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LJUBLJANA, Slovenia -– They came in waves. Mantas Kalnietis, Renaldas Seibutis, even Linas Kleiza. Just as Tony Parker had expected. Just as everyone watching back in France had anticipated from Lithuania with the EuroBasket title on the line.
The San Antonio Spurs guard, already feeling fatigue in every muscle, had prepared his teammates for this, right from when they went into the locker room some 46 hours earlier following an exhausting overtime win over Spain in the semifinal.
He walked straight over to Nicolas Batum. The Trail Blazers forward had contributed just three points toward the conquest of the reigning champions. "I did everything I could today to win the game," Parker told him. "But I'm going to be tired. I need you to be The Man in the final."
"So," said Batum, "I was ready to go, right from the start, to help the team."
With an early block on Seibutis. Then a slash to the basket, grabbing a precise pass from Boris Diaw and driving it to the hoop. Then, with words not deeds, he berated Alexis Ajinca for a blown play. The margins, against an opponent in supreme form, did not allow for mistakes.
Kleiza, the former Toronto Raptors forward, was throwing everything he could. Five shots, five makes, 11 of his eventual game-high 20 points in the opening quarter.
"Both teams were scoring too easily," said Batum, who led France with 17 points while Boris Diaw added 15 in the 80-66 EuroBasket championship win Sunday.
In a timeout during Lithuania's early run, the French started talking about defense. They practiced what was preached. "Then we started running, making some big shots," he said.
Batum hit a three in the corner in a 7-0 run midway through the second. Then another, moments later, on the opposite side. For the last 4:02 of the first half, they shut down Lithuania, hitting 14 straight points. Up 50-34 at the break, they were in control.
http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/9...ts-big-hand-teammates-france-eurobasket-title
The San Antonio Spurs guard, already feeling fatigue in every muscle, had prepared his teammates for this, right from when they went into the locker room some 46 hours earlier following an exhausting overtime win over Spain in the semifinal.
He walked straight over to Nicolas Batum. The Trail Blazers forward had contributed just three points toward the conquest of the reigning champions. "I did everything I could today to win the game," Parker told him. "But I'm going to be tired. I need you to be The Man in the final."
"So," said Batum, "I was ready to go, right from the start, to help the team."
With an early block on Seibutis. Then a slash to the basket, grabbing a precise pass from Boris Diaw and driving it to the hoop. Then, with words not deeds, he berated Alexis Ajinca for a blown play. The margins, against an opponent in supreme form, did not allow for mistakes.
Kleiza, the former Toronto Raptors forward, was throwing everything he could. Five shots, five makes, 11 of his eventual game-high 20 points in the opening quarter.
"Both teams were scoring too easily," said Batum, who led France with 17 points while Boris Diaw added 15 in the 80-66 EuroBasket championship win Sunday.
In a timeout during Lithuania's early run, the French started talking about defense. They practiced what was preached. "Then we started running, making some big shots," he said.
Batum hit a three in the corner in a 7-0 run midway through the second. Then another, moments later, on the opposite side. For the last 4:02 of the first half, they shut down Lithuania, hitting 14 straight points. Up 50-34 at the break, they were in control.
http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/9...ts-big-hand-teammates-france-eurobasket-title
