Mike Monroe: Fans go to great lengths to reach FIBA Americas

SOMEWHERE BETWEEN BUENOS AIRES AND MAR DEL PLATA, Argentina — The bus taking 42 basketball fanatics to the FIBA Americas pre-Olympic basketball tournament bounces along Argentina’s Route 2 past open spaces that look a lot like South Texas, minus the scorching heat. It is late winter in the Southern hemisphere, after all, and the temperature today is a delightful 53 degrees.

This is a non-scheduled bus, but the first of only two Aerolineas flights from Buenos Aires’ Jorge Newbery Airport was canceled. A plume of volcanic ash from the Puyehue volcano in Chile apparently made it too dangerous for the small aircraft that makes the short hop to Mar del Plata.

Aerolineas’ second flight isn’t until 6:50 p.m. and there are basketball games to be seen, so Ivan Rivera, wearing a J.J. Barea Dallas Mavericks jersey, springs into action. Rivera is an officer of the Asociación de Turistas Olímpicos de Puerto Rico, which he announces loudly as he descends on the kiosk of a bus company serving the airport.

After 20 minutes of negotiations, Rivera has secured the names of the passengers willing to pay a premium to have a bus to Mar del Plata added to the day’s schedule. These include one American sports reporter grateful for the chance to tag along, at what seems a very reasonable $60 — a price that seems to outrage the others.

“They want $500 extra for the driver, but when you are a fan, you are a fan,” says Rivera, who has been to international tournaments from Beijing to Athens in support of Puerto Rican athletes. “When they said there was no airplane, I knew we were going to find a bus. Nothing holds us back.”

After fares are collected, the hoops dreamers cluster around their luggage and debate the tournament that will begin its first day without them, but not end before they have taken their seats at Malvinas Argentinas Stadium. These include plenty of Argentines — from Cordoba, in the Northwest, to Patagonia, in the South.

Danilo Ventura, a 44-year-old worker at an electrical company in Cordoba, speaks perfect English, having benefited from a year as a high school exchange student in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

“I began playing when I was young, 8 or 9,” he says, “but the game I knew was different from what I discovered when I went to America. It was 1985, and Magic Johnson and Larry Bird were the best in the NBA, although there was a young player named Michael Jordan.”

Ventura never dreamed Argentines would someday be stars in the NBA, but everything changed for Argentine basketball fans once Manu Ginobili joined the Spurs. Now Ventura is but one of the basketball-loving Argentines happy to assist in chartering the bus to see the team that is a national treasure.

“I bought my tickets the day they opened the sales on the Internet in July,” he says.

He chats at length with Cristian Kuhot, a Patagonian who calls Puyehue “el traitor volcano.” They agree making the tipoff justifies extreme hardship.

Five thousand miles from Route 2, David Stern and his NBA lieutenants will sit today across a table from Billy Hunter, Derek Fisher and other representatives of the NBA players’ union and scowl as the NBA lockout approaches its third month.

Ventura doesn’t understand how owners who offered big contracts they now contend have ruined their business can expect the players to save them from themselves.

But nobody at the FIBA Americas pre-Olympic tournament cares much about the gloomy doings in New York.

This tournament is about the love of the game, and it is about national pride, as is the Eurobasket tournament in Lithuania, where Tony Parker will begin play in a few days.

There are business issues that must be resolved in New York. But when you see the passion with which Ginobili and his teammates represent the host country, you wonder how anyone can be as committed to taking meaningful basketball away from the basketball-loving world as some of the league’s owners now seem.

mikemonroe@express-news.net

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FIBA Americas: Aug. 30, 2011


Manu Ginobili drives through a pack of Paraguay defenders on Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2011 in Mar del Plata, Argentina. He scored 10 points, including a fast-break slam dunk, and added five rebounds and three assists in 21 minutes during Argentina’s 84-52 victory. (Jose Jimenez/FIBA Americas) (José Jiménéz © PHOTO FIBA Americ)


Manu Ginobili dribbles past Paraguay’s Daniel Perez on Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2011 in Mar del Plata, Argentina. He scored 10 points, including a fast-break slam dunk, and added five rebounds and three assists in 21 minutes during Argentina’s 84-52 victory. (Martin Mejia/Associated Press) (AP)


Manu Ginobili dribbles past Paraguay’s Daniel Perez as Juan Gutierrez (left) blocks on Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2011 in Mar del Plata, Argentina. He scored 10 points, including a fast-break slam dunk, and added five rebounds and three assists in 21 minutes during Argentina’s 84-52 victory. (Martin Mejia/Associated Press) (AP)


Manu Ginobili shoots to score on Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2011 in Mar del Plata, Argentina. He scored 10 points, including a fast-break slam dunk, and added five rebounds and three assists in 21 minutes during Argentina’s 84-52 victory. (Martin Mejia/Associated Press) (AP)


Manu Ginobili shoots over Paraguay’s Guillermo Araujo on Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2011 in Mar del Plata, Argentina. He scored 10 points, including a fast-break slam dunk, and added five rebounds and three assists in 21 minutes during Argentina’s 84-52 victory. (Martin Mejia/Associated Press) (AP)


Brazil’s Tiago Splitter (right) battles Venezuela’s Jose Bravo for a rebound in their FIBA Americas opening game in Mar de Plata, Argentina, Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2011. (Martin Mejia/Associated Press)
(AP)

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  • Argentina FIBA Americas Basketball
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Long story short: A buzz cut for Manu

There’s a video up on YouTube – tip of the hat to our friends at Pounding the Rock for pointing us to the video that was posted by one of their contributors – that features some from Argentina’s friendly game against Venezuela as both teams prepare for the FIBA Americas pre-Olympic qualifying tournament.

Two things struck me about the video: First, Manu’s to-the-basket game looks to be in mid-season form; second, he’s getting closer and closer to what some of us call a great haircut.

In short, Manu is rocking a buzz cut. The effect of the cut minimizes that bald spot that has continued to creep in all directions from the crown of the Spurs guard’s head for the last few years.

Having long ago given in to the misfortune of disappearing hairlines and adopted the totally bald look, I heartily endorse Manu’s new cut.

From a basketball standpoint, the video shows that Manu has lost none of his touch off the glass with his left hand and none of the fire that makes him the Spurs’ emotional leader. After one hard foul by a Venezuelan player, he goes nose to nose with him, then has a long discussion with a referee.

Takes from blog brothers: Manu looks strong in Super 4 Tournament

Manu Ginobili looked in mid-season form over the weekend in his early work for his Argentina national team.

Ginobili erupted for 22 points in 20 minutes of action to help Argentina to a 106-53 victory over Venezuela to win the Super 4 Tournament as the teams prepared for the FIBA Tournament of the Americas later this month.

Jeff Garcia of Project Spurs.com has a few snippets of the .  It’s a typical Ginobili performance as he dives and hustles around the court looking to make plays. In the process he shows little lingering rust from his injury-marred end of the 2011 season.

Chilai of Pounding the Rock.com was at Orfeo Stadium to watch the Argentina team and about the effort by Ginobili, Fabricio Oberto and their teammates. Watch for his “Manu alerts.”

Garcia also has an update from the performance of first-round draft pick Cory Joseph with the Canadian national team. The rookie point guard in  Canada’s 74-67 triumph over Belgium in the Jack Donohoe International Classic.  

Here are some other Spurs-related stories from across the blogosphere.

  • Andrew McNeill of 48 Minutes of Hell.com wonders if the Spurs might have arranged for Danny Green to play for the Slovenian team Union Olimpija to .
  • ESPN.com’s Andy Katz reflects on Kawhi Leonard’s on the West  Coast for San Diego State.
  • Robby Lim of Spurs World.com provide a on Nov. 5, 2008.   
  • Howard Herman of the Berkshire (Mass.) Eagle reflects on .
  • Jerry DiPaola of the Pittsburgh Review has a profile of Pitt wide receiver Cameron Saddler, a 5-foot-7 junior .
  • The Sacramento Bee’s Ailene Voisin believes Vlade Divac belongs in the Naismith Hall of Fame because of the way he like Ginobili.
  • The Boston Globe’s Gary Washburn describes into the Hall of Fame.
  • The San Diego Union-Tribune’s Tim Sullivan describes how Leonard’s early departure from San Diego State for the school’s Academic Progress Rate score.
  • Gilmore calls Hubie Brown the during his pro career, the Jacksonville Times-Union’s Gene Frenette reports.   
  • In case you missed it, here’s a story that Express-News colleague Heath Hamilton wrote about how athletes of today like Parkerthan those of previous generations.
  • Eric Johnson of the Bleacher Report.com predicts the Spurs – once next season finally begins.