TrueNorth31 wrote:Hair Canada wrote:TrueNorth31 wrote:
Good find. I've heard these minicamp/retreats organized by the players are becoming more and more a thing with a lot of squads just before training camp. So now if you want to play in the World Cup you have to run the gauntlet-first your NBA team will try to dissuade you ( and if you have the least little injury they have the power to pull the plug) , then your agent will probably be worried about maximizing your future revenue so he'll be negative about you participating and then, last but not least your teammates will be pressuring you to do the Banana Boat/ mini camp team bonding expedition thing.
You really have to want to participate in the World Cup to withstand all these pressures. I give a lot of credit to a guy like Okogie for showing up for Nigeria, but he's the exception , not the norm.
This sounds true until you realize that in many of the European countries the NBA guys do suit up. This includes superstars like Giannis in Greece and Jokic in Serbia. Or take the team in our group, Lithuania. They have two NBA players. Both are in China. We have like more than ten (not including rookies) and only two in China. Same goes for France, which we might meet if we somehow get through our group of death. Each and every one of their NBA veterans is suiting up. And the list goes on (Serbia, Greece, Italy, etc.). I imagine that these players face the same pressures as the Canadians (and Americans) do from teams and agents, but do not let this bother them. Eventually, as you say, it comes down to players' commitment to the team and wanting to be there. And I suspect that the main issue is that in all of these countries people and the media actually care about this tournament, and so players do too. We (Canadians; not people who are here obviously) just don't.
I'm not sure comparing European athletes to North American athletes is necessarily accurate though ( glad to see you posting again). My understanding that culturally sports in Europe is considerably different than here in North America. In Europe they follow a hybrid soccer model. If your a fan of the Bayern Munich basketball program ( or soccer for that matter) it's a lot different than being a Raptor fan. Instead of chasing the one penultimate goal of winning a league championship like we do here, a European athlete or fan has several other options. First of all the Bayern basketball team would be involved in competing in their own domestic German League, concurrently they would also be playing internationally against other teams in Euroleague. If it's soccer there's a whole myriad of international Fifa qualifying matches or international friendly exhibition matches that occur all year long. Players are strongly encouraged to join the national squad ( there's no such thing as a Mark Cuban whining to everyone about his own narrow business interests ) without consequence to their club teams. Playing for the National Program is paramount in soccer.
Here we put all our eggs in one basket as fans. The ultimate goal is to win a domestic league championship at all cost - nothing else matters ( e.g. the Larry OB ). Unfortunately in such a system international competition is secondary. I know it's hard to comprehend their system - I'm not a soccer guy and I barely understand it. As people we tend to be ethnocentric ( looking at other cultures through the lens of our own values) so it's hard for us to understand European sports, but I do know it's totally different. I can see if your Marc Gasol and you grew up in a sports environment that constantly promotes and focuses on international competition playing for your national program would be important. In North America we just don't have the same approach to sports.
It varies from country to country. For example, Slovenia, Croatia and Greece national basketball teams have been struggling with players refusing to play for years. With Slovenia it was players fighting among themselves. With Croatia it is a bad federation that didn't give the players proper conditions.
With Greece it is a crazy federation that is run by a EuroLeague club team (Panathinaikos) and bases its decisions on what looks good for that club and what that club's owner wants.......including some crazy ideas like forcing many players out because "all players are washed up by age 30"........
Some European teams have just as much, or even more problems getting players to play as Canada does.




















