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I fondly recall when the first US Dream team was put together to represent our country in the sport of basketball at the Olympic games. It was an incredible assembly of talent, a team consisting of NBA All Stars to the tenth degree. Not every player was in the prime of his career. Larry Bird, for example, was finishing off his stellar playing days. Still, there was no doubt that a finer team of basketball players had never been assembled. Their opposition, for lack of a better word, pretty much just watched in awe on the court, and collected autographs off it, rather than making much attempt to actually compete against them. It would be several years down the road, though not as many as most would have thought, before the United States would send a basketball team to the Olympics that was vulnerable to defeat. When an American basketball team finally did lose in international play, it was a stunning surprise despite its inevitability. Each Dream Team subsequent to the first one has seemed a little more watered down than its predecessor. Meanwhile, the quality of basketball overseas has been improving by leaps and bounds. The number of European players selected with high picks in the NBA's annual draft continues to increase. It was only a matter of time on Europe's part, and increased nonchalance on the part of American players, before Team USA was knocked off its high horse. And after it happened so much sooner than expected, the legend of the original Dream Team shone brighter than ever, forever reminiscent of a time when we were kings of the hardcourt. If only I had hung on to the classic Wheaties box that featured them.
Things have changed dramatically since then, and not exclusively because the gap between American basketball and the sport as played in other parts of the world has greatly diminished. If we were to send the best of our best to Athens, Greece for the upcoming Olympic games, the Americans would no doubt be the team to beat. Yet today's crop of NBA talent is not nearly so eager to earn gold medals on behalf of their country as were old schoolers such as Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Charles Barkley, et al. Instead, the senior men's committee for USA Basketball has practically had to beg players to be on the team, with an unimpressive degree of success. The list of players who have declined to play for one reason or another is long and growing. It consists of stars such as Kobe Bryant (who understandably has other matters to attend to in a Colorado courtroom, his teammate Shaquille O'Neal (who did play on a previous Olympic team, and right now is focused primarily on getting himself traded out of L.A.), Kevin Garnett (another previous Olympic participant), Jason Kidd, Jermaine O'Neal, Mike Bibby, Ray Allen, Vince Carter, and Tracy McGrady. This stream of rejections has left the Olympic committee scrambling to find replacements for their original list of invitees. For certain, they did not expect the job of putting together a team to be so difficult. It is supposed to be an honor for an athlete to be asked to represent his or her country in the Olympics, not an inconvenience or chore to be avoided. Of the initial nine players invited to play for the U.S., only Tim Duncan and Allen Iverson remain committed. How did this get so complicated? Go To Page: 1 2
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