HIROSHIMA, Japan -- Germany showed there is a lot more to its team than Dirk
Nowitzki.
Germany used the 3-pointer and some staunch defense to overcome a poor
shooting game from its NBA star and beat New Zealand 80-56 on Sunday in the
opening round of the FIBA world championships.
"Dirk rarely has a game like that, maybe one in 50," Germany coach Dirk
Bauermann said, referring to his star's 11-point effort on 3-for-13 shooting.
"It wasn't a Dirk Nowitzki-like percentage but he passed well, rebounded, never
forced anything and just helped his team win a basketball game."
Nowitzki, the 7-footer who led the Dallas Mavericks to the NBA finals, had
eight rebounds, five assists and teammates who picked him up on an off night.
"They were great and we played great defense in the first half and
offensively," he said. "It was impressive the way we were moving the ball."
Nowitzki was 1-for-7 from the field in the first half, a far cry from his
6-for-7 start in the opening win over Japan when he scored 27 points.
It didn't matter, however, because his teammates were on from long range,
going 10-for-19 from beyond the arc in taking a 38-17 halftime lead in this
rematch of the bronze medal game from the 2002 worlds, which was won by Germany.
Robert Garrett had four of the first-half 3s for Germany (2-0), which held a
23-13 rebound advantage after 20 minutes, limiting New Zealand (0-2) to 23
percent shooting (5-for-22), including 2-for-12 on 3s.
"It's my job to come off the bench and be effective," Garrett said. "When I
made my first shot it felt good and they kept coming and coming."
When New Zealand started the second half with three 3-pointers to get within
43-26, Germany called timeout. Nowitzki then had a conventional three-point play
to end the run and get the lead back to 20.
"We made a slight impression at the start of the second half but Germany
regrouped well," New Zealand coach Tab Baldwin said. "They really smothered us
in the first half. We just couldn't get to the basket and they got a hand on
anything we tried to do and they never let up."
Demond Greene had 18 points and Garrett added 14 for Germany while Nowitzki
finished with 11.
Germany finished 16-for-34 from 3-point range and had a 44-24 rebound
advantage.
"You're not going to go 16-for-34 every night but you can still play defense,
make the right play and get to the basket," Nowitzki said.
Kirk Penney had 12 points for New Zealand, which played again without
starting point guard Mark Dickel, who was suspended by FIBA for 10 days. Dickel,
who tested positive for cannabis last month with the results released Aug. 11,
will miss one more game, on Monday against Angola. He will be back for the final
two opening-round games against Japan and Panama.
"We have to take this on the chin and regroup after a great performance by
Germany," Baldwin said.
Paul Henare, who has started at point guard in Dickel's absence, said: "It's
pretty much a must-win game against Angola."
Germany's next game is the big one in Group B. Spain, led by Memphis
Grizzlies star Pau Gasol, will be the opponent Monday and the winner should
finish on top of the six-team group.
"This was very good for us the way everybody played well today," said Germany
forward Ademola Okulaja, who played at North Carolina from 1995-99. "The whole
team played well and that's what you want going into a game like Spain. You know
they were watching this and now they a lot more to think about rather than one
guy."
Bauermann knows he'll see a different Nowitzki in the next game.
"I'm expecting a vintage Dirk Nowitzki-type performance against Spain," he
said.
Spain (2-0) did its part in keeping the game a matchup of unbeatens, easily
handling Panama 101-57 on Sunday night.
Gasol had 26 points and 10 rebounds in a game Spain controlled from the
start.
"It's the game for first place in the group and that's what we want," he
said. "It's going to be good for us. We want to play against teams that are
going to make it hard for us. We need to play our game."