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Eurobasket 2009 championship: Serbia can win if…

September 20, 2009

“Let’s be realistic. Spain is a great team” – Nikolas Zisis, Greece

How hopeful?

How hopeful?

That’s the lead quote over at the Eurobasket 2009 official site, and it’s good enough to lead here at BallinEurope.com as well on the morning of the final game. Firstly, congratulations to Spain and Serbia for getting into the final game after a seriously hard-fought tournament.

And now the big question: Can Serbia beat the prospective champs? The gut reaction is, of course, “no way, man. The youngest team in all of Eurobasket overcoming a team of world-class all-star level household names? Dream on.” On the other hand, as supporters of Team Greece and Team Spain itself already know from as “far” back as Euroleague 2007 that, well, upsets do happen in this tournament.

So how can the upstarts overcome the Spaniards? Glad i asked. Serbia can win tonight if…

• …Spain forgets history. Since the Iberian nation rose to the forefront of basketball superpowers in the late 90s, the team has managed to rack up three golds and a bronze in this tournament (to sit in the trophy case with Eurobasket medals from 1973, 1983 and 1991). The championship-game loss was particularly egregious in 2007, as essentially the same team as this tournament’s went up against Team Russia as a double-digit favorite only to be exposed as slackers on the boards. The most memorable thing about that finals game was the stunning lack of initiative and stamina on the part of Spain, a bugaboo that could come back to haunt them today.

• …youth wins out. Sheer energy and dynamism – combined perhaps with a universally-acknowledged underdog’s attitude – propelled Andrei Kirilenko’s boys past Spain two years ago, and Serbia brings more of the same today. As has been well-publicized, the oldest player on this roster is Bojan Popovic, all of 26 years old. If nothing else, a higher energy level from Serbia will erase any advantage Spain might have held with Serbia having played a tight late contest last night, while Spain received the benefit of an early-hour blowout.

• …Serbia brings a surprise. Last night, Milos Teodosic was the shocking stud for Serbia, with perhaps the best single-game performance in this tournament thus far. (“”Milos Teodosic is one of the best point guards in Europe,” proclaimed teammate Novica Velickovic in the post-game. Really? At 22? He certainly was last night…) Against swarming Russia in the quarterfinals, Uros Tripkovic led all scorers while second-string center Kosta Perovic came off the bench for another 13. In knocking out Lithuania, Serbia brought a barrage of threes while multi-purpose Nemanja Bjelica crushed underneath. While Spain brings the megastars, Serbia brings a team; if the latter manages to bring the unexpected player to the forefront – recall a key clutch player in the game one win for Serbia was 19-year-old Milan Macvan – it will be a long night for Spain.

The targeted one?

The targeted one?

• …Serbia can exploit matchups against Jorge Garbajosa. If any one player on Spain has not lived up to the hype recently, it’s Garbajosa. Perhaps the surgeries of 2007 are catching up with the 31-year-old or maybe he just hasn’t found his niche on this particular national team, but when on the floor, Garbajosa has been the Achilles’ heel of this team. His shot selection has been timid – except from the three-point line, where he’s just 5-for-19 in this tournament – and he’s been a non-factor in the passing game, with *all* outlet passes seemingly coming from Juan Carlos Navarro and Ricky Rubio (you’ve heard of the triangle offense; call this one “the square”). Sure enough, in the previous Serbia-Spain game, Garbajosa’s anemic shooting performance kept Real Madrid’s new acquisition on the bench for most of the second half. Another show like that could account for the margin of victory.

• …the game comes down to a battle of game plans. Dusan Ivkovic or Sergio Scariolo: Which would you choose to coach your team? That’s what i thought.

• …Serbia channels 2007 Russia – like they did in the opening game. Eurobasket 2009 comes full circle with the matchup in the finals, repeating the most memorable game of day one. Serbia shocked all observers with the solid win over the prohibitive favorites; this team out, they won’t nearly be as big a surprise for Spain, but no matter. Spain was shut down through a combination of tough defense, tougher rebounding, and winning the individual battles at guard. With the exception of Pau Gasol, you’ve gotta like any Serbian player over his Spanish counterpart in terms of sheer defensive skill. And this youthful bunch has shown it has the will to play with the best.

BiE fearless predictions: Nah, i’m not willing to take a barrage of criticism here, nor am i willing to wedge with the serious underdogs in this one; let’s just say it’s going to be waaaaaaaaay closer than people think. In the qualifying matches, let’s go Slovenia over Greece, France over Croatia, and Turkey over Russia.

Sep 20, 2009ballineurope
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This post was published on September 20, 2009
Who's ready for EuroBasket 2011?From BiE to Team Spain: ¡Felicidades!
Comments: 10
  1. Modimi
    16 years ago

    Os,

    Wishful thinking again….? This time no prediction… Oh well look at your eurobasket coverage and what your dislike for the spanish team has done for you. A bunch of biased articles. A pity, really.

    ReplyCancel
  2. juegos multijugador
    16 years ago

    Great Gasols, great rudy fernandez, great Carlos cabezas!! going for gold medal!

    ReplyCancel
  3. Carlos
    16 years ago

    Been following this blog for many years now…but the coverage of this eurobasket…come on men, if you want people to follow your blog try to pretend that you are impartial when writing. That is what serious journalists try to do. I am with modimi too, its a pitty!

    ReplyCancel
  4. migala
    16 years ago

    My congrats to Serbia, Greece and Slovenia. It´s been a long hard tournament. You should be proud of your teams. Also to France, a team which only lost one game.

    ReplyCancel
  5. migala
    16 years ago

    And of course congrats to Spain, your defense has been underrated, but for the last 3 games you have shown grit, coordination and will.

    The future is going to be bright for basketball in general. Serbia has an amazing team. Greece and France are going to be dangerous. And Slovenia and Turkey and Lithuania will recover very soon, I am sure.

    Fascinating tournaments ahead.

    I also want to say thanks to Pau Gasol. What a year for him.

    ReplyCancel
  6. Havlicek
    16 years ago

    “With the exception of Pau Gasol, you’ve gotta like any Serbian player over his Spanish counterpart in terms of sheer defensive skill.”

    ROFL!

    After the thorough (and really predictable, except for hardcore fanatics with blinders on) destruction of Serbia by Spain, this sentence summarizes the incompetence and prejudice with which this blogger has covered the whole Eurobasket.

    By the way – the final has been over for two hours now, and not a word here from the great man who knew the recipe for a Serbian victory…

    ReplyCancel
  7. isthispleasure
    16 years ago

    In defence of Ballineurope.

    This article’s title is: Serbia can win, if:
    That being said, the author of the article recognizes that Serbia is the underdog. Spain was clearly the favorite, especially after the Greek team never showed up for the semis (gotta thank coach K.)-very much unlike the Slovenians who fought the Serbians till the very end.

    I like the consistency of the blog in the post-Kristophe era, one post per day- at least. Euro ball with a bit of Americas, plenty to debate on and heated commentary.
    I enjoyed the coverage of Eurobasket and I bet that Google Analytics show the same thing.
    Other than that, congrats to Spain and Pau. Well deserved really.

    ReplyCancel
  8. Havlicek
    16 years ago

    isthispleasure says:
    September 21, 2009 at 1:37 am

    I like the consistency of the blog in the post-Kristophe era.

    ———-

    Yes, great coverage. Really unbiased and full of insight. You could sense that Os Davis was watching each game closely and dispassionately and had keenly observed that Spain had just a bunch of cocky stars out there, not a real, closely-knit, hardworking team:

    “Tony Parker won’t let France lose. Think Ricky Rubio and Juan Carlos Navarro will be pulling that fancy-schmancy extra (unnecessary) pass stuff against Parker? Ha! The dude hasn’t run up 14 steals in this tournament for no reason. And Parker’s getting it done all over the floor, too, with 18 ppg, 4.3 rpg and 3.7 apg. Once a team that stood around to let Parker create has become a team on which Parker makes everyone better – maybe even better than their Spanish counterparts when given a chance to set the half-court offense.”

    Tony Parker, 1-for-8, 6 points. Spain wins by 20.

    “BiE fearless prediction: Vassilis Spanoulis goes for another monster game, but Spain overcomes.”

    Spanoulis, 3-for-8, 7 points. Spain wins by 18.

    “While Spain brings the megastars, Serbia brings a team; if the latter manages to bring the unexpected player to the forefront – recall a key clutch player in the game one win for Serbia was 19-year-old Milan Macvan – it will be a long night for Spain. (…) With the exception of Pau Gasol, you’ve gotta like any Serbian player over his Spanish counterpart in terms of sheer defensive skill. And this youthful bunch has shown it has the will to play with the best. BiE fearless predictions: Nah, i’m not willing to take a barrage of criticism here, nor am i willing to wedge with the serious underdogs in this one; let’s just say it’s going to be waaaaaaaaay closer than people think.”

    Spain: 49.3% FG, 42 rebounds, 17 assists, 9 turnovers, 4 blocks
    Serbia: 41.5% FG, 24 rebounds, 12 assists, 12 turnovers, 2 blocks
    Spain wins by 22.

    ReplyCancel
  9. krle
    16 years ago

    I am Serbian, and i am proud on team Serbia in this tournament, they are still young and they crushed under pressure of final game, the game was lost in first quarter and i was just waiting the end of it, boy it sucked when someone play with you like that, 22 difference is too much and this does not show the real difference in quality, it should be waaaaaaaay closer 😀 but what the hell, this team have deserved silver medal, and congrats to Spanish team also they are truly the best team in Europe.

    ReplyCancel
  10. krle
    16 years ago

    p.s. can you give me the number of the girl from the picture, she must be very sad right now, I want to be there for her 🙂

    ReplyCancel
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ballineurope
16 years ago 12 Comments EuroLeague, FIBA, MoreBojan Popovic, Dusan Ivkovic, Eurobasket 2007, Eurobasket 2009, FIBA, Jorge Garbajosa, Juan Carlos Navarro, Kosta Perovic, Milan Macvan, Milos Teodosic, Nemanja Bjelica, Novica Velickovic, Pau Gasol, Ricky Rubio, Sergio Scariolo, Team Serbia, Team Spain, Uros Tripkovic
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