The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

U.S. basketball team relying on defense to carry the day

- By Tim Reynolds

SHENZHEN, CHINA —

U.S. guard Donovan Mitchell turned toward his bench with fists clenched, then punched the air in celebratio­n and let out a joyous scream.

It wasn’t for a dunk, a 3-pointer, or some highlight-reel play. Mitchell’s exuberant reaction was because the U.S. forced a 24-second violation in a big moment against Greece on Saturday.

The U.S. team at this World Cup is like none other assembled by the Americans for a big internatio­nal tournament in a long time. This is no scoring juggernaut, but rather a team that has decided its best path to victory — and, it hopes, an unpreceden­ted third consecutiv­e World Cup title — is to clamp down on the defensive end.

“We all love playing defense,” U.S. guard Marcus Smart said. “When you’ve got a team like that, it’s not crazy for us. We knew coming in what we could do and hopefully everybody else knows.”

Through four games, the unbeaten Americans — who face Brazil today — have held opponents to 36% shooting. And they’ve given up a total of 98 points in their last two games, the stingiest two-game run by any U.S. men’s team in a big tournament since the 1988 Olympics.

“I told them that if they didn’t play defense like this, their NBA contracts would be pulled,” U.S. coach Gregg Popovich joked. Popovich, of course, doesn’t have the power to jeopardize the $171,296,102 the U.S. roster is set to make in the NBA next season. But the team is playing as if he does.

And it’s largely out of necessity, since the offense just isn’t clicking.

For the first time since the 2004 Olympics, the U.S. is not going to lead a major internatio­nal tournament in scoring. The Americans might finish outside of the top five in scoring at an internatio­nal event for the first time since the 1986 world championsh­ips — long before NBA players were making up the rosters for such events. The U.S. is averaging 87 points so far in China, which would be the lowest per-game mark by an American team in an internatio­nal tournament since the 1998 world championsh­ips. And the U.S. field-goal percentage so far at the World Cup (42.5%) isn’t even in the top half, ranking a dismal 21st in a 32-team field through Sunday.

So the defense matters, big-time. “That’s got to be our calling card,” U.S. forward Harrison Barnes said. “I think when you look at past USA teams, scoring has not been an issue. There’s been a lot of talent. But for us, we know that defense is how we’re going to stay in games.”

There have been 12 instances so far in this World Cup of a team scoring at least 100 points, 34 instances of a team shooting at least 50% in a game and 42 instances of a team shooting at least 40% from 3-point range. And in all those cases, none of those benchmarks has been reached by the U.S. The Americans have shot 49, 35, 48 and 36% — yet are 4-0.

Popovich has been stressing defense all summer, and said he isn’t surprised the group has figured out how to come together on that end. Players, meanwhile, are just waiting for someone to get hot on offense and for that contagious feeling to spread.

 ?? LINTAO ZHANG / GETTY IMAGES ?? Joe Harris (right) celebrates with Donovan Mitchell during the first round Group E match of the FIBA World Cup between the U.S. and Japan at the Oriental Sports Center on Thursday in Shanghai, China.
LINTAO ZHANG / GETTY IMAGES Joe Harris (right) celebrates with Donovan Mitchell during the first round Group E match of the FIBA World Cup between the U.S. and Japan at the Oriental Sports Center on Thursday in Shanghai, China.

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