Jamison Is Learning A Valuable Lesson - 華盛頓巫師 Washington Wizards
By Todd Johnson
at 2006-09-05T22:20
at 2006-09-05T22:20
Table of Contents
Jamison Is Learning A Valuable Lesson
Playing With NBA's Best Gives Him Chance to Help Wizards' Teammates
By Brian Windhorst
Special to The Washington Post
Friday, September 1, 2006; Page E03
SAITAMA, Japan -- Practice has just ended in the small, third floor gymnasium
at Japan Institute of Sport Sciences, Team USA's hideout in Tokyo's northern
suburbs. It's an off day for the highest-profile team in international
basketball's highest-profile tournament, the FIBA World Championship. Which
means it's playtime for some.
LeBron James and Carmelo Anthony, the team's captains along with Dwyane Wade,
quickly become engaged in a shooting game with hints of some extra, monetary
motivation. Others start throwing down inventive dunks or attempting
impossible-angle shots.
Antawn Jamison eschews the action and heads to a chair for a drink and a
precautionary ice bag for his knee, occasionally smiling or giggling at his
teammates' antics. The Washington Wizards' star has a role with the U.S.
national team, one that isn't desirable for many ex-all-stars, but one he
freely and honestly accepts.
At 30, Jamison and Brad Miller are the oldest players on a new-age Dream Team
constructed around the rising draft class of 2003, which includes the three
captains, Kirk Hinrich and Chris Bosh. Jamison is not really part of the
young core USA Basketball is preparing for the 2008 Beijing Olympics. And he
plays the same positions James, Anthony, Bosh, Shane Battier and Elton Brand
have been playing with the team.
After starting the first game of pool play two weeks ago against Puerto Rico,
Jamison has mostly fallen out of Coach Mike Krzyzewski's rotation. As the
Americans prepared to face Greece on Friday morning at 3:30 a.m. EDT in the
world semifinals, he was averaging eight minutes and just 3.7 points per game.
Yet there are no complaints, or even hints of them, coming from Jamison. He's
immersed in the sense of togetherness and the team-before-individual attitude
that has, somewhat surprisingly, become the trademark of what some are
referring to as the "Redeem Team" -- a squad that will restore the luster to
U.S. basketball in international play.
"It has been a great experience, it's been a journey, and all of us are
taking something from it," Jamison said.
Jamison's Wizards teammate Gilbert Arenas saw things differently. At one
point the two-time all-star was considered a safe bet to make the national
team, but he injured his groin and didn't survive the second round of cuts.
This week he told The Washington Post that he did not receive a fair tryout.
Jamison is determined to learn from his unlikely journey. He was part of the
junior national team in 1995 when he was a teenager, back when the United
States dominated the basketball world. But the United States hasn't claimed
the world championship title since 1994 and infamously wheezed to a bronze
medal at the 2004 Olympics in Athens.
Back wearing "USA" on his chest, Jamison is sure he'll bring something from
Japan to the Wizards' locker room. "I think the most important thing I'm
getting out of this is the way these guys approach practices and approach
games and the way they carry themselves," Jamison said. "This is a formula
for being a successful team, and that is something that, in the past, not all
12 or 15 guys in the Wizards' locker room have been doing."
At a dinner the first night the team gathered in Las Vegas before a two-week
training camp last month, Krzyzewski delivered an impassioned speech about
how everyone on the team was going to be treated equally.
"He said that on the first night and everyone bought into it," Wade said.
"From that time on I think we started becoming a team and it has been
working."
It may have seemed cliche, but the U.S. players developed into a close group
and have played unselfishly. Seven players are averaging eight points or more
and five have picked up 10 assists or more.
"My teammates in Washington usually listen to me, but perhaps after this
they'll listen even more," Jamison said. "Being a leader I have to come in at
training camp and emphasize that I was with a guy who finished second in the
MVP voting [James], a guy who led his team to the NBA championship [Wade],
and this is what they do. This is what I'm trying to preach."
For that reason, Jamison finds himself wishing Arenas were still with the
team. "I definitely regret that Gilbert couldn't be here, he is someone who
really could benefit from this," Jamison said. "He still has another eight or
nine years in the league. He got a good glimpse of it, but this is a time
when it goes up another notch."
--
男孩問女孩為什麼不接受他的愛。
女孩淡淡的回應:「一杯滿的水,要怎麼再倒水進去?」
男孩:「我願意等,直到水份全部蒸發為止。」
--
Playing With NBA's Best Gives Him Chance to Help Wizards' Teammates
By Brian Windhorst
Special to The Washington Post
Friday, September 1, 2006; Page E03
SAITAMA, Japan -- Practice has just ended in the small, third floor gymnasium
at Japan Institute of Sport Sciences, Team USA's hideout in Tokyo's northern
suburbs. It's an off day for the highest-profile team in international
basketball's highest-profile tournament, the FIBA World Championship. Which
means it's playtime for some.
LeBron James and Carmelo Anthony, the team's captains along with Dwyane Wade,
quickly become engaged in a shooting game with hints of some extra, monetary
motivation. Others start throwing down inventive dunks or attempting
impossible-angle shots.
Antawn Jamison eschews the action and heads to a chair for a drink and a
precautionary ice bag for his knee, occasionally smiling or giggling at his
teammates' antics. The Washington Wizards' star has a role with the U.S.
national team, one that isn't desirable for many ex-all-stars, but one he
freely and honestly accepts.
At 30, Jamison and Brad Miller are the oldest players on a new-age Dream Team
constructed around the rising draft class of 2003, which includes the three
captains, Kirk Hinrich and Chris Bosh. Jamison is not really part of the
young core USA Basketball is preparing for the 2008 Beijing Olympics. And he
plays the same positions James, Anthony, Bosh, Shane Battier and Elton Brand
have been playing with the team.
After starting the first game of pool play two weeks ago against Puerto Rico,
Jamison has mostly fallen out of Coach Mike Krzyzewski's rotation. As the
Americans prepared to face Greece on Friday morning at 3:30 a.m. EDT in the
world semifinals, he was averaging eight minutes and just 3.7 points per game.
Yet there are no complaints, or even hints of them, coming from Jamison. He's
immersed in the sense of togetherness and the team-before-individual attitude
that has, somewhat surprisingly, become the trademark of what some are
referring to as the "Redeem Team" -- a squad that will restore the luster to
U.S. basketball in international play.
"It has been a great experience, it's been a journey, and all of us are
taking something from it," Jamison said.
Jamison's Wizards teammate Gilbert Arenas saw things differently. At one
point the two-time all-star was considered a safe bet to make the national
team, but he injured his groin and didn't survive the second round of cuts.
This week he told The Washington Post that he did not receive a fair tryout.
Jamison is determined to learn from his unlikely journey. He was part of the
junior national team in 1995 when he was a teenager, back when the United
States dominated the basketball world. But the United States hasn't claimed
the world championship title since 1994 and infamously wheezed to a bronze
medal at the 2004 Olympics in Athens.
Back wearing "USA" on his chest, Jamison is sure he'll bring something from
Japan to the Wizards' locker room. "I think the most important thing I'm
getting out of this is the way these guys approach practices and approach
games and the way they carry themselves," Jamison said. "This is a formula
for being a successful team, and that is something that, in the past, not all
12 or 15 guys in the Wizards' locker room have been doing."
At a dinner the first night the team gathered in Las Vegas before a two-week
training camp last month, Krzyzewski delivered an impassioned speech about
how everyone on the team was going to be treated equally.
"He said that on the first night and everyone bought into it," Wade said.
"From that time on I think we started becoming a team and it has been
working."
It may have seemed cliche, but the U.S. players developed into a close group
and have played unselfishly. Seven players are averaging eight points or more
and five have picked up 10 assists or more.
"My teammates in Washington usually listen to me, but perhaps after this
they'll listen even more," Jamison said. "Being a leader I have to come in at
training camp and emphasize that I was with a guy who finished second in the
MVP voting [James], a guy who led his team to the NBA championship [Wade],
and this is what they do. This is what I'm trying to preach."
For that reason, Jamison finds himself wishing Arenas were still with the
team. "I definitely regret that Gilbert couldn't be here, he is someone who
really could benefit from this," Jamison said. "He still has another eight or
nine years in the league. He got a good glimpse of it, but this is a time
when it goes up another notch."
--
男孩問女孩為什麼不接受他的愛。
女孩淡淡的回應:「一杯滿的水,要怎麼再倒水進去?」
男孩:「我願意等,直到水份全部蒸發為止。」
--
Tags:
NBA
All Comments
By Damian
at 2006-09-07T20:53
at 2006-09-07T20:53
Related Posts
1992選秀回顧
By Donna
at 2006-09-05T22:02
at 2006-09-05T22:02
這期的SLAM XD
By Skylar Davis
at 2006-09-05T18:18
at 2006-09-05T18:18
1993年選秀回顧
By Quintina
at 2006-09-05T09:51
at 2006-09-05T09:51
1997年選秀回顧
By Noah
at 2006-09-05T04:58
at 2006-09-05T04:58
這支搞不好是台灣最強的隊
By Suhail Hany
at 2006-09-05T00:19
at 2006-09-05T00:19