USA Vs. Serbia Live: Updates, Highlights From Olympic Men’s Basketball Game

Good evening and welcome into NESN.com’s coverage of Team USA basketball’s preliminary round Group A matchup versus Serbia.

We’ll have you covered with live scoring updates, plus stats, highlights and analysis throughout the game, so be sure to stay tuned. Tipoff is scheduled for 6 p.m. ET.

FOURTH QUARTER

3:13 — Jokic hits a trey and it remains a five-point deficit.

USA 90, Serbia 85.

The crowd at this game is rooting hard for Serbia, and why not? Underdogs are fun, and this game is very entertaining.

4:30 — Cousins just blocked a layup that somehow found its way into the hoop anyway. That’s how this game is going. Serbia playing with house money and getting a bit of luck, too.

USA 87, Serbia 82.

5:19 — Durant takes his third shot of the game 35 minutes into it. He misses this trey, though, and the U.S. lead stays at six.

6:19 — Aaaand Raduljica fouls out 13 seconds later. Durant follows with a nice back cut on an inbounds play that leads to a dunk and pushes the U.S. lead to eight points, 83-75.

6:32 — Raduljica is back and immediately makes Cousins look foolish. That’s his 18th point of the game.

8:00 — USA 75, Serbia 70.

This is getting a bit too close for comfort. Both DeAndre Jordan and DeMarcus Cousins are on the bench.

9:28 — USA 72, Serbia 65.

Nikola Jokic hits a trey to open the final quarter and suddenly the U.S. lead drops to seven points again.

The Serbs are fouling USA as much as possible to force them into halfcourt sets, their weakness, and prevent them from running and playing in open space, their strength. It’s a great strategy, and would be even better if DeAndre Jordan weren’t having one of the best free throw-shooting performances of his career. He’s 5-of-8 from the line, and USA is 29-of-37 (78 percent) overall.

THIRD QUARTER

End of third: USA 72, Serbia 62.

DeAndre Jordan is USA’s leading scorer with 12 points. Kevin Durant still has only taken one shot.

The Americans missed four free throws in that quarter alone, but got to the line 17 times, so we’ll take it.

1:02 — USA 71, Serbia 60.

A mini USA run opens up a double-digit advantage for the first time in a while. And, hey, DeAndre Jordan hit two free throws in a row!

2:33 — That’s more like it: USA forces a turnover leading to a 4-on-1 fast break that ends with a big dunk from DeAndre Jordan.

USA 65, Serbia 57.

Meanwhile, Carmelo Anthony heads to the bench with his fourth foul. The limit is five in international play.

3:10 — Nikola Jokic picked up where Raduljica left off. He’s got seven points this quarter and 13 in the game, giving the U.S. a lot of trouble.

4:11 — A USA goaltend on Jokic cuts the lead to five. Coach K is stoic.

Jimmy Butler gets fouled shooting a trey and hits two of them. Lead back to seven.

5:22 — USA 60, Serbia 53. Kevin Durant only has one official field goal attempt. That can’t happen.

5:41 — Nikola Jokic, who plays for the Denver Nuggets, connects for a big dunk and it’s a seven point game.

6:11 — USA 58, Serbia 49.

We’ve got a timeout less than halfway through the third. USA isn’t playing great, and Serbia is keeping the pressure on.

7:41 — The Serbians are playing tough and hitting shots at a far better rate than they had previously in this tournament, including a few 3-pointers.

It’s kept them alive thus far, as they still trail by less than double digits: USA 56, Serbia 47.

Carmelo Anthony has had an immediate impact in this quarter with five quick points.

9:00 — Raduljica strikes quickly and now has 16 points. But he picks up his third and fourth fouls in just three seconds and heads to the bench. That’s a very big break for Team USA.

10:00 — We’re underway in the third quarter. USA starters are on the floor, including Carmelo Anthony, who sat much of the first half with three fouls.

HALFTIME: USA 50, Serbia 41.

Kyrie Irving scored 11 points in the second quarter and leads USA in scoring. Miroslav Raduljica has 14 points for Serbia on 4-of-6 shooting and six free throws. He’s been a major thorn in America’s side, and they just don’t have an answer for him.

We mentioned this before, but that 9-0 run to start the game is the difference for the U.S., as the teams have been even at 41 points a piece since.

DeMarcus Cousins has the highlight of the half with this breakaway spin move that led to a monster dunk that capped the 9-0 run.

Carmelo Anthony played sparingly for the U.S. after picking up his third foul. DeAndre Jordan has two.

Harrison Barnes is the only American not to play.

SECOND QUARTER

1:05 — Durant hits his first field goal that actually counts: a pull-up 3-pointer. He’s got nine points now.

Kyrie Irving  and Miroslav Raduljica lead their respective teams with 11 points.

1:53 — Since USA’s 9-0 run to start the game, Serbia has played USA tough: 37 points apiece.

USA leads 46-37.

3:04 — Score update: USA 42, Serbia 31.

3:45 — Kyrie hits the same shot again. He suddenly has nine points, all in this quarter.

5:05 — What a pretty shot from Kyrie Irving. He falls away to the left side of the basket and hits a LeBron James-esque one-handed jumper high off the backboard.

6:15 — Paul George is back in the game.

We’ll see if the starters finish out the last six minutes of the half. Serbia has gotten progressively better throughout the game, and currently has cut the lead to nine.

7:00 — Irving and Milos Teodosic trade 3-pointers. Serbia is finally hitting some shots this quarter, led by a quick five from Teodosic, but they still trail by 11, 36-25.

7:45 — Durant, Irving, Anthony and Cousins are back on the floor. DeRozan the only non-starter remaining.

10:00 — We’re underway in the second quarter.

Four USA players tied with five points in the first quarter, while Miroslav Raduljica scored eight points for Serbia.

DeMar DeRozan entered the game for the final seconds of the first and remains in there to start the second. Harrison Barnes is the only guy who hasn’t come off the bench for the Americans yet.

Lowry, Thompson, Butler, DeRozan and Jordan start the second for USA.

FIRST QUARTER

End of first: USA 27, Serbia 15.

:47 — Jordan, still upset over getting elbowed by Raduljica, gets a technical foul, which count like normal fouls in FIBA.

It appeared Draymond Green picked one up seconds later, but it ended up being on the USA bench. Green slammed the basketball down in excitement after preventing Raduljica from dunking on him.

It resulted in both a personal foul and a tech, leading to three free throws, which Green sunk.

Raduljica entered the game as Serbia’s leading scorer at nearly 20 per game, and he’s been an aggressor early on in this matchup. He’s already got eight points.

2:30 — Miroslav Raduljica, a seven-footer who has about half a season’s experience in the NBA, drops an elbow into Jordan’s midsection while backing him down, then dunks over him with Jordan bent over holding his stomach. He’s got four points for Serbia, while Jordan likely just got the wind knocked out of him.

He remains in the game and seems to be fine.

3:24 — Jimmy Butler, Kyle Lowry and Draymond Green enter the game.

5:15 — DeAndre Jordan and Klay Thompson come off the bench first for Team USA. DeMarcus Cousins sits, but was effective to start the game, scoring five points and drawing a few fouls. He was double-teamed every time he touched the ball and traveled twice.

A good sign for the Americans: Thompson hits his first shot, a 3-pointer, and then hits Jordan for an alley-oop slam. Jordan gets another oop, and Serbia calls their second timeout.

It’s a 23-5 lead for USA.

8:05 — A monstrous breakaway dunk from DeMarcus Cousins puts an exclamation point on an 8-0 USA run to start the game.

10:00 — And we’re underway.

Pregame: The Americans narrowly escaped with a victory Wednesday against upstart Australia, which currently leads the group with a 3-1 record and seven points.

It took a dominant fourth quarter from Carmelo Anthony and Kyrie Irving to dispel their foes. The duo combined for 50 of USA’s 48 points, including 31 from Anthony on nine 3-pointers.

Anthony is now the team’s second-leading scorer through three games in Rio, as well as the program’s leading international scorer. Only Kevin Durant has scored more, and it’s a close battle — 55 points (18.3 ppg) for Durant in 27.0 minutes per game to 54 points (18.0 in 26.3 minutes) for Anthony.

The U.S., as expected, is scoring at a much higher rate than any other team in the tournament. They’re currently averaging 110 points as a team through three games. No other team has even averaged 90.

Their defense also has been tremendous, though that’s likely as big a product of the general lackluster competition than their own skill. They’ve been a bit sloppy, and it showed versus Australia. Still, they’re allowing opponents to score just 73 points per game, good for an average margin of victory of 37 points.

After Durant and Anthony, Paul George and Kyrie Irving have excelled for USA as well. George was inserted into the starting lineup vs. Australia after Golden State Warriors shooting guard Klay Thompson got off to an awful start in two starts. Thompson has scored just eight points in three games, the fewest on the team. George, meanwhile, is averaging 13.3 thus far.

For the Serbs, there’s only one name that might be vaguely familiar to diehard NBA fans: Bogdan Bogdanovic. The 23-year-old guard was drafted by the Phoenix Suns in the first round of the 2014 NBA Draft, but has yet to join the team. Based on his performances in the Olympics, that might change soon.

Bogdanovic has been Serbia’s second-leading scorer, averaging 13.7 points in almost 28 minutes per game. He’s been their best 3-point threat as well, shooting 50 percent (6 of 12) from beyond the arc.

Miroslav Raduljica, a 28-year-old center, has led the team in scoring at 19.7 points in 22.7 minutes.

Here are the projected starting lineups for USA vs. Serbia:

USA
Kyrie Irving, PG
Paul George, SG
Kevin Durant, SF
Carmelo Anthony, PF
DeMarcus Cousins, C

SERBIA
Stefan Jovic, PG
Bogdan Bogdanovic, SG
Nikola Kalinic, SF
Stefan Bircevic, PF
Miroslav Raduljica, C

Click to watch USA vs. Serbia basketball online >>

Thumbnail photo via John David Mercer/USA TODAY Sports Images





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