SI.com HomeA CNN Network SiteSI.com Home
Get EA SPORTS NBA Live Video Game for $49!  Subscribe to SI Give the Gift of SI
  • PRINT PRINT
  • EMAIL EMAIL
  • RSS RSS
  • BOOKMARK SHARE
Posted: Monday August 4, 2008 11:13AM; Updated: Monday August 4, 2008 3:09PM
Chris Mannix Chris Mannix >
INSIDE THE NBA

Question of tempo will be a running theme for Team USA in Olympics

Story Highlights
  • The strategy against Team USA will be to force it into a half-court game
  • The Americans are at their best creating turnovers and getting into transition
  • Kobe Bryant has led the defensive charge in the exhibition games
Decrease font Decrease font
Enlarge font Enlarge font
Defensive stance: Kobe Bryant has helped fuel the Americans' running game by forcing turnovers and getting stops.
Defensive stance: Kobe Bryant has helped fuel the Americans' running game by forcing turnovers and getting stops.
MN Chan/Getty Images
Team USA at the Olympics
The U.S. opens by playing each team in its group. The quarterfinals are Aug. 20, the semifinals are Aug. 22 and the finals are Aug. 24
Date Opponent Time
Aug. 10 China 10:15 a.m. ET
Aug. 12 Angola 8 a.m. ET
Aug. 14 Greece 8 a.m. ET
Aug. 16 Spain 10:15 a.m. ET
Aug. 18 Germany 8 a.m. ET

At every major international tournament, the competition finds one chink in the Americans' armor and tries to exploit it.

At the 2004 Olympics in Athens, it was perimeter shooting. Puerto Rico, Lithuania and Argentina packed five guys into the lane and practically dared Team USA to beat them from the outside. Stephon Marbury and Co. couldn't do it, losing to all three teams, and the United States went home with a bronze medal.

At the 2006 world championships in Japan, the United States appeared to have constructed a juggernaut. It steamrolled through its early opponents, hammering the competition by an average of 25 points entering the semifinal game against Greece. But with an opportunity to regain some measure of international pride, the Americans were victimized by the simplest play in basketball: the pick-and-roll.

Running it with Stockton-to-Malone-esque efficiency, the Greeks scored 101 points (on 62.5 percent shooting) in a victory that relegated Team USA to another bronze medal game.

USA Basketball has gone to great lengths to address those problems. It added a sharpshooter/zone buster in Michael Redd. It put together arguably its most athletic team ever and spent extra time in practices working on pick-and-roll defense. Coach Mike Krzyzewski went as far as to solicit advice from his players (particularly point guards Jason Kidd, Deron Williams and Chris Paul) on how they prefer to defend it.

But there is a new threat looming, one that will likely be pointed to should this group come up short in its quest to reclaim Olympic gold.

Tempo. The United States likes to push it, and the rest of the world is doing everything within its power to slow it down.

After watching the Americans' first three exhibition games in China, against Turkey, Lithuania and Russia, you can see their offensive strategy. Run. Run on steals. Run on missed shots. Run on made shots. Run out of the huddle before the other team takes the court.

OK, we made up the last one. But you get the idea.

"If you take a look at past games," Russia forward Andrei Kirilenko said, "the most points they score are on the fast break."

He's right. The United States has fielded what is probably its most aggressive defensive team to date, a ball-hawking group of players that creates turnovers in bunches to set up transition opportunities. Team USA forced 19 turnovers against Turkey, 23 against Lithuania and 17 against Russia.

The leader of the group is Kobe Bryant, who gave himself the new nickname the Doberman. The moniker is appropriate: Bryant has aggressively defended the top perimeter player on each team, including Lithuania guard and former NBA player Sarunas Jasikevicius (who committed three turnovers and shot 2-of-8 from the field in a 120-84 loss to the Americans) and Russia's J.R. Holden (who had five turnovers in an 89-68 loss on Sunday).

The question now is, Can Team USA maintain this type of tempo throughout the Olympics? And if not, how effective will it be in the half court?

If the game against Russia is any indication, teams may be willing to roll the dice and find out.

Using a methodical offense that would have made Dean Smith proud, and dropping into a zone defense, the Russians made it a priority to a) limit the Americans' offensive possessions and b) keep the fast-break points to a minimum.

The strategy was effective. Against Turkey, the United States had 82 offensive possessions. Against Lithuania, the number jumped to 86. In both matchups, Team USA had 28 fast-break points and turned the game into a Harlem Globetrotters-type exhibition.

But against Russia, the tempo slowed considerably. The USA had 74 possessions and finished with only 15 fast-break points.

"They did a good job of calling timeouts or substituting when there was a free throw," forward Carlos Boozer said. "Usually on a free throw, we get the ball and take off and run."

Slowing the game down, however, only works when you are executing on the other end, and with Turkey, Lithuania and Russia each shooting no better than 44 percent, there wasn't much chance for an upset. Still, better offensive teams might have more success keeping the game close and forcing the United States into a half-court game, where its love of isolation plays can be detrimental in international competition.

"I think that's why they schedule these games," Dwyane Wade said. "Russia is a team we could see in the gold medal game and a team that's been playing very well of late, so it was good competition. They made us run some sets, slow us down a little bit, but I think overall we played good defense."

1 2
  • PRINT PRINT
  • EMAIL EMAIL
  • RSS RSS
  • BOOKMARK SHARE
ADVERTISEMENT