DeclinetoState
08-10-2008, 11:18 PM
By ANDREW BAGNATO, AP Sports Writer
9 hours, 19 minutes ago
BEIJING (AP)—In one heartpounding minute in the first half, LeBron James (http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/beijing/usa/lebron+james/220991/;_ylt=AuBoF6M9ijrNjqQYumH5fJDQ1Zl4) dunked off a nifty underhanded feed from Dwyane Wade (http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/beijing/usa/dwyane+wade/222087/;_ylt=AhHw1gWc96vzBdi2O8YLCfDQ1Zl4). Then Kobe Bryant flew in and jammed. Then it was Chris Bosh (http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/beijing/usa/chris+bosh/220242/;_ylt=Anb2n2TkKzUBZaQ48CS_tADQ1Zl4)’s turn to rattle the rim.
As the backboard swayed, some might have recalled the fabled Dream Team. The final score—U.S. (http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/beijing/usa/;_ylt=Aq_jU2oTe4Xqp_uiHMN6gV_Q1Zl4) 101, China (http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/beijing/chn/;_ylt=AmISZqGDLM_8giF5t.0fTRXQ1Zl4) 70—might also draw comparisons.
Who’s worried about the 7-for-29 shooting from beyond the arc? Just toss it up and throw it down.
This was the biggest basketball game in China’s history and perhaps the most-watched basketball game ever—and the U.S. wanted to turn in a performance to match the moment as it took its first step toward Olympic hoops redemption.
“I’ve never felt an environment quite like this,” said Bryant, a veteran of five NBA Finals. “I’ve played in many big games, but the energy tonight was different.
“I think they knew that history was being made tonight,” Bryant said. “Obviously, it was a proud moment for their country as it is for ours. You could feel the electricity.”
Link (http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/beijing/basketball/news?slug=ap-bko-us-china&prov=ap&type=lgns)
9 hours, 19 minutes ago
BEIJING (AP)—In one heartpounding minute in the first half, LeBron James (http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/beijing/usa/lebron+james/220991/;_ylt=AuBoF6M9ijrNjqQYumH5fJDQ1Zl4) dunked off a nifty underhanded feed from Dwyane Wade (http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/beijing/usa/dwyane+wade/222087/;_ylt=AhHw1gWc96vzBdi2O8YLCfDQ1Zl4). Then Kobe Bryant flew in and jammed. Then it was Chris Bosh (http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/beijing/usa/chris+bosh/220242/;_ylt=Anb2n2TkKzUBZaQ48CS_tADQ1Zl4)’s turn to rattle the rim.
As the backboard swayed, some might have recalled the fabled Dream Team. The final score—U.S. (http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/beijing/usa/;_ylt=Aq_jU2oTe4Xqp_uiHMN6gV_Q1Zl4) 101, China (http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/beijing/chn/;_ylt=AmISZqGDLM_8giF5t.0fTRXQ1Zl4) 70—might also draw comparisons.
Who’s worried about the 7-for-29 shooting from beyond the arc? Just toss it up and throw it down.
This was the biggest basketball game in China’s history and perhaps the most-watched basketball game ever—and the U.S. wanted to turn in a performance to match the moment as it took its first step toward Olympic hoops redemption.
“I’ve never felt an environment quite like this,” said Bryant, a veteran of five NBA Finals. “I’ve played in many big games, but the energy tonight was different.
“I think they knew that history was being made tonight,” Bryant said. “Obviously, it was a proud moment for their country as it is for ours. You could feel the electricity.”
Link (http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/beijing/basketball/news?slug=ap-bko-us-china&prov=ap&type=lgns)