Bob8 wrote:JonFromVA wrote:Pipp33 wrote:
On no! Can't believe how inconsiderate FIBA is, with scheduling something so close to the start of the NBA....which is still well over a month away. Other leagues around the world also start soon and the best countries have players in the NBA too. Now that the USA couldn't make the SF, all of a sudden it doesn't matter. Every other country takes the World Cup seriously. The rest of the world don't care which players turn up, they just want to represent their countries at play hard to win.
The USA's biggest issue is the majority of their players cannot adjust to the different style of basketball that FIBA is. Kemba Walker will still be great in the NBA, because he plays that game really well, but he was lost out there tonight, as ISO ball will not work in FIBA.
NBA talent does not mean success in FIBA. If you have not played FIBA basketball previously, there is a big adjustment to make. Guards like Mills/De Colo/ Fournier/Rubio look like superstars in FIBA games, because they understand how to play that style of basketball. Yet we have people saying Kemba Walker is too small - Mills is about the same size and is in Top 5 for player of the tournament and some NBA fans think he's overpaid at Spurs making $11 mil per year.....
Sorry, go check the TV ratings if you don't believe how little most Americans care about the FIBA WC.
And while experience in the format matters a lot, talent still matters more. Feel free to compare the 2014 roster to the 2019 roster. The 2014 team suffered a major drop-off in talent and experience from the 2012 Olympic team and still won it all; but their drop-off was nothing like the 2019 team.
Jerry Colangelo mentioned the problems FIBA's schedule changes were causing the team well over a month ago. Heck, team USA had to qualify with a friggen G-League team because FIBA decided previous winners should no longer get an exemption and they scheduled the Americas tourney right in the middle of the NBA season. Why do you think FIBA made these changes?
As for Patty, we don't judge or pay players based on what they do in FIBA. The fact the Spurs were -1.5 points per 100 when Patty was off the floor speaks loudly about his value and/or the Spur's lack of PG depth after Murray went down with injury. We'll have to see on that.
So why Fiba made that changes? Before you answer that, may I remind you that Slovenia( Eurobasket champion), Croatia and Latvia didn’t even qualify because of this changes. Mostly All European players are from Nba or Euroleague, which accidentally starts in 3 weeks. And what about Olympics? USA is already qualified. All European countries except France and Spain, who are in semis, will have to qualify in pre-olympic tournaments. Only 4 places left. It will be bloody. So please stop crying about USA, which is in much better position.
You know it used to be people would mistakenly answer a rhetorical question as if it was a question ... now we have people responding to a question like it's rhetorical.
What was FIBA trying to do? That was a serious question.
Now let's talk about the repercussions ...
I never said what FIBA did to the scheduling didn't harm other teams, but surely you realize there's a difference between trying to qualify with a team of G-League level players .vs. NBA stars?
And while there are NBA players scattered across all these teams, why do you think it was primarily Team USA and Team Canada affected by players dropping out due to the scheduling changes? And by scheduling changes I'm talking about two things: moving up the games so they're back to back with the Olympics AND moving the games very late in the Summer/early FALL when players are getting ready for training camp.
There's only one team in this single elimination tourney that's expected to win it all and that's because Team USA is expected to be ridiculously more talented than the competition not slightly more talented. Make it close, and the odds of winning drop precipitously.
We're talking simple math here.... even if team USA was expected to win 87% of the time the odds of them wining a 5 game single elimination tourney would just be 50-50.
So, has the world caught up with the US in basketball?
That's simply not something you can conclude when the US is sending a team weaker than even something like the "B" team we sent to the 2014 World Championships.