Basketball World Cup Preview
With
college football starting this weekend, and the NFL next weekend, I’m pretty
sure the inaugural FIBA Basketball World Cup (used to be the World
Championship) is flying way under the
radar for most casual sports fans. Never
fear though, that’s what I’m here for.
The B-Ball World Cup (WC) runs from 8/30 to 9/14 and takes place at six
cities in Spain. The WC consists of 24
teams split into four groups with the top four teams from each group being
seeded into a 16-team knockout bracket.
Around the globe the WC is viewed as more important than the Olympics
but that obviously isn’t the case is good ole USA. The main motivation to win the WC for The
Yanks, besides a shiny new gold medal of course, is it allows them to skip
qualifying for the Olympics at the 2015 FIBA Americas Championship.
With
the particulars out of the way USA Basketball (USAB) has already played four
friendlies leading up to the WC. They
beat Brazil 95-78 in Chicago, Dominican Republic 105-62 & Puerto Rico
112-86 in New York and Slovenia 101-71 in Las Palmas, Canary Islands. Along the way USAB Chairman Jerry Colangelo
and Coach Mike Krzyzewski lost a player to injury, had another withdraw unexpectedly
and made seven cuts.
After
Paul George’s gruesome leg injury forced his withdrawal the first round of cuts
saw Bradley Beal, Paul Millsap and John Wall shown the door. Then in a big surprise Kevin Durant withdrew
out of nowhere citing “physical and mental fatigue.” Coach K had built USAB’s offense around KD
during training camp in Las Vegas and losing Durant so soon after George took
away two-thirds of USAB’s projected starting frontcourt. The final four cuts were Gordon Hayward, Kyle
Korver, Damian Lillard and Chandler Parsons.
The
final 12 chosen by Colangelo and Coach K were Kyrie Irving, Stephen Curry,
Derrick Rose, Klay Thompson, James Harden, DeMar DeRozan, Kenneth Faried, Rudy
Gay, Anthony Davis, DeMarcus Cousins, Andre Drummond and Mason Plumlee. It’s worth noting that both Gay and Plumlee
were not on the original invitee’s list and earned their way onto the team with
their play. Likewise I think that
DeRozan and Drummond made the final cut based on the big performances they each
had against the Dominican Republic.
When
pressed on the matter of his rotation Coach K says he’s still experimenting but
other than gamesmanship with the other countries I think the rotation is pretty
much set. Kyrie will start at PG, Steph
at SG, Harden at SF, Faried at PF and Davis at center. They are backed up by Rose, Klay, DeRozan,
Gay and Cousins. DeMar is the 10th
man and probably won’t play at all in close games. Drummond is the 11th man and
Plumlee the 12th and as far as I can tell they are insurance
policies for Spain only.
The
overall makeup of the final roster is a little atypical for USAB in recent
tournaments since they kept less shooting in favor of more big men. I’m sure that is to deal with Spain’s
frontcourt of Pau Gasol, Marc Gasol and Serge Ibaka but since USAB can only
meet Spain in the final game I’m a little worried that we might not even get
there.
I
watched all four friendlies and I haven’t been impressed with this group so far
at all. The raw numbers don’t look too
bad when you consider their point differential is +29 points per game. Their rebound differential is also an
impressive +9.8 per game. They are
forcing opponents into 18.3 turnovers per game and average 19.5 stocks
(steals+blocks) per game. The shooting
numbers (52.1% FG, 39.5% 3FG & 73.5% FT) aren’t superlative but they aren’t
bad by any stretch of the imagination either.
To my eyes this squad just doesn’t look to have that intangible “it”
that their predecessors under Colangelo and Coach K have had.
When
they need a score in crunch time they really have no one that can get them an
easy bucket outside of “Boogie” Cousins in the low post. I’m well aware that Irving, Rose, Harden, DeRozan
and Gay can beat their man off the dribble whenever they want but in FIBA those
lanes all the way to the hoop just aren’t there consistently. That means those drives turn into mid-range
jumpers…which are not Kyrie, Derrick, James or Rudy’s specialty…or kick-outs.
This
brings me to 3-point shooters. By my
count Curry and Thompson are the only deadeye marksmen from three on the
roster. Other guys can and will shoot
3’s but the likes of Irving, Harden, DeRozan and Gay are nowhere near the level
of Steph and Klay. If both of the “Splash
Brothers” are off on the same night I can see USAB really struggling. That is why I would have kept Korver around
to be the 12th man over Plumlee.
FIBA basketball has always been about 3-point shooting over low post
defense so I really don’t understand keeping Mason over Kyle on the deep
pine. Now if Faried, Davis, Cousins and
Drummond are all in foul trouble at the same time against Spain (always a
possibility with FIBA referees) I may eat those words when Plumlee steps up but
until then color me dubious.
So
far USAB has hung around in games playing pretty good defense (41.7% OPFG) and
running almost no set offense that I can decipher. Their superior depth has basically worn the
opposition down until they give up a 15-0 run followed by another 10-0 run not
too long after and then it’s garbage time.
The thing is the way they are doing it by out-athleticing everyone it is
too reminiscent of the “dark days” of USAB.
I’m already sick of watching Harden jack up bad shots or drive the lane flailing
around looking for a foul call. Curry
and Thompson likewise have taken many ill-advised jumpers and Rudy Gay is being
Rudy Gay disguised as a “stretch four.”
Derrick Rose’s game is also showing considerable signs of rust, which to
be fair is not all that surprising.
I
have seen some good things though starting with “Manimal” Faried’s hustle. I’m not sure if his energy will translate
when the level of competition picks up but against the lesser sides his work
rate has been a wakeup call to the rest of his teammates. The next is Anthony Davis. “The Brow” is ready to explode onto the
international scene but since he doesn’t have a go-to move on offense yet he
has to do it with defense, freak athleticism and length. So far Davis and Faried’s activity along with
Kyrie Irving’s playmaking ability (5.7 AST/TO) has defined this team.
USAB
was drawn into Group C and will play all of their group stage games in
Barakaldo at the Bizkaia Arena.
Barakaldo is located at the very northern edge of Spain on the Bay of
Biscay about an hour and a half drive from the French border. Most pundits expect USAB to roll through
their group and I tend to agree. Turkey might
be the exception and possibly the Mike Fratello coached Ukraine could present a
few problems early. Hopefully USAB gets
a test from someone in their group but the more likely scenario is that the
group stage, and even the early part of the knockout round, will just be a tune
up for the semifinals and finals.
If
I was a betting man I’d take “the field” over this USAB squad right now. I just have a very bad feeling about this
group with the way they play. Even more
concerning is that their body language hasn’t been the greatest thus far. Potentially having to play Spain with all
their big guns in Madrid for the gold doesn’t sit well with me either. Granted USAB hasn’t been able to cake walk
for years now but something tells me that our run of three straight major
tournament wins is about to end…and it wouldn’t shock me if it happened before
the final game. I hope all the “superstars”
that skipped this summer are ready to play in Mexico next summer at the FIBA
Americas Championship.
USAB GROUP SCHEDULE
8/30
– Finland at 12:30 PM
8/31
– Turkey at 12:30 PM
9/2
– New Zealand at 8:30 AM
9/3
– Dominican Republic at 12:30 PM
9/4
– Ukraine at 8:30 AM
(all times Pacific
& all games on ESPN)
KNOCKOUT SCHEDULE
9/6
– Round of 16 in Barcelona
9/9
– Quarterfinal in Barcelona
9/11
– Semifinal in Barcelona
9/14
– Final in Madrid
(assumes USAB is
seeded as C1)