zaniljiv osvrt po pitanju dariovih izgubljenih lopti nba draft neta.....bice zabari sena silu htjeli ugurati...pouka: ne kometirati sto ne vidis
89 KK Zagreb-61 Stella Azzurra
More so than the final, this game wound up being the best setting to evaluate Zagreb's otherworldly talent, Dario Saric. In the previous games, when the whistles were somewhat questionable, Saric displayed great maturity and composure by simply playing on. In this instance, however, the referees were so egregiously one-sided that even a most-devout Buddhist monk would have been flustered; and, while Saric did complain, especially when collecting his many nonexistent traveling violations, as well as his equally nonexistent fourth and fifth fouls--which occurred midway through the third quarter with Zagreb up by twenty-two--a player whose ego matched Saric's talent would have erupted in a violent fit of anger. Encouragingly, this did not happen. Furthermore, while still in the game, Saric refused to allow the refs quick whistles to alter his attacking style-of-play. Predictably, the 6'10" point-center dominated every facet of the game. Stella, which normally shot well from all second and third levels, had their worst collective outing at the most inopportune time.
The Final: 62 KK Zagreb-52 Fenerbahce
Dario Saric, dominant.
The Croat, who would be just a high school senior in the States, played the
entire game being Zagreb's primary ball-handler, distributor, shot-creator,
rebounder, interior defender, and fast-break igniter. Despite being exhausted in
the fourth quarter, he still gave a tremendous all-round effort, showing both
the intangibles and the skill that could make him a star at the European and
potentially NBA-level.
Istanbul's James Birsen, on the other hand, did not
display Saric's same attacking mentality, settling for jumpers, including eight
threes, while connecting on just one. While he does not posses Saric's
quickness, he still had the agility and, especially, the intelligence to have
been able to exploit Zagreb's zone defenses, where he could have taken short
mid-range jumpers, instead of misfiring from long-range. He did, however,
display good instincts on defense, guarding Saric fairly well when assigned to
him, and collecting six steals and ten rebounds. While a humble and intelligent
player, Birsen could take his game to the next level by being more aggressive,
especially at the end of games. Fener was down just two points going into the
fourth, and Birsen did not take over. Since he's just sixteen--and two months
younger than Canadian Andrew Wiggins--he has time to develop a greater
propensity to dominate
[uredio Flash - 04. siječnja 2012. u 09:51]