Call & Times

Brown, Walker, Team USA ready for FIBA foes

- By BEN GOLLIVER

ANAHEIM, Calif. — There were bumps, bruises and even blowout scrimmage losses along the way, but USA Basketball wrapped its two weeks of FIBA World Cup training with an affirming victory over its biggest rival.

Team USA defeated Spain, 90-81, in an exhibition contest at the Honda Center on Friday, maintainin­g firm control of the action after claiming a double-digit lead in the first quarter. While Spain’s starting lineup, which consisted of five players with NBA experience, nearly played the Americans to a draw, coach Gregg Popovich’s second unit handily outplayed their counterpar­ts.

“Of course, they are the best team in the competitio­n and the best team in the world,” said Spanish Coach Sergio Scariolo, whose country took silver behind Team USA’s golds at the 2008 and 2012 Olympics.

Scariolo’s tip of the hat capped an up-anddown training camp for Team USA, which lost scrimmages to a Select Team of rising stars in Las Vegas last week and to a makeshift band of fringe NBA talents in Los Angeles this week. During one turnover-filled rout on Wednesday, Boston Celtics guard Marcus Smart stood within earshot of dozens of media members and exclaimed, “This is embarrassi­ng.”

Friday night’s victory wasn’t always pretty, but it was far from embarrassi­ng. Popovich’s winning formula relies on depth, defense and rebounding, and the Americans decisively prevailed in all three. Team USA’s bench outscored Spain’s, 52-36; the Americans held Spain to 29-of 71 shooting (41%) and won the rebounding battle, 42-20.

“It was like a baptism for us,” Popovich said of his team’s first game against foreign competitio­n. “I was most pleased with us defensivel­y. I thought we did a good job for a new group communicat­ing with each other, and we had a good effort by everybody on the boards tonight.”

The American attack, however, often lacked flow during a sloppy performanc­e that saw 21 turnovers borne of miscommuni­cation, poor timing and mental lapses. If not for the U.S. team’s scorching 11-of-19 3-point shooting, Spain would have been in position to pull off a rare upset. Indeed, timely three-pointers by Joe Harris and Jayson Tatum snuffed out a Spanish rally late in the fourth quarter.

“We definitely needed that [response],” said Khris Middleton, who scored 12 points. “[FIBA] isn’t a 48-minute game, where you can have lapses, or even a regular season NBA game, where you can drop one and come back [the next game]. In this [World Cup], you can’t let up. It’s a shorter game, so you have to be on top of it for those 40 minutes.”

There were many uncertaint­ies facing Team USA when it first assembled two weeks ago with a new coach in Popovich and a roster lacking in superstar talent. As the Americans head to Australia for a pit stop on the road to China, answers have started to emerge.

Even without James Harden and Anthony Davis, among other A-listers, Popovich will have the tournament’s most talented, most imposing, and most athletic roster. The Americans have proven that they deserve to be the clear favorites, as Scariolo noted, but they have also looked far from unbeatable. This year’s replacemen­ts command respect, but don’t inspire fear.

Team USA can play elite defense, shoot at a high level, and consistent­ly create high-percentage shots. But unlike past gold medal-winning teams, the Americans can’t turn to Kobe Bryant or Kevin Durant for late-game isolation brilliance. Popovich doesn’t have an elite playmaker such as LeBron James or Chris Paul, so he must scrap for all the scor

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