Current:Home > ScamsUSA Basketball result at FIBA World Cup is disappointing but no longer a surprise -FutureFinance
USA Basketball result at FIBA World Cup is disappointing but no longer a surprise
Benjamin Ashford View
Date:2025-04-06 20:26:28
Bronze medal, silver medal, no medal, second place, third place, fourth place or worse, anything short of gold for the U.S. men’s national basketball team at a major competition is a failure.
Yet, reality is that gold is not guaranteed for the U.S., especially at the FIBA Basketball World Cup − not with the roster it sends and not with the quality of rosters in Europe, South America and now North America with Canada’s marked improvement.
Canada sent the Americans home empty-handed on Sunday, beating the U.S. 127-118 in overtime for the bronze medal. It was Canada's first medal at the World Cup in 87 years, a monumental accomplishment for a nation with Olympic medal aspirations next summer in Paris.
The U.S. finished seventh in the World Cup in 2019 and hasn't won it since back-to-back titles in 2010 and 2014 when disappointment from the 2004 Athens Olympics (bronze) and 2006 World Cup (bronze) was fresh and painful and the U.S. was focused on re-establishing global basketball dominance.
And the U.S. did that, winning every Olympic gold medal since that bronze in Athens. But the big blue ball spins, ever precariously, and the world changes.
STAY UP-TO-DATE: Subscribe to our Sports newsletter for exclusive content
The World Cup doesn’t have the same prestige as the Olympics, and the U.S., which qualified for the 2024 Paris Olympics in men's basketball, has not been able to send its very best. Does anyone think a team with a combination of Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, Jimmy Butler, Steph Curry, LeBron James, Donovan Mitchell, Damian Lillard, Trae Young, Julius Randle, Devin Booker, Kevin Durant, Jaren Jackson Jr., Anthony Edwards, Jalen Brunson, Mikal Bridges, Anthony Davis, Bam Adebayo, Ja Morant and Tyrese Haliburton loses? No.
Of that group, only Edwards, Brunson, Jackson, Bridges and Haliburton committed to USA Basketball for the 2023 FIBA World Cup.
The rest of the world has closed the gap, no question there, and that’s evident by the growing number of international players in the NBA. The last five NBA MVPs have been awarded to players born and raised outside of the U.S. Still, the USA’s best players, collectively, are better than any other country’s best players.
However, with the 2024 Paris Olympics next summer, U.S. players are not giving up substantial offseason time in back-to-back summers for international events. The Olympic event remains the preferred competition for U.S. players. So USA Basketball had to go to FIBA World Cup with a B team.
This U.S. team was flawed – and that was apparent early – with its lack of size and go-to playmakers. The hope was that the U.S. would just out-talent its opponents, and in most cases, it did. But against some of Europe’s top teams, talent alone was not enough.
The U.S. lost to Lithuania in group play and Germany in the semifinals. Germany’s core of Dennis Schroder, Franz Wagner, Mo Wager, Daniel Theis and Andreas Obst have played together for multiple FIBA events, including last year’s EuroBasket team that earned silver.
The U.S. doesn't have that continuity. The Americans began practicing for the first time together in August and played five exhibition games before the World Cup where the 32-team field is more competitive than the 12-team Olympic field.
Also, FIBA ball is a different style, one that favors the defense – or at least favors the defense more than the NBA – and limits some of the offensive freedom enjoyed in the NBA.
Size and strength play a factor, and the U.S. World Cup team didn’t have enough. There aren’t many American bigs who excel at the FIBA game, and even if Joel Embiid decides to play for the U.S. and not France, he likely would not have played in the World Cup. He may play in next year’s Olympics.
The U.S. will be favored to win gold in Paris, regardless of the World Cup result. It was a learning experience for U.S. coach Steve Kerr and his All-Star coaching staff of Erik Spoelstra, Ty Lue and Mark Few, and they will be better next summer.
It was also a necessary experience for USA Basketball men’s managing director Grant Hill who assembled his first team since taking over for Jerry Colangelo.
There is pressure on Hill to pick a team that will win a fifth consecutive gold at the Olympics. With a field in Paris that includes Serbia, Germany, Canada, France and Australia, Olympic gold isn’t a guarantee either.
veryGood! (59959)
Related
- Grammy nominee Teddy Swims on love, growth and embracing change
- Lawyers for teen suing NBA star Ja Morant over a fight during a pickup game withdraw from the case
- Tiffany Haddish Reveals the Surprising Way She's Confronting Online Trolls
- What is Sidechat? The controversial app students have used amid campus protests, explained
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Kendrick Lamar doubles down with fiery Drake diss: Listen to '6:16 in LA'
- Judge says gun found in car of Myon Burrell, sentenced to life as teen, can be evidence in new case
- An anchovy feast draws a crush of sea lions to one of San Francisco’s piers, the most in 15 years
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- '9-1-1' stars talk Maddie and Chimney's roller-coaster wedding, Buck's 'perfect' gay kiss
Ranking
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Woman wins $1 million scratch-off lottery prize twice, less than 10 weeks apart
- Bystander livestreams during Charlotte standoff show an ever-growing appetite for social media video
- Jewish students grapple with how to respond to pro-Palestinian campus protests
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Captain sentenced to four years following deadly fire aboard dive boat Conception in California
- Flowers, candles, silence as Serbia marks the 1st anniversary of mass shooting at a Belgrade school
- The Kentucky Derby could be a wet one. Early favorites Fierceness, Sierra Leone have won in the slop
Recommendation
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
Employer who fired 78-year-old receptionist must now pay her $78,000
Researchers found the planet's deepest under-ocean sinkhole — and it's so big, they can't get to the bottom
'Fear hovering over us': As Florida dismantles DEI, some on campuses are pushing back
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
'9-1-1' stars talk Maddie and Chimney's roller-coaster wedding, Buck's 'perfect' gay kiss
Massachusetts woman wins $1 million lottery twice in 10 weeks
North Carolina candidate for Congress suspends campaign days before primary runoff after Trump weighs in