Skip to main content

The big three - FOXSports.com

Updated Jul 30, 2012 9:40 PM ET

LONDON (AP)

LeBron James, Carmelo Anthony and David Robinson are part of an exclusive Olympic club that may never have another member.

Chinese men's gymnastics team

GOLD STARS

Monday's best Olympic action included a Chinese gymnastics masterclass. VIEW PHOTOS

They're the only U.S. men's basketball players to compete in three Olympics â€" and with a potential age-limit rule change looming, maybe the last ones.

''We're very humbled from the simple fact that we've been selected once again, but we don't take it for granted,'' said James, who said he wasn't aware of the rare threepeat until someone told him. ''This is a very select group of guys who get this opportunity every four years and for us to be a part of it for three consecutive teams is an unbelievable feat.''

A feat that seemed unlikely after James' and Anthony's first experience.

The Olympics couldn't end quickly enough for them in Athens.

James can hardly hide his disgust with his role, or lack thereof, whenever he is asked about 2004, a time when USA Basketball was, as Anthony says, ''just trash.''

Now they refuse to let the Olympic experience stop.

The NBA All-Stars have gone from Olympic outcasts to longtime leaders whose commitment has helped get the Americans back on top and favorites to stay there.

Olympics medals in London

KEEPING TRACK?

Luckily for you, we are. Updated medal count.

Robinson, a Hall of Famer, followed up a bronze medal finish in 1988 by winning in 1992 with the Dream Team and again in 1996.

James and Anthony can follow the same pattern, a remarkable finish â€" if they are done â€" to an ugly start.

''I'd have come full circle,'' Anthony said. ''Just the feeling of having that experience of being at the bottom of it all as far as USA Basketball goes in 2004 and then coming back to redeem ourselves in 2008, I had to come back. LeBron had to come back. We had to do it once again.

''Even right now, in London, that gold medal in '08 was sweet, but this one would be even better.''

James and Anthony were NBA rookies in 2004, playing for a coach in Larry Brown who favors veterans. They still needed to grow as players and grow up as people, and they really didn't belong in Athens in the first place.

But such was the state of USA Basketball that when numerous players pulled out and the Americans had no plan in a place to fill out the roster, they picked a pair of familiar names who didn't yet have the games to match their popularity. James had been the NBA rookie of the year but was just 19. Anthony was 20, a year after leading Syracuse to the NCAA championship as a freshman.

The Americans lost three times in Athens while James and Anthony mostly sat and watched. Anthony in particular was viewed as the poster child for a team that was hated at home and abroad.

Pau Gasol

U.S. VS. THE WORLD

The Americans have dreams of Olympic hoops gold. These guys are the USA's biggest nightmares.

''That experience I've kind of forgotten about, honestly,'' James said. ''I was thrown in as an afterthought after my rookie year and I didn't play much and we wasn't a team. ... Ever since then, being a part of this and part of Team USA has been great for myself â€" and I know Melo feels the same.''

James has become a leader for the Americans, perhaps caring more about that role because leadership was so lacking on that '04 disaster. Anthony has become a potent scorer and an even better teammate, willingly taking a sixth man role this year after starting every game he played from 2006 to '08.

''It's great to see and, yeah, we owe them such a debt of gratitude for committing themselves to be part of this,'' USA Basketball chairman Jerry Colangelo said. ''And that's the thing that touches me so, so much, that players have ... really committed to it because they liked it, felt comfortable, wanted to be a part of it. And those guys were right at the forefront, Carmelo, LeBron.''

The opportunity to play for the U.S. multiple times wasn't available until NBA players were allowed to compete in the Olympics starting in 1992. Even so, most players either never considered or were considered for a second try, certainly not even giving thought to the idea of sacrificing a third summer.

Robinson, a Naval Academy graduate who had great appreciation for representing his country, was an obvious exception. Now with the experience James and Anthony have had, players such as Chris Paul may welcome the chance to keep competing.

''It still has a great feel to it,'' Robinson said while watching a U.S. practice in Barcelona. ''I grew up with the Olympics, so I always thought this was the best, there was no way I would not play in the Olympics. But I think these guys enjoy coming together. This is a tremendous experience for all of them. Looks like everybody's having a lot of fun.

''I would guess, yeah, guys would want to do it as many times as they could.''

LONDON TWEETING

Track all of the athletes' juicy Twitter messages at our Olympics social media hub.

They may not have the chance.

NBA Commissioner David Stern has discussed limiting Olympic participation to players 23 and younger, a proposal that would have to be approved by FIBA, basketball's governing body. Beyond preventing future threepeats, it would have blocked Anthony and James from making up for their Athens misery had it been in place, since they had already turned 24 before the Beijing Games.

Players oppose the idea, with James saying he's against it ''because I'm 27.''

He and Anthony know better than anyone that playing in the Olympics isn't always for the young. They appreciated it more as they became more experienced, and now Anthony, criticized for some immature behavior eight years ago, is lauded by coach Mike Krzyzewski for being as committed as anyone to playing for his country.

''For me to get that call and be one of the 12 guys to represent the USA,'' Anthony said, ''you can't ask for anything better than that.''

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

NBA Rumors: LeBron James' Son Bronny Is on Draft Boards of 'Multiple Teams'

Chris Coduto/Getty Images Bronny James' USC team has struggled this season, but that reportedly hasn't stopped the NBA interest in the son of legend LeBron James. "When I talk to people around the league, he's on the draft boards of multiple teams," Shams Charania of The Athletic and Stadium reported Thursday: Charania noted teams around the league believe he is "further along" on the defensive side of the ball than the offensive side, which makes performances like Wednesday's all the more important. The USC freshman finished with 11 points, six assists and five rebounds while shooting 5-of-11 from the field in one of his best offensive showings of the season in a loss to Arizona. The only game that he scored more points in was a Dec. 30 loss to Oregon State when he finished with 15 on 6-of-11 shooting from the field. Perhaps most importantly, James played a season-high 30 minutes against the Wildcats on Wedn...

What Happened to the Rivalry Between LeBron James and Carmelo Anthony? - Bleacher Report

They were two young stars with unique and special abilities on the basketball court. They had recently played in a high-attention scholastic contest against each other. They were both selected in the same draft. The LeBron James and Carmelo Anthony rivalry was supposed to be the best individual rivalry since Magic and Bird. But while the relationship between Bird and Johnson is dramatized in a new Broadway play , Anthony and James will meet for the 15th time in their careers and do so without much fanfare. James and Anthony first met in a USA developmental camp in 2001 . Much like how Johnson raved about Bird after they played together on a college All-Star team playing in an international tournament, James couldn’t stop talking about Anthony. The two squared off in a high school showcase game the following year that pitted the player regarded as the best senior in the country (Anthony) against the one that was the best junior in the country (James), a game Anthony’s team wo...

‘So You Think You Can Dance’ 18 episode 3 recap: In ‘Auditions: Day Three,’ one hopeful was like ‘the LeBron James of dance’

"So You Think You Can Dance" season 18 ended the first stage of the competition on Monday night, March 18, with the last dance hopefuls looking for a spot in the choreography round. So far the bar has been set pretty high by standout performances from dancers representing a variety of dance styles, shapes, sizes and ability levels. So who stood out among the last crop of contestants? Did the show save the best for last? "We've put 25 people through," said judge Allison Holker at the start of the show. She singled out contemporary dancer Braylon Browner and gymnast Dakayla Wilson as standouts from the first two days of auditions. Comfort Fedoke agreed that Wilson is capable of anything a professional choreographer could throw at her. Maksim Chmerkovskiy was especially impressed by contemporary dancer Easton Magliarditi . But "there's so many other things outside of dance that we're also looking at." More from GoldDerby SEE ...