World Championships, then certainly before the 2008 Olympics.

"The training period that we have is not now sufficient enough to come into international competition and outright win – the way that the Dream Team did or the team in '96 did," Jackson said. "Those days are gone."

Stern suggested possibilities such as pulling the USA team together for a training camp a year before the Olympics, assembling a team of international players to practice against them and hiring international referees to officiate practice games.

"Something that begins to focus on [training], and make sure that we give them everything we can," Stern said. "Because that's what they deserve for being willing to make the commitment."

Argentina 84, Italy 69: Manu Ginobili of the San Antonio Spurs had 16 points, six assists and six rebounds as Argentina won its first gold medal since the 1952 Helsinki Games.

Argentina shot 52 percent and won going away, outscoring the Italians in the final period, 24-15.

It was the first medal of any kind in men's basketball for Argentina.

This text is invisible on the page, but this text is affected by the invisible item's flow. This text is invisible on the page, but this text is affected by the invisible item's flow.
ARTICLE TOOLS: Print it | E-mail it to a friend

Advertising

Advertising
TXCN Channel Guide

Austin (Time Warner)
Ch. 324 | City list
Corpus Christi (Time Warner)
Ch. 74 | City list
D-FW (Comcast/Charter)
Ch. 38 | City list
El Paso (Time Warner)
Ch. 18 | City list
Houston (Time Warner)
Ch. 230 | City list
Laredo (Time Warner)
Ch. 28 City list
Port Arthur/ Beaumont (Time Warner)
Ch. 58 | City list
Rio Grande Valley (Time Warner)
City list
San Antonio (Time Warner)
City list
Texarkana (Channel One)
Ch. 53 | City list
Waco (Time Warner)
Ch. 74 | City list
Wichita Falls (Time Warner)
Ch. 58 | City list

© 2010 Texas Cable News