The 2008 Summer Olympics have begun. The US Men's Basketball Team is being referred to as "The Redeem Team," looking to make up for recent subpar finishes in international play, including a Bronze-medal performance in 2004. Bad memories from those Olympic basketball games include seeing Head Coach Larry Brown benching the young players (including LeBron James) and watching Zydrunas Ilgauskas's best man, Sarunas Jasikevicius, making a mockery of Stephon Marbury's defense. This time around, James is no longer a benchwarmer. He has guaranteed that the US will win the Gold medal. The quest for Olympic Gold starts Sunday versus Yao Ming, Yi Jianlian, and host China. While the US is favored to win the game, they need to make sure to match the intensity and emotion of their opponents. Overall, this should be a pretty entertaining Men's Basketball tournament.
In accordance with the release of the new NBA 2K11 basketball video game, legendary Chicago Bulls shooting guard Michael Jordan has returned to the media's spotlight. That is, Michael Jordan has caught the sports world's attention by saying that today's NBA rules would have allowed him to score 100 points in a game. No one is questioning Michael Jordan's uncanny ability to make plays, create shots, and score points. Michael Jordan is right in saying that, overall, today's rules favor offensive players, particularly guards. Much less contact is allowed in defensive play; some of what was legal when Jordan played (such as forearms and handchecking) is now deemed personal foul-worthy. Furthermore, with a 30-team league, talent is spread out more than it used to be, and players--while on average are more athletic today--come into the league much less fundamentally sound. However, Michael Jordan has forgotten about the re-emergence of zone defense in the NBA. True,