By Sean Kennedy (@PhillyFastBreak)
![By Augustas Didžgalvis (Own work) [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html) or CC-BY-SA-3.0-2.5-2.0-1.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons His Name Was Jonas: USA Reaches Final](http://localhost/bloguin/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/Jonas_Valanciunas_by_Augustas_Didzgalvis.jpg)
The highlight of the game was DeMarcus Cousins nearly ending Jonas Valanciunas late in the second quarter. After the Raptors big man struck Cousins’ neck with an elbow in a box out attempt, Cousins feinted punching Valanciunas before the countless hours coaches spent drilling into his head not to do such things took hold. Still, Valanciunas cowered back as if Leonidas and his brave 300 were bearing down on him, which is basically the only reaction you can have when an angry DeMarcus Cousins is coming at you.
That exchange serves as a metaphor for how the US has carved up opponents throughout the tournament. The other teams have come out swinging and given the Stars and Stripes their best shot, usually keeping things close in the first half. Then, for whatever reason, USA finds its stride coming out of the locker room, and its superior talent and depth finally begins to reflect on the scoreboard. The world isn’t quite cowering back in fear, but they might as well have.
Unfortunately for basketball fans, we might never see a true test for this United States squad, as Spain was upset by France in the quarterfinals. With a deep roster, the home crowd behind them, and revenge on their mind following the Olympics, many expected Spain to be the biggest threat to a US gold. The entire tournament was viewed as prelude to the eventual clash between those two basketball titans. Instead, the US will likely once again be heavy favorites against the winner of today’s Serbia-France semifinal. With all due respect to those clubs, I wouldn’t expect the likes of Bogdan Bogdanovic, Boris Diaw, and Nic Batum to derail the US train to gold.
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