SAITAMA, Japan - Arvydas Macijauskas scored 10 of his 15 points in the fourth 
quarter and Lithuania survived four missed free throws in the final seconds for 
a 71-68 victory over Italy on Saturday in the second round of the basketball 
world championship. 
 
 
   Lithuania's Arvydas 
 Macijauskas (R) hugs team mate Darius Songaila (9) in the final moments of 
 their win over Italy at the second round of the world basketball 
 championships in Saitama August 26, 2006. 
[Reuters] | 
Italy was even worse from the line than Lithuania (3-3), missing five foul 
shots in the last 2.1 seconds, three by Gianluca Basile with 0.6 seconds left 
and his team down three points. 
Lithuania will play the winner of the Spain-Serbia and Montenegro game in the 
quarterfinals on Tuesday. 
Macijauskas scored eight straight points, the first six on 3-pointers, in a 
12-4 run that gave Lithuania a 66-56 lead with 4:01 to play. 
Marco Mordente's four-point play then started Italy (4-2) on an 11-3 run that 
had the silver medalists from Athens within 69-67 with 1:05 left. 
Then came the missed free throws from both teams. 
Marco Belinelli made one of two from the line with 7.8 seconds left to get 
Italy within 69-68. 
Italy fouled immediately on the inbounds and Linas Kleiza, who plays for the 
Denver Nuggets, missed two free throws. But Darius Songaila, who signed with the 
Washington Wizards this summer, grabbed the rebound of the second and was fouled 
with 4.9 seconds to go. 
He missed both, but 6-foot-11 Darius Lavrinovic tipped in the miss of the 
second to give Lithuania a 71-68 lead with 2.8 seconds to go. 
Belinelli was fouled near midcourt with 2.1 seconds left. He missed the first 
free throw, then missed the second intentionally. The rebound bounced around 
until it was grabbed by Basile, who unbelievably was fouled by Macijauskas as he 
threw up a desperation 3-point attempt with less than a second to play. 
He missed all three attempts, and the buzzer finally sounded to give 
Lithuania the victory. 
Lavrinovic and Songaila each had 12 points for Lithuania, which finished 
19-for-30 from the line (63 percent). 
Mason Rocca, who played at Princeton from 1996-2000, and Fabio di Bella each 
had 15 points for Italy, which was 6-for-19 (32 percent) from the line overall. 
Italy finished 4-1 in pool play, its only loss to the United States in a game 
it led by 12 points in the second half before falling 94-85. 
The free throw debacle took away from a strong defensive effort by both teams 
in a game far different from Italy's 100-91 victory over Lithuania in the 
opening round at Athens two years ago.