Tuesday 20 September 2011

EuroBasket 2011 Final 2

France


The French opened EuroBasket 2011 trailing 41–40 at halftime against Latvia. The French pulled away early in the third quarter but Janis Blums scored on several three-pointers to cut the lead to two points, at 72–70. Nicolas Batum and Mickaël Gelabale converted their own three-point shots to bring back the French lead to eight. In their game against Israel, Tony Parker scored 21 points in a game in which the Israelis made it close when he was on the bench; with France leading 28–14 in the second quarter and Parker on the bench, Lior Eliyahu and Yotam Halperin brought the Israelis within a single-digit advantage when Parker returned. He scored on a lay-up, but David Blu converted on a three-pointer to give Israel the lead. Parker scored on his own three-pointer, and led a 12–0 run after the break to put the game out of reach for the Israelis. In a game where both teams are undefeated, Tony Parker had a game high 32 points, erasing Germany's lead in the first quarter and creating an unassailable French lead; Dirk Nowitzki and Chris Kaman were benched for much of the second half, but Nowitzki returned to cut the lead to ten. That was the closest the Germans would get as Nowitzki finished with a team high 26 points. With Parker sitting out the next game, Italy started the game strong, leading by a point after Steed Tchicamboud and Gelabale each scored a three-pointer. Danilo Gallinari also made a three-pointer, but the French tied the score off two made free-throws from Batum; Gelabale scored on another three-point shot to wrest the lead back for the French. With the Italians taking a one-point lead off Gallinari's split free-throws, Boris Diaw was fouled on the post. Diaw scored on both free-throws, Andrea Bargnani missed on the other end, and Diaw scored on a lay-up to give the French an 85–82 lead with 36 left. After a time out, Gallinari missed on a three-pointer, and when the French rebounded the ball, the game was out of reach for the Italians. On the preliminary round finale that will decide the group winner, the game went into overtime when Parker missed on a three-pointer at the buzzer. In the extension, Marko Keselj converted his seventh three-pointer of the game to give the Serbs a 96–95 lead. Parker made his two free-throws at the other end, and Dusko Savanovic three-pointer was short, to give France the victory.
The Turks trailed in their opening game of the second round against the French 61–48 with 6:33 remaining in the game when they made a 13–2 run, ended by an Ersan Ilyasova three-point play to cut the lead to two with 45 seconds left. Parker scored on two free-throws to bring the French lead to four with 18 seconds left when Emir Preldzic made an off-balanced three-pointer to cut the deficit to one, with eight seconds left. The Turks fouled Parker with five seconds left, who made both free-throws. Preldzic, off a Turkish time out, was called for a five-second violation, sealing the game for the French. The French next faced the hosts Lithuania, whom they lead at the half by nine points. The Lithuanians then had a 12–2 run at the final six minutes of the third quarter to cut the lead to three. Nando de Colo scored on a three-pointer to give France the two-point lead, and free-throws two minutes later were enough to keep the hosts from retaking the lead. The French suffered their first defeat of the championship when they were beaten by Spain, 96–69. Noah and Parker sat out in the game; French coach Vincent Collet justified their absences, saying that Noah was advised to sit out due to an issue with his calf, and Parker who was tired from the last couple of games.
Facing the Greeks in the quarterfinals, the French trailed 15–4 after a three-pointer by Antonios Fotsis. The French had a 10–2 run the at rest of the quarter to limit the lead to a single possession. The Greeks extended their lead back to seven, but France tied the game with seven unanswered points. Noah, who had missed his first six attempts, dunked to give France a four-point lead. The Greeks retook the lead at the end of the half, with Ioannis Bourousis getting his own dunk to post a halftime score of 39–32. The French erected a deciding 16–5 run, but while Greece was able to cut the lead to two with two minutes left, the French were able to hold off Greece to score a semifinal appearance.


The French next faced an undefeated Russia in the semifinals. The French had a deciding 8–0 run in the third quarter to deny a repeat of the 2007 final, although Andrei Kirilenko led a Russian run to cut the lead to four, but it wasn't enough as Parker and Batum scored on clutch shots at the final minutes. The win clinched France's first appearance in the EuroBasket final




Match details


18 September
21:00 Report Spain 98–85 France Žalgiris Arena, Kaunas
Attendance: 14,500
Scoring by quarter: 25–20, 25–21, 25–21, 23–23
Pts: Navarro 27
Rebs: P. Gasol 10
Asts: Navarro 5 Pts: Parker 26
Rebs: Noah 8
Asts: Diaw 7
Joakim Noah started the game with two dunks to give the French team an 8–7 lead. José Calderón scored five points to give the Spaniards a 17–12 lead, forcing French coach Vincent Collet to call a timeout. The teams scored on several three-point shots but Spain held a 25–20 lead at the end of the first quarter. Spain stretched the lead to nine in the second quarter but two three-pointers from Mickaël Gelabale and Tony Parker kept the game close. However, Serge Ibaka's third block of the night led to a Pau Gasol basket to pad the Spanish lead to ten. Coming off another timeout, Ibaka blocked two more French shots. Later, Rudy Fernández was called for an unsportsmanlike foul against Tony Parker, whom he pulled down to the floor. This led to a French 7–0 run, capped off by a Nicolas Batum three-pointer and a dunk to cut the lead to five. Spain increased their lead to nine, 50–41, at the end of the first half.
While the French were able to score at the start of the third quarter, Spain managed to maintain the lead within the 10-point margin. France scored five points in a row but Juan Carlos Navarro scored to prevent the lead from decreasing. The Spanish team started the fourth quarter with another run, and they retained the title they had won two years ago in Poland.
Navarro, who scored 27 points in the final and 35 points in the semifinal against Macedonia, was named tournament MVP. Pau Gasol achieved a double-double in the final, scoring 17 points and grabbing 10 rebounds, while Calderón scored 17 points, Fernández had 14, and Gasol's younger brother Marc had 11. Spain's successful title defense was the first since Yugoslavia's 1997 title.
After the game, Prime Minister of Spain Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero congratulated the team, remarking that "discounting the national football team which has just started its brilliant run, I think there is no other team in Spanish sport history that has shone as long as you have.


All about: EuroBasket 2011 Final

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