No Stephen Curry. No LeBron James. It won't matter for U.S. basketball in Rio

Tue, Jun 28th 2016, 03:01 PM


No other Olympic team will feature a player with the all-around skills of the United States’ Kevin Durant, right, pictured driving on the Warriors’ Andre Iguodala in an N.B.A. game. (Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)

Stephen Curry isn’t on the team, and neither is LeBron James or Russell Westbrook. Nor is Kawhi Leonard, Chris Paul or James Harden.

Though all those players would be automatic selections to a “best American” basketball team, each has bowed out of consideration for the United States Olympic team, citing fatigue or injury.

But the 12 men who were named to the team Monday morning are still a formidable group and will be heavily favored to win another gold medal. In other words, the United States bench is deep.

The best American gymnasts or volleyball players would not pass up an Olympic opportunity. And most international men’s basketball stars keep playing for their home countries as long as they can. Dirk Nowitzki was still plugging away last summer at age 37 for Germany at the European championship.

But with a grueling N.B.A. schedule just completed and another one around the corner, many of America’s best have decided this is not the year to add a summer tournament to their schedules.

Does this open up an opportunity for Nigeria or Venezuela to win the gold in Rio? Well, no.

The United States team starts with one no-arguments superstar, Kevin Durant of the Oklahoma City Thunder. No other country will feature a player who nears his all-around skills.

Curry is missing, but the other Splash Brother, Klay Thompson, is on the team, along with his Warriors teammates Draymond Green and Harrison Barnes. Though James is taking the summer off, the N.B.A. champion Cleveland Cavaliers are represented by Kyrie Irving.

The American team is notably versatile. Except for the two centers, DeMarcus Cousins and DeAndre Jordan, and the two point guards, Irving and Kyle Lowry, every player is listed from 6 feet 7 to 6-9, and many play multiple positions.


Harrison Barnes, left, Draymond Green, center, and Klay Thompson, not pictured, will represent the Warriors on the United States national team, but Stephen Curry, right, will use the time to rest and recover from the N.B.A. season. (Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)

Paul George is also on the team, despite having sustained a serious leg injury while training for the 2014 World Cup of Basketball, which caused him to miss nearly a full N.B.A. season.

The team is rounded out by Jimmy Butler, DeMar DeRozan and Carmelo Anthony, playing in his fourth Olympics. In recent days, Anthony has been socializing with Durant in New York and working out with him in what amounts to an unofficial wooing of the Oklahoma City star before he officially becomes a free agent next month.

Would Durant really consider joining Anthony on the work-in-progress Knicks, who traded for Derrick Rose last week? Probably not, but Anthony can keep trying right through the Olympics, where the Americans’ status as gold-medal favorites is enhanced by the other contenders’ relatively weak rosters.

Spain has been the second-best team in the world for many years, but it is led by a 35-year-old, Pau Gasol. The status of his brother Marc, who broke his foot with the Grizzlies in February, is unclear, and Serge Ibaka, the Orlando Magic star, will not play, citing the long N.B.A. season. That leaves Ricky Rubio as Spain’s No. 2 star.

Other contenders have even fewer N.B.A. quality players. Lithuania, runner-up to Spain in last year’s Euros, is led by Jonas Valanciunas, a solid center for the Raptors who would not have come close to the Olympics were he an American.

Other teams have legitimate N.B.A. stars who are getting toward the end of their careers. Manu Ginobili of Argentina is 38. Anderson Varejao and Leandro Barbosa of host Brazil are 33. Tony Parker and Boris Diaw of France are 34 (and France has not yet qualified for the Games).

While all these teams have good players from the European leagues, even the most passionate Europhile acknowledges the huge gulf between the quality of the N.B.A. and Italy’s Serie A or Spain’s Liga ACB.

Knowing that the Americans are likely to win the gold medal won’t make you rich. Sky Bet currently offers odds of 1-14 on the United States — a $14 bet will earn you just a buck. Spain is the second favorite at 10-1, and Brazil is 20-1.

After the group stage, the Olympic tournament moves to the single-elimination quarterfinals, semifinals and final, so a fluky loss is not impossible. But even without its biggest stars, the United States is playing with by far the best team.

By Victor Mather

Source: NY Times

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