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USA Basketball forged by golden partnership

USA Basketball forged by ‘lunch box’ guys
The partnership of coach Mike Krzyzewski, left, and Jerry Colangelo, right, took hold in the wake of the “Abomination in Athens,” when a U.S. team coached by Larry Brown and packed with high-maintenance, highlight-reel guys who slept through wake-up calls couldn’t rouse themselves in time for the medal round. They left the 2004 Summer Games with a consolation prize of bronze and the program’s reputation in tatters. Colangelo, a former NBA and MLB executive and once a fine athlete in his own right, agreed to pick up the pieces on one condition: “I get to make all the rules.”

CHICAGO – Nearly every time coach Mike Krzyzewski and USA Basketball boss Jerry Colangelo stage a reunion in their hometown, there’s plenty of backslapping, a trophy gleaming in the background and the only thing they have to protect is their cocktails. This time around, it’s about safeguarding the Olympic legacy the two built.

Their partnership took hold in the wake of the “Abomination in Athens,” when a U.S. team coached by Larry Brown and packed with high-maintenance, highlight-reel guys who slept through wake-up calls couldn’t rouse themselves in time for the medal round. They left the 2004 Summer Games with a consolation prize of bronze and the program’s reputation in tatters.

Colangelo, a former NBA and MLB executive and once a fine athlete in his own right, agreed to pick up the pieces on one condition: “I get to make all the rules.”

Instead of submitting the names of the players he wanted to a selection committee, Colangelo picked his own. Instead of contacting their agents to set up meetings, he called some directly and collared others as they clambered off the team bus at NBA arenas across the country. No one told him no.

Once he shaped a roster that reflected his philosophy – that the best teams are made up of complementary parts instead of just the best ones available – there was only one guy Colangelo wanted to coach them.

“We’re both Chicago guys through and through,” Colangelo said Thursday, while the Team USA practiced for Friday’s exhibition here against Venezuela. “A lot of the bond we felt right off the bat had to do with the lunch-bucket beginnings both of us had.”

Gold medals at Beijing and London followed in their wake, and the mix of players buzzing around Krzyzewski at practice – bona fide NBA stars like Kevin Durant and others like Kyle Lowry and DeAndre Jordan, who bring specific skill-sets to the floor – suggest their approach hasn’t changed. The only surprise about this edition is Colangelo found yet another way to get Coach K to sign on for another tour of duty.

“There’s usually lots of wine involved, but it hasn’t really been that tough,” Colangelo said, laughing.

Krzyzewski, whose day job is coaching Duke, chuckles at the memory. There’s so little daylight between the two men about basketball and how it’s played that the few disagreements usually surface only at mealtime.

“Yeah, we’re both Chicago guys, but I’m Polish and he’s Italian,” Krzyzewski said. “He’s always reminding that they have better restaurants and more of them.”

That kind of continuity at the top of the program sets the tone, but it doesn’t explain all the success. Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim, who’s been along for the ride as an assistant, describes both men as “strong-willed” and “problem-solvers,” but also “guys who are smart and secure enough to welcome input from the team, top to bottom.”

“You’ll never hear them say this is ‘their program,” Boeheim added. “It’s everybody’s program. They make that clear from the outset. Guys buy in faster and stronger when they feel an ownership stake. They feel respected and listened to. ... If you want to know the ‘secret,’ it’s that. They share the credit and the responsibility.”

Yet by the time practice wrapped up and the talk turned to dinner, one voice counted more than all the rest.

“We’re going for Italian,” said Colangelo, smiling. “I know a great place downtown.”



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