November 8, 2024

FIBA World Cup: Luka Doncic, Slovenia def. Josh Green, Australia; U.S. beats Montenegro

Luka #Luka

At the Japan Olympics in 2021, Josh Green’s Australian team got the better of Dallas Mavericks teammate Luka Doncic and Slovenia in the bronze medal game.

Two years later, Doncic and Slovenia punched back.

Doncic finished with 20 points, seven rebounds and six assists in Slovenia’s 91-80 win over Australia in the FIBA World Cup on Friday. He also had a rare defensive highlight, soaring to block Green on a layup attempt in the paint.

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Oklahoma City Thunder star Josh Giddey led Australia with 25 points to go with eight rebounds and four assists. New Mavericks guard Dante Exum added 13 points for Australia. Green scored eight points.

Doncic has led Slovenia to a 4-0 start to World Cup play. In addition to Australia, Slovenia has picked up wins against Venezuela, Georgia and Cape Verde.

Next up, Slovenia will face Germany (4-0) in the quarterfinals at 6:10 a.m. CT on Sunday.

— SportsDay Staff

U.S. guard Anthony Edwards (10) drives on Montenegro guard Kendrick Perry (55) and center Nikola Vucevic (4) during the second half of a Basketball World Cup second round match in Manila, Philippines Friday, Sept. 1, 2023. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)(Michael Conroy / ASSOCIATED PRESS)

MANILA, Philippines — Everything had looked so easy for the U.S. at the Basketball World Cup. Points were coming in bunches, final scores were blowouts and stress wasn’t a problem.

Until Friday.

If the Americans were waiting a serious test at the World Cup, they can wait no more. Facing a 26.5-point underdog in Montenegro in a second-round opener for both teams, they trailed by a point at the half, didn’t take the lead for good until midway through the third quarter and still had a contest on their hands until the final minutes.

They found a way in the end, winning 85-73 to remain unbeaten and move to the brink of the quarterfinals.

“Great game for us … These games are going to happen,” said U.S. coach Steve Kerr.

Anthony Edwards scored all of his team-high 17 points in the second half for the Americans (4-0), who got 12 from Austin Reaves and 11 from Jaren Jackson Jr. Mikal Bridges and Tyrese Haliburton each added 10 for the U.S., which didn’t pull away until late in the fourth.

“It wasn’t the prettiest game,” Haliburton said. “But what FIBA games really are?”

Nikola Vucevic had 18 points and 16 rebounds for Montenegro, which led 39-38 at the half. Kendrick Perry scored 14 for Montenegro (2-2).

It was essentially a must-win for Montenegro, and it darn near pulled off a stunner.

“We played well and we made it as tough for them as we could,” said Vucevic, who plays for the Chicago Bulls. “But in the end, quality prevailed.”

The U.S. led 61-55 going into the fourth and tacked a point on to make it a seven-point edge — its biggest of the game to that point — early in the final quarter.

Montenegro just wouldn’t go away. A 3-pointer by Nikola Ivanovic got the underdogs within 64-62 with 7:15 remaining, and the Americans couldn’t exhale until the final seconds — a far cry from the way the first three games of the tournament went, with points coming in bunches and the U.S. winning every game by at least 27 points.

“It’s good for us to get one of these games,” Reaves said.

Montenegro had a game plan and worked it nearly to perfection: Slow the Americans down by any means necessary — “our only hope,” Vucevic said. That included well-timed substitutions, sprinting back on defense, whatever it took.

The Americans know they’ll see more of that going forward.

“We’ve got to get stops and get rebounds so we can’t go against a set defense every time,” Edwards said. “If they set their defense, they’re going to pack the paint, load up and make us shoot. And I shot terrible from the outside today. I don’t know what’s going on but I’ll figure it out.”

He figured it out only once from long range Friday, but it was a big moment. Edwards’ only 3-pointer came with 6:07 left, putting the U.S. up 69-62. It stayed a two-possession game, at least, for much of the remainder of the contest.

“A small country like Montenegro, we played tonight maybe one of the best games ever,” Montenegro coach Bosko Radovic said. “We played such a good team.”

— The Associated Press

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