BILBAO, Spain – They set out in different directions, with every reason to believe they are headed for the same destination.
Spain and the United States, who have met in the last two Olympic gold-medal games, have been the class of the Basketball World Cup. A matchup that was an expectation coming into the tournament seems closer to a guarantee when watching them now.
Both went 5-0 and hardly were challenged in group play, Spain powering past what was considered a difficult pool and the U.S. sweeping through the weakest. They look so good that it’s hard to envision anyone beating one of them except the other.
“They are playing well, but we can’t think about games that could come in the future,” Spain guard Ricky Rubio of the Minnesota Timberwolves said. “We have to concentrate on the game at hand.”
Besides, they still are a long way from seeing each other – on the calendar and the map.
The round of 16 will open Saturday with a new format that has the teams divided between two sites. The U.S. is back in Barcelona, where the Dream Team rolled to Olympic gold and a place in history, while Spain awaited a champion’s welcome in its capital of Madrid.
If the Americans reach the final, they then would travel to Madrid, perhaps with Spain waiting for them. If so, only then would U.S. head coach Mike Krzyzewski start watching the Spanish.
He’s not doing it yet, same as he doesn’t check in on some team Duke might not play in the NCAA Tournament until the matchup is secured.
“Because you may never play those teams,” Krzyzewski said. “We’re not a fan, we’re coaches, and if I was a fan I would watch every game. I’m a coach, and I watch my next opponent and the team I’m responsible for. I’ve done that for 40 years, so we’ve been pretty successful doing it that way.”
The U.S. will play Mexico on Saturday. Slovenia will face the Dominican Republic in the other game in Barcelona, while Lithuania will play New Zealand and Turkey will play Australia on Sunday.
The Madrid bracket will open Saturday with Senegal-Spain and Croatia-France. On Sunday, Greece will play Serbia, and South American rivals Argentina and Brazil will meet.
Greece also was unbeaten in the group stage, while Lithuania won a tiebreaker over Slovenia to win Group D after both went 4-1.
Any of them potentially could wreck a Spain-U.S. final Sept. 14, which is why Krzyzewski’s players repeatedly have said they’re not thinking about the team that the Americans edged in the 2008 and 2012 Olympic finals.
“I don’t pay attention to Spain,” U.S. forward Kenneth Faried said this week.
But those who do see a team that easily handled medal contender Brazil and European champion France in the first round, with chemistry from playing years together and an international stalwart in Chicago Bulls forward Pau Gasol, the MVP of Spain’s 2006 world title run who is having another strong tournament.
“Spain is a very, very good team. They’re very good,” said Ukraine head coach Mike Fratello, whose team lost to the U.S. on Thursday. “They’re big, they’ve played together for so long, the majority of the team, and they do things that you have to do. They pass well, they’re skilled. To play the U.S., you have to be skilled, otherwise you have too many turnovers from not being able to pass and catch, small things, they don’t do that.
“They have size to go on the glass, and I’m sure in their minds, playing in their home country, they feel they have a very, very good chance to play against them.”
Fratello’s team was one of three in the group stage that hung with the Americans for more than a quarter, which rarely happens against truly dominant U.S. teams. This one isn’t, partly because it’s so young, a group whose average age of about 24 years old makes it the Americans’ youngest since pros were first used in the 1992 Olympics.
Yet Fratello, a former NBA coach and current TV analyst, thinks the Americans will start playing better when better teams are in front of them.
“But don’t count the U.S. out, because they have resiliency, they have toughness about them, they have a great coaching staff, and when they get to a point where they’re playing teams that they know are a major challenge, they’re going to raise their game a little bit and get after it,” Fratello said.
Associated Press writer Joseph Wilson in Granada, Spain, contributed to this report.