
Originally Posted by
BlueintheFace
It is all about match-ups. Spain undoubtedly has the most individual talent, but they play like the US does. They will play man-to-man (though theirs will sag a few feet) against us, and rely on making and exploiting matchup advantages on offense.
Greece will throw zones and junk defenses at us (which we have struggled with). They will also run the pick and roll to perfection (which we struggle defending). Finally, they have a bevy of spot up three point shooters to make open shots from distance (which we tend to give away pretty easily). Finally, they have beaten us before so the intimidation factor won't play as large a roll there.
The best way to describe it is-- Spain speaks the language of international basketball fluently (zones, back screens, etc...) because their players have played in these systems most of their life, but they speak the same language as the Americans in terms of execution (matchup exploitation, outside-in emphasis, etc..). They know both languages pretty well, but prefer to speak NBA on the court. Because they KNOW both, they are able to beat all the European teams (like Greece). Unfortunately, we don't know International Basketball that well. All we know is "Hello", "Goodbye", and "Where's the toilet?" Therefore, we can get really confused and turned around against Greece who is arguably the best at the "International style," while we should be able to handle the Spaniards. They are speaking our language, but we speak it much better.
That was a terrible analogy, but hopefully I conveyed my point somewhat.