sport news MIKE COLMAN: Despite NBA names, the U.S. basketball stars are a shadow of the ...

sport news MIKE COLMAN: Despite NBA names, the U.S. basketball stars are a shadow of the ...
sport news MIKE COLMAN: Despite NBA names, the U.S. basketball stars are a shadow of the ...

When I heard an Australian TV reporter this week refer to the USA men's basketball outfit currently preparing for their first game of the Tokyo Olympics as 'the Dream Team' I nearly fell off my chair.

I covered the original Dream Team at the Barcelona and Atlanta Olympics, and to put this current side in their league is, quite frankly, an insult.

The 1992 Dream Team featured the likes of Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, Scottie Pippen and Charles Barkley. It was unquestionably the greatest side ever assembled.

The USA's 1992 team oozed star quality with Michael Jordan (left) and Scottie Pippen (right)

The USA's 1992 team oozed star quality with Michael Jordan (left) and Scottie Pippen (right)

However, the class of 2021 suffered two chastening warm-up losses before playing in Tokyo

However, the class of 2021 suffered two chastening warm-up losses before playing in Tokyo

Four years later Jordan, Magic and Bird were gone, but with the addition of such players as Shaquille O'Neal, Reggie Miller, Penny Hardaway, Hakeem Olajuwon and Gary Payton, the side was still very much deserving of the Dream Team label.

But the 2021 version? Not on their best day.

In their four practice games in Las Vegas in the last two weeks, they lost to Australia and Nigeria – an experience described by their two-time gold medallist Kevin Durant as 'a punch in the mouth' - before scratching out unconvincing wins over Argentina and Spain.

To make things worse, two key players in Bradley Beal and Kevin Love have pulled out due to Covid and injury concerns.

Add in the fact that their preparation has overlapped the NBA finals, meaning that some players only joined the squad a few days ago, plus the overall strangeness of the Covid-affected Games placing all competing athletes into unknown territory mentally, and you have a side ripe for the plucking.

Former Australian captain Shane Heal played at the Barcelona, Atlanta, Sydney and Athens Olympics and has seen first-hand the gradual disintegration of the perception of Team USA invincibility.

Heal made a name for himself on the international stage by engaging in a running battle with Dream Team enforcer Charles Barkley during a warm-up match before the Atlanta Olympics and was signed by the Minnesota Timberwolves in the NBA largely on the strength of it soon after the Games.

By the time he played for Australia against Team USA in Athens eight years later, the Americans were a shadow of that Atlanta gold-medal winning team.

'We led them until the final quarter and that was the weakest Australian team I played in,' he said yesterday from his Sydney home.

Bradley Beal and Kevin Love (pictured) have pulled out just before the tournament kicks off

Bradley Beal and Kevin Love (pictured) have pulled out just before the tournament kicks off

'You'd have to say they started losing their aura after Atlanta. Up until then they looked down their noses at everyone else. When I went over to the NBA they figured if you weren't American you couldn't play.

'Now it's different because there are so many international players over there and there is not that mystique about the US players anymore. The overseas players play with and against them every day.

'It's not the same now, but the aura they had in 1992 and 1996 was unbelievable.'

He's got that right. I'll never forget the media conference the Dream Team held in Barcelona on the morning of the Opening Ceremony.

As coach, Chuck Daly led Jordan, Johnson, Bird, Barkley and co onto the stage at the jam-packed auditorium, supposedly professional journalists from all over the world began to applaud. Some even rose to their feet in a standing ovation.

It is something I have never experienced before or since.

Shane Heal believes the team's aura of invincibility has continued to wane since Atlanta

Shane Heal believes the team's aura of invincibility has continued to wane since Atlanta

The players were so sure of claiming the gold medal that they spent more time on the

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