• Leftist failure Gregg Popovich's nigger Team USA falls to 0-2 in Olympi

    From hamilton@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jul 13 23:26:12 2021
    XPost: alt.niggers, talk.politics.guns, sac.politics
    XPost: alt.disney

    Team USA might indeed win its fourth consecutive Olympic gold
    next month in Tokyo.

    But if the Americans do, it will be a story of overcoming
    adversity.

    They lost their second consecutive exhibition Monday, this time
    bested by Australia 91-83 in Las Vegas. Dating to the 2019 World
    Cup, where they finished seventh, Team USA has lost four of its
    past five games. It also has lost two in a row now to Australia,
    a team expected to contend for the gold in Japan.

    It was a better showing than the loss to Nigeria on Saturday,
    but just reading those words is a little mind-boggling
    considering the pedigree of this roster and coaching staff.
    Their chemistry and execution, particularly in late-game
    situations, is holding the Americans back in their early stages
    of defending their title.

    "I thought we got better tonight," said Team USA coach Gregg
    Popovich, continuing his stance of emphasizing process over
    results. "After a short time together, there's a lot of things
    that have to be covered."

    Damian Lillard, who had 22 points, and Kevin Durant, who had 17
    points, definitely looked more like All-Stars in this game than
    in the Nigeria loss. They combined to shoot 10-of-20 on 3-
    pointers, the type of shooting this roster has been designed to
    deliver.

    The Americans had an 11-point first-half lead and played
    effective physical defense at times, holding Australia to just
    13 points in the second quarter. After giving up 20 3-pointers
    in the exhibition opener, there was a clear effort to challenge
    them better and Australia had just 10.

    Those are the signs Popovich was talking about. But moral
    victories in losses are a new sensation for Team USA. The loss
    to Nigeria was deemed one of the great international basketball
    upsets on record. When this one was over, the Australians gave
    each other routine congratulations and moved on.

    "We walked into this game expecting to win," said Joe Ingles of
    the Utah Jazz, who had 17 points for Australia. "No disrespect
    to them, they're a hell of a team, obviously the guys they've
    got on their roster and Pop standing up there is always nice to
    see, but we came in here expecting to win the game and that's
    what we did."

    For decades, whether it was in tight wins or the rare loss, Team
    USA cited an inherent disadvantage it has against national teams
    whose core players develop chemistry from their teen years
    onward. Popovich did so again after this loss, as did Lillard,
    who is headed to his first Olympics.

    "These teams are experienced and they've spent a lot of time
    together," Lillard said. "We are still working at becoming a
    team."

    The Australians do have institutional knowledge as Patty Mills,
    who has played nine seasons for Popovich in San Antonio, has
    been a tremendous lead guard for them for years. And he was
    great again Monday, scoring 22 points and nailing six 3-pointers.

    But the Aussies have seven new players and have changed coaches
    twice in the past two years. Their best player, Ben Simmons,
    elected not to play. And they admittedly are still installing
    their systems.

    The chemistry deficit is a real thing, but it isn't the only
    thing. This American team was built with versatility and
    shooting in mind at the cost of size. The Aussies knew it and
    crushed it.

    Over and over they were able to throw passes into the middle to
    players either wide open from great cuts or in an advantageous
    matchup. They racked up 44 points in the paint to the USA's 24,
    making 22 of 35 shots in there. It led to 53% shooting overall.

    Much like the Nigerians, the Australians wore the Americans down
    and slowly extended the lead in the second half. Popovich
    attributed this to his players not having their stamina and
    wearing down.

    "Some guys have to get their legs and rhythm back," Popovich
    said. "We're sticking with the process."

    The Aussies were flying around defensively and challenging shots
    toward the end of the game, and the Americans' tired legs
    showed. Lillard and Durant missed crucial open looks and, in a
    final indignity, Jayson Tatum tossed up an air ball on a corner
    3-point try with the team down five with a minute to play.
    Though it was better than the next possession, which resulted in
    a turnover.

    There was a time when Team USA could get by with average
    performances in spots such as these. As is becoming increasingly
    clear, those days are at an end. The number of teams that are a
    threat to the Americans has clearly grown, something this week
    has already driven home.

    "It is different ... now you go out there and the whole starting
    five are NBA players that are in the rotation," Lillard said.
    "This also isn't the first time I've seen Team USA be tested."

    https://www.espn.com/olympics/story/_/id/31808700/team-usa-falls- 0-2-olympic-exhibitions-loss-australia

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