Poll

How do you feel of USA basketball

I put full support behind Team USA
8 (66.7%)
I root for Team USA because I'm an American, that's it
0 (0%)
I actually kind of want them to lose, they are spoiled athletes anyways
1 (8.3%)
I hate Team USA, I hope they lose the next two games and don't medal
1 (8.3%)
I'm not an American so I want terrorist to bomb the Queen Mary
2 (16.7%)

Total Members Voted: 9

Voting closed: September 06, 2004, 07:15:33 AM

  

Author Topic: Team USA basketball... love it... hate it.  (Read 130 times)

M Dogg™

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Team USA basketball... love it... hate it.
« on: August 27, 2004, 07:15:33 AM »
It's like these. There is a lot of hate going to Team USA basketball, even from Americans. Around here, in San Bernardino, of course the blacks still support the team, and whites are talking shit about how our team is spoiled rich players. The little kids are like, that Italian team is good, and I wish Shaq would have went. I saw this in ESPN, and I thought it made a lot of sense, because you can see it. Now it's not like it's all true. I know Trauma is watching the Oympics, rooting for our basketball team, as I am too. What does everyone else think.


What's the real reason why so many people are rooting against Iverson and co.?

The Haters Can't Handle The Truth

I must've missed the memo -- the memo that went out to the red-blooded American sports public and explains exactly when it became OK to throw patriotism out the window and openly root against a U.S. Olympic team.

Yeah, I didn't get that memo. I'm wondering what was in it. Did it mention Allen Iverson by name? Did it have stipulations about the number of tattoos acceptable on an Olympian? Was there a cornrows clause? Or was the memo just straight and to the point?

Americans do not have to support a group of black American millionaires in any endeavor. Despite the hypocritical, rabid patriotism displayed immediately after 9/11, it's perfectly suitable for Americans to despise Team USA Basketball, Allen Iverson and all the other tattooed NBA players representing our country. Yes, these athletes are no more spoiled, whiny and rich than the golfers who fearlessly represent us in the Ryder Cup, but at least Tiger Woods has the good sense not to wear cornrows.

The memo must've read something like that. That's the only explanation for the near-universal hatred of our Olympic basketball team. Oh, you can hide behind a bunch of other excuses. You don't like the NBA style of play (which I don't). You're rooting for the underdogs. Shaq and Kidd and K.G. declined an invitation. The selection committee picked the wrong team.

There are a million excuses, some of which might legitimize a teeny bit of hostility toward USA Basketball. But there's no reasonable justification for the out-and-out hatred of Larry Brown's squad. There's no reasonable justification for the sheer delight that many red-blooded, patriotic Americans are taking from the USA's struggles.

In a poll on Page 2's Daily Quickie on Monday, 54.1 percent of the approximately 20,000 respondents said they wanted to see the USA team lose, and another 19.9 percent said they "kind of" would like to see it lose. I've sat on my radio show the past two weeks and listened to alleged patriot after patriot bitch about and shred Team USA and openly admit they want the team to lose. One guy, who identified himself as a former member of the American military, said he hates Team USA because the team doesn't "represent the America he fell in love with." I asked him to describe the America he fell in love with, and he said, "it was a country you could walk the streets without worrying about being mugged."

So there once was a time when a man or woman could walk the streets without worrying about a wild gang of NBA players whacking them over the head with a bottle and taking their wallet or purse? That must've been a glorious time, because you can hardly go anywhere these days without looking over your shoulder wondering whether Tim Duncan or Stephon Marbury is stalking you. I know it's dangerous to make too much of the sentiments expressed by talk-radio callers. But they speak for somebody. Monday evening I wore my Team USA jersey to the Rams-Chiefs game. As I walked to the stadium, people laughed at me and my jersey and several people made disparaging comments about our basketball team.

If this team doesn't win the gold medal (they beat Spain Thursday to advance to the semifinals), I half expect Americans to spit on Iverson, Duncan, LeBron James and Carmelo Anthony at the airport. We haven't fielded a team this unpopular at home since Johnson and Nixon sent Team USA into Vietnam.

This is ridiculous, and it hints at a much larger issue.
Someone call Johnnie Cochran and have him send over "The Card" -- the race one.

This team is being discussed unfairly in the media and being treated unfairly by American sports fans. There's a lot of convenient denial going on. No one wants to deal with the truth because they're having too much fun blasting a bunch of black millionaires for being lazy, unpatriotic and stupid. With the exception of adding the word "millionaires," this is a very familiar tune.

It's just more denial. The truth -- and what needs to be discussed -- is that African-American basketball players no longer have a lock on the game. The rest of the world has caught up, at warp speed. The game has been exported and redefined in superior fashion.

Go ask the folks up in Canada what the Soviets did to the game of hockey. Don Cherry can tell you all about the Red Army team whipping Canadian and NHL fanny on bigger rinks with faster, more creative skaters. It was 1972, and Team Canada -- the best Canadian-born NHL players formed into a Dream Team -- took on the Soviet Union team, which had pretty much dominated international play since 1954. It was called the Summit Series -- eight games between the world's two hockey powers.

The Soviets won the first game 7-3 and led the series 3-1-1 before the Canadians rallied to win the last three games -- all by one goal -- to win the series. Paul Henderson scored a goal with 34 seconds to play in Game 8, or the series would've ended in a tie. One of the reasons Team Canada eventually prevailed is that the bigger, stronger Canadians began to resort to cheap shots and thuggery on the ice. Several Canadian players later admitted they were embarrassed by what they had to do to sneak past the quicker Soviets. A Canadian newspaperman had to eat his entire newspaper because he'd promised to do it if Phil Esposito, Stan Mikita, Ken Dryden and Co. lost a single game in the series.

Canadians invented hockey in the late 1800s, and once dominated it the way African-Americans dominate basketball. Eastern Europeans reinvented the game and made up nearly 70 years of hockey experience on the Canadians in just two decades.

Sound anything like what we're witnessing on the basketball court?

Eastern Europeans introduced finesse, speed and creative passing to hockey. No longer could you just dump the puck into the zone and maul the guy in the corner. You had to play the game. The Canadians weren't stupid and lazy. They were just slow to adjust to a new, superior brand of hockey.

"Back then, we thought our way was the only way to play hockey; and we found out it wasn't," American Ken Morrow, one of the heroes on the 1980 Miracle on Ice Olympic team, told me Wednesday. "The NBA is kind of going through that right now. Hockey went through it in the 1970s and '80s. The NBA should look at what we went through and learn from it."

Morrow, the current director of pro scouting for the New York Islanders, played 10 years in the NHL. He vividly remembers the 1972 Summit Series.

"You talk to people in Canada, and they'll tell you the Summit Series was like a national emergency," Morrow said. "It really shook the heart and soul of the Canadians."

The similarities between hockey and basketball and the impact that international play is having on the games is indisputable. The high rounds of the NHL draft now favor European players. The NHL in the 1970s celebrated the Philadelphia Flyers' Broad Street Bullies approach, which included beating people up. The game was played at a slow, boring, defensive pace. Does that sound anything like today's NBA?

"The skill portion of the game [hockey] is viewed as being superior by the Europeans," Morrow said. "But when it comes to character and heart and competing, it's still the Canadians and the American players. Just look at the top scorers in the NHL the last few years -- seven or eight out of 10 are European."

Doesn't that sound like Dirk Nowitzki vs. Ben Wallace?

The international style of basketball play is superior to the American game, particularly the NBA game. The wide lane, shorter 3-pointer and prevalence of zone defenses limit the effectiveness of the NBA's two-man game. You can't have three guys stand on one side of the court and talk to Spike Lee while your two best players go two-on-two on the other side. It's boring, and it doesn't work in international play.

It's also foolish and arrogant to believe that we can throw a team together that can take on the world in two or three weeks. We can't do it. Even if we had Shaq and Kidd and K.G., our team would need time to prepare. We obviously need role players.  What bothers me most are the charges that Iverson and Co. aren't trying and don't care. First and foremost, they do care and they are trying. They're competitors. They know what's at stake. They don't want to be ripped at home.

But do they care about the Olympics the way Michael Phelps does? No. And we shouldn't expect them to. American basketball players don't spend their childhoods dreaming about playing in the Olympics. Their goal is the NBA. For swimmers and track athletes and gymnasts, on the other hand, the Olympics is the pinnacle.

If there was a professional swimming league that would make Phelps filthy rich, I guarantee he'd dream of making that league more than he dreamt of making the Olympic team. Phelps might even turn down a spot on the Olympic team, if it interfered with his professional swimming offseason.
Once every four years, Phelps and Carly Patterson and Justin Gatlin get an opportunity to strike it rich. They go all out. Don't romanticize it. They're chasing money -- endorsement opportunities -- just like the NBA players. Phelps, Patterson and Gatlin might be more cooperative and gracious with the media during the Olympics because they only have to deal with us once every four years. We don't know how they'd react if they were forced to talk to us every day almost year round.

The criticism of USA Basketball is borderline racist, is definitely unsophisticated and exposes a lot of super patriots as hypocrites. Allen Iverson is wearing our jersey -- our red, white and blue -- and playing the game the way we taught him to play it.

We owe Iverson support when he's representing us abroad. Save the hatred for when he's back home skipping Sixers practices and boring us to death playing a two-man game with Glenn Robinson.

Jason Whitlock is a columnist for the Kansas City Star and a regular contributor on ESPN The Magazine's Sunday morning edition of "The Sports Reporters." He also hosts an afternoon radio show, "The Doghouse," on Kansas City's 61 Sports KCSP. He can be reached at ballstate68@aol.com.

« Last Edit: August 27, 2004, 07:23:48 AM by M Dogg »
 

M Dogg™

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Re: Team USA basketball... love it... hate it.
« Reply #1 on: August 27, 2004, 07:17:12 AM »
ATHENS, Greece -- They've tried, you know? Team USA came to Athens with suits lecturing them about how to act, how to dress, how not to bang their chests and gloat, how to be complimentary at every pass, how to be a Dream Team of Gentleman.

 
They were the nice guys after losses to Puerto Rico and Lithuania, smiling although the crowd and refs and press and seemingly everyone back in America wanting to see them return to the States without a medal and as a walking billboard for everything wrong with NBA-style basketball.


"In '92, everyone wanted the Dream Team to win, including the teams they played against," says Lamar Odom. "Everyone wants to see us humbled. There's tension out there."


Well ... ?


The days of the Olympic team acting like guys you'd let date your sister are gone. That schtick is over.


The Yanks beat Spain on Thursday 102-94, and although they finally shot well (Stephon Marbury set a U.S. Olympic record with 31 points) and played good defense, Team USA advanced to the semifinals on Friday with a new aura and message.


They're fed up. Fed up with every fan blindly booing them and cheering the opponents. Fed up with the refs calling a foul every time an American player's fingernail grazes a shooting hand. Fed up with hearing about how fans in the States don't care if they win gold or not.


"Everyone wants them out of the tournament," said Spain's Pau Gasol.


And the Americans know it. So screw the rest of the world.


Screw the wisdom that the United States must rely on Tim Duncan and Carlos Boozer inside because the Americans can't shoot outside. They had been hearing that for more than a week and a half, and they answered by taking 22 3-pointers and hitting 12 of them, six by Marbury.


Screw the refs, who keep whistling the Yanks for Wal-Mart cheap fouls. Duncan, Boozer and Odom didn't change their defense after being in foul trouble in various times during the tournament. Even though Duncan played only 20 minutes, 45 seconds due to first-half foul problems, he came back and played exactly the same way, harassing Gasol into only four fourth-quarter points.


And screw the foreign diplomacy. Team USA coach Larry Brown enraged the living tappas out of Spain coach Mario Pesquera by calling a timeout with only 23 seconds left and the United States up by 12. In the NBA, most fans and coaches wouldn't think twice about it. In Euro ball, calling a timeout up 12 late in the game is like walking to first while watching your home run sail out of the park.


Both coaches yelled at each other after the game and had to be separated by their assistants. In the postgame news conference, Brown and Pesquera had only a seat separating them, and didn't even look at each other. Brown took the first jab, saying he wanted to wave off the timeout but the refs gave it to him anyway. Then, with Pesquera sitting next to him, said that he had tried to explain that to the Spanish coach but found that it was "like arguing with my son."


Pesquera was not happy, and after Brown left said, "I had -- and stress the word 'had' -- a lot of respect for Larry Brown." He continued by saying that "you can't always say sorry" and "Dean Smith would have never done something like that."


Ouch.


You know what Brown did?


Nothing.


He shook it off, basically saying, "Look, I tried to apologize. Pesquera was Bob Knight-angry, and he wouldn't listen. So screw it. I have a semifinal game to prepare for. Later."


Now the entire us-against-the-world cliché is about to come out, so sorry ahead of time, but it's apt. Everyone wants the United States to fail, and Team USA has turned that into motivation.


"We've been together awhile, and we've been through some difficult times," Brown said. "The adversity we've had getting blown out by Italy and Germany, playing so poorly against Puerto Rico, giving the game away against Lithuania, has made us much closer."


Against Spain, the United States was on the verge of another collapse. At the start of the fourth quarter, Team USA led 74-69 but gave up three easy baskets in a row, all inside the paint. The crowd was screaming against the Americans.


But Allen Iverson hit a 3 to temper the crowd some, and the defense stiffened on Spain's next three possessions. On one, Spain's Juan Carlos Navarro took three shots and missed all of them. Soon, Boozer put in a Richard Jefferson miss, Marbury hit another 3, and Duncan tapped in a Dwyane Wade miss. Suddenly it was 87-78 with just more than three minutes to go. "That was the best part of the game for us," U.S. assistant coach Gregg Popovich said. "We could have lost energy or focus, but we didn't."


The Americans played hard against Spain, not only diving for loose balls but throwing elbows and hip checks and bending Spain's will as far as it would go. And the refs noticed it, calling 27 fouls against the Americans to only 18 against Spain. But the United States will take that. "We have a sense of pride," Boozer said. "We're on the biggest stage in the world. We want to win."


It'll continue in the semifinal game against either Greece or Argentina on Friday. The nice-guy stuff is over. There's a gold to win


Whether the world likes them or not.


Seth Wickersham covers the Olympics for ESPN The Magazine. E-mail him at seth.wickersham@espn3.com.
 

7even

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Re: Team USA basketball... love it... hate it.
« Reply #2 on: August 27, 2004, 07:49:50 AM »
you act like it's blasphemy to make fun of the US Team. I'll tell you something.

It's normal as fuck.

When our German Soccer Team embarrassed the whole country in the Euro 2000, everybody hated on it here. Noone was talking about "Why do these fools hate on their own team?" or "Fuck them, they are throwing partiotism out of the window!!!".
If a friend of yours does something that sucks, like fucking your girlfriend, will you be disappointed and mad or will you support him, because he's your friend?

Further, everybody knows that the best players of each country usually have the goal to play in the NBA. Because, the NBA is like the first league in Basketball and all the other foreign leagues are like amateur leagues, in which ppl try to make the NBA. Now, all the foreign countries currently got 1 NBA player max. The US Team only contains NBA players, and out of those only the better ones. You do the fucking math. A player of the US Team owns more money in a year than all the players of Angola, Greece and Australia in their entire bball career combined.
Now please dont tell me you dont get it.

As I dont intend to dodge the poll...
I dont hate the US Team as such. It has 2 of my 3 favorite players in it. Im still amused when they get owned by a country that isnt even a real state by 19 points. Who can blame me? Im not disappointed to see them losing after a tough game either. But Im also not disappointed to see them win after a game.
Cause I don't care where I belong no more
What we share or not I will ignore
And I won't waste my time fitting in
Cause I don't think contrast is a sin
No, it's not a sin
 

M Dogg™

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Re: Team USA basketball... love it... hate it.
« Reply #3 on: August 27, 2004, 08:26:44 AM »
I get what you are trying to say. Don't think I'm that dump. What I am putting out there is articles from ESPN, that I found here in the United States to be true. White people don't like our team, and black people support them. And in the US, we are at a time when patriotism is at an all time high. So it's weird seeing people boo something that has the red white and blue colors. Also, don't get so offensive, you're German, I don't think you'll understand. Our players are over there in Greece, playing hard, diving for loose balls, playing hard American style basketball, just beat an undefeated team, and you say they did something that sucks. Not being the best in the world is alright, it's just a game. The Oympics is a time when the word puts it's best out there, and the world's best athletes compete. Our team has been competing, and a few loses don't mean anything. They are starting to play like they care. At first they were good sportsmen, but now they are playing good solid, hard basketball. This is not Vince Carter jumping over an Eastern European for a dunk, this is scrappy Allen Iverson driving.
 

white Boy

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Re: Team USA basketball... love it... hate it.
« Reply #4 on: August 27, 2004, 08:29:19 AM »
USA all the Way
 

A-Trak

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Re: Team USA basketball... love it... hate it.
« Reply #5 on: August 27, 2004, 10:50:43 AM »
the more they're getting hated on, the more i'm like them. lol.
 

eS El Duque

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Re: Team USA basketball... love it... hate it.
« Reply #6 on: August 27, 2004, 12:18:24 PM »


Go ask the folks up in Canada what the Soviets did to the game of hockey. Don Cherry can tell you all about the Red Army team whipping Canadian and NHL fanny on bigger rinks with faster, more creative skaters. It was 1972, and Team Canada -- the best Canadian-born NHL players formed into a Dream Team -- took on the Soviet Union team, which had pretty much dominated international play since 1954. It was called the Summit Series -- eight games between the world's two hockey powers.

The Soviets won the first game 7-3 and led the series 3-1-1 before the Canadians rallied to win the last three games -- all by one goal -- to win the series. Paul Henderson scored a goal with 34 seconds to play in Game 8, or the series would've ended in a tie. One of the reasons Team Canada eventually prevailed is that the bigger, stronger Canadians began to resort to cheap shots and thuggery on the ice. Several Canadian players later admitted they were embarrassed by what they had to do to sneak past the quicker Soviets. A Canadian newspaperman had to eat his entire newspaper because he'd promised to do it if Phil Esposito, Stan Mikita, Ken Dryden and Co. lost a single game in the series.

Canadians invented hockey in the late 1800s, and once dominated it the way African-Americans dominate basketball. Eastern Europeans reinvented the game and made up nearly 70 years of hockey experience on the Canadians in just two decades.

Sound anything like what we're witnessing on the basketball court?

Eastern Europeans introduced finesse, speed and creative passing to hockey. No longer could you just dump the puck into the zone and maul the guy in the corner. You had to play the game. The Canadians weren't stupid and lazy. They were just slow to adjust to a new, superior brand of hockey.

"Back then, we thought our way was the only way to play hockey; and we found out it wasn't," American Ken Morrow, one of the heroes on the 1980 Miracle on Ice Olympic team, told me Wednesday. "The NBA is kind of going through that right now. Hockey went through it in the 1970s and '80s. The NBA should look at what we went through and learn from it."

Morrow, the current director of pro scouting for the New York Islanders, played 10 years in the NHL. He vividly remembers the 1972 Summit Series.

"You talk to people in Canada, and they'll tell you the Summit Series was like a national emergency," Morrow said. "It really shook the heart and soul of the Canadians."

The similarities between hockey and basketball and the impact that international play is having on the games is indisputable. The high rounds of the NHL draft now favor European players. The NHL in the 1970s celebrated the Philadelphia Flyers' Broad Street Bullies approach, which included beating people up. The game was played at a slow, boring, defensive pace. Does that sound anything like today's NBA?

"The skill portion of the game [hockey] is viewed as being superior by the Europeans," Morrow said. "But when it comes to character and heart and competing, it's still the Canadians and the American players. Just look at the top scorers in the NHL the last few years -- seven or eight out of 10 are European."

Doesn't that sound like Dirk Nowitzki vs. Ben Wallace?

mg]

NBA should really read this, its gonna happen. Just like in MLB, when it was just white dominateds, then blacks...and now the whole league is dominated by Latin players (who are black/latino lol Guerro, Rodriguez, Ortiz, Martinez and so on)
 

tommyilromano

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Re: Team USA basketball... love it... hate it.
« Reply #7 on: August 27, 2004, 01:18:23 PM »
Good post, I agree 100%.


It's like these. There is a lot of hate going to Team USA basketball, even from Americans. Around here, in San Bernardino, of course the blacks still support the team, and whites are talking shit about how our team is spoiled rich players. The little kids are like, that Italian team is good, and I wish Shaq would have went. I saw this in ESPN, and I thought it made a lot of sense, because you can see it. Now it's not like it's all true. I know Trauma is watching the Oympics, rooting for our basketball team, as I am too. What does everyone else think.


What's the real reason why so many people are rooting against Iverson and co.?

The Haters Can't Handle The Truth

I must've missed the memo -- the memo that went out to the red-blooded American sports public and explains exactly when it became OK to throw patriotism out the window and openly root against a U.S. Olympic team.

Yeah, I didn't get that memo. I'm wondering what was in it. Did it mention Allen Iverson by name? Did it have stipulations about the number of tattoos acceptable on an Olympian? Was there a cornrows clause? Or was the memo just straight and to the point?

Americans do not have to support a group of black American millionaires in any endeavor. Despite the hypocritical, rabid patriotism displayed immediately after 9/11, it's perfectly suitable for Americans to despise Team USA Basketball, Allen Iverson and all the other tattooed NBA players representing our country. Yes, these athletes are no more spoiled, whiny and rich than the golfers who fearlessly represent us in the Ryder Cup, but at least Tiger Woods has the good sense not to wear cornrows.

The memo must've read something like that. That's the only explanation for the near-universal hatred of our Olympic basketball team. Oh, you can hide behind a bunch of other excuses. You don't like the NBA style of play (which I don't). You're rooting for the underdogs. Shaq and Kidd and K.G. declined an invitation. The selection committee picked the wrong team.

There are a million excuses, some of which might legitimize a teeny bit of hostility toward USA Basketball. But there's no reasonable justification for the out-and-out hatred of Larry Brown's squad. There's no reasonable justification for the sheer delight that many red-blooded, patriotic Americans are taking from the USA's struggles.

In a poll on Page 2's Daily Quickie on Monday, 54.1 percent of the approximately 20,000 respondents said they wanted to see the USA team lose, and another 19.9 percent said they "kind of" would like to see it lose. I've sat on my radio show the past two weeks and listened to alleged patriot after patriot bitch about and shred Team USA and openly admit they want the team to lose. One guy, who identified himself as a former member of the American military, said he hates Team USA because the team doesn't "represent the America he fell in love with." I asked him to describe the America he fell in love with, and he said, "it was a country you could walk the streets without worrying about being mugged."

So there once was a time when a man or woman could walk the streets without worrying about a wild gang of NBA players whacking them over the head with a bottle and taking their wallet or purse? That must've been a glorious time, because you can hardly go anywhere these days without looking over your shoulder wondering whether Tim Duncan or Stephon Marbury is stalking you. I know it's dangerous to make too much of the sentiments expressed by talk-radio callers. But they speak for somebody. Monday evening I wore my Team USA jersey to the Rams-Chiefs game. As I walked to the stadium, people laughed at me and my jersey and several people made disparaging comments about our basketball team.

If this team doesn't win the gold medal (they beat Spain Thursday to advance to the semifinals), I half expect Americans to spit on Iverson, Duncan, LeBron James and Carmelo Anthony at the airport. We haven't fielded a team this unpopular at home since Johnson and Nixon sent Team USA into Vietnam.

This is ridiculous, and it hints at a much larger issue.
Someone call Johnnie Cochran and have him send over "The Card" -- the race one.

This team is being discussed unfairly in the media and being treated unfairly by American sports fans. There's a lot of convenient denial going on. No one wants to deal with the truth because they're having too much fun blasting a bunch of black millionaires for being lazy, unpatriotic and stupid. With the exception of adding the word "millionaires," this is a very familiar tune.

It's just more denial. The truth -- and what needs to be discussed -- is that African-American basketball players no longer have a lock on the game. The rest of the world has caught up, at warp speed. The game has been exported and redefined in superior fashion.

Go ask the folks up in Canada what the Soviets did to the game of hockey. Don Cherry can tell you all about the Red Army team whipping Canadian and NHL fanny on bigger rinks with faster, more creative skaters. It was 1972, and Team Canada -- the best Canadian-born NHL players formed into a Dream Team -- took on the Soviet Union team, which had pretty much dominated international play since 1954. It was called the Summit Series -- eight games between the world's two hockey powers.

The Soviets won the first game 7-3 and led the series 3-1-1 before the Canadians rallied to win the last three games -- all by one goal -- to win the series. Paul Henderson scored a goal with 34 seconds to play in Game 8, or the series would've ended in a tie. One of the reasons Team Canada eventually prevailed is that the bigger, stronger Canadians began to resort to cheap shots and thuggery on the ice. Several Canadian players later admitted they were embarrassed by what they had to do to sneak past the quicker Soviets. A Canadian newspaperman had to eat his entire newspaper because he'd promised to do it if Phil Esposito, Stan Mikita, Ken Dryden and Co. lost a single game in the series.

Canadians invented hockey in the late 1800s, and once dominated it the way African-Americans dominate basketball. Eastern Europeans reinvented the game and made up nearly 70 years of hockey experience on the Canadians in just two decades.

Sound anything like what we're witnessing on the basketball court?

Eastern Europeans introduced finesse, speed and creative passing to hockey. No longer could you just dump the puck into the zone and maul the guy in the corner. You had to play the game. The Canadians weren't stupid and lazy. They were just slow to adjust to a new, superior brand of hockey.

"Back then, we thought our way was the only way to play hockey; and we found out it wasn't," American Ken Morrow, one of the heroes on the 1980 Miracle on Ice Olympic team, told me Wednesday. "The NBA is kind of going through that right now. Hockey went through it in the 1970s and '80s. The NBA should look at what we went through and learn from it."

Morrow, the current director of pro scouting for the New York Islanders, played 10 years in the NHL. He vividly remembers the 1972 Summit Series.

"You talk to people in Canada, and they'll tell you the Summit Series was like a national emergency," Morrow said. "It really shook the heart and soul of the Canadians."

The similarities between hockey and basketball and the impact that international play is having on the games is indisputable. The high rounds of the NHL draft now favor European players. The NHL in the 1970s celebrated the Philadelphia Flyers' Broad Street Bullies approach, which included beating people up. The game was played at a slow, boring, defensive pace. Does that sound anything like today's NBA?

"The skill portion of the game [hockey] is viewed as being superior by the Europeans," Morrow said. "But when it comes to character and heart and competing, it's still the Canadians and the American players. Just look at the top scorers in the NHL the last few years -- seven or eight out of 10 are European."

Doesn't that sound like Dirk Nowitzki vs. Ben Wallace?

The international style of basketball play is superior to the American game, particularly the NBA game. The wide lane, shorter 3-pointer and prevalence of zone defenses limit the effectiveness of the NBA's two-man game. You can't have three guys stand on one side of the court and talk to Spike Lee while your two best players go two-on-two on the other side. It's boring, and it doesn't work in international play.

It's also foolish and arrogant to believe that we can throw a team together that can take on the world in two or three weeks. We can't do it. Even if we had Shaq and Kidd and K.G., our team would need time to prepare. We obviously need role players.  What bothers me most are the charges that Iverson and Co. aren't trying and don't care. First and foremost, they do care and they are trying. They're competitors. They know what's at stake. They don't want to be ripped at home.

But do they care about the Olympics the way Michael Phelps does? No. And we shouldn't expect them to. American basketball players don't spend their childhoods dreaming about playing in the Olympics. Their goal is the NBA. For swimmers and track athletes and gymnasts, on the other hand, the Olympics is the pinnacle.

If there was a professional swimming league that would make Phelps filthy rich, I guarantee he'd dream of making that league more than he dreamt of making the Olympic team. Phelps might even turn down a spot on the Olympic team, if it interfered with his professional swimming offseason.
Once every four years, Phelps and Carly Patterson and Justin Gatlin get an opportunity to strike it rich. They go all out. Don't romanticize it. They're chasing money -- endorsement opportunities -- just like the NBA players. Phelps, Patterson and Gatlin might be more cooperative and gracious with the media during the Olympics because they only have to deal with us once every four years. We don't know how they'd react if they were forced to talk to us every day almost year round.

The criticism of USA Basketball is borderline racist, is definitely unsophisticated and exposes a lot of super patriots as hypocrites. Allen Iverson is wearing our jersey -- our red, white and blue -- and playing the game the way we taught him to play it.

We owe Iverson support when he's representing us abroad. Save the hatred for when he's back home skipping Sixers practices and boring us to death playing a two-man game with Glenn Robinson.

Jason Whitlock is a columnist for the Kansas City Star and a regular contributor on ESPN The Magazine's Sunday morning edition of "The Sports Reporters." He also hosts an afternoon radio show, "The Doghouse," on Kansas City's 61 Sports KCSP. He can be reached at ballstate68@aol.com.