Providence’s Alpha Diallo, Seton Hall’s Myles Powell and Villanova’s Jermaine Samuels combined for 55 points as Team USA blew out the Virgin Islands Wednesday in their Pan American Games debut.
Diallo went for 20 points, Powell 19 and Samuels 16 as the Big East won 119-84 over the Virgin Islands Wednesday at Dibos Coliseum. Team USA shot 52 percent from the field and made 17-of-34 from deep.
Team USA will play highly-regarded Venezuela Thursday at 10 p.m. ET on ESPN3.
“I thought our depth was an important
#TeamUSA def. Virgin Islands, 119-84
— #BIGEASThoops (@BIGEASTMBB) July 31, 2019
?️Full ?? Highlights (via @ESPNDeportes): pic.twitter.com/sj9sVbb6f4
The game could not have started any better for Team USA. Diallo took a pass from Collin Gillespie (Villanova) on the first possession of the game and hit a 3-pointer. The next time down the floor, Geoff Groselle (Creighton) made a couple of free throws. Then, Gillespie made it 8-0 with another trey. The defense forced two shot clock violations on the first two Virgin Islands possessions and Diallo blocked a shot on the third.
Team USA made seven 3-pointers in the opening period that ended with a 39-23 lead.
The BIG EAST group went to work inside in the second quarter with Diallo scoring a pair of baskets early in the stanza. Virgin Islands was able to cut into the advantage temporarily as the Team USA white-hot shooting cooled down, but a Powell 3-pointer in the final minute sent the his team into the locker room with a 56-43 edge. Team USA made 57 percent from the field in the first half.
“We are able to do a lot of switching and I think that disrupted them,” said Diallo. “We made a significant number of threes and that provided a nice cushion for us.”
The BIG EAST Conference is representing USA Basketball at the Pan American Games. Cooley is
The Pan American Games is a multi-sport event featuring teams from North, South and Central American and the Caribbean, which is organized by the Pan American Sports Organization (PASO) and played every four years in the year preceding the Olympics (2019, 2023, etc.).