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Btw, Ricky was awesome yesterday too.
If he keeps shooting three pointers like that he is completely unstoppable.
If he keeps shooting three pointers like that he is completely unstoppable.
I think there is just a difference in basketball mentality between Europeans and Americans. European basketball is much more team-oriented than American basketball. No European team with Euroleague championship aspirations will allow itself to have just one go-to-guy. In fact, being a Maccabi fan, I still have goosebumps watching youtube clips from the 2003-04 season, where we won countless games with buzzer beaters, and it was always a different guy making those shots, and always in a different way. The most amazing of those buzzer beaters, known to European fans as the "Zalgiris Miracle", was hit by a reserve role-player named Derrick Sharp, who is arguably Maccabi's most valuable player of all time despite him coming off the bench his entire career, being responsible for numerous titles that Maccabi has won in his 13 years of playing for the team.
Anyway, I won't go on about Maccabi, but the point is that there is no tolerance in Europe for Superstar mentality while here it's all about the superstar. I think the break was in the early nineties, when Michael Jordan was the new face of the NBA, while European basketball was influenced by then-Yugoslavian tradition of uber-sophisticated team play.
Of course, even in European basketball not all players are equal, but even the top players are not considered "franchise players". They are what they are - top players who make a great contribution to their team - not superstars surrounded by players who are supposed to "help" them.
Don't get me wrong, although I personally clearly prefer the team-play philosophy, I'm not saying it's better. If a superstar can win you championships and you are happy with it, then all is great. This is just my personal preference, which I'm sure a lot of the Europeans share, and that's why I am enjoying the Kings so much, because they are not playing the stereotypical NBA "give the ball to the superstar and move out of the way" game for the most part. They are playing really energetic and fun-to-watch team basketball. At this point Tyreke is the only guy who gets the ball in clutch plays, but I'm hoping that as PW continues to develop this team, we will have more options for these moments as well.
I think this goes a little too far. It is a team game here, too and I don't think superstars or franchise players all think their teammates are there only to help them. Generally, everyone is there to win and everyone brings their specific skills and abilities to the team. Success is just more likely if you have a player on the team that is clearly a special talent, someone in a class by themselves.Of course, even in European basketball not all players are equal, but even the top players are not considered "franchise players". They are what they are - top players who make a great contribution to their team - not superstars surrounded by players who are supposed to "help" them.
I seriously doubt that a LeBron or a Kobe would not stand out in Europe, too and elevate the play of any team.
On our old Kings, anyone would have said Webber was the franchise player, the "star." However, everyone was integrel to the success of that team and Webber and everyone else on the team knew that. Everyone contributed their individual abilites/talents to the success of the whole team. They were not just helping the "star.
It is a sizeable amount of space that separates USA basketball from the rest of the world. Case in point, USA's best players beat the rest of the worlds best players by 27.5 points each game on average During the 2008 olympics. That includes pummeling Greece by 23, Spain by 37, and Argentina by 20. The closest any team came to beating the USA was Spain, who lost by 11. Team USA never lost nor did they allow any team within double digits. That my international friend is called being head and shoulders better than everyone else.
I'd actually like to see a united European team. There's still a problem, however. A lot of the top players on that Euro would be guys who honed their skills in the NBA. They're really NBA players who just happen to wear a different uniform when it comes to the Olympics. Is it really fair that they get all the most valuable experience here in the US and then use it "against us" when they compete in international competitions?
I'm just askin'...
I'd actually like to see a united European team. There's still a problem, however. A lot of the top players on that Euro would be guys who honed their skills in the NBA. They're really NBA players who just happen to wear a different uniform when it comes to the Olympics. Is it really fair that they get all the most valuable experience here in the US and then use it "against us" when they compete in international competitions?
I'm just askin'...
If it's FIBA rules I wouldn't take Parker for this team and neither Calderon.Well, even ignoring the fact that the US team was beaten in past Olympics and World Championships by numerous teams, including Carlos Arroyo's Porto-Rico, even in this Olympics you are looking at a US team, consisting of players from across the US, playing against European teams divided by countries. That's comparable to the US team divided to separate teams from each state. If you want to compare American and European basketball you have to take into consideration a matchup that would involve the US national team vs. a united European team. You can bet a team that combined Gasol, Nowitski, Tony Parker, Calderon, and other European stars would not be a pushover even for the Lebron-Kobe-Wade team. In fact, I would put my money on the European team for this one.
Don't you think that NBA learnt something from them too? Do you know that Popovich spent a lot of time teaching and also learning in Europe. I know that Brown (Cleavland coach) spend each summer with CSKA learning their system.
And we can continue this list.
Obviously, it is not a fair two-way road but still it is a two-way road.
The first basketball game between an NBA and a FIBA team was held in 1978 in Tel Aviv, Israel. Maccabi Tel Aviv surprisingly beat the defending NBA champion Washington Bullets 98-97. Since then only 4 other Euroleague teams have defeated an NBA franchise: FC Barcelona, Baloncesto Málaga and Real Madrid from Spain and CSKA Moscow from Russia.
In addition to defeating the Washington Bullets in 1978, Maccabi Tel Aviv also beat the New Jersey Nets and Phoenix Suns in 1984 in Israel, and beat the Toronto Raptors 103-105 in Toronto in 2005. As of 2008[update], this is the only FIBA victory on North American soil. The FC Barcelona and CSKA Moscow wins came during the 2006 NBA Europe Live Tour, where Barcelona beat the Philadelphia 76ers 104-99, and the Moscow won by 19 over the Los Angeles Clippers (94-75), the widest FIBA victory so far. During the 2007 NBA Europe Live Tour, Baloncesto Málaga beat the Memphis Grizzlies 102-99, and Real Madrid beat Toronto 104-103.
In addition, one national squad, the Soviet Union National Team, beat the Atlanta Hawks 132-123 in an exhibition game in Moscow in 1988.
Most of these games were initially played as part of the now-defunct McDonald's Championship, where NBA teams always won the games. Since 2006, they are played during the NBA Europe Live Tour
I honestly don't know, which is why I brought up the point. I only watch European teams during the Olympics. I've tried to watch at other times, but I'll be perfectly honest...it just doesn't hold much appeal for me. I'm not sure why...perhaps because I grew up watching NBA-based basketball and have followed the NBA faithfully for close to 50 years.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NBA_vs_FIBA_games
There were 7 games played in 09 during the preseason where a FIBA team played an NBA team. No FIBA team won any of the games and the average margin of victory for the NBA team was 21 pts....there is still a gap.
Like I said earlier, there is no question that the NBA is a much stronger league than the Euroleague, but the gap is largely due to the fact that the best European players are playing in the NBA, therefore making the NBA stronger in their presence and the Euroleague weaker in their absence.
Agreed.
I've always been interested in a US vs. World type all star event rather than an Eastern vs. Western game. I'm not a huge NHLer, but doesn't the NHL do North America vs. World for their all star game? Not only do I think this would be more entertaining, but I believe the game would be quite competitive with pride at stake.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NBA_vs_FIBA_games
There were 7 games played in 09 during the preseason where a FIBA team played an NBA team. No FIBA team won any of the games and the average margin of victory for the NBA team was 21 pts....there is still a gap.
Agreed.
I've always been interested in a US vs. World type all star event rather than an Eastern vs. Western game. I'm not a huge NHLer, but doesn't the NHL do North America vs. World for their all star game? Not only do I think this would be more entertaining, but I believe the game would be quite competitive with pride at stake.
So wait I'm a little fuzzy on the logic of this all? Because Spain played better in game two of the Olympics they are far more prepared mentally for high pressure situations than NBA players because they play more one and done scenarios?
Because teams are able to beat NBA teams under FIBA rules during preseason games this proves the gap between the NBA and FIBA is negligible?
My opinion is that under FIBA rules any elite European team should have a legitimate shot at beating an mid-level NBA team at any given time. Under NBA rules the European team probably shouldn't even show up. I mean for heavens sakes they should win given that's the rules they are used to playing by. Obviously this isn't the early 90's anymore and European teams aren't at the end of some cruel punchline. But by saying it would take an all Europe team under FIBA rules for it to be a close competition already speaks volumes for the size of the gap that still exists between the USA and other countries around the globe. Because lets be honest if that same game was played under NBA rules it would not even be close.
This thread is so biased I have to bite my tongue (figuratively) every time i read it lol.