Shelby Daily Globe

Colangelo seeks golden finish to time leading USA Basketball

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Associated Press

Jerry Colangelo recalls it as a watershed year in his life.

He sold the NBA’S Phoenix Suns in 2004. He stepped down from the Arizona Diamondbac­ks, three years after they had won the World Series.

For Colangelo, who was also diagnosed with prostate cancer that year, a career in sports seemed to be heading toward its finish.

Instead, a new chapter would soon be starting.

When the U.S. stumbled to a third-place finish that summer in Athens, Greece — the first time it hadn’t won Olympic gold when using NBA players — former NBA Commission­er David Stern decided the USA Basketball program needed to be overhauled. The guy he had in mind to take over was Colangelo, who had been a trusted confidante on many matters in basketball and beyond.

“It was kind of perfect timing and the result was, it’s been a great run,” Colangelo said. “I’ve loved it. It’s been terrific.”

Now he needs one more victory to end it on top.

The Olympics will be Colangelo’s final tournament as the managing director of USA Basketball’s men’s national team. He took the Americans from their darkest days back to the top of internatio­nal basketball, getting the sport’s biggest stars to give up portions of their summers and commit to playing for the national team — sometimes multiple times — after many had begun to shun the program.

The Americans have won three straight Olympic gold medals and added a pair of world championsh­ips since Colangelo took over in 2005.

But his tenure began with another U.S. loss —- in the very Saitama Super Arena where the Americans are headed back to now — and he is driven to make sure it doesn’t end the same way.

“My focus is on the win, for everyone’s sake,” the 81-year-old Colangelo said. “For the country, for USA Basketball, for the players who have committed the time to do this under the circumstan­ces, we want to win. It’s all about winning the gold medal.”

That was a foregone conclusion when the Americans first started using NBA players in 1992. The Dream Team rolled through those Olympics and the U.S won the next two before the program cratered.

The Americans lost three times in a dismal sixth-place finish as the host team in the 2002 world championsh­ips, then fell three more times in the 2004 Olympics. The selection committee USA Basketball was using wasn’t getting the players or coaches the Americans had counted on as the sport’s gold standard from the moment it debuted in the Olympics in 1936.

Colangelo accepted the job under the condition of autonomy. There would be no selection committees; he would pick the players. And his choice as coach, Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski, came from the college world after the Americans had been using NBA coaches with NBA players.

Talent alone wouldn’t win anymore. Players couldn’t be picked months before a competitio­n. Colangelo started getting them into the program sometimes years in advance.

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