Mickelson becomes ‘glue guy’ for Team USA (PGA)

27 Sep
2012
Mickelson becomes 'glue guy' for Team USA
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Tour Report: Your picks: Biggest impact players (PGA Tour)

27 Sep
2012
It’s Ryder Cup eve for the 39th matches, which begin on Friday at Medinah CC in suburban Chicago. Our experts have made their picks on the biggest impact player for both Team USA and Team Europe. But now we want to hear your thoughts. Tell us who will have the biggest impact for both sides [...]
Tags: eve, impact players, , Medinah CC, , , , , , suburban Chicago, Team Europe,
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PGA of America invites fans to become '13th Man' for Team USA
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Watch the Dream Team play Team USA 2012 in ‘NBA 2K13′ (VIDEO)

14 Sep
2012

We learned last month that "NBA 2K13," the soon-to-be-released annual revamp of 2K Sports' super successful basketball video game franchise, would include the involvement of USA Basketball, meaning that gamers could play as both the 2012 edition of the U.S. men's national basketball team and the legendary 1992 "Dream Team," allowing for a virtual settling of the summertime debate that nearly tore our nation asunder.

"Hooray!" we thought. "That sounds like it is going to be very cool, indeed!"

Now, thanks to a new teaser trailer for the game released Friday on 2K Sports' YouTube page, we can confirm that we were correct in our suspicions. Behold:

As you can see in the clip, after initially being excluded from the game due to a reported inability to come to terms with its makers, Scottie Pippen has been added to the Dream Team's roster, reaching an agreement with 2K after fans expressed major disappointment at the announcement of his absence. In exchange for his licensing rights, Pippen gets shown driving past LeBron James and dunking on Kevin Durant. Seems like a square deal.

[Related: Get ready to bid on Michael Jordan's (expired) American Express card]

The inclusion of Pippen is just one of the things that makes the game seem so cool, alongside myriad small touches like Kobe Bryant's jaw jut, the pregame salute between James and Chris Paul and the exactitude of Karl Malone's bald spot. (The fact that the teaser ends with Michael Jordan trying to turn Kobe into Bryon Russell doesn't hurt, either.)

I haven't bought or regularly played a video game since maxing out Dynasty Mode with my created Providence Friars in "NCAA Football 10," but man, do I want to buy this, even if it seems like doing so means I won't be able to get away from all the dudes I see on Twitter every day. I'm trying to escape reality when I play games, guys, not double down on it. I don't need Zach Harper to troll my 6-foot-7, 235-pound, chiseled and blazing-fast avatar; I can get that at home.

Hat-tip to Chris Littmann of The Sporting News.

Yahoo! Sports Minute

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Tags: 2K Sports, , Dream Team, , , involvement, michael jordan, , Scottie Pippen, settling, , USA Basketball,
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Team USA goofs around on its way to the gold (VIDEO)

27 Aug
2012

After a month's worth of practice, scrimmages, exhibition, travel and games; of course the 2012 version of Team USA's Men's Basketball outfit would have some missteps and quips to share with us. Of course, the ultra-clean NBA is in charge of documenting those quips and missteps -- those quipsteps -- so the resulting on-record document of Team USA's various fulminations might not be as entertaining as your typical blooper video.

Heck, they may not be bloopers at all; despite a title that includes the word "bloopers." And the word "heck" may even be too strong for this clearly-scrubbed compilation. We weren't exactly looking for an R-rated and expletive-filled game to 11 (win by two) between Kobe Bryant and LeBron James (Kobe can't order lunch without the R-rating taking hold), but it would have been nice to see something a little more daring.

As it stands, click the jump for some Team USA "bloopers."

Our favorite is probably Andre Iguodala's dry sense of humor regarding Anthony Davis' dodgy outside touch, taken in from the sidelines of this Jerry Colangelo-approved joint. A muttered run of fun that will no doubt serve him well as he takes to working under George Karl in Denver.

Considering how fun Team USA's 2012 drive to gold was, and how warmly we'll remember it, a video like this is hardly an appropriate recollection. These goofs are just part of the story, though, until the official DVD pops out and makes the NBA a few more million bucks.

You don't have to buy that one, either. Just bask in how entertaining and fulfilling this tumble towards the gold medal was.

Tags: Andre Iguodala, heck, , Men, , outfit, , Travel, ,
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‘NBA 2K13′ will include the Dream Team* and Team USA 2012, allow for debate-settlin’

15 Aug
2012

Well, this is a neat little surprise.

Remember how for a little while there, folks were batting around the question of whether the 2012 edition of Team USA — led by present-day superstars LeBron James, Kevin Durant, Kobe Bryant and Chris Paul — could have beaten the 1992 version popularly referred to as "The Dream Team," which featured legends Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson and Larry Bird, and is widely considered the greatest team ever assembled in any sport? Well, in case you were under a rock for a couple of weeks (or got on Billy King's scotch plan to "Eternal Sunshine" the memories away), let's catch you up:

The discussion started when a reporter asked Kobe at a pre-London workout how he thought the 2012 squad would fare against the Dream Team. Kobe, unsurprisingly, said he thought his team would "pull it out," citing superior speed, scoring and wing depth. This, naturally, led to a slew of Dream Teamers, including the famously shy Charles Barkley, disputing Bryant's claim. Hoops fans all over the world, including President Barack Obama, shared their opinions on the topic, with most falling on the side of the '92 squad, which smashed its opponents by an average margin of 43.8 points per game en route to gold in Barcelona, compared to the crummy lil' 32-point average posted by 20-Doz during their 8-0 run in London.

[ Y! Sports Minute: Coach fuels Jordan-James debate ]

While chatter on the matter has largely subsided in the wake of another U.S. gold-medal win at the 2012 Summer Olympics, Wednesday has brought us a new fuel-for-the-fire nugget: "NBA 2K13" — the forthcoming annual update to the wildly successful basketball video-game series from 2K Sports, which will feature Blake Griffin, Kevin Durant and Derrick Rose on its cover and is being "executive produced" by Brooklyn Nets minority owner/hip-hop legend Jay-Z — will include both the Dream Team and the 2012 squad, enabling players to get their "Rocky Balboa" on and simulate the result for themselves (or choose their side and influence the outcome on their own, if they want to be non-scientific about it).

2K Sports shared a promotional image of the Dream Team lined up and ready to go on its Twitter account on Wednesday morning, dovetailing nicely with a story from SI.com's Sam Amick in which Jordan (as part of the 2K team announcing USA Basketball's involvement in this year's game) reiterated that he doesn't think "we would've had any problems with [2012], as much as they think they probably would've given us a lot more difficulties." Promotional synergy, y'all!

The sharper cookies among you noticed that asterisk in the subject line and might be wondering what's up. Well, the whole Dream Team isn't represented in "2K13" — Scottie Pippen won't be included on the '92 roster, because he couldn't come to terms with the game's makers, according to multiple reports. (That's especially weird considering he was one of the all-time legends available for selection in the 2012 model of the game; you'd figure there must be some relationship in place there. But apparently, not enough to get this deal done.)

That's a bummer, both because it'd be nice to have the whole gang together and because Pippen was an integral on-court part of the Dream Team — remember, he led the team in assists, trailed only Jordan in steals and gave many European players fits on the defensive end in Barcelona. Luckily, I'm sure that as soon as the game drops on Tuesday, Oct. 2, 2012, about 300 enterprising fans will upload step-by-step tutorials on how to create your own Scottie Pippen to YouTube. They're helpful like that.

The absence of Pippen puts "NBA 2K13" at a significant disadvantage in its quest to be a better video game than the Sega Genesis classic "Team USA Basketball." Will the gameplay, graphics and music be superior? Only time will tell:

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Tags: , bird, , Kevin Durant, , , , , , , the Dream Team
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Kevin Durant and James Harden show off gold, talk Team USA, bragging rights, Lakers on ‘Late Night with Jimmy Fallon’ (VIDEO)

14 Aug
2012

Fresh off their return to the United States after their gold-medal win with Team USA at the 2012 Summer Olympics, Oklahoma City Thunder stars Kevin Durant and James Harden made a stop in New York City to appear on NBC's "Late Night with Jimmy Fallon" to discuss their experience in London and how it'll impact the coming NBA season.

The young Thunderers were good sports, despite being clearly jet-lagged from the trans-Atlantic trip (and, presumably, exhausted from all that post-gold Instagrammed celebrating). Durant let the host hold his gold, which I swear is not slang, for all of 10 seconds ("That's probably the first time I put it down," he said) and the duo discussed what it was like to be embroiled in such a close contest with Spain late in the fourth quarter on Sunday. Harden, for his part, said he didn't sweat it.

"To be honest, you've got 12 of the best players in the world, so you know, you see on the court Kevin Durant and LeBron James, Kobe Bryant, Chris Paul, 'Melo — at the end of the game you don't have worry," Harden said. "You're not worried at all. That's how I felt."

Durant, however, begged to differ.

"Me, on the other hand, I was a little nervous," said the man who played 38 of the game's 40 minutes, scored a game-high 30 points (a U.S. record for gold-medal-game scoring) and grabbed nine rebounds.

If Harden didn't feel nervous in the slightest, his free-throw stroke told a slightly different tale — remember, he split his four final-minute free throws, making it just a bit warmer under coach Mike Krzyzewski's collar as the clock ticked down. (Then again, that could be attributed to the little-used guard having just pulled off his warmups for his first action of the gold-medal game.)

Still, Team USA prevailed over Spain, which gave U.S. teammate Kobe Bryant bragging rights over fellow Los Angeles Lakers star Pau Gasol.

"Kobe's like ... he's, like, a beast," Durant said. "Like, he don't care about anybody else. So he really hated Pau, actually."

"And we felt the same about [Thunder teammate] Serge Ibaka," Harden added.

But just as the USA/Spain divisions will fade for Bryant, Gasol and the Thunder players once the NBA schedule kicks back into gear, so too will the bonds forged by sharing the experience of coming together as a national team and playing for gold. Neither Harden nor Durant plan to spend much time reliving their London memories when they face their USA teammates this fall.

"On the court, it's different," Harden said.

"I think the competitive fire's going to be, you know, inflamed a little bit more, because we enjoyed being around one another so much, and you always want to beat your friends," Durant said. "We want to have bragging rights. If we beat the Knicks or the Nets or the Clippers, oh, we're going to talk a lot of trash throughout that whole season."

Hey, KD: Couldn't help but notice one team you didn't mention there. You know, the one you got asked about a couple days back?

"Now, what do you think about Dwight Howard going to the Lakers?" Fallon asked.

The guests met the question with shrugs and silence; the audience met the silence with laughter.

"Come on, though, that's major — the Lakers are getting a crazy team," Fallon pressed.

More silence. And then:

"Good for them," Harden said, with the disaffected tone of a man who hasn't forgotten beating the Lakers four games to one just three months ago.

"Yeah, man," Durant added, barely even registering it.

Man, can I not wait for the start of the season.

A couple of other notes from the interview:

Harden on his after-the-final-buzzer decision to grab and dance around with a stuffed-animal likeness of creepy 2012 Summer Olympics mascot Wenlock: "I don't even know. I just saw it there and I grabbed it and I ran around with it. I don't even know. [...] Just having fun."

Durant on why Olympians bite their medals after receiving them: "I don't know, man, that's a good question — I just did it. I watched the other sports and I seen people do it, so ... [shrugs] I wanted to be a part of the team."

(Luckily, we've already answered this one for you.)

Durant on Team USA's special accommodations in London: "No, we stayed at a hotel; like, the other athletes stay at the village." The Olympic tournament's leading scorer added that he wanted to stay at the village ("I just wanted to get the whole experience"), which prompted Fallon to suggest that the U.S. stars would have been "part of the Village People." Harden really got a kick out of that, which is great, because watching that beard shake is like watching a star being born.

But check out the way Durant raised his eyebrow after saying "the other athletes stay at the village:"

Something about that seems to suggest two things:

1. Team USA rolled like bosses in London;

2. There are some good stories of precisely how they boss-rolled to be told, though one would suspect we won't hear 'em anytime soon.

Tags: bragging, court, , James Harden, Jimmy Fallon, Kevin Durant, , , , , ,
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Create-a-Caption: And with that, the weirdest musical collaboration ever was born

14 Aug
2012

"I'm not saying I didn't like 'Picture' — heck, I'm in Detroit now; I certainly can't speak ill of the Kid — but ... I mean, I guess I'd just prefer to hear you get a little more 'Strong Enough' with it. A little more Lilith with it. I've got some bass tracks I've been working on that I think you'd really dig. ... And seriously, [EXPLETIVE] Lance Armstrong." — Detroit Pistons rookie center Andre Drummond, probably.

Best caption wins the beginning of a beautiful friendship. Good luck.

In our last adventure, lo those many days ago: Team USA gets its Edvard Munch on.

Winner, The Champ: PA announcer: "This just in! Dwight Howard just traded to the Los Angeles Lakers!"

Kobe Bryant: "Sweet!"

LeBron James, Kevin Durant and Tyson Chandler: "NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!"

Runner-up, Magic32: Kobe: "Uh, guys? Our basket is over here. You just scored in their basket."

All: "YEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH! Wait, what?"

Second runner-up, Mark M: Somebody just told Team USA that there is nothing but chocolate in their gold medals.

A Special Commendation in Ruling, Being Appropriately Creeped Out Division, goes to many of you, who zoned in on the right shoulder of (newly signed Houston Rockets forward) Carlos Delfino:

Beaukemon: "Just a note — apparently Thing from 'The Addams Family' is what spooked Delfino."

Bsn: "That hand holding #10's shoulder is creepy! I don't see anyone there! Ginobili's arm cannot be that long! CREEEEPY!"

JC: "The Argentinians, along with some help from Kobe, pull off the classic 'fake severed hand crawling up the shoulder' prank on a few unsuspecting Team USA players."

Jeffrey D: "Whose hand is on Delfino's right shoulder???"

My guess? Manu Ginobili, via a trick-of-the-light photo effect making him look further away than he was. But I'm not here to rule out the possibility of anything supernatural, especially when Manu's involved.

Tags: Andre Drummond, Carlos Delfino, Detroit Pistons, Kevin Durant, , ,
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At the Olympics, Anthony Davis learned he wasn’t alone, unibrow-wise (VIDEO)

14 Aug
2012

So this is what it sounds like when doves cry.

After Team USA completed its gold-medal run through the 2012 Summer Olympics in London with a 107-100 win over Spain on Sunday, the U.S. began celebrating their hard-earned victory and sharing pictures of their reverie on their Twitter and Instagram accounts. But while many American players elected to showcase their medals in a variety of poses, the team's elder statesman, Los Angeles Lakers superstar Kobe Bryant, found a different means of social media commemoration — letting the world know that, in his journey through life with an all-encompassing unibrow, little-used USA big man/New Orleans Hornets rookie-to-be Anthony Davis is not alone, because Armenian wrestler Gadzhimurad Nurmagomedov exists.

You can learn more about the interaction in the video above, thanks to our friends at the Yahoo! Sports Minute, but here's the gist. During a post-medal meeting, Bryant spotted Nurmagomedov, instantly registered the forehead-follicular resemblance, corralled him and grabbed Davis, snapped their picture (which clearly pleased Davis to no end) and then shared it on his Facebook page — which, contrary to what you might expect, Bryant actually maintains himself, according to the Wall Street Journal — with the caption, "Battle of the unibrow!!! Who wins???" A distinctive, buzzy original image, shared through a distribution channel he himself controls, with a simple call to action — Kobe's clearly been working on his social media strat. It's just like the campaign for "The Social Network" said — you don't get to 13,872,869 likes without making a few determinations on virality and stickiness.

Congratulations are in order for Kobe, who recognized a can't-miss photo op when it presented itself; Nurmagomedov, who now simply must be the most famous Armenian wrestler in the world (surpassing even Kazarian); Davis, who one would now assume stands to collect a large sum of money from Nurmagomedov in a trademark-violation suit; and grandpas everywhere for the successful completion of countless "I think [INSERT WHICHEVER GUY'S NAME HERE] wins by a hair!" jokes. Just a really good outcome for everyone, when looked at from a certain light. Unlike unibrows, of course, which are unseemly regardless of lighting.

Hat-tip to Trey Kerby at The Basketball Jones.


Tags: 2012 Summer Olympics, , Gadzhimurad Nurmagomedov, , los angeles lakers, , , showcase, , , , , wasn
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The Team USA Reputations Index: How the gold medal changes our opinions of these players

13 Aug
2012

In the four years since Team USA won Olympic gold in Beijing, the experience has taken on near-mythic weight as it applies to the players' involved. It was supposedly the birthplace of the idea that became the star-laden Miami Heat, as well as an important moment in the careers of superstars including Kobe Bryant (who regained much of the goodwill lost during his sexual assault trial and his years as a solo scorer with the Lakers), Carmelo Anthony (who simultaneously gained a reputation as a great international scorer and less-than-elite superstar), and Jason Kidd (who turned from slow, old liability into steady veteran hand capable of winning a championship, which he did a few years later). That group wasn't only the Redeem Team fighting for American honor — they also made the Olympics a major part of an NBA player's career path in a way they hadn't been for more than a decade.

Team USA's triumph over Spain happened only one day ago, but we can already start to wonder how the experience will change our opinions of the players involved. With that in mind, we present Ball Don't Lie's Team USA Reputations Index, an inexact consideration of what has changed now that each of these players owns a gold medal from the 2012 Olympics.

LeBron James: A certain number of people will always be put off by the antics of "The Decision" and LeBron's much-predicted and in many ways preordained status as the best basketball player in the world. However, everyone else is becoming a lot more comfortable praising James without reservations, and with good reason. It's hard to imagine a player having a better Olympics — LeBron did everything, from chasing down opponents for highlight-reel blocks to facilitating the offense from both the perimeter and post to taking over the scoring load whenever Team USA was in trouble.

In broad terms, this gold medal will mean little to LeBron's reputation if the Heat disappoint in the 2013 postseason. For at least one season, though, he'll be the toast of the basketball world, praised by media and the majority of fans at every opportunity. His magisterial performance in London only cemented that fact.

Kobe Bryant: For most of the tournament, Kobe was not at his best, struggling to make shots with any consistency and having defensive issues after acting as Team USA's appointed perimeter stopper in Beijing. A few strong performances in the medal rounds helped salvage his Olympics — particularly his 20-point second half against Australia in the quarterfinals — but Bryant still shot only 42.9 percent from the field and finished with more turnovers than assists. He typically wasn't involved in game-breaking runs, and many expert observers saw his performance in London as validation of the growing opinion that he's no longer among the top superstars in the NBA.

On the other hand, the Dwight Howard trade and the Lakers' subsequent ascendance to the league's trio of legitimate title contenders means that Kobe leaves the Olympics more relevant than he was when they started. In that context, this gold medal helps solidify his venerable status as the NBA star who's seen it all, the old timer who stays on top with a combination of craftiness and a not-insignificant level of remaining talent. Kobe is now as triumphant as he's been since the Lakers won the championship in 2010, albeit not necessarily because of the quality of his recent play.

Chris Paul: The vast majority of sensible NBA fans believe that CP3 is the best point guard in the game — that question hasn't really been in doubt for several years. Yet, despite his peerless management of tempo (often within the same possession) and great feel for where other players are on the court, Paul has had difficulty graduating from his reputation as a young, learning player to that of the entrenched master.

[ Video: More Olympics Coverage ]

In part, that's because Paul's Hornets teams weren't always the most competitive groups, and playing for a likely perennial postseason outfit in the Clippers should change that. In this Olympics, though, taking over for Jason Kidd as Team USA's acknowledged floor general, Paul has clearly become widely known as a basketball genius with a veteran's sense of the moment. He had several huge baskets in the fourth quarter of the gold-clinching win over Spain and had several of the most amazing highlights of the tournament (though his best, a fake into a no-look dish around an Argentinian defender to LeBron James in the last game of the preliminary round, will be forgotten due to LBJ's immediate miss and the efforts of NBC's legal team). After these two weeks, everyone now knows that Chris Paul is in total control of everything associated with playing the point guard position.

Tyson Chandler: As Team USA's lone center, Chandler was tasked with great responsibilities versus big-heavy teams like Spain and ... well, they didn't really play anyone else with multiple post threats. Yet, while Chandler averaged only 11.25 minutes per game and Coach K seemed perfectly happy playing LeBron James or Carmelo Anthony as de facto centers, Chandler nevertheless ends the tournament better thought of by basketball fans simply because he was the only center on this roster. Even if only in theory, he was entrusted with great responsibilities, the lone post defender who could beat back Spain's bevy of interior warriors. As it applies to the NBA, this importance means that Chandler is the New York Knick most likely to be considered a victim whenever conservation turns to the franchise's dysfunction.

Kevin Durant: When a player leads the NBA in scoring for three consecutive seasons, it's difficult to imagine that his reputation as a producer of points could actually improve. However, Durant was so fantastic in his eight games — breaking the U.S. record for points in an Olympics and winning the tournament scoring title — that it's only going to become easier to mention him as one of the best scorers in history, not just in this era. We didn't really learn anything new about Kevin Durant in this tournament; he just continued to establish that he's a historically great player worthy of all the praise he receives.

Carmelo Anthony: With every successive international tournament, more people believe that Melo is better for Team USA than in the NBA. This time around, his national-record 37 points versus Nigeria and 50 percent shooting from the shorter FIBA three-point line made him one of the gold medalists' most potent and efficient scorers. Oddly, Anthony's designation as What's Wrong With the Knicks makes him one of the few players for whom a strong Olympics makes his domestic career look worse. In the wake of his impressive play, many have wondered if Melo is really cut out to be a first option or why he can't score this well with this few shots in an NBA uniform. He can do little right these days, and that reaction probably won't change until he brings tangible success to Madison Square Garden.

Deron Williams: Along with Chris Paul, Williams formed the backcourt of Coach K's security blanket lineup, a ball-control group that saw the court whenever a blowout threatened to become a game or Team USA needed a steadying influence. Unfortunately for Williams, that's the kind of role that basketball insiders notice but that doesn't lend itself particularly well to a steady narrative. Despite playing quite well, Deron did very little to change prevailing opinions about his place in the contemporary NBA. He's still one of the league's best point guards, and he's still not quite as good as Chris Paul. I guess he'll have to settle for his second gold medal.

Kevin Love: In Team USA's short schedule of exhibitions, Love could barely get off the bench, which suggested that he was a poor fit for this particular style despite seeming very well suited to the international game. Once the real games started, though, Love played a key role for the Americans, dominating the glass with 61 rebounds (27 offensive) in 138 total minutes and 63 percent shooting from the field. Simply put, Love forced himself into the lineup through the quality of his play. That should put the lie to any arguments that his gaudy stats are empty for a bad team in Minnesota, or that he's lacking some essential ability to raise his game to a superstar level. Love proved that he belongs on the court with the best players in the world, no matter the system.

Russell Westbrook: After the many losses suffered by mid-00s incarnations of Team USA, commentators have focused on how this new group of players has come to respect the international style and adjust their games accordingly. I think we tend to overrate that need to change, and no player proves that situation better than Westbrook, who usually doesn't even look like he's figured out the NBA, let alone a separate form of basketball. Throughout the tournament, Westbrook played with the same breakneck, effectively wild style that's made him so good for the Oklahoma City Thunder. He was good enough to save himself from scorn, averaging 8.5 points per game on 47.8 percent shooting and dishing out 13 assists against seven turnovers. Westbrook is still going to have his detractors, but every time he helps his team to considerable success it's going to become harder to argue that he should change his style. This is who he is, and he continues to prove that it works.

Andre Iguodala: One of the great things about Team USA is that it allows very good players to focus on one or two aspects of their considerable talents and carry them out to the best of their abilities. On this team, Iguodala had to do little more than defend perimeter scorers really, really well and use his elite athleticism to run and score in transition. Iguodala did these things well and he's going to get more attention as one of the NBA's best defenders, as he should.

What makes this development interesting is that he was traded in the middle of the Olympics to a Denver Nuggets team likely to employ him in a beefed-up version of this same role. With their fantastic depth and interest in playing a fast tempo, Iguodala can do what he did for Team USA with more minutes and a larger share of the scoring load. While he did similar things with the Philadelphia 76ers, Doug Collins was more concerned with playing a slower tempo and figured to lean on Iguodala for more points with the departure of leading scorer Louis Williams. In Denver, Iguodala will have the freedom to do what he does best without being saddled with quite so many expectations. This tournament provided a template for that role, and we can now read what he does for the Nuggets with this experience in mind.

James Harden: Harden wasn't exactly a giant killer for this team — along with Anthony Davis, he played primarily in the fourth quarters of blowouts and played less than one minute of the final against Spain. Nevertheless, a gold medal confers a certain amount of prestige upon a player, and that accomplishment can only help Harden as he negotiates a contract with the Oklahoma City Thunder ahead of his pending free agency next summer. He was already very likely to earn a max-level offer on the open market, but this piece of hardware makes it a virtual certainty. That's bad news for OKC as they look towards future salary cap figures and great news for Harden as he moves up another stratum in the league's hierarchy.

Anthony Davis: It's no secret that Team USA entered the Olympics with little depth inside, but expectations for Davis were very low regardless. As we thought, he played few minutes outside of mop-up duty and even suffered the characteristically rookie mistake of forgetting his jersey for an entire half of a game. Yet, because we are now conditioned to read the national team experience as a sort of month-long conference where great players exchange ideas and skills, Davis might have learned quite a bit from his time with these veteran teammates. At the very least, we can now look at whatever success he has with the New Orleans Hornets next season through the lens of his Team USA experience, as if it provided a stellar foundation for what many already thought would be a career of stardom. That might not be entirely fair to the skills and talent Davis already has, but this was the first time we watched him in an NBA context. First impressions matter, as always.

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