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U.S. basketball team suffers stunning loss to Nigeria in pre-Olympic exhibition

The United States' Jayson Tatum drives against Nigeria during an exhibition game Saturday in Las Vegas.
Jayson Tatum of the U.S. drives against Nigeria during an exhibition in Las Vegas. Nigeria won 90-87, the 22nd-ranked nation by FIBA beating the No. 1-ranked team and three-time reigning Olympic gold medalists.
(David Becker / Associated Press)
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This is not how USA Basketball expected to open its Olympic summer.

Nigeria probably didn’t expect it either.

If there was any expectation of invincibility for the Americans heading into the Tokyo Olympics, it’s already gone — after Nigeria stunned the U.S. 90-87 on Saturday night.

Nigeria pulled off an international shocker with a roster primarily filled of little-known NBA players who found a way to beat a group of All-NBA, All-Star and max-contract performers.

“I thought that the Nigerian team played very physically, did a great job in that regard, and knocked down a lot of threes,“ U.S. coach Gregg Popovich said. “Give them credit.“

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Gabe Nnamdi, who goes by Gabe Vincent when playing for the Miami Heat, led Nigeria with 21 points. Caleb Agada scored 17 points, Ike Nwamu added 13, and Nigeria outscored the U.S. 60-30 from three-point range.

Kevin Durant, who had never before played in a loss for USA Basketball in 39 senior international games, scored 17 points. Jayson Tatum added 15, Damian Lillard had 14 and Bam Adebayo 11.

“Just goes to show that we have to play better,“ Tatum said.

The Americans had gone 39-0 in their last three Olympic seasons — including pre-Olympic exhibitions — on their way to gold medals and had been 54-2 in major exhibitions since NBA players began playing for USA Basketball in 1992. Plus, they had beaten Nigeria by a combined 127 points in their last two meetings — one at the 2012 London Games, the other a warmup for the 2016 Rio Games.

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Nigeria lost to the U.S. at the 2012 Olympics by 83 points. Lost to the Americans again four years later in an exhibition, that time by 44 points.

Not this time.

U.S. coach Gregg Popovich on the sideline during an exhibition game against Nigeria on July 10, 2021.
U.S. coach Gregg Popovich looks on from the sideline. “I thought that the Nigerian team played very physically, did a great job in that regard,” he said.
(David Becker / Associated Press)

“Nigeria’s come a long way with their basketball,” USA Basketball managing director Jerry Colangelo said.

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Ike Iroegbu — a former Washington State player who spent some time in the G League — hit a three-pointer with about 1:15 left to put Nigeria up 88-80. Durant scored the next seven points for the United States — a three-pointer, two free throws following a turnover, then two more from the line with 16.5 seconds remaining.

Nnamdi made two foul shots with 13.2 seconds left to restore Nigeria’s three-point edge. The Americans ran 9.7 seconds off the clock on the ensuing possession without getting a shot off, and Zach LaVine missed a pair of free throws — the second intentionally — with 3.5 seconds left.

Precious Achiuwa got the rebound for Nigeria, and that was it. It’s only an exhibition — but the upset was still of the massive variety, the 22nd-ranked nation by FIBA beating the No. 1-ranked team and three-time reigning Olympic gold medalists.

Popovich heard the final buzzer and shook hands with Nigeria coach Mike Brown, the Golden State assistant, as the Americans walked off stunned.

Draymond Green of the U.S. shoots against Nigeria's Ekpe Udoh during an exhibition game July 10, 2021.
The United States’ Draymond Green goes up for a shot against Nigeria’s Ekpe Udoh during Saturday’s exhibition.
(David Becker / Associated Press)

There was an injury scare for the Americans late in the second quarter when LaVine got hurt on a play where he was closing out against Nnamdi. He went airborne after a head fake and came down awkwardly, grabbing at his left ankle before getting up and going directly to the U.S. locker room.

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LaVine was fine and returned in the third quarter.

The bigger scare was the scoreboard. Nigeria trailed only 43-41 at the half, led for long stretches of the opening 20 minutes and simply wasn’t going away.

Tipins

Nigeria: Achiuwa had perhaps the night’s top defensive play with 1:23 left in the first half, reaching with his left hand to block a Durant dunk attempt. Nigeria outrebounded the U.S. 46-34.

United States: Darius Garland and Saddiq Bey were Select Team players who got into the game. The Olympic team needed extra players because Khris Middleton, Jrue Holiday and Devin Booker are at the NBA Finals. The U.S. got 32 free-throw attempts to Nigeria’s 10.

Free-throw defense

Nigeria’s Chimezie Metu had a brilliant play in the third quarter — committing what would be goaltending in the NBA. Durant was taking a free throw, and as his shot bounced on the rim Metu reached up and knocked the shot away. That’s a legal play under FIBA rules.

Up next

Nigeria: Faces Argentina on Monday in Las Vegas.

United States: Faces Australia on Monday in Las Vegas.

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