[剪報] 維京群島的夢幻隊
靠,台灣1/10的人口,籃球教練的煩惱層級卻差這麼多....
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Without an anchor, islanders are adrift
By Bob Ryan, Globe Columnist, 8/24/2003
SAN JUAN -- Tevester Anderson can dream, can't he?
In a better world he'd have Raja Bell and David Vanterpool at
forward. He'd have Jabari Brown banging people around at big
forward. And, of course, he'd have that Duncan guy in the middle.
"We could finish second here," he smiles.
Second place, or even third, will get you to Athens. That's
why we're here. And while Tevester Anderson is not the only
coach at the Tournament of the Americas lamenting the absence
of a star player or two, his is clearly the saddest tale of
woe. C'mon. How could you not root for the teeny United States
Virgin Islands?
The team Anderson's got is not disgraceful. But it entered
yesterday afternoon's tussle with the United States as a winless
team, and that situation wasn't going to change. The Virgin
Islands isn't going to Athens. When the preliminary round is
completed tomorrow it will be making the short trip home.
Bell alone would have made a difference Friday night, when the
Virgin Islands lost to a Dominican Republic team it has beaten
twice in recent international competition. But the 6-foot-5-inch
Bell isn't playing for his national team because he is an unsigned
NBA free agent who could not take the risk of playing here without
any kind of contract and insurance protection. "Totally
understandable," says the classy Anderson, an American with an
extensive collegiate background (he's the new head coach at
Jackson State after being the head man at Murray State and a noted
recruiting assistant at the likes of Auburn and Georgia) who has
been in charge of the Virgin Islands program since 1985.
Bell wants to suit up, so much so that he's been on the cellphone
constantly keeping tabs on the team's progress. If a deal were to
come through, he'd be on the next plane. But it would already be
too late.
Vanterpool is another midsize guy who is good enough to have been
in some NBA camps and who has just signed to play in Italy. Why
that precludes him from being here is another matter. But in this
murky world of international basketball there is always "another
matter." Brown is one such matter. The 6-9 kid who plays for Kelvin
Sampson at Oklahoma, and who would provide a useful big body for
Anderson, is also AWOL, or however you'd like to phrase it. Suffice
it to say there would be a uniform ready for him if he showed up.
Tim Duncan is the greatest "What-If?" of all. But there really is
nothing to talk about, either in terms of the Virgin Islands team
in general or Anderson's personal connection with the team in
particular. Duncan wouldn't be allowed to play for his home team
even if he wanted to (and it's safe to say he does), while Anderson,
despite being the national coach for 18 years, never got to coach
the greatest Virgin Islands athlete of them all.
Blame it on Hugo.
That would be Hurricane Hugo, which was the Storm of Storms in
20th-century Virgin Islands history.
When the hurricane devastated the Virgin Islands in 1989, Duncan
was 13 years old, and more interested in swimming than basketball.
Hugo wrecked the only Olympic-size swimming pool in the islands,
and Duncan switched to basketball. But Hugo's effect was far-reaching.
As a result of the storm, the entire national basketball program was
suspended for more than five years. Anderson had no team to coach.
And it was during that period that Duncan became a basketball player.
The St. Croix-born Duncan is an American citizen, of course, and
when he accepted a spot on the 1994 American Goodwill Games team
he had made a permanent career choice in the eyes of FIBA, the
international basketball governing body. According to the rules,
you can only align yourself with one international team per lifetime,
and never mind that at the time the Virgin Islands didn't even have
a team. It's a rational rule. You can imagine what kind of chicanery
might take place otherwise.
But it has brought about an unhappy situation for Duncan, who made
an 11th-hour decision not to play. Though he has never performed
internationally for the Virgin Islands, he is a proud Virgin
Islander, and is a huge celebrity back home. He was going to be
playing against friends. There was no reason for USA coach Larry
Brown not to honor Duncan's wishes, because if he needed Tim Duncan
in order to subdue the Virgin Islands, the Americans are in desperate
trouble.
The USA coaching staff understands completely what Tim Duncan could
do for any team here. Assistant coach Gregg Popovich is Duncan's
coach in San Antonio, and after winning two championships with Duncan,
he doesn't need to be educated in the matter. Neither does Brown.
"You can see what Steve Nash has done for Canada," Brown says. "So
imagine what Tim Duncan could do for a team. He is a Larry Bird at
7-1 in certain ways. He makes everybody better. Any team here with
Tim Duncan would finish second."
Put him on Argentina and it might win. It might win with the team it
already has, frankly.
A situation such as the USA's is an abstract to Anderson, who only
got to work with his team for seven days before coming to San Juan.
The reason? Money. There wasn't any.
"We couldn't bring guys in before the last minute because we didn't
have the money," Anderson explains. "What we need more than anything
else is a sponsor."
The coach tries not to think of Duncan too much, but how can he not?
There really is enough residual basketball talent in the Virgin
Islands to complement Duncan and make his team a nice international
entry. The Olympics would be a very attainable goal.
"Blame it on Hugo," Anderson sighs.
--
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