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Showing posts with label Serbia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Serbia. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

A Look at Eurobasket 2011


Tomorrow the 2011 FIBA Eurobasket or the European Basketball Championships will begin in Lithuania pitting 24 of Europe’s best basketball nations against each other in 4 pools of 6 with 3 nations advancing out of each pool (or group) into the second round. Because the NFL is still in preseason, the MLB playoffs haven’t started yet and the NBA season is never going to start, this tournament will be the main sporting focus in my life for the next two weeks. It doesn’t hurt that mine and Daki’s national team (Serbia) is coming off an improbable silver medal run in 2009 and a 4th place finish (should have been 2nd but that’s what happens when you play Turkey in Turkey, honestly felt like the players who didn’t make the Turkish national team just became the referees instead) at the World Championships in 2010. So with a vested rooting interest for the entire tournament, a lull in the rest of the sporting world, and the fact that this might be the last time in a little while that we will get a chance to see NBA players face off against each other (seriously who doesn’t want to watch Dirk Nowitzki again? Or make fun of Jose Calderon again?) for some time I encourage everyone to watch what is sure to be an exciting tournament. Now on to our picks/preview:

Daki

Champion
: Spain. Just too talented across the board, stacked at every position and the emergence of Marc Gasol as a legitimate beast will be too much for other teams. They can trot out a crunch-time line-up of Rubio/Calderon Navarro, Fernandez, Gasol brothers/Garbajosa, they have the depth to go with their talent and experience and should be the heavy favortes.

Sleeper: A tie between Germany and Italy. The Italians are bringing a strong team featuring the likes of Bellinelli, Bargnani, and Gallinari, if those three are clicking they could give teams legitimate problems. Germany on the other hand features the hottest player in the world at the moment in Dirk Nowitzki. If he catches fire in a game I can't see Germany losing said game, even if they have no one after Chris Kaman. Both of these squads are in group B (the hardest group in the tournament) and it is hard to believe that they may not even get out of their group. The fact that teams from groups C and D have a free ride to the knock-out round is a disgrace.

Team likely to dissapoint: France. They always have plenty of talent (6 players in the NBA or who have played there) but it never seems to translate, I pick them.

Player to watch: Again I'm going to pick 2, Dirk Nowitzki and Milos Teodosic. We already talked about Dirk and he is the best player in the tournament; but in any given game Teodosic is capable of amazing things, if he is at his best Serbia will be tough to beat

Match-up I would like to see the most: Serbia-Turkey, they owe it to the Serbs after the officiating disgrace last year.

Luka

Champion: Spain. Although I want to pick Serbia as they are my country and I will be cheering for them throughout, the talent of the Spanish team is simply too great in my opinion for any other team to match. The defending champions who the last time around beat their opponents by an average score of 18.5 points in the knockout rounds come to Lithuania with pretty much the same team except for the addition of Oklahoma City Thunder Center Serge Ibaka. For the talent disparity and the fact that this Spanish squad has been to big tournaments before and won (they would have even beat the Redeem team in the 08 Olympics if it wasn’t for Kobe’s heroics) I am picking them to win and they remain the favourites to lift the trophy on September 18. Will I root for them? Absolutely not. Not the most likeable team whose players all look like they stay in hotels that have non-functioning showers.

Sleeper: France. This pick could very well look stupid in a week’s time but looking at the French team from a talent level standpoint I don’t see why they can’t compete with any other nation at this tournament. With 4 NBA players on the squad; Tony Parker, Joakim Noah, Nicolas Batum, and Boris Diaw (yes, Boris Diaw still counts, he should probably count as 2) and a decent supporting cast the French team can make some noise. In years past they have been known to disappoint and yet if Tony P and Noah start flying around on the court I would not want to play them in the knockout stages. If nothing else Joakim Noah is so unlikeable that he will start at least 3 wars.

Team likely to disappoint: Italy. Every time I watch the Italian national basketball team I feel that their entire playbook consists of one thing; “shoot the three”. This is no surprise when their three best players are Marco Bellinelli (never seen a shot he didn’t like), Andrea Bargnani (raises Raptors’ fans blood pressures at the mention of his name) and Danilo Gallinari. And when you live by the three, you also die by the three. Not the best strategy to have as a team in my opinon. Also, Italy is probably in the hardest opening group of the 4 where they must take either Serbia’s, France’s, or Germany’s spot in the next round and I just don’t see it happening.

Player to watch: Being a Toronto Raptors fan, the one player I will definitely keep an eye on as the tournament progresses is Lithuanian center Jonas Valanciunas. A player the Raptors drafted fifth overall in this year’s NBA Draft. Jonas is having a fantastic summer, one in which he led the U-19 Lithuania team to a gold medal at the Worlds averaging 23 points, 14 rebounds with 3 blocks per game and winning the MVP in the progress. He then proceeded to score 26 points and get 11 boards in his debut game for the senior national team. Definitely a player to watch, one who might use this tournament as his coming-out party for the world.

Match-up I would like to see most: I will have to agree with Daki on this one and say Serbia vs Turkey. I just want to see how the outcome of this match-up will be affected by fair officiating.


Follow us on twitter at @Daki_4 and @Luka_M91

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Water-polo World Championships Semi-finals Running Diary


To the 5 remaining people who are still reading after seeing the title of this post welcome!   It is the 2011 World Aquatics championships from China and we have an amazing match-up in water polo today.  Juggernaut Hungary meets Juggernaut Serbia, the unstoppable force vs. the immovable object (feel free to add your own ‘two great teams going head to head’ cliché here).  To put this Serbia-Hungary game into perspective for the North American audience that may or may not be reading; this matchup is like Rocky Balboa vs. Ivan Drago, Red-Sox Yankees, and Celtics Lakers.  There is little doubt that these 2 teams are the best in the sport (a quick glance at their respective Wikipedia pages gives us the following count:  In the last 10 years Serbia and Hungary have won 25 and 17 medals!)  Those statistics are not from bush-league competitions either; they include the World championships, European championships, the water-polo world league and the Olympics.  Although Serbia has the edge in overall gold medals and total medals, Hungary boasts an amazing Olympic record (3 straight gold medals).  In addition to the medals, Serbia has named the men’s water polo team ‘Serbian team of the year’ for 9 years running.  Now that you know the background of this matchup we will get right into the running diary.  As I write this I will explain things as best I can to the people out there who have no idea how water polo is played.  Why am I writing this?  Several reasons:  Firstly, I am currently on vacation in Serbia, so this game will be easily available to watch.  Second, I really like water polo and this is a great opportunity to practice writing running diaries.  Lastly, I wanted to write this for fun and see how it goes (I’m also a huge nationalist).

The basics: 2 teams compete in an Olympic sized swimming pool.  Each side fields (pools?) 6 players plus 1 goalie.  There are 4 8-minute quarters, and the object of the game is to score goals by putting a ball into the opposing teams net.  For the complete set of rules please go here.

10:45am (Serbian time):  We begin!  Obligatory shots of both teams warming up, and the shots of the coaches.  These are a staple of any sports broadcast.  The announcer is saying some background stuff about how the teams got here, what a big rivalry this is etc.

10:48  There’s something odd about watching teams huddle up in water.