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Kawhi Leonard's selection to U.S. Olympic basketball team 'a no-brainer'; so why the wait?

Mark Zeigler, The San Diego Union-Tribune on

Published in Olympics

Leonard and Philadelphia center Joel Embiid are the only two members of the roster without previous international experience. Leonard has expressed interest in playing at an Olympics going back a decade, but the birth of his first child (2016) and a knee injury (2021) derailed those plans.

He's 32 now and appeared in 68 games this season, his most since 2016-17 (although he missed the final eight of the regular season with inflammation in his knee and is iffy for Game 1 of their playoff series against Dallas). This might be his last chance.

"Although Kawhi has not played in FIBA (international tournaments), he's played in big games, he's had in big moments, he's won championships," Hill said. "That kind of experience is valuable. And then he's physical, he has a strength about him, he can defend, he's played with other great players so he can co-exist with others. He just wants to play and wants to win.

"I don't want to say he's a no-brainer, but he's a no-brainer."

It makes for a busy summer for Leonard — especially if the Clippers make a deep playoff run into June.

 

The team begins training camp on July 6 in Las Vegas and has its first exhibition game four days later there against Canada. Then it's off to Abu Dhabi for two games and London for two more before opening the 12-team Olympic tournament on July 28 against Serbia in Lille, France — the city 130 miles north of Paris that is hosting the early rounds.

The rest of the roster: Embiid, Bam Adebayo (Miami), Devin Booker (Phoenix), Stephen Curry (Golden State), Anthony Davis (Lakers), Kevin Durant (Phoenix), Anthony Edwards (Minnesota), Tyrese Haliburton (Indiana), Jrue Holiday (Boston), LeBron James (Lakers) and Jayson Tatum (Boston).

"It's not always the best players, per se, but the best fit," Hill told journalists Wednesday in New York. "There's a difference between the FIBA game and the NBA game. A lot of thought went into that.

"It's blending personalities together. It's like a puzzle, and you're trying to put the puzzle together. It's an interesting and, certainly at times, exhausting exercise but a very fulfilling one nonetheless. It's more than: 'OK, he's the best, he's the best, let's do it.'"


©2024 The San Diego Union-Tribune. Visit sandiegouniontribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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