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U.S. gets by on way to Games

BEIJING 2008

August 06, 2008|Mark Heisler, Times Staff Writer

SHANGHAI -- So much for off-Broadway, or as they say here, off-Tiananmen Square.

The U.S. Olympic men's basketball team has had enough of the provinces. Showing the Americans are ready for prime time . . . or bored . . . they beat undermanned Australia on Tuesday night, although not by a lot and not impressively, winning, 87-76, to finish their exhibition season 5-0.


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It was the closest game the U.S. has played in two summers. No one had come closer than 21 points this summer. The closest any team came in last summer's Tournament of the Americas was Argentina, which lost, 91-76.

Not that a lot is expected of the U.S. but Coach Mike Krzyzewski was asked afterward whether his team is ready.

"We're prepared for the Olympics," said a bemused Krzyzewski. "It's just a matter of you're going to have some games in which you don't play as well and if you can win those games when you don't shoot well from the free-throw line [20 for 33] and you don't hit threes [three for 18] and you still almost score 90 points, that means something good happened in the game.

"You can elaborate on all the bad things. . . . I'd be much happier if we had played great, but I would be much sadder if we had lost. . . .

"I told them, 'Let's just take it to Beijing.' This was our worst effort, or not effort but performance. . . . I was concerned after our last game [a 21-point victory over Russia], our guys were already in Beijing."

Counting their five days in Las Vegas, the U.S. players have now been on the road more than two weeks. If their heads were already in Beijing, their bodies will officially arrive today.

Of course, they will then have to wait four more days before their eagerly anticipated opener against China with President Bush in attendance along with members of the Chinese Politburo.

In any case, the U.S. is going to see a lot of what it saw here, teams sagging back on defense or playing a zone, slowing the game down and making sure they protect the ball to keep the Americans from running off turnovers.

Like the Russians, who are coached by David Blatt, an American from Boston, the Aussies are coached by Brian Goorjian, an American from La Crescenta whose father, Ed, coached Loyola Marymount and whose brother, Greg, set a California state scoring record in high school.

"We talked all night about having four sets of shoes in the paint," Goorjian said. "If you get beat, you want them to beat you from the outside. . . .

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