Popovich after US ouster:
‘Proud’ of players’ sacrifice
Coach Gregg Popovich deflected talk about his missing megastars after Team USA’s glorious run in major competition came to a juddering halt on Wednesday at the hands of France.
The US lost to Greece in the World Cup semi-finals in 2006 but then went on a 58-game winning streak with NBA players on the roster that brought them three Olympic golds and two World Cup crowns.
But the Americans became just the latest high-profile casualty in China as the powerhouses of basketball went down 89-79 in the quarterfinals to France.
“It doesn’t matter who was on the team. I couldn’t be more proud of these 12 guys who sacrificed their summer to come here,” said Popovich, the mastermind behind the San Antonio Spurs’ success.
The prospect of an early American exit had always looked possible after they sent an unfamiliar collection of second-tier stars.
They also had one of the youngest rosters at the World Cup after their top NBA names pulled out injured or otherwise made themselves unavailable.
LeBron James, Kawhi Leonard, Stephen Curry, James Harden, Anthony Davis, Russell Westbrook, and Paul George all opted out.
Kevin Durant, Kyle Lowry and Klay Thompson were injured.
“They’ve never played together before and they put themselves in the arena and competed,” Popovich said of his squad.
“And they deserve credit for that, just like France deserve credit for winning.
The Americans will still be favorites to retain their Olympic gold in Tokyo next summer, but failing to win a third World Cup in a row will put the focus on Popovich and his missing men.
“It’s not about ‘the United States didn’t have the other guys’ — there is no such thing as other guys,” Popovich said.
France, powered by a double-double from big man Rudy Gobert of the Utah Jazz, play Argentina today in the last four. (Agence France-Presse)