February 11, 2009 2:26 PM

U.S. Earns Men's Hoops, Volleyball Gold

(CBS/AP)  The United States won the gold medal in Olympic men's basketball Sunday with a 118-107 victory over Spain.

Culminating a three-year mission to end years of embarrassment, the U.S. Olympic team survived a huge challenge from Spain, winning 118-107 Sunday in the gold-medal game.

After overwhelming everyone for seven games, the Americans led by only four points with under 2 1/2 minutes to play, then proved they could handle the close game that seemed would never come in Beijing.

Their prize: the first U.S. gold medal since the 2000 Olympics.

"Much respect to Spain, but the U.S. is back on top again," LeBron James said.

Dwyane Wade scored 27 points for the Americans, who found a much gamer Spanish team than the one they humiliated by 37 points earlier in the tournament. Kobe Bryant added 20.

In a game so devoid of defense that it felt more like an NBA All-Star game than one with a title at stake, the Americans had too much offense down the stretch. Bryant converted a clutch four-point play with 3:10 remaining, holding his finger to his lips to quiet the rowdy Spanish crowd behind the basket.

Wade added another 3-pointer that made it 111-104 with just over 2 minutes left, and only then could the Americans relax a little.

They began to celebrate during a break after some technical fouls on Spain with 26 seconds left, then celebrated at midcourt when it was over with "Born in the USA" blaring over the arena's speakers.

"I'm proud of our guys. We played with great character in one of the great games in international basketball history, I think," U.S. coach Mike Krzyzewski said.

Nobody else had been close to the Americans in Beijing. This team's only Olympic competition had been history, in a dream matchup with guys named Jordan, Magic, Bird and the rest of the U.S. team that dominated the Barcelona Games in 1992.

Forget comparisons to those guys. The Americans were lucky to be better than Spain on Sunday.

Rudy Fernandez scored 22 points and Pau Gasol had 21 for the Spanish, the reigning world champions who were hoping to win their first Olympic gold.

U.S. players appreciated the game Spain gave them. After the contest, they hugged the Spanish players. Bryant had an especially long embrace for Gasol, patting his Los Angeles Lakers teammate on the back.

"They did what they were supposed to do," Gasol said. "We fought hard all the way."

Seeming to appreciate the moment, after congratulating Spain, the team joined in a circle, jumping up and down at center court and waving triumphantly to the crowd as Krzyzewski applauded on the sidelines.

The Americans had won their first seven games by 30.3 points, including a 119-82 rout of Spain. But they never had control of this game, giving up open looks from the perimeter and plenty of points in the paint.

(AP Photo/Eric Gay)
But Bryant, who waited so long to finally wear the red, white and blue, hit two 3-pointers in a big fourth quarter to add the gold medal to the only piece of hoops hardware he didn't already own. The NBA MVP pounded his hands toward the floor in celebration at the end.

James scored 14 points, while Carmelo Anthony and Chris Paul had 13 apiece for the Americans, who had won bronze medals in their last two international events, the 2004 Olympics and '06 world championships.

The U.S. started planning for this game after that first event, the low point in its hoops history, following a sixth-place flop two years earlier in the world championships. Jerry Colangelo was given control of USA Basketball and constructed a national team program in 2006, requiring those who wanted to play to commit to three years.

He got Bryant and James quickly on board and landed almost everyone else he asked for, finding a group of NBA stars eager to give up their summer to get back what they felt belonged to their country.

And he needed all of them against a Spain team that on this day would have likely beaten any other recent U.S. squad.

Jason Kidd ran his record to 56-0 in senior international play and collected another gold to place alongside the one he earned in 2000, becoming the 13th U.S. player with multiple golds.

That elite list, which includes Michael Jordan and seven other Dream Teamers, could grow in 2012. Paul and Dwight Howard said they would be in London if asked, and perhaps half this team could join them.

James ran out for pregame warmups with his finger in the air, already believing the U.S. was No. 1. But even though the Americans were shooting better than 70 percent for most of the first half, it would take a long time to prove it.

James and Bryant were both on the bench after picking up two fouls in the first 3 1/2 minutes, and though Wade came in and picked up their scoring load, the U.S. reserves couldn't open their usual cushion.

Spain hit seven of its first nine shots, leading for much of the first quarter. A quick burst of 10 points by James and Wade had the U.S. advantage up to 14 points with 4 minutes left in the half, but Spain chipped away and trailed only 69-61 at the break.

Spain was within four on a number of occasions in the third, and Fernandez's 3-pointer cut it down to 91-89 with 8:13 remaining. Bryant answered with a bucket, later added a 3, and things seemed safe when James scored to make it 103-92.

Spain made one last push to close within 108-104 on Carlos Jimenez's 3-pointer, but Wade hit one on the other end, and the final score became lopsided when the Americans hit a bunch of free throws after the Spanish became frustrated and were called for the technicals.

Argentina won the bronze with an 87-75 victory over Lithuania.


Also At The Games:

Men's Volleyball: The U.S. men's volleyball team won the gold medal, defeating defending champion Brazil to complete a perfect run through a tournament struck by tragedy hours after the opening ceremony. The U.S. surge to the title came after coach Hugh McCutcheon's father-in-law was fatally stabbed the day before competition started. McCutcheon missed the team's first three games to be with his wife, a former volleyball Olympian whose mother was also wounded in the attack.

(AP Photo/David J. Phillip)
Men's Marathon: Samuel Wanjiru pulled away over the final few miles to become the first Kenyan to win the Olympic marathon - and he did it an Olympic record time of 2 hours, 6 minutes, 32 seconds. The temperature was 75 degrees with 52 percent humidity when the race began at 7:30 a.m. and it heated up steadily through the morning, reaching 86 degrees by the finish. Thanks to an overnight thunderstorm, blue sky greeted the final day of the games.

Wrestling: Mongolia, which had never won a gold medal before Beijing, won two. Ten days after wrestler Tuvshinbayar Naidan won Mongolia's first gold medal, bantamweight Badar-Uugan Enkhbat got another by beating Cuba's Yankiel Leon 16-5.

Water Polo: The U.S. water polo team was beaten in the gold medal game 14-10 by Hungary, which won its third straight Olympic championship. It was the first time the Americans got back to the medal stand for the silver since 1988.

Boxing: About two hours after light flyweight favorite Zou Shiming made history with China's first gold medal in boxing - a sport long banned by Mao - light heavyweight Zhang Xiaoping beat Kenny Egan of Ireland.

Medals: China had one of the most dominating and diverse performances at an Olympics ever, winning a games-leading 51, and an even 100 overall - the most golds since the Soviet Union won 55 in Seoul in 1988. Not since the Berlin Olympics of 1936, when Nazi Germany dominated, has a country other than the U.S. or the Soviet Union led the gold medal list. The United States trailed well behind the Chinese in golds with 36, the first time since 1992 it didn't lead the category.

Closing Ceremony: More than 90,000 spectators will pack the iconic National Stadium to mark the finale of the Games. Highlights are to include a duet by tenor Placido Domingo and Chinese soprano Song Zuying, and a display by several hundred kung fu practitioners from a martial arts school.

Mark Your Calendar: July 27, 2012 is the date of the opening ceremony of the London Games.

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 16 Comments
by samthetvcat August 25, 2008 5:11 AM EDT
---"These guys are just a bunch of high paying Hoop Ringers brought in to in place of the true amateur. Shawn Johnson and Michael Phelps are the real Deal."---
Posted by spoon2456

You''d be surprised - my mom was telling me the other day both Shawn Johnson and Michael Phelps are already millionaires because of their endorsements! :o

There''s also other pros who play in the olympics like the Williams sisters.

What I love about this basketball team is that the 2004 team acted like NBA stars, apparently just showing up thinking they had it in the bag and chartered a yacht to live on during the games and stuff . . . and they lost! So then this year''s team has been touring the world the last three years bonding and learning to appreciate what it means to be olympians representing their country . . . and they won! And they were all like saying that it was the best moment ever - that was cool . . . the price of NBA games, not so cool . . . them sacrificing their time to represent the US though, cool!

PS I hope some of these olympic athletes get asked to go on Dancing With The Stars! :)

Reply to this comment
by trrrorislam3 August 25, 2008 1:37 AM EDT
Freedom has a thousand charms to show, That slaves, howe''er contented, never know.~William Cowper
Reply to this comment
by trrrorislam3 August 25, 2008 1:18 AM EDT
Posted by fjinnw at 09:08 PM : Aug 24, 2008

CHINA never play fair, what can you say,,,

like all communist countries,,,
Reply to this comment
by pollroller1 August 25, 2008 12:14 AM EDT
I like the boxing. One of the boxing analyst said:
"sure there have been injuries and even some deaths in boxing, but none of them that serious.
Reply to this comment
by fjinnw August 25, 2008 12:08 AM EDT
American never play fair, what can you say.
Reply to this comment
by fstop100 August 24, 2008 11:44 PM EDT
Here Kitty Kitty
Reply to this comment
by trrrorislam3 August 24, 2008 11:40 PM EDT
Posted by ibsteve2u at 09:30 AM : Aug 24, 2008

http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2008/08/04/sports/olympics/20080804_MEDALCOUNT_MAP.html
Reply to this comment
by trrrorislam3 August 24, 2008 11:35 PM EDT
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jmf5GTALw6o&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WD5MDa1U2nE&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FbwVhuSUTIU&feature=related
Reply to this comment
by brianbwb-2009 August 24, 2008 8:58 PM EDT
Congratulations are in order to all the athletes, and especially the medal winners.

From the opening ceremony, which will probably not be equalled anytime soon, to the record setting performances by the US, Jamaica, China, and many other countries, to the closing ceremony, this was definitely the greatest sport spectacular in modern times.

It was also nice to see Dwight "Superman" Howard get some gold to show for his amazing talent, because his NBA team doesn''t yet have what it takes to take NBA gold.

Usain Bolt''s braggadocious celebration at the end of the 100 meter race was hard earned, he outclassed the field, and I laughed at his celebration. To anyone who would criticize him, I say run faster than he did, and earn the right to celebrate in your own way.

All those who seek irrelevant, hypocritical and just plain jealous reasons to try to downplay the significance of the event, hey, next time don''t watch. This was about sport competition, and visually incredible celebration, anything else made of it is pure BS.
Reply to this comment
by haoli25 August 24, 2008 6:23 PM EDT
Better test them all for drugs!
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