Wear, Walker Lead USA Over Venezuela; Echenique Barely Misses Double-Double | Zagsblog
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Adam Zagoria covers basketball at all levels. He is the author of two books and an award-winning journalist whose articles have appeared in ESPN The Magazine, SLAM, Sheridan Hoops, Sports Illustrated, Basketball Times and in newspapers nationwide.
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Saturday / November 23.

Wear, Walker Lead USA Over Venezuela; Echenique Barely Misses Double-Double

North Carolina commit Travis Wear tallied 15 points and 7 rebounds and UConn-bound point guard Kemba Walker of Rice added 12 points and 5 assists as the USA U18 National team downed Venezuela, 82-73, in the 2008 FIBA Americas U18 Championship in Formosa Argentina.

Ryan Kelly of Ravenscroft High in Raleigh, N.C. added 12 points and 10 boards for the USA, and St. Anthony senior Dominic Cheek had just 2 points that came off a steal and a dunk. Kansas freshman Travis Releford and Duke commit Mason Plumlee added 8 points apiece.

Rutgers commit Greg Echenique of St. Benedict’s Prep in Newark tallied 11 points on 4-of-12 shooting to go with 9 rebounds and 4 blocks for Venezuela.

“We felt since day one that Kemba Walker was the catalyst for our team,” USA and Davidson head coach Bob McKillop said. “He’s the one that started us off, he’s a superb leader. He just gets better and better and makes everyone around him better. I thought Travis Wear and Travis Releford were sensational, as was Ryan Kelly. Ryan Kelly and Travis Wear gave us great interior scoring, added buckets and rebounds. Travis Releford did everything: rebounded, ran the court, defended, got loose balls, made shots inside and was extremely, extremely effective and efficient in running our offense.”

Walker scored the USA’s first 10 points, but the USA found itself trailing early and was down 23-17 with 1:43 to go in the first quarter. Kelly got a bucket and a free throw, while  Cheek smothered his man, came up with a steal and a dunk to pull the score to 23-22 at the end of the period.

Rutgers fans should feel good about all the praise for the 6-9 Echenique.

“I was impressed by them, especially Greg (Echenique), I had never seen him play before,” Plumlee said. “They were a lot better than I thought they would be because we handled Mexico and Canada pretty easily in our scrimmages and they’re a lot better than both those teams.”

The USA next faces the Bahamas at 2 p.m. on Tuesday and closes out preliminary round play against Puerto Rico at 6 p.m. on Wednesday. The semifinals will be played July 17 and the gold medal game will be contested July 18.

Here’s the box. Also, read more quotes here.

(Photo courtesy USA Basketball)

Latest comment

  • Between his complexion and 2100+ SAT score (the new scale), he might not be someone the readers of SLAM would be interested in, but he is a top twenty recruit as well as a transplanted New Yorker, boarding at one of North Carolina’s best private schools so, perhaps, some of your readers would be interested in a profile of him.

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