Daily Southtown (Sunday)

US found help to prep for World Cup

- By Tim Reynolds

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates — Among the prized possession­s that John Jenkins has collected in his career: a handwritte­n letter from former USA Basketball coach Gregg Popovich for his role on the Tokyo Olympic team, and a gold medal from those games.

His medal is a replica. His effort was very real. And who knows, another shiny souvenir might be coming his way in a few weeks. As part of its preparatio­ns for big tournament­s in recent years — such as the World Cup, which begins on Friday in the Philippine­s, Indonesia and Japan — USA Basketball has been taking a few extra players to help in practices and workouts. Jenkins, Langston Galloway and Eric Mika were the trio that got the call for this trip; they go home on Sunday, one day before the Americans leave for Manila and their World Cup run.

“To have this opportunit­y given to me again, I’ve never been more grateful in my life than now,” Jenkins said.

These aren’t some guys off the street who were brought in to be tackling dummies. Make no mistake: They all could be on NBA rosters right now. Galloway has appeared in 452 NBA games with seven different franchises. Jenkins has appeared in 171 games with five franchises. Mika had six points and seven rebounds in his only NBA game, more than holding his own on a night where LeBron James and Anthony Davis were on the opposing team.

They were among the 52 players, most of them from the G League, that USA Basketball brought in for the 12 qualifying games — six different teams were assembled to play each of the two-game windows that wound up securing the Americans their spot in the World Cup.

“The people working in USA Basketball, we’re just placeholde­rs, right?” said Sean Ford, USA Basketball’s men’s national team director. “But there’s a lot of people that contribute to make USA Basketball what it is. And once you’ve done it, you own a piece of USA Basketball — and we can never have too many investors.” As they should. Nobody played in more World Cup qualifying games than Galloway, who appeared in 10 of the 12 contests. On the night when the Americans clinched the World Cup spot in February, Galloway led the charge in an 88-77 win over Uruguay with 21 points — including 11 straight in the fourth quarter to help put the win away.

It’s the guys like him that gave the U.S. a chance to win gold this summer.

“It’d be a huge accomplish­ment,” said Galloway, a pro who’ll

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