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"US
hopes to find riches in Macau,
gold in Beijing"
LAS VEGAS (AP)—If things
don’t work out at the
Olympics, at least the U.S.
basketball team should be ready
for the World Series of Poker.
The Americans left this gambling
mecca Saturday and are headed
for an even bigger one in Macau,
where they will continue their
preparations for winning gold—and
maybe strike some along the
way.
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After spending parts of three straight
summers here, with an All-Star weekend
thrown in, most players had their
fill of Sin City. They’ll find
something new in Macau, a ferry ride
from Hong Kong along China’s
Southeast coast that has surpassed
Las Vegas in terms of annual money
gambled.
Its casinos have a new group of fortune
seekers coming.
“There’s going to be a
lot of that,” guard Dwyane Wade
said. “Everybody’s got
to make sure they’ve got their
duckies ready. There’s going
to be a lot of table time for all
of us.”
It won’t be all fun and games,
though, for a team that promises to
take the remainder of its exhibition
tour seriously.
“To me, it’s all part
of a process,” USA Basketball
managing director Jerry Colangelo
said. “It doesn’t matter
where we’re going, we have to
get the job done in terms of preparing
ourselves.”
The Americans beat Canada 120-65 on
Friday in their opener, the first
of what they hope is five straight
victories before they arrive in Beijing
in search of their first gold medal
in eight years.
“We must win all the games to
build our confidence, build our spirit,”
forward Carmelo Anthony said. “We
don’t want to have to say we
lost any games.”
The Americans will play Turkey and
Lithuania in Macau, then move to Shanghai
for games against Russia and Australia.
And though the games won’t count,
don’t tell the U.S. players
that they’re meaningless.
Wade and Anthony were on the team
four years ago that left the United
States believing it was the gold medal
favorite following a 25-point victory
over Puerto Rico. Then the Americans
were routed 95-78 by Italy before
barely escaping with a win over Germany
in their first two exhibitions overseas.
Wade said when that group of players
gathered for training camp, “You
think it’s going to just work.
But once we’d seen that it didn’t
just work … we knew we had a
lot of work ahead of us, that it wasn’t
going to be easy.”
By the time the Americans saw Puerto
Rico again in their Olympic opener,
their confidence had been shaken,
and their opponents knew they were
facing a beatable team. They lost
92-73. So this group wants to avoid
any defeats that could mess with their
minds.
“It matters,” said LeBron
James, who also played on the 2004
team. “We don’t have a
lot of time to prepare. It’s
not like 82 regular-season games where
we have a lot of time. So we do have
to get the rhythm and get ready for
the Olympics, and the only way to
do that is we continue to win.”
The United States should be tested
on the tour. The Americans split two
games with Lithuania in the Olympics
four years ago, bouncing back from
a loss in pool play to win the bronze
medal game. Russia, the European champion,
is a tough defensive club led by Utah
Jazz forward Andrei Kirilenko.
The Americans likely will have James
back in the lineup when they reach
China. He sprained his right ankle
during practice Tuesday and sat out
Friday’s exhibition victory.
The ankle had improved enough that
James probably could have played,
but the U.S. staff preferred to rest
him to avoid any further swelling
before the long flight to Asia.
U.S. coach Mike Krzyzewski will use
the tour to help settle his rotation.
Wade scored 20 points as a starter
Friday, but is headed back to the
bench when James returns. Fellow guards
Michael Redd, who also scored 20,
Chris Paul and Deron Williams all
showed they are worthy of playing
major minutes.
Krzyzewski has until Aug. 10 to sort
it out, when the Americans open against
host China. And this time, his players
plan to get there with momentum.
“We don’t want to lose
no games,” Wade said. “We
want to make this a perfect month
of not losing anything, and losing
exhibition games is not an option.”
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