• Home
  • FIBA
  • EuroLeague
  • NBA/NCAA
  • National Leagues
  • Podcast
  • Features
  • More
  • Contact

Grimag

  • FIBA
  • EuroLeague
  • NBA/NCAA
  • National Leagues
  • Podcast
  • Features
  • More

British Basketball announces 21-man national team roster, dubbed “strongest Team Britain ever”

April 10, 2012

Head coach Chris Finch and the British Basketball Federation today released a preliminary roster of 21 players to compete for spots on the host team’s 2012 Olympic team. Given the fairly short modern history of FIBA-level basketball on the ‘Isles, the claim from the federation that this is the “strongest-ever preliminary GB men’s squad” isn’t very debatable.

Said roster draws on quite an international reach, consisting as it does of NBA players Luol Deng (Chicago Bulls), Ben Gordon (Detroit Pistons) and Byron Mullens (Charlotte Bobcats); Liga Endesa’s Kieron Achara (Manresa), Robert Archibald (Zaragoza), Dan Clark (Asefa Estudiantes), Joel Freeland (Unicaja Malaga) and Devon van Oostrum (Tarragona); European professionals Ogo Adegboye and Kyle Johnson (Apoel Cyprus), Eric Boateng (Peristeri), Matthew Bryan-Amaning (Hacettepe), Mike Lenzly (CEZ Nymburk), Pops Mensah-Bonsu (Besiktas Milangaz), Sullivan Phillips (Prievidza); the BBL’s Nate Reinking (Sheffield Sharks) and Andrew Sullivan (Leicester Riders); NCAA players Andrew Lawrence (College of Charleston), Alex Marcotullio (Northwestern), Ovie Soko (University of Alabama-Birmingham); and current free agent/San Antonio Spurs draftee Ryan Richards.

Official press release follows.

(British Basketball) – NBA stars Luol Deng, Ben Gordon and Byron Mullens have all confirmed their availability and commitment to pull on the Great Britain jersey this summer.

Although it will be the first time Gordon and Mullens have been available to play for GB, Deng has long been a prominent and consistent figure in the squad since 2007 when he helped the side qualify for A Division basketball for the first time since 1981. In 2011 he provided a timely reminder of his talent at EuroBasket 2011 in Lithuania where he averaged a huge 24.6 points per game and 9.4 rebounds, coming second overall in the tournament for double-doubles.

Gordon has voiced his desire to be part of the British Basketball programme for a number of years, and visited the team during the 2011 EuroBasket qualifiers but has yet to step on court for his country, primarily as a result of some unfortunate injuries. Today’s announcement confirms his commitment to the side; Gordon commented: “I am very excited to pull on the GB jersey this summer and play for my country. To be invited into camp is the first step in that journey and I am immensely proud to have the opportunity.

“I am totally committed to playing with the Standard Life GB team this year and look forward to being part of the squad hoping to make 2012 a year to remember for British Basketball fans.”

Also returning to action for GB is power forward, Pops Mensah Bonsu who is having a brilliant season in Turkey with Besiktas. He is averaging a huge 30 minutes per game and 18.3 points. Pops has helped his team to National Cup glory as well as to the EuroChallenge final four. Joining him in the preliminary GB squad, and hoping to be part of the team’s training camp in Houston this summer are established national team players Joel Freeland and Robert Archibald who have also enjoyed fantastic seasons in Spain’s top flight and will be aiming for a final berth in Finch’s squad.

With today’s announcement, Finch has once again shown his belief in the wealth of young players that have been working their way up through GB’s performance pathway. 2011 alumni, Kyle Johnson, Andrew Lawrence, Alex Marcotullio, Ryan Richards, and Devon van Oostrum also make it into the preliminary squad and will want to demonstrate their credentials on the big stage.

British Basketball’s 2011 Emerging Athlete of the Year, Van Oostrum, played a tournament-high 23 minutes against Spain in the EuroBasket finals in Lithuania, and will be hoping to emulate this on the Olympic stage.

Former under-20 player Ovie Soko is also included in the preliminary squad. Sullivan Phillips who plays with Prievidza in Slovakia is a new addition to the roster; he has been twice Defensive Player of the Year in his stints with teams in both Hungary and Cyprus and could prove to be a fascinating prospect among the initial players invited into camp.

Standard Life GB head coach Finch commented: “The GB basketball programme has come a long way since 2006 and the blend we have now of experienced talent with the younger guys is fantastic to see. We have the potential for a world class team who will surprise a few people this summer. The commitment from all our players to the programme once again is great and it’s also good to see our strength and depth continuing to increase year on year.”

The preliminary squad of 21 players will be cut down to 16 at the beginning of May with two additional places available for Futures team players. The final roster of 12 players heading to the Olympic Games this summer will then be announced early in July when the team returns to the UK from preparation camp in the USA.

Apr 10, 2012ballineurope
Powered by Sidelines
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
This post was published on April 10, 2012
Boston Celtics to take on Fenerbahce Ulker, Milano in October Lietuvos Rytas: Stable in Motion (and Jonas Valanciunas, too)
Comments: 12
  1. Phileus
    13 years ago

    I’m not going to say it’s going to do well in the Olympics, but that roster looks a lot better than I thought it would. At the very least, this isn’t going to be as bad as Japan in 2006. This roster looks like it could give good teams a run for their money. It should be exciting to watch 🙂

    ReplyCancel
  2. Orlando Articial Grass
    13 years ago

    I love the clips you’ve chosen to illustrate the point!

    ReplyCancel
  3. Zelaya
    13 years ago

    Good team, but Gordon does not fit. He will mess the team up.

    ReplyCancel
  4. Phileus
    13 years ago

    Well who else do you think would be a better SG for the team, then? Gordon’s fallen off the radar in the NBA, but he was a really good scorer with the Bulls (where he played with Deng, remember). On a well-coached team, he could still be an excellent asset.

    I’d be interested in BiE’s British basketball expert’s take on it.

    ReplyCancel
  5. Apollo
    13 years ago

    Os Davis,

    your thoughts please on this absurd FIBA Olympic qualifying tournament as how it is screwing over the European teams. Now, because of it, the Greek League even has to finish ONE MONTH earlier than normal. This is just nuts that this schedule is being approved by FIBA.

    The qualifying schedule from FIBA is ridiculous. Why are they punishing the European teams in the qualifying tournament like this? Is it to help eliminate them and therefore help give the US an easier tournament?

    It sure seems that way. The schedule is so crazy that the Greek League just announced that they have to move up the date of the Greek Finals by one month. Can you imagine if they did this to the NBA? There would be OUTRAGE in the USA. But do it to the European countries and it’s just standard I guess.

    Now Olympiacos and Panathinaikos have to play the Greek league Finals BEFORE they go to the Euroleague Final Four. This is so out of line. It is ruining the club season for the Greek clubs, AND is ruining the chances for the team at the Olympics.

    The Greek federation said that for example, national team players like Kostas Vasileiadis, Dimitrios Mavroeidis, Antonis Fotsis, and Ioannis Bourousis would only have about 3 days probably of off time before they ave to report to the national team training camp.

    Can you imagine the outrage there would be in the USA if FIBA made NBA players report to Team USA just 3 days after their season ended?

    Now the fact that because of this, on top of it, the two Greek League teams that made the Euroleague Final Four have to play their league final series before the final four is just too damn much. It’s even wrecking the the club season for the teams.

    I can’t believe how absurd this qualifying tournament schedule is. My god WTF is FIBA trying to do? Don’t they grasp that top leagues in Spain, Italy, Greece (where the good European national team players play) are going well into June?

    And they make the tournament at the start of July? How the hell do the teams have a training camp? How the hell do they invite new players to tryout? How the hell do they give a rest to their players? And then on top of it to make them travel to the other side of the world for the tournament……….and play against other teams where their players are all going to have a month or 2 of rest off……….

    I can’t believe that FIBA is getting away with it. They have to be doing this on the orders of the NBA to help make the tournament easier for Team USA.

    ReplyCancel
  6. Phileus
    13 years ago

    We won’t need the help, dude 😉 Keep churning out the excuses, though. I’m sure it’ll make you feel better when your team gets eliminated.

    Just as a factual matter though, the NBA playoffs also go deep into June, and players on NBA Finals teams (potentially including the majority of relevant players) will probably only have a week of break before being called into training camp.

    Good thing our team was good enough to make it without having to go through the qualifying tournament.

    Zing! 😉

    —

    By the way, Sam Chadwick, I’m disappointed you haven’t chimed in on Team GB’s roster yet!

    ReplyCancel
  7. Apollo
    13 years ago

    Team USA does not play at the start of July and only a very few, or even none of their players will be in the NBA Finals.

    Greece’s players would all be playing into middle or late June, and the national team has to start playing official games at the start of July. Team USA starts them in August.

    You are as stupid as Gabe if you think that is even remotely fair or comparable.

    You do you need help. That is why the refs helped you win the 2008 gold medal game against Spain. That is why the refs helped you win the games against Lithuania and Russia in 2010.

    That is why the refs helped you win the semifinal against Lithuania in 2000.

    Without the refs helping you, your last gold medal would have been won in 1996. You can keep your inferiority complex and patriotic xenophobic nonsense to yourself or to an American basketball site like ESPN or realgm or whatever.

    This site isn’t the place for lying denials about how much help Team USA gets from the refs.

    ReplyCancel
  8. Phileus
    13 years ago

    “This site isn’t the place for lying denials about how much help Team USA gets from the refs.”

    Exactly, Apollo 🙂

    trolololo

    ReplyCancel
  9. Dorian
    13 years ago

    Looks like someone is holding a grudge, referencing a game that took place 12 years ago, come on Apollo, if blaming games on the refs is what you do, then we’re never going to be able to settle any arguments.

    But from reading your little rant you basically think the refs help out Team USA more than any other team, correct? Because what, FIBA wants Team USA to win every year and if they lose the refs didn’t help any teams, but if they win the refs helped Team USA Win?

    So a 10 point win versus Russia and a 15 point win versus Lithuania would have been different if the refs weren’t so blatantly helping Team USA? You can blame some things on the zebras, but double-digit wins, they can’t make up that difference.

    And USA v. Spain is one of the great international games ever, don’t sully it with ref nonsense, just appreciate what happened.

    ReplyCancel
  10. Justin
    13 years ago

    Team USA is getting helped by the refs in every game they play. It’s absolutely disgusting. Anyone that can’t admit that is a big time patriotic flag waver.

    ReplyCancel
  11. Aleksandar Zoran
    13 years ago

    Apollo how old are you?

    ReplyCancel
  12. Gabe
    13 years ago

    To answer your question Apollo, for some reason these Olympics are starting a week early than four years ago and as in the last Olympics, the qualifying event ends about three weeks before basketball at the Olympics starts. Why a three week break, who knows, maybe they want to give the qualifying three weeks to prepare. Although that is silly, I don’t think it is a conspiracy considering they did the exact same thing in the last Olympics. The only difference is the Olympics is a week earlier than four years ago and I can’t believe that the whole billion dollar London Olympics was scheduled a week earlier this time just to make the basketball tournament easier for the US. lol

    ReplyCancel

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

ballineurope
13 years ago 12 Comments FIBA, More, NBA/NCAA2012 Olympic Games, Alex Marcotullio, Andrew Lawrence, Andrew Sullivan, Apoel Cyprus, Asefa Estudiantes, BBL, Ben Gordon, Besiktas Milangaz, Britain, Byron Mullens, CEZ Nymburk, Charlotte Bobcats, Chicago Bulls, Chris Finch, College of Charleston, Dan Clark, Detroit Pistons, Devon Van Oostrum, Eric Boateng, Hacettepe, Joel Freeland, Kieron Achara, Kyle Johnson, Leicester Riders, Liga Endesa, Luol Deng, Manresa, Matthew Bryan-Amaning, Mike Lenzly, Nate Reinking, NBA, NCAA, Northwestern, Ogo Adegboye, Ovie Soko, Peristeri, Pops Mensah-Bonsu, Prievidza, Robert Archibald, Ryan Richards, San Antonio Spurs, Sheffield Sharks, Sullivan Phillips, Tarragona, Unicaja Malaga, University of Alabama-Birmingham, Zaragoza
Recent Posts
Will Cummings delivered a gritty performance as Galatasaray stunned Tenerife to reach the BCL final & reclaim relevance on the European stage
Will Cummings Leads Galatasaray’s BCL Surge
10 hours ago
NBA Semifinals 2025 Betting Guide for Series Outcome Wagers
NBA Semifinals 2025 Betting Guide for Series Outcome Wagers
14 hours ago
Kostas Papanikolaou plays a smaller on-court role these days, but his leadership remains vital to Olympiacos’ pursuit of a Euroleague title.
Kostas Papanikolaou’s Quiet Fire Powers Olympiacos
6 days ago
Categories
Recent Posts
Will Cummings Leads Galatasaray’s BCL Surge
NBA Semifinals 2025 Betting Guide for Series Outcome Wagers
Kostas Papanikolaou’s Quiet Fire Powers Olympiacos
Tags
EuroLeagueNBAYouTubeReal MadridCSKA MoscowFC BarcelonaFIBAOlympiacosPanathinaikosZalgiris KaunasACBSpainMaccabi Tel AvivRicky RubioTeam SpainLos Angeles LakersMontepaschi SienaPartizan BelgradeLithuaniaIrelandGermanyPau GasolItalyTeam LithuaniaTurkeyTeam FranceCaja Laboral BaskoniaLietuvos RytasFenerbahce ÜlkerGreeceJuan Carlos NavarroSerbiaSan Antonio SpursTony ParkerMinnesota TimberwolvesFranceDirk Nowitzkibasketball highlightsTeam RussiaALBA BerlinEuroCupEuroleagueDallas MavericksTeam USAEuroBasket 2011
Share
0
Facebook
ABOUT
BallinEurope.com was founded in September 2007 by Christophe Ney (who now runs the excellent scouting-themed website European Prospects) and Tobias Seitz, both then bloggers for FIBA.com with over 10 years’ worth of experience in the professional basketball world each. The mission then was to “provide a very unique perspective of Basketball in and about Europe.”
Most Commented
Why Andrei Kirilenko and CSKA Moscow must win the Euroleague
13 years ago
180 Comments
Euroleague Transfers Table 2008/2009
17 years ago
168 Comments
A week in highlights: Spanish block party, mighty Milos, Utah rap and some dude dunking in L.A.
14 years ago
139 Comments
Archives
Get In Touch

Email: emmetryan@gmail.com

Name: Emmet Ryan

2014 © BallinEurope. Join JCI Dublin