Germany beats Latvia, to face U.S. in FIBA semis

Sports

MANILA, Philippines — Germany will play the United States in the semifinals of the Basketball World Cup, a rematch of an exhibition matchup from earlier this summer where the Americans needed a big rally to win.

Franz Wagner scored 16 points and Germany – the last unbeaten team left in the World Cup – held off Latvia 81-79 in a quarterfinal game on Wednesday, pulling away in the fourth quarter of what had been a back-and-forth matchup for the first 30 minutes.

Next up: The U.S. on Friday for a spot in Sunday’s gold medal game. The U.S. beat Germany 99-91 on Aug. 20 in Abu Dhabi, rallying from a 16-point second-half deficit and needing an 18-0 run down the stretch to take control.

That game was a scrimmage, meaningless, the final tune-up before the World Cup. Friday’s game will be very, very different.

Andreas Obst scored 13 for Germany, which survived on a night where Dennis Schroder was 4 for 26 from the floor.

Arturs Zagars scored 24 and Davis Bertans scored 20 for Latvia.

With the win, Germany is assured of no worse than its second-best finish in basketball’s top two international events – the World Cup and the Olympics. The Germans were third in the 2002 world championships, an event now called the World Cup, and have never placed better than seventh at an Olympics.

Latvia can still finish as high as fifth in its first World Cup appearance. It’ll play Italy in Thursday’s consolation playoffs, then play for either fifth- or seventh-place on Saturday.

The Americans rolled past Italy 100-63 in the quarterfinals on Tuesday. They took Wednesday off, using part of the day to visit the Manila American Cemetery and Memorial – even taking part in a brief ceremony to commemorate the thousands of World War II soldiers who are buried or memorialized there.

They’ll resume practice Thursday, fully aware of the challenge Germany presented them with about three weeks ago.

Articles You May Like

Virginia Tech Mathematicians Use Algebraic Geometry to Reduce Data Centre Energy Use
Driver dies after crashing into wall during police chase
King praises response to ‘lawless’ UK riots in Christmas message – as he gives ‘personal’ thanks to medics
Volkswagen to cut 35,000 jobs but keep factories open
Denmark to boost defence spending for Greenland after Trump repeats call for US control