Utah Jazz: Olympic basketball team ready for gold medal run
But once in the quarterfinals, a slip here or a misstep there can result in an upset loss, which in the quarterfinals means elimination, in the semifinal finals means bronze medal at best, and in the championship game means a perceived tarnished silver.
Up first for the United States in Wednesday’s quarterfinals Andrew Bogut-led Australia, which after opening the Games with a pair of listless performances ripped off three dominating victories in Group A.
Other quarterfinal pairings: Spain meets up-and-down Croatia, Lithuania faces host China, and defending champion Argentina takes on Greece.
After the U.S. struggled to a 5-3 record and a much-maligned bronze at the 2004 Athens Games, anything short of gold for star-studded Team USA will earn public rebuke.
The United States’ thrashing of Group B peers did nothing but fuel the fire of public expectations.
“Every team we play from here on,” said center Dwight Howard, "coach said was going to be like a 'game seven’ and we have to stay focused.”
Focused is what the Americans were through five pool games.
Consider the numbers:
• Scoring The United States is first in points scored at 103.0 a game and tops in points allowed, only 70.8. And the five margins of victory — 29 points in the opener against China, followed by a charitable 21 against winless Angola, then 23 versus Greece, 37 in blowing out then-undefeated Spain, and 49 in the finale with Germany.
• Shooting After a couple of off outings, the U.S. ended up shooting a collective 55 percent from the floor and allowing opponents just 37 percent. That’s 64 percent to 43 on two-pointers and 36 percent to 27 percent for 3-pointers, the latter an area where critics wondered if the Americans could stop the international sharpshooters.
• Defense The United States has created 114 turnovers but committed just 69, tripled the amount of steals made versus given up (72 to 24) and blocked 21 shots to having been stuffed 14 times.
• Balance Unlike other Olympic squads, the U.S. is not counting just on one or two mainstays. Dwyane Wade and LeBron James are ninth and tied for 10th in scoring average, but both are in the top six in FG percentage and total field goals made.
And when it comes to unselfishness, the U.S. has three James, Chris
Recent comments
Hey, Chuckles55, if someone wants to pay to watch badmitton or ping…
Eye Dee Ten Tee | Aug. 20, 2008 at 2:57 a.m.
That was an excellent comment by coach Goorjian, "I don't know what…
Very insightful | Aug. 19, 2008 at 7:11 p.m.
The olympics should be for amateur sports, not professional ones.…
chuckles55 | Aug. 19, 2008 at 4:42 p.m.


