RIO DE JANEIRO – The U.S. men's basketball team has won 50 straight international games, 22 of them in Olympic play.
It is undefeated in this Olympics, heading into Wednesday's 4:45 p.m. quarterfinal matchup against Argentina.
It has a Hall of Fame coach and brings stars off the bench.
And it seems to be in more trouble than any U.S. team since a bronze medal in Athens in 2004 prompted an overhaul of the program and led to the Redeem Team that dominated in Beijing.
"To start out, I thought, personally, that we were going to dominate, that these games were going to come easy," said U.S. forward Paul George. "But you start playing better competition, and you see across the board that these teams are pretty good."
Seemingly all of the nice things that the U.S. coaches and players said about their opposition before the Olympics began have turned out to be prophetic.
Other teams have more continuity. Other teams are more accustomed to the international style of play, which includes touch fouls, and frequent fouls in the open court to prevent the kind of fast breaks NBA players thrive on, and shorter quarters.
And while the American women have roster continuity and a massive talent advantage over teams, the men have only two players returning from the team that won gold in London, and are facing foes that, while not as talented as the U.S., feature NBA players who are not intimidated by American stars.