Dillon Brooks efficient again as Canada blasts Lebanon at World Cup

Canada routed Lebanon in Sunday’s FIBA World Cup action, and the Canadians were +32 in the 20-plus minutes that #Rockets forward Dillon Brooks was on the floor.

Canada continues to look the part of a legitimate contender at the 2023 FIBA Basketball World Cup, and versatile Houston Rockets forward Dillon Brooks continues to be one of the big reasons.

Brooks is one of a handful of established NBA players on Canada’s roster, joining Oklahoma City’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander; New York’s RJ Barrett; Utah’s Kelly Olynyk; Minnesota’s Nickeil Alexander-Walker; and Dallas’ Dwight Powell.

On Sunday in Jakarta, Indonesia, none of those big names played major minutes as Canada cruised, 128-73 (box score). Two days after crushing France in an unexpected blowout, Canada built on that momentum and didn’t take a lesser opponent for granted.

One reason was Brooks, who is setting a tone with tenacious wing defense, energy and leadership. In just over 20 minutes played, Brooks had 11 points, 3 assists, and 2 steals on 4-of-5 shooting (80%), including a perfect 2-of-2 on 3-pointers. Most notably, in those limited minutes, Canada was plus-32 with Brooks on the floor.

Here’s a look at some of Brooks’ highlights, along with reaction to his play from media members and fans watching the game.

Global Rating: The best players of the 2023 World Cup

August and September are for hoops, at least in FIBA competitions. The World Cup is in full swing, showcasing a wealth of talent. As usual, we’re using Global Rating to identify the tournament’s top players.

August and September are for hoops, at least in FIBA competitions. The World Cup is in full swing, showcasing a wealth of talent. As usual, we’re using Global Rating to identify the tournament’s top players.

Dillon Brooks helps lead Canada to epic World Cup blowout of France

In Canada’s unexpected World Cup blowout over France, the Canadians were +33 in the 26 minutes played by #Rockets forward Dillon Brooks. “We put the world on notice,” Brooks says.

On paper, Friday’s 2023 FIBA Basketball World Cup opener between Canada and France was thought to be a relatively even matchup.

Each team featured a handful of current NBA players. The Canadians featured Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Dillon Brooks, Luguentz Dort, Kelly Olynyk and RJ Barrett. French standouts included Rudy Gobert, Evan Fournier and Nicolas Batum.

On the court, it turned out to be a mismatch. Canada won in a shocking blowout, 95-65 (box score).

One leading reason was Brooks, who signed with the Houston Rockets this offseason. In 26 minutes, Canada’s energetic defensive ace had 12 points and 4 rebounds on 5-of-6 shooting (83.3%), including 1-of-2 on 3-pointers (50%). Most impressively, Canada was plus-33 in those minutes, ranking No. 2 among all players.

“We started off slowly, and I tried to create some energy early on,” Brooks told Sportsnet’s Arash Madani. “I told guys to stick with it.”

“We actually look at every single game as if it’s Game 7 in the NBA,” Brooks said to reporters postgame (via Eurohoops.net). “We put the world on notice. This ain’t no joke; we ain’t playing.”

Read on for further quotes and highlights from Brooks’ showing.

Why you can’t intentionally score a basket on your own hoop in FIBA

Note this does not preclude accidental tip-ins and the like — the basket has to be an accidental one (and no, we aren’t exactly sure how they know the difference either).

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Earlier today we explained how one of the more obscure rules in the NBA’s rule book came to be known through the antics of Hall of Fame Boston Celtics small forward Paul Pierce.

It is not just the NBA that has some very unusual rules for the sport of basketball, however.

On the international level, FIBA also has some surprising rules. One states a team is not allowed to intentionally score on their own basket. This does not preclude accidental tip-ins and the like (and no, we aren’t exactly sure how they know the difference either).

To find out for yourself what led to the creation and implementation of this obscure rule, take a look at the clip embedded below for the story behind it and other weird sports rules from the folks at “Secret Base.”

Listen to the “Celtics Lab” podcast on:

Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3zBKQY6

Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3GfUPFi

YouTube: https://bit.ly/3F9DvjQ

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Boston’s Kristaps Porzingis opens up about his injury, World Cup

“I have an idea where the injury occurred,” explained Porzingis.

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Star Boston Celtics big man Kristaps Porzingis recently chose to sit out for his Latvian National Team in the 2023 FIBA World Cup due to a bout of plantar fasciitis and in a recent interview with Sporta Studija via Eurohoops, Porzingis shed some light on how the situation came about.

“I have an idea where the injury occurred,” explained Porzingis. “But an injury develops during a career and then jumps onto the field. During the training process, it started to hurt. There has never been anything like it. I felt that there were no options to achieve the shape I wanted.”

“There was no logic in trying to break my feet,” added the Boston bog man, alluding to his choice not to push his luck by playing for Latvia. Still, Porzingis plans to remain with his national team while they play in the ’23 World Cup.

“I said being around is important, even though I’m not playing,” he explained. “They supported my decision.”

“Also, there’s a long season ahead. It’s important for me to spend time with my teammates, with my family, and Boston respected my decision.”

Listen to the “Celtics Lab” podcast on:

Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3zBKQY6

Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3GfUPFi

YouTube: https://bit.ly/3F9DvjQ

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Jock Landale turns attention to Rockets after injuring ankle in international play

“My MRI results are back, and I’ll be good as gold,” #Rockets center Jock Landale says of his recent ankle injury. “Nothing too serious, just gonna need a bit of time on this one.”

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Approximately six weeks before 2023-24 training camp opens, newly signed Houston Rockets center Jock Landale injured his left ankle while playing for Australia’s 2023 FIBA World Cup team.

The injury occurred in last Thursday’s World Cup warmup game against South Sudan in Melbourne. According to media reports, Landale turned his left ankle after landing on an opposing player’s foot. He immediately clutched his ankle in pain and hobbled straight to the locker room, unable to put significant pressure on his left ankle.

Since then, Landale has undergone an MRI, and the 27-year-old said it showed “nothing too serious.” His comments (via Instagram):

Was fun while it lasted, but that’s sport! Looking forward to supporting the Australian Boomers from afar. The fellas have put in too much work to not take this the distance. My focus is shifting to preparing for a massive season with the Houston Rockets.

My MRI results are back, and I’ll be good as gold. Nothing too serious, just gonna need a bit of time on this one. See you in a Rockets’ jersey soon, and a Boomers’ one come Paris 2024 (Olympics).

At 6 feet, 11 inches and 255 pounds, Landale averaged 6.6 points (52.8% FG) and 4.1 rebounds in 14.2 minutes last season. He’s well regarded for his physical play on offense and defense, as well as for his hustle.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CwE_XJgREIV/

Six weeks is usually enough time for a Grade 1 or Grade 2 ankle sprain to heal, though Landale didn’t share specifics in his update. Even if he’s cleared by Houston’s medical staff, the Rockets may still opt to build up Landale’s conditioning at a slower pace, since he’s likely to be coming off an extended period without running.

Should Landale not be fully available once NBA training camps open, Houston’s other options behind starter Alperen Sengun could involve veteran Jeff Green or playing Jabari Smith Jr. more minutes at center, as he did in the recently completed 2023 summer league.

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The best basketball player in the history of each country

With the World Cup finally here, what better occasion to delve deep into the history of all the countries ever to qualify for the event and choose the pre-eminent star for each nation? (Additionally, we’ve included somewhat notable basketball …

With the World Cup finally here, what better occasion to delve deep into the history of all the countries ever to qualify for the event and choose the pre-eminent star for each nation? (Additionally, we’ve included somewhat notable basketball countries with at least one representative on your beloved HoopsHype international GOATs list).

From heavyweights like USA and France to minnows like Cape Verde and Montenegro, we cover it all.

As always, we weigh in NBA accomplishments far more than FIBA ones when rating players, so prepare for some surprises.

The Bahamas had a super fun celebration after winning an Olympic basketball qualifying tournament

This was HISTORIC for the Bahamas.

Although the Bahamas did not qualify for the FIBA World Cup, the national team just went on a wildly impressive stretch of play.

The team played four games in a FIBA Olympic Pre-Qualifying Tournament over the course of the last week. Despite a low world ranking (56) in FIBA, they won four games in a row, including two shocking wins over Argentina (ranked fourth in the world) while playing at Estadio Ciudad in Santiago del Estero, Argentina

By winning this tournament, the Bahamian national team can make a bid for the 2024 Olympics in France at the FIBA ​​Olympic Qualifying Tournaments next year.

The Bahamian national basketball team has never competed in the Olympics, so this was obviously exciting and the joy was palpable:

The Bahamas were led by Phoenix Suns teammates Deandre Ayton (15.5 ppg, 13.8 rpg and 1.3 spg) and Eric Gordon (20.3 ppg, 2.0 rpg, 2.3 apg, 1.3 spg). Gordon finished with 27 points while shooting 6-of-7 on 3-pointers.

Pacers wing Buddy Hield (19.8 ppg, 4.8 rpg, 3.3 apg, 2.3 spg) also played a massive role during the four-game tournament as well.

This was a huge step in the right direction for the Bahamas, coached by Warriors assistant Chris DeMarco. We wish we could see how they would fare in the upcoming FIBA World Cup!

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International basketball is booming. But how did we get here?

In the hallways of the Detroit Pistons’ arena years ago, two-time NBA champion Earl Cureton ran into someone he vaguely remembered. It was during a game in the early 2000s. And the man he encountered was especially pleased to see him. But Cureton , …

In the hallways of the Detroit Pistons’ arena years ago, two-time NBA champion Earl Cureton ran into someone he vaguely remembered. It was during a game in the early 2000s. And the man he encountered was especially pleased to see him. But Cureton, now in his late 40s, scratched his head. He needed a minute to remember where he knew this tall, long-haired fella from.

“He was like, ‘I can’t believe you guys are still hanging around!’” Cureton said, recalling the moment. “Like, ‘You look good!’”  

The two talked in the stadium’s catacombs as Cureton frantically engaged his recall. Who was this guy with the hair brushed behind his ears?  

But that’s when Cureton remembered: Buenos Aires!

The man was Luis Scola, who by then was a hero with Argentina basketball after winning an Olympic gold medal with the team in 2004, the same year the American team shocked the world, finishing third – an unthinkable turn of events. Cureton had played with Scola some 10 years prior when the wiry South American was just 16-years-old, before the Olympics and his NBA career with teams like the Houston Rockets.

Playing abroad as a way to extend his own career in the mid-90s, Cureton helped teach basketball to Scola and his burgeoning team in Argentina. By then the globe had grown gaga for the game, thanks to the  1992 Dream Team. But, as Cureton knows, that wasn’t always the case. It took time and effort to teach the flow of basketball overseas.

Today, when considering the globalization of basketball, the numbers are staggering. Last season, for the second time in a row, the NBA’s top-three MVP candidates were international players: Giannis Antetokounmpo (Greece), Joel Embiid (Cameroon) and Nikola Jokic (Serbia) – with Jokic taking home the coveted award. The Top 5 scorers were all from different countries, too.

To begin 2022-2023, 120 international players (about ¼ of the NBA) from 41 countries filled league rosters. Compared to 1980 when only 1.7% of the league was foreign-born. But how exactly did basketball get to this position?

It starts, as many things in basketball history do, with Spencer Haywood.

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If you ask Haywood now, he calls the year he spent in Italy his “period of exile.” In 1980, a dozen seasons before the Dream Team, the five-time NBA All-Star and former ABA MVP had concluded what he calls a “debacle” of a season. It was one in which his team, the Los Angeles Lakers, won the NBA championship. But Haywood had already been voted off the squad by then after he’d fallen asleep in practice due to substance abuse issues.

To make those matters worse, Haywood wasn’t exactly a darling of the league. To start his career, Haywood, who is now working on a feature-length biopic, had taken the NBA to the Supreme Court over the league’s age limit for players to enter the draft. And, well, he won, beating the NBA in court. As such, he wasn’t exactly endearing himself to the top brass.

After his issues in L.A. in the 1980 season, the 31-year-old faced a choice: if Haywood wanted to continue to play professional basketball (and collect the money remaining on his Lakers contract), he would have to do so overseas. It was a Napoleon-like exile. But as with the French ruler, the first punishment didn’t prove deadly. In fact, in Haywood’s case, heading to Venice for a year proved to be both a salve and a growth point for basketball itself. A necessary, symbiotic moment of cross-pollination.

“What was supposed to have been a bad thing,” said Haywood, “instead opened up the doors. And eyes for [more] European players.”

*

The Silver City, Mississippi-born Haywood had been a teenage hero for American basketball in the 1968 Olympic Games. He’d carried the team to gold and, as such, had a positive reputation internationally. Though his stock was down in America after the “debacle” with the Lakers, fans overseas who caught a glimpse of his American athleticism embraced Haywood through and through. In Venice, people flocked to his games, which were also broadcast nationally for all to see. Haywood dominated for his team, Venezia, averaging more than 25 points and 20 rebounds.

Haywood, who was married then to the fashion model, Iman, says he had originally wanted to stay in the NBA, perhaps to play for the expansion Dallas Mavericks. But his time in Italy as one of the first American stars to play overseas ended up being a boon to him and international basketball. Iman even took gigs around Europe to be closer to her husband.

When the year was up, Haywood, who wanted to be near his mother and daughter in the U.S., moved back home with his wife and played two seasons with the Washington Bullets. But in his wake, others followed across the Atlantic Ocean, including stars like former NBA MVP Bob McAdoo to role players like the NBA champion Cureton.

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It was the summer of 1983 and Cureton had just won a championship with the Philadelphia 76ers. But now he was suddenly without a contract. A bench player, Cureton feared he wouldn’t earn a new deal in the league thanks to its outdated “right of first refusal” clause, which said a team that a free agent was set to leave was owned compensation for said player. Cureton thought no one would give up value and pay him. So, now spending time in Italy was on his mind. If he left for overseas play, the right of first refusal clause would no longer apply. It was a loophole and a good one, he thought.

So, Cureton signed a deal to play with a squad in Pesaro, Italy. At the time, few Americans still in their primes went that route. Yet, it was in the Boot-shaped country playing later for a team in Milan where Cureton met point guard and future NBA coach, Mike D’Antoni, now a life-long friend. He also met future basketball Hall of Famer Dino Meneghin. The team’s coach, Dan Peterson, was an American, too. Though his first stint in Italy lasted only a few months (the Detroit Pistons called with a contract a few weeks into the season), Cureton, who went on to play in a handful of countries in his two-decade career, saw the impact of NBA veterans abroad almost immediately.

“American players created the atmosphere over there,” Cureton says today. “We made them better players. Bringing American coaches in helped to teach the game, too.”

While the NBA now has just one franchise outside the U.S. (the Toronto Raptors), there is talk of expansion to Mexico City. These days, the league is thriving, and its reach is robust, with programming hitting 214 countries and territories in more than 50 languages. The sport is accessible, easy for young people of all backgrounds to pick up. Unlike baseball and football, there is no expensive equipment. Today, the NBA product enjoys a big footprint in China and is expanding in India and Africa. The league also holds camps in countries like the Philippines with retired stars like Muggsy Bogues. And last summer, all eyes were on the Eurobasket tournament, which featured NBA All-Stars Jokic, Lauri Markkanen and Luka Doncic.

“The NBA is a global league,” says senior vice president, head of international basketball development, Troy Justice. “The level of international talent is at an all-time high.”

*

With Jokic winning the MVP Award last year, the 2022-2023 season marked the fifth consecutive campaign in which an international player took home the coveted trophy. Indeed, the NBA has evolved since the 1980s when foreign players like Detlef Schrempf, Sarunas Marciulionis and Manute Bol were outliers.  

 But instead of flouting the international influence back then, the NBA fostered it. Doubled-down on it. And, somewhat more recently in the 2000s, teams like the San Antonio Spurs took it even further, bringing in guys like Parker and Manu Ginobili. Now, international scouting is a part of every team’s philosophy, with each squad employing at least several foreign-born players. Not to mention the recent No. 1 pick in the NBA draft was Frenchman Victor Wembanyama.

For Haywood, who helped spark the revolution nearly 50 years ago, his time overseas was restorative personally and telling professionally. The fans abroad showed him support during some of his darkest days. And in turn, the talented Haywood gave them the best basketball they’d ever seen in their lives. It was – and remains today – a wonderful symbiotic relationship.

“I was in so much pain from the previous year,” said a reflective Haywood. “The beautiful thing about being in Italy, they just loved [me]. All of the anger, all of the hate, the mistreatment that I felt – they just loved it all out of me. I couldn’t carry it with me anymore.”