Where is the Love?
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ad looking just like tyson during that 07-08 year.
Few moments where I think Davis could've gone after the shot at the rim harder, but why overextend yourself, I guess.
Solid, solid game for him.
Haha Kobe signing autographs for Tunisia players.
hope we can get some highlights on anhony davis today, i couldnt watch the game :(
John Hollinger @johnhollinger
I believe this will be the first opportunity for online NBA editors to bust out the "Browbeaten" headline.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3QyRPcLWuKw
:21 Where Unibrow Happens
Missed the game. Is there a site that posts highlight vids?
He does look bigger... Very encouraging.
Anthony Davis @AntDavis23
"@Getlosd: Young fella @AntDavis23 http://pic.twitter.com/J9nrX3s0" putting in that work in the weight room
https://p.twimg.com/AzKqaKOCEAAR9WK.jpg
if anybody can post a highlight video link i'd appreciate it. missed it as well.
Couple Davis highlights and commentators talking about how awesome he is.
http://www.nbcolympics.com/video/bas...a-victory.html
Davis is a unibrowniaml!
http://espn.go.com/olympics/summer/2...lowout-tunisiaQuote:
'The Kid' keeps Team USA soaring
Anthony Davis shows his alley-oop prowess in blowout win over Tunisia
LONDON -- Against the only opponent they'll see in these Olympics without a single NBA player on its roster, nothing played out Tuesday night as the tournament's overwhelming favorites planned or envisioned. This was about as nervy for Team USA as a 47-point rout could ever be.
Never did the Americans imagine they'd be trailing after nearly nine minutes against a Tunisia team that, in its Olympic debut two days prior against Nigeria, scored all of 15 points in the first half.
Likewise, you wouldn't have found, in anyone's red-white-and-blue script, anything about young Anthony Davis rushing in to finally get some earlier-than-usual playing time because Kevin Love had to hobble off with a knee injury.
aw look at Laettner going to bat for AD!
good read :D
Would be nice if NBC's olympic website actually F'ING worked!!!! I'd like to watch the replay of the game. I love how all the damn ads work but no video for the game. just keep getting errors. BS!!!!!!!!!!! :bah:
You know, ive really only watched the basketball games on TV this year. So I don't know how the other events or opening ceremony went ,but their coverage of basketball hasn't been too bad. I like doug collins commentating. But the NBC Olympics website that they are really pushing has been nothing but trouble for me.
i have the nbc sports channel, which shows all of the basketball games complete and live, but i have friends who have cox and they only get to see bits and pieces of the game. wasnt so much complaining about the commentary. i have also heard a lot of complaints about the website, so its not just you lol
I realized every time Davis got an alley Kobe would stand, raise his hand then do a wink or something to communicate with AD. Sweet! To have Kobe as a short sorta mentor is great; surprised Kobe went with it.
Life is just grand, isn't it?
I gotta say.... DeThrone has been reaaaallll quiet lately
Because there's little basketball to discuss. I haven't watched either game, but from what I understand Davis has displayed he can dunk the ball.
Article on Anthony Davis from Yahoo:
http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nba-ba...7392--nba.html
When Anthony Davis takes the floor
http://espn.go.com/blog/truehoop/pos...akes-the-floorQuote:
Anthony Davis has a good life with Team USA. In his first prolonged stint of Olympic action, the 19-year-old top pick scored a dozen points without so much as a single dribble.
Seriously, all five of his buckets were lob dunks -- and his two free throws came when he was fouled on a tip jam attempt.
But the flashy lobfest wasn’t all Davis brought to the game. He was active around the rim, seemed to know where to be on both ends and hardly looked physically overmatched against grown men. Against the worst team in the Olympic field, he looked pretty sharp.
Yet after the game, Deron Williams, while praising Davis, said "he doesn't even really know how to play the game yet."
That's a good summary of where Davis is right now: He's incredible ... for a nineteen year old who hasn't seen a second of NBA action.
All of which leaves a question mark about his role on this team. Is he here to learn, or to help?
If he were an NBA veteran with his current skill level, he'd never have been on the team. Consider how Tunisian big man Salah Merji blows past Davis for a fourth-quarter slam. A nitpicker would mention his inability to hold position down low or create a shot for himself.
But since Davis is on the team, and a big man with several elite skills, why does coach Mike Krzyzweski keep him under wraps like some top-secret space project?
This goes beyond fans who want to see the highly touted rookie in action. It seems worthwhile to determine if Davis has the ability to really help against international competition. If Kevin Love hadn’t injured his leg on a third-quarter move to the hoop, it’s unlikely Davis would have had dazzled against Tunisia.
Perhaps Davis should be playing more simply so he's ready should Team USA ever, because of injuries or foul trouble, have to count on him for substantial minutes in a close elimination game. Stranger things have happened.
nick vanexel @vanexel31
Anthony Davis could really help #Team USA with his size and length. Probably should use him more.
I was just made aware of this, but it's funny.
Michael Jordan wore #23 for the Bulls, Kobe Bryant wears #24 for the Lakers.
Michael Jordan wore #9 for Team USA, Kobe Bryant wears #10 for Team USA.
Someone is trying to one up Michael.
"Consider how Tunisian big man Salah Merji blows past Davis for a fourth-quarter slam. A nitpicker would mention his inability to hold position down low or create a shot for himself."
Sounds familiar
"Consider how Tunisian big man Salah Merji blows past Davis for a fourth-quarter slam. A nitpicker would mention his inability to hold position down low or create a shot for himself."
Sounds familiar
Yes, it was a great move. Beat him all the way out from the three point line.
Not so sure about the defend part. He's got a few weakside blocks and got a few guards, but 1 on 1 he's been taken to the hole by skilled bogs like that guy Traore.
Still wish they would let him try and return the favor with a few post moves, but so far he's been '08 Tyson Chandler.
http://www.nola.com/olympics/index.s...ookie_ant.htmlQuote:
New Orleans Hornets rookie Anthony Davis getting work in with Olympics team
London — Anthony Davis stopped dribbling, tucked the ball under one of his long arms and shook hands with the tall reporter whose face seemed so familiar.
"He had no idea who I was," Christian Laettner said. "But he's seen The Shot."
Two players — one from Kentucky, the other from Duke — separated by 20 years yet so intertwined in U.S. men's basketball history. All-Americans in college, both led their respective schools to national championships and then spent the following summer at the end of the bench on Olympic teams.
Stars to subs just that quick.
Earlier this week, Davis, at the London Games because a knee injury knocked Blake Griffin off the American roster, and Laettner, the 12th man on the 1992 Dream Team, met for the first time before a U.S. team practice.
They shared a few laughs and posed for pictures.
"He was cool, but I didn't know who he was at first," Davis said, a bit embarrassed. "I've heard of him. Everybody was asking me about him."
Since arriving in England last week, the 19-year-old Davis, taken with the No. 1 overall pick in June's NBA draft by New Orleans, has been asked about Laettner. After finishing his career at Duke, Laettner spent the summer of his life in Spain as teammates with Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson and Larry Bird.
Davis only knew of Laettner the same way all Kentucky fans know him — the unspeakable villain who drained the immortalized buzzer-beating jumper that beat the Wildcats in the East Regional final of the 1992 NCAA tournament.
Mention The Shot and any Kentuckian's blue blood boils.
"Yeah, I've heard about it forever," Davis said. "That's OK. I think we made up for it this year."
With the reach of someone 7-foot-5, Davis led Kentucky to a national title as a freshman before entering the NBA draft. He was invited to the U.S. team's pre-Olympic camp, but the 6-foot-10 big man was slowed by a sprained ankle. After not making the squad, he would have most of his summer off before training camp.
However, while in Los Angeles attending the ESPY Awards, Davis got a call telling him Griffin was hurt and to get to Las Vegas.
"I said, 'all right,' hung up the phone and caught the first plane," he said.
Unlike Laettner, who averaged just eight minutes per game — "as the 12th most unneeded person on that team" — in Barcelona, Davis may have a far more significant role with this U.S. squad before these Olympics end. With just one true experienced center in Tyson Chandler, the Americans lack both interior size and depth — something they figure to need against Spain, Argentina and Brazil in the medal round next week.
If Chandler gets in foul trouble, if there's an injury, or if U.S. coach Mike Krzyzewski wants to play a bigger lineup, Davis may get more playing time.
He's earning it.