BARCELONA, Spain—Forever in the Dream Team’s shadow, the US Olympic basketball team is now walking in its footsteps.
The Americans are back in Barcelona, site of their greatest glory, the scene of the best basketball ever played, as they finish their preparations for London.
Twenty years after their predecessors stormed their way to gold here, the Americans will see one of the Dream Team’s lasting legacies: the strength of international programs that rose in part because of the interest it created.
The US will play exhibition games against Argentina and Spain, teams with veterans old enough to remember seeing Magic and Bird play. The Americans beat both en route to the gold medal four years ago, holding off the Spaniards in a gold-medal game thriller.
Both countries have enjoyed lengthy stays near the top of international basketball, each winning a major title in the past decade, and should provide quality tests for a US team that still has some improving to do.
“It seems like each game the competition progresses a little bit more,” US guard Chris Paul said. “We’ve had three great games so far, but we have to keep getting better because we know when we get there and play against Argentina and Spain, they’re going to be great games.”
The Americans had an easy one Thursday, beating Britain 118-78 in Manchester, England. The US carved up a defenseless opponent, shooting 60 percent, collecting 39 assists on 47 baskets, and leading by as much as 47 points.
But the British are just getting going in basketball, where the sport is largely ignored. The Americans know to expect better in their upcoming games at Palau Sant Jordi.
Pau Gasol’s first contact with the NBA game came as a 12-year-old boy watching the Dream Team on TV in his Northern Spain home. He’s gone on to become one of the NBA’s best big men and was the MVP of the 2006 world basketball championship, when Spain won the gold medal.
Manu Ginobili and Luis Scola both starred in Europe and became international stalwarts before taking their pro careers to the NBA, and were the driving forces behind an Argentina squad that won the 2004 Olympic gold medal and the silver in the 2002 world championships.
The US will play Argentina on Sunday and Spain on Tuesday.
The game against Spain is the more anticipated one. The Americans edged the Spanish in an exhibition game in Madrid before the 2010 worlds, but both teams played that summer without key players from the Americans’ 118-107 victory on the last day of the Beijing Games.
“They are a great team,” US forward LeBron James said. AP