Agonizing Summer Leaves U.S. Basketball Much to Ponder - 1 minute read
Agonizing Summer Leaves U.S. Basketball Much to Ponder
DONGGUAN, China — When they huddled on the floor before tipoff Thursday night, Coach Gregg Popovich of the United States slipped some colorful language into his greeting for his Serbian counterpart Sasha Djordjevic.
This was not an angry reaction to the headline-grabbing comments Djordjevic made before the FIBA World Cup, when he said of a potential Serbia-United States showdown, “Let’s let them play their basketball and we will play ours and, if we meet, God help them.”
This, rather, was Popovich, in his first face-to-face encounter with Djordjevic since, using humor to mask sadness.
Djordjevic did not want to use curse words at his postgame news conference, but he revealed later that Popovich, the five-time N.B.A. championship-winning coach, broke the pregame ice by jokingly calling them “a couple of losers” — with a profanity thrown in.
Source: The New York Times
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Keywords:
Basketball • Dongguan • Gregg Popovich • United States men's national soccer team • Serbian language • Aleksandar Đorđević • FIBA Basketball World Cup • Serbia • United States • Basketball • Profanity • News conference • 1993 NBA Finals • Pre-game show • Profanity •
DONGGUAN, China — When they huddled on the floor before tipoff Thursday night, Coach Gregg Popovich of the United States slipped some colorful language into his greeting for his Serbian counterpart Sasha Djordjevic.
This was not an angry reaction to the headline-grabbing comments Djordjevic made before the FIBA World Cup, when he said of a potential Serbia-United States showdown, “Let’s let them play their basketball and we will play ours and, if we meet, God help them.”
This, rather, was Popovich, in his first face-to-face encounter with Djordjevic since, using humor to mask sadness.
Djordjevic did not want to use curse words at his postgame news conference, but he revealed later that Popovich, the five-time N.B.A. championship-winning coach, broke the pregame ice by jokingly calling them “a couple of losers” — with a profanity thrown in.
Source: The New York Times
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Basketball • Dongguan • Gregg Popovich • United States men's national soccer team • Serbian language • Aleksandar Đorđević • FIBA Basketball World Cup • Serbia • United States • Basketball • Profanity • News conference • 1993 NBA Finals • Pre-game show • Profanity •