1972 United States men's Olympic basketball team
Appearance
Head coach | Hank Iba |
---|---|
1972 Summer Olympics | ![]() |
Scoring leader | ![]() 9.2 |
Rebounding leader | ![]() 5.7 |
→ |
The 1972 United States men's Olympic basketball team represented the
Roster
Name[5] | Position | Height | Weight | Age | Team/School | Home Town |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mike Bantom | F | 6'8" | 205 | 20 | St. Joseph's University | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
|
Jim Brewer | F/C | 6'9" | 220 | 20 | University of Minnesota | Maywood, Illinois |
Tommy Burleson | C | 7'2" | 225 | 20 | North Carolina State University | Newland, North Carolina |
Doug Collins | G | 6'6" | 180 | 21 | Illinois State University | Benton, Illinois |
Kenny Davis | G | 6'1" | 180 | 23 | Georgetown College | Monticello, Kentucky |
James Forbes | F | 6'7" | 200 | 20 | University of Texas at El Paso | El Paso, Texas |
Tom Henderson | G | 6'2" | 190 | 20 | San Jacinto College | Bronx, New York
|
Bobby Jones | C/F | 6'8" | 205 | 20 | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill | Charlotte, North Carolina |
Dwight Jones | C | 6'8" | 205 | 20 | University of Houston | Houston, Texas
|
Kevin Joyce | G | 6'3" | 190 | 21 | University of South Carolina | Queens, New York
|
Tom McMillen | F | 6'11" | 210 | 22 | University of Maryland, College Park | Mansfield, Pennsylvania |
Ed Ratleff | F/G | 6'6" | 190 | 22 | California State University, Long Beach
|
Columbus, Ohio |
1972 USA results
United States beat
Czechoslovakia, 66–35
United States beat
Australia, 81–55
United States beat
Cuba, 67–48
United States beat
Brazil, 67–54
United States beat
Egypt, 96–31
United States beat
Spain, 72–56
United States beat
Japan, 99–33
United States beat
Italy, 68–38
Soviet Union beat
United States, 51–50
1972 Olympic games final standings
- 1.
Soviet Union (9–0)
- 2.
United States (8–1)
- 3.
Cuba (7–2)
- 4.
Italy (5–4)
- 5.
Yugoslavia (7–2)
- 6.
Puerto Rico (6–3)
- 7.
Brazil (5–4)
- 8.
Czechoslovakia (4–5)
- 9.
Australia (5–4)
- 10.
Poland (3–6)
- 11.
Spain (4–5)
- 12.
West Germany (3–6)
- 13.
Philippines (3–6)
- 14.
Japan (2–7)
- 15.
Senegal (0–8)
- 16.
Egypt (0–8)
See also
References
- ^ "The Role of Sports in the Soviet Union | Guided History".
- ^ Hubbard, Jan (April 8, 2020). "The Vote That Cleared the Way for NBA Players to Play in FIBA Competitions". USA Basketball. Archived from the original on April 11, 2020. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
- ^ "Federation Rule Change Opens Olympics to N.B.A. Players". The New York Times. April 8, 1989. Retrieved August 5, 2020.
- ^ "History of basketball at Olympics: A tale of American domination".
- ^ "USAB: Games of the XXth Olympiad -- 1972". USA Basketball. 2010. Archived from the original on August 12, 2010. Retrieved May 2, 2014.
External links
- USA Basketball, official website