HAKEEM OLAJUWON: USA MUST WIN GOLD, SILVER IS FOR LOSERS

For the elite basketball stars of the NBA and WNBA, winning Olympic gold is a given. Silver is for the losers.

The U.S. men’s team has been champion 13 out of 16 times since 1936. American women have topped the podium six out of eight.

“Second place is unacceptable,” says legendary center Hakeem Olajuwon, who was in the U.S. “Dream Team” that topped the podium in the 1996 Atlanta Olympics.

With teammates such as Shaquille O’Neal, Charles Barkley and Scottie Pippen, the Nigerian-American, who was born in Lagos, quickly came to realize that reality.

“Coming to the United States, being there for so long, then it becomes — you are expected to win gold,” he told CNN’s Aiming for Gold show.

Olajuwon, who is rated one of the greatest 50 NBA players of all time, came into the Atlanta Games having helped Houston Rockets win back-to-back NBA titles in 1994 and 1995.

While he enjoyed winning Olympic gold, the sheer fame of the Dream Team left them surrounded by an all-pervading security presence and he felt he missed out on the Games experience.

“We can’t go anywhere — we weren’t even free to go to the (athletes’) village. So it was a different experience from that perspective.

“The opening day you get all the different athletes but after that, of course, for security issues the Dream Team were by themselves.”

But he added: “The Olympic gold medal is a huge accomplishment and so is my career with NBA basketball. I’m just happy that I get the opportunity to accomplish both.”

Olajuwon retired in 2002 but is still involved in the game, acting as a mentor for the likes of current superstars LeBron James and Kobe Bryant.

Argentina’s Luis Scola followed in Olajuwan’s footsteps at Houston Rockets and to the top of the Olympic podium.

The Nightmare Team

The forward center achieved the feat at the 2004 Games in Athens, on the way beating a U.S. lineup which acquired the unfortunate label of “The Nightmare Team.”

It was a stunning upset, but proof that the rest of the world had raised their standards to match America’s NBA elite.

“I take a lot of pride in the gold medal because of the whole experience that happened behind it,” he told CNN.

“When you talk to somebody here in the U.S. and they find out you played in the Olympics and they are like, ‘Wow, the Olympics?’ ‘Yeah.’ ‘How did you do?’ ‘We won it.’ They are stunned, they cannot believe it really.”

U.S. basketball chiefs were sufficiently stunned to revamp its organization and coaching staff so by the 2008 Olympics in Beijing traditional dominance had been restored.

Scola and his Argentina teammates took the bronze medal in China.

He will be in an Argentina squad attempting to cause another upset at the 2012 Olympics in London, but believes U.S. success is almost inevitable.

“There are three big sports here: baseball, American football and basketball. Basketball is really the only one that’s played in the Olympics. So I think that plays a role too.

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SPAIN MAKES HISTORY WITH AMAZING EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIP 2012 WIN!!

• Let’s call Spain what it is: The most accomplished international soccer team of all time. What more could you ask for? On a glorious summer night in Ukraine, Spain played a spectacular game against the four-time world champions, carving up the Italian defense with speed and precision to leave no doubt that this Spanish team’s accomplishments deserve to be in the sport’s pantheon ahead of Brazil (1958-62, 1970), France (1998-2000) and West Germany (1972-74). In doing so, Spain becomes the first country ever to be a two-time reigning European champion and World Cup champion at the same time. Just as importantly, Spain turned on the style more than it had at any point in this tournament, giving us brilliant passing sequences that led to goals by David Silva, Jordi Alba, Fernando Torres and Juan Mata. The highlights of their goals — the motion, the imagination, the beauty — will live on in the history of sports, and for that we can all be thankful that we got the chance to witness it.

• No Spanish center forward? No problem. For three weeks we’d heard questions about coach Vicente del Bosque’s 4-6-0 lineup that lacked a true center forward, but the reality was that Spain never needed a diminished Torres as a starter. In the absence of all-time leading scorer David Villa, who was injured, Cesc Fabregas performed well in a withdrawn central role, scoring two goals in the tournament and providing a terrific assist at speed on Silva’s opener in the final. This was a tournament of midfielders — no player in Euro 2012 scored more than three goals — and with six midfielders Spain was a perfect reflection of that fact. Just running through the names reveals an embarrassment of riches: Andrés Iniesta, Xavi, Silva, Fabregas, Xabi Alonso, Sergio Busquets. Xavi in particular had a tremendous game in the final, combining with Alba and Torres on two beautiful goals and showing more verve and stamina than he had in previous games. But the truth was that all of the Spanish midfielders were in top form in a final for the ages.

• Italy’s own attacking play allowed for the spectacle. From the opening kickoff, Spain played at a faster pace than it had during any point in Euro 2012, going vertical with its passing and much less horizontal (as we had seen leading up to the final). Part of that may have been due to a Spanish desire to silence anyone who was criticizing them as “boring,” but the main reason was Italy’s decision to play attacking soccer of its own. The Italians created chances in this game and weren’t going to change their tactics out of fear, for which coach Cesare Prandelli deserves a tremendous amount of credit. But Italy’s forays upfield opened up space that the Spanish exploited with ruthless efficiency and speed. When you pack it in against Spain (a la France or Portugal, at least in the second half of the semis), playing fast, vertical soccer is exceedingly difficult. If space opens up, as it did against Italy, Spain will break you. Unfortunately, Italy’s reduction to 10 men after Thiago Motta’s injury (and the exhaustion of Italy’s three subs) caused much of the second half to be a more conservative affair.

SERENA WILLIAMS FIGHTS FROM BEHIND TO WIN AND ADVANCE TO WIMBLEDON 4th ROUND

While watching Serena Williams come from behind at Wimbledon, older sister Venus sat in the front row stifling a yawn.

Nothing to worry about.

Venus was correct – barely. Serena hit a Wimbledon-record 23 aces, held every service game and escaped an upset bid by Zheng Jie, winning 6-7 (5), 6-2, 9-7 in the third round Saturday.

Williams, who erased all six break points she faced, served three times to stay in the match and held each time at love. She was pushed to deuce serving in the final game but closed out the victory with a volley winner, then hopped in glee on the Centre Court grass.

”I just wanted to get through that match,” Williams said. ”The last thing I wanted to do was lose.”

On an eventful day at Wimbledon, unseeded Yaroslava Shvedova swept every point in a set, American Sam Querrey lost the second-longest match ever at Wimbledon, and three-time runner-up Andy Roddick fended off questions about retirement after being eliminated.

The 5-foot-4 1/2 Zheng, seeded 25th, played with little flash but plenty of consistency against Williams, committing just 17 unforced errors. She hung in the match despite hitting only one ace.

Venus Williams – a five-time champion who lost in the first round – may not have been concerned, but Serena looked plenty worried. She rocketed a return to break for an 8-7 lead in the final set, then showed how much she wanted to win, throwing back her head and letting out a long scream.

Williams has been stalled at 13 Grand Slam titles since winning Wimbledon for the fourth time in 2010, and dealt with a series of health issues in 2010-11.

Her next opponent will be Shvedova, who won all 24 points in the first set – a so-called ”golden set” – and beat French Open runner-up Sara Errani 6-0, 6-4. It’s the first known golden set by a woman in the Open era, the International Tennis Federation said, and the BBC showed a highlight package of all 24 points.

Williams will face Shvedova on Monday.

”Hopefully I’ll be able to win a point in the set,” Williams said. ”That will be my first goal, and then I’ll go from there.”

Defending champion Petra Kvitova, No. 2-ranked Victoria Azarenka and former French Open champions Ana Ivanovic and Francesca Schiavone also reached the fourth round.

Lukas Rosol, who stunned two-time champion Rafael Nadal in the second round, flopped in his follow-up, losing to No. 27-seeded Philipp Kohlschreiber 6-2, 6-3, 7-6 (6).

 

”I knew that this can happen,” said Rosol, a Czech ranked 100th. ”I was thinking only just to don’t sleep and open eyes again and play good tennis.”

Americans Mardy Fish and Brian Baker made the round of 16, but not Roddick. He failed to convert two set points in the second set and lost to No. 7-seeded David Ferrer 2-6, 7-6 (8), 6-4, 6-3.

Roddick, whose ranking is in decline at age 29, wouldn’t say whether he thinks he’ll be back for Wimbledon next year.

”If I don’t have a definitive answer in my own mind, it’s going to be tough for me to articulate a definitive answer to you,” he said.

Fish, playing in his first tournament since undergoing a procedure on his heart in May, beat David Goffin 6-3, 7-6 (6), 7-6 (6). Baker, an American mounting a career comeback from reconstructive elbow surgery, continued his surprising run by beating Benoit Paire 6-4, 4-6, 6-1, 6-3.

”It is crazy, kind of, what’s going on,” said Baker, ranked 126th. ”I’m still trying to stay focused on the task at hand and not get too wrapped around it. Because once you do that, I think it’s tough to be able to play your best.”

The unseeded Querrey lost to No. 16 Marin Cilic in a 5 1/2-hour marathon, 7-6 (6), 6-4, 6-7 (2), 6-7 (3), 17-15. No. 5 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga swept Lukas Lacko 6-4, 6-3, 6-3 and next faces Fish. No. 4 Andy Murray’s four-set victory over Marcos Baghdatis ended at 11:02 p.m. to end the day.

On a sunny, windy afternoon, the retractable Centre Court roof was open after being closed all day Friday, and the breeze that had Williams’ skirt flapping might have contributed to her slow start. She struggled with her returns, and several times shanked serves by Zheng that barely reached 100 mph.

Williams didn’t have a break-point chance in the first set, and every point Zheng won in the tiebreaker came on an error by her opponent, including two mishit returns.

”I thought, `Serena, just relax and be calm,”’ Williams said. ”I felt good. I never felt like I was going to lose this match.”

Williams briefly locked on Zheng’s serve in the second set, sweeping the final 13 points to even the match.

In the last set, Williams overcame a love-40 deficit to hold for 2-all. Two games later, when she bounced a kick second serve over her opponent’s head for an ace, Zheng managed a laugh.

Later in the set Williams won 14 consecutive service points, including three aces in one game to reach 7-all. She held 18 times and lost only 18 of 98 service points.

”It’s a tough match, because she has big serve,” Zheng said. ”It’s very difficult against her on the grass court.”

ROGER FEDERER ESCAPES DISASTER IN WIMBLEDON 2nd ROUND WIN

WIMBLEDON, England — The aftershocks of Rafael Nadal’s upset loss were still being felt around Wimbledon on Friday afternoon, when Roger Federer opened his third-round match with a heavenly one-handed backhand winner that skidded past the French veteran Julien Benneteau.

Nadal’s defeat to someone named Lukas Rosol under the same Centre Court roof almost precisely 19 hours earlier had assured Federer the No. 2 ranking he had ceded last month, and provided an unmistakable boost for a deposed champion who had entered Wimbledon as an afterthought — at least as much an afterthought as someone who’s won the tournament a half-dozen times can possibly be.

No one then could have expected the 30-year-old Swiss would find himself two points from elimination after dropping the first two sets, not after Federer had lost just nine games total in his first two matches to equal his best-ever start at the All England Club. Yet there he was, the 16-time Grand Slam champion, precipitously close to his first exit from a major tournament before the quarterfinal stage in more than eight years.

By the end Federer had showed a fighter’s grit in rallying for a 4-6, 6-7(3), 6-2, 7-6(6), 6-1 triumph over a game Julien Benneteau, whose concentration and fitness conspired against him down the stretch. It marked the eighth time Federer won from two sets down in his career, a comeback he attributed to his deep well of experience. “Probably having been there so often, down two sets to love, knowing how to handle the situation, not to panic,” he explained, “knowing that once I broke the beginning of the third set that this match is completely open, and I’m only going to get stronger for here.”

A cathartic and deserved victory, to be sure, though it’s clear Federer will need to raise his level if he expects to capture a seventh Wimbledon title to match the tournament record held jointly by Pete Sampras and William Renshaw.

Benneteau had defeated Federer the last time they’d met, rallying from a set down in the second round of the 2009 Paris Masters. It was easily the biggest victory of his career and he wept openly afterward, but that match had taken place before a partisan crowd on Benneteau’s native soil. Federer may be Swiss, but Centre Court is his spiritual home, and most in attendance Friday regarded the Frenchman as a mere speed bump on the former champion’s route to a fourth-round date with unseeded Xavier Malisse — whose earlier victory over Fernando Verdasco cleared yet another seed from a quarter that’s looking more and more favorable for Federer by the day.

Yet Benneteau controlled the rallies early on, while Federer was uncharacteristically sloppy, connecting on just 44 percent of his first serves in the opening set. After closing out a second-set tiebreak to stake an improbable two-sets-to-none lead, the 30-year-old Frenchman had struck 37 winners against 17 unforced errors, compared to 16 winners and 18 misfires for Federer.

“I tried to stay calm,” Federer recalled. “And I was.”

A turning point came in the first game of the third, when a wrong-footed Benneteau fell on his surgically repaired wrist. Clearly shaken, he quickly went down two breaks as Federer capitalized on a series of momentary lapses. “If your level is a bit lower, right here, right now he takes the opportunity,” Benneteau lamented. “At the beginning of the third set I was a little bit not as good as I was during the first two sets, and in five minutes it’s 4-0.”

By the time Federer closed out the fourth-set breaker to push the match to a fifth and deciding set, Henman Hill was packed as spectators bunkered in for a thrilling finish. It never came, however, due to the severe cramping that compromised Benneteau’s serve and gave Federer all the opportunity he needed to ruthlessly close the show in 26 minutes.

“Mentally he’s a rock, you know. He’s two sets down and he doesn’t show anything,” Benneteau said. “He has a capacity to improve his game during the match. He was more aggressive right after I serve the first shot of the rally, he tried to hit the all stronger and to be more aggressive, and you feel it when you are on the other side.”

No one doubts Federer is capable of summoning the sublime tennis that made him the sport’s consummate stylist in addition to its all-time Grand Slam champion — no sane observer can — but whether he can do it on the pressure points in the biggest matches is the singular doubt hanging over his quest to become the first men’s player to win a major past his 30th birthday since Andre Agassi at the 2003 Australian Open.

He passed the test Friday as day turned to night at the All England Club, the hallowed venue where his legend was forged and later immortalized, yet whether Federer can sharpen his consistency and elevate his game for the sterner challenges at the business end of this year’s tournament remains to be seen.

From Sports Illustrated

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TIGER WOODS COMES BACK TO WIN MEMORIAL GOLF TOURNAMENT TIES JACK NICKLAUS

To all those Tiger Woods haters…..IN YOUR FACE!!!!! Tiger woods is finally back with a resounding fist pump. Tiger came from behind to win the Memorial PGA tournament, yesterday, tying Jack Nicklaus for second place on the career victories list.

All the brands that dropped him because of his personal problems, will soon come crawling back. Just like they did with Kobe Bryant, when he had his troubles.  If you recall, Sprite, Adidas and Nutella all dropped Kobe when he was going through the sex assault case. Kobe made a massive come back and they all came begging. He signed with Nike, a much bigger brand than Adidas, and got resigned by Sprite. It just goes to show you that you can’t keep a champion down!!

Dust off the Tiger Woods highlight reel and add another jaw-dropper, this one  near the very top. From a downhill lie, to a green running away from him, and  with a wall of water lurking if he went long, Woods knocked in a flop shot for  birdie on the par-3 16th hole, one of the most amazing shots of his career, and  went on to record his 73rd victory on Sunday.
His fifth win at the  Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village ties Woods with tournament host Jack  Nicklaus for second place on the career victories list, trailing only Sam Snead  (82), and gives Woods a surge of adrenaline heading into the U.S. Open at  Olympic Club, which begins in 11 days. “I don’t think under the  circumstances I’ve ever seen a better shot,” Nicklaus said of Woods’s  chip-in.
Woods trailed by two with four holes to play, but he birdied  three of the last four holes, including the tricky, par-4 18th for a 67 — tied  for the low round of the day — to get to nine under and beat Andres Romero (67)  and Rory Sabbatini (72) by two.
Woods moves to fourth in the World Ranking  after authoring a shot that will surely rank first among the week’s golf  highlights, if not the week’s sports highlights. The shot on 16, a brutally  difficult par 3 that was creating problems for everyone, was vintage  Tiger.
After Woods went over the green with his tee shot, CBS Sports  analyst Peter Kostis said anything that wound up within six feet of the pin  would have been a success. Afterward, Woods said eight to 10 feet would have  been fine. But even after four knee surgeries, a tornado of personal turmoil,  and much second-guessing of his new swing, Woods proved he is still, on his good  days, beyond exceptional.

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