The US Basketball Team and Schadenfreude
I’ve never been a big advocate of sending professional athletes to the Olympics. I’m sure that it’s helped television ratings, but it somehow sours the already dubious spirit of sportsmanship. Isn’t it a little weird to have a point guard who earns US $2 million a year in the same tournament and (if he’s so inclined), the same athlete’s village as the gymnast who works as a waitress to make ends meet?
In particular, I’ve always frowned upon the US basketball program and their so-called “dream teams”, who until 2004 hadn’t lost a game in the Olympics. Clearly the constant pounding the team was giving to opponents wasn’t very sporting, was it? So, I’m really enjoying the schadenfreude of seeing the team trounced by Puerto Rico (who subsequently lost to Lithuania) and nearly beaten by the lowly Greeks. They may still win the gold, but they’ve learned some lessons already. As happened in hockey in the nineties, the world may be catching up with the NBA.
In fact, Mavericks owner Mark Cuban cites a posting to his comments about how Canada’s hockey program has responded to similar circumstances. I don’t think NHL players should be in the Winter Olympics, either, but it’s a well-written response to how the NBA should handle their new-found mediocrity.
