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If you’re a fan of Team USA basketball, you might have reason to worry about the next Olympics.That reason is none other than Spain, which cruised to the European championship this past weekend, placing an exclamation point on its dominance with a 98-85 victory over France in the title game.When it comes to Spain, you already know many of the names: Pau Gasol of the Lakers, brother Marc Gasol of the Grizzlies, Ricky Rubio of the Timberwolves, Jose Calderon of the Raptors, and Rudy Fernandez of the Mavericks. The Spaniards also added Serge Ibaka for the most recent tournament, and received a Jordan-esque performance from team captain Juan Carlos Navarro, formerly of the Grizzlies.To give you an idea of Spain’s success, it manhandled a French team that included Tony Parker (San Antonio), Joakim Noah (Chicago), Nicolas Batum (Portland) and Boris Diaw (Charlotte).Even France coach Vincent Collet could do little more than look down and shake his head after the loss.“No doubt (Spain) was the best team,'“ Collet said. '“We tried, and for a long time we were not far, but not very close, either. Every time we got close they found a solution. ... When you lose to a better team, there is not much to say.”Granted, Team USA is more or less a Who’s Who of NBA All-Stars, with the likes of LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Carmelo Anthony leading the way. And despite all the big names, the Americans played unselfishly, moving the ball on offense and bending their knees and shuffling their feet on defense in the previous Olympics.But unlike Spain, the U.S. doesn’t have the benefit of playing together every summer and building confidence through tourneys like the biggies in Europe.Plus, the addition of Ibaka to a frontcourt that already consisted of the Gasol brothers makes Spain considerably more fearsome than the last time the teams met in the Olympics — a 118-107 Team USA win in the Gold Medal game back in 2008. (The teams did not play during the 2010 FIBA World Championships.)Picasso of the HardwoodMore than anything, though, has been the play of Navarro. He was more than the biggest threat in every game Spain played — he was an international basketball work of art.Just listen to Spanish national team coach Sergio Scariolo.“(Navarro is) like a masterpiece you see in Louvre or Prado. He is one of the best artists, he has his own inspiration,” Scariolo said after Spain‘s semifinal win. “He is out of this planet.”Pretty high praise for a guard who couldn’t really cut it in the NBA and is playing alongside some much more celebrated teammates. But we see this sort of stuff in Olympic basketball all the time

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