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Israel rolls past Poles, stays perfect at U20 EuroBasket

Israel rolls past Poles, stays perfect at U20 EuroBasket

Yahoo15-07-2025
ISRAEL GUARD Omer Mayer had 24 points and 11 assists to pace the blue-and-white to a 91-75 victory over Poland at Under-20 EuroBasket in Crete on Monday. (photo credit: FIBA/COURTESY)
In its third win in as many days, Sharon Avrahami's squad overcame an early deficit and used a spectacular 24-0 run bridging the second and third quarters to take control of the game.
Israel's Under-20 National Team remained perfect at the European Championship with a 91-75 victory over Poland on Monday, locking up first place in Group A and advancing to the last-16, where it will face Romania.
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In its third win in as many days, Sharon Avrahami's squad overcame an early deficit and used a spectacular 24-0 run bridging the second and third quarters to take control of the game.
Alon Michaeli led the way with a dominant 28-point-12-rebound performance, while point guard Omer Mayer added 24 points and 11 assists in what was another brilliant outing for the Israeli backcourt.
The game opened with high energy from the blue-and-white, which raced out to a 17-7 lead. But Poland clawed back behind physical play and second-chance points, taking advantage of Israel's defensive lapses in the paint.
By late in the second quarter, the Poles had flipped the momentum completely, building a 40-30 lead as Israel struggled to move the ball or generate clean looks.
ISRAEL GUARD Shachar Doron scored 10 points in the blue-and-white's 88-69 victory over Finland to improve to 2-0 at the U20 EuroBasket. (credit: FIBA)
But with the half winding down, Michaeli and Mayer took over. The pair ignited a furious 24-0 run, begun in the final minutes of the second quarter and extending deep into the third, that left Poland stunned and gave Israel a commanding double-digit advantage. At one point, the lead ballooned to 24, with Israel's offense clicking and its defense forcing stop after stop.
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To Poland's credit, it didn't fold. Sharpshooting from the perimeter helped it cut the lead to single digits midway through the fourth quarter, but every time the Poles threatened, Michaeli and Mayer responded with timely buckets. Shachar Doron added 13 points, Yoav Vitlem scored 8, and Daniel Sharon chipped in 7 points and 10 rebounds in a well-rounded team effort.
Perfect 3–0 record
Having already beaten Spain and Finland earlier in the tournament, Israel finished the group stage with a perfect 3–0 record.
The win ensured an easier round-of-16 matchup against Romania, avoiding a much tougher Lithuanian team that awaits the group's runner-up. With its eyes set on the quarterfinals, Israel knows Wednesday's knockout game is a must-win – not only due to the quality of the opponent, but because of what's at stake in the tournament's critical elimination phase.
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Bengals' preseason win: 3 who impressed, 3 who struggled, 1 who provoked a question

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Why Kansas legend Jacque Vaughn is back at KU after 2 stints as an NBA head coach

LAWRENCE, Kan. — When he starred at Kansas in the late 1990s, Jacque Vaughn always wore a rubber band around his left wrist. Not just on the court, but everywhere. A bad turnover? Snap. Grammatical mistake on a paper? Snap. Vaughn held himself to a high standard because everyone else saw him as the standard. Advertisement Ryan Robertson, his backup at point guard, said Vaughn was the only person in basketball he ever looked up to. 'There wasn't anything about Jacque,' Robertson said, 'that I didn't like.' Roy Williams has this folksy way of telling you that his players are like his children; it's hard to pick a favorite. But then he starts talking about Vaughn, the Big 12 Player of the Year and an Academic All-American as a senior. When Williams showed up at a Kansas City hospital at 6 a.m. for Vaughn's wrist surgery in his senior year, the nurse told him there was a 'problem.' His entire team had shown up. 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So he sat on his couch and tuned in to every game. He watched for the joy of it, but also started thinking ahead, pulling concepts he could use once he returned to coaching. It was nice to have that free time, but something else started to nudge at him. 'I wanted to be depended on.' On the final day of summer practices at his alma mater, Vaughn wears a red Kansas basketball shirt and a smile. He's grateful to be here, at a place where he feels like he can make a difference. Will be given the time to make a difference. 'I do think we're guardians of the next generation,' he said. 'And I do love being a part of that.' Advertisement Vaughn was given the chance to have a full-circle moment in his life when Kansas assistant Norm Roberts retired earlier this spring. Self immediately targeted Vaughn for the job. Considering it had been over two decades since Self last hired a top-three assistant from outside his coaching tree — Kurtis Townsend in 2004 — it was obvious how badly he wanted to bring back the former Jayhawk. Still, Vaughn had to weigh the offer against two others: an associate head coach and lead assistant, both in the NBA. NBA assistants leaving to become college head coaches has become a trend — like Kevin Young at BYU, Alex Jensen at Utah and Luke Loucks at Florida State — but Vaughn's offer was to be an assistant, not a head coach. His brother-in-law questioned why he'd even consider such a move. Vaughn remembered a line he used to share with players sent from the NBA to the G-League: 'You're not going down; you're going over.' And Self didn't hire Vaughn just for the PR bump of bringing a storied alumnus with NBA coaching experience home. Vaughn aligns exactly with what it seems Kansas needs. The Jayhawks underwent a necessary makeover this offseason. 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Self talks about Peterson in a way he's never talked about any other freshman before, perhaps similar to how Williams once saw a young Vaughn in the summer of 1993. (Vaughn became the first freshman to be a full-time starter for Williams.) Who better to help mentor someone like Peterson than a guy who has walked in his shoes? Advertisement 'He's certainly not above rolling his sleeves up, putting in hours. All those sorts of things that maybe you would think an NBA head coach would be,' Self said. 'He likes to work, he loves this place, and he's terrific on the court.' Asked who he called to vet Vaughn before officially signing him, Self was taken aback. 'I didn't talk to anybody about him,' the 62-year-old said. 'I talked to Jacque.' Vaughn's time in the Spurs ecosystem meant Self knew they spoke the same basketball language. Vaughn comes from Popovich's coaching tree, while Popovich comes from Larry Brown's coaching tree … as does Self, who Brown hired for his first college coaching job in 1985. On top of that, one of Self's best friends — and his old roommate at KU in the '80s — is R.C. Buford, the architect of the Spurs dynasty. 'The basketball world is two blocks long,' Vaughn said. Self and Vaughn's shared Spurs connections have already materialized on the court. On the final practice of KU's summer session, Self referenced one of the Spurs' greatest contributions to basketball: the 0.5 rule, which requires a player to make a decision — shoot, pass or drive — in a half a second. 'Jacque,' Self said, 'point five is that what they called it?' 'Point five,' Vaughn confirmed. A reminder to the KU players of the company they now keep. As the final summer practice finishes, Vaughn hangs around and rebounds for Peterson as he shoots free throws. He then goes to everyone left in the gym before he exits. It's subtle, but that simple act exemplifies why Vaughn felt called to coaching: Because he's always felt like he could relate to every teammate he's had or player he's coached. 'I can take a guy, we can go eat at the White House, or we can eat at White Castle and be OK doing both,' Vaughn said. 'Every player that I've coached, every person that I have come in contact with organization-wise, I always wanted to leave an impression of how I made them feel.' Advertisement Detroit Pistons guard Caris LeVert is one of those players. LeVert played for Vaughn in Brooklyn and was assigned to Vaughn as his developmental coach. LeVert said Vaughn was so good in that role that other teammates would get jealous they weren't in his group. LeVert questions whether he would have lasted as long as he has in the league — he's entering his 10th season — if not for Vaughn. LeVert prided himself on being a gym rat, but he was overdoing it as a rookie, showing up late at night and not getting the proper rest. Vaughn got through to LeVert that the season was a journey as opposed to a sprint, and he could still get in extra work but do so in a more efficient manner. 'He's someone who's gonna be there good, bad, ugly, and he was not afraid to tell the truth,' LeVert said. 'In this business, you run across a lot of people who kind of try to massage the truth; JV is someone who would give it to you straight.' Vaughn's humility also stuck with LeVert and Jalen Wilson, the former Kansas wing who also played for Vaughn in Brooklyn. When Vaughn was promoted to head coach, instead of reassigning the players he worked with to an assistant, Vaughn continued with his group. 'Most coaches may sit on the side or coach from the side,' Wilson said. 'He was right there sweating with us.' Wilson said he created an atmosphere where it didn't feel like there was a hierarchy. 'JV is one of the best motivators that I played for,' LeVert said. 'For me, he was more than a coach; he was more like a big brother. … He knows how to talk to that age of players. He's somebody who can talk to anybody. When JV walks into a room, you know JV's in a room.' Some theorize the reason KU brought Vaughn back was to become Self's successor. Self, who will turn 63 in December, was hospitalized last month and had two stents inserted, and he previously missed the 2023 NCAA Tournament after undergoing a heart procedure. He has returned to work and said Friday that he could coach a game tomorrow if KU had one. Advertisement As for a succession plan … 'Absolutely not remotely in mind,' Self said. 'I just wanted to hire the best guy and I thought he was the best guy for us. He's terrific on the court. He's great with the kids. He's high energy. But I'm not interested in thinking or talking about a succession plan.' While Vaughn is no stranger on campus, he admits that he's very much a newbie back at Kansas. He's entering a college environment much different than the one he left upon graduating in 1997. He didn't seek the advice of others when he decided to go back to school, but he did get a call from his former backcourt mate and former Stanford coach Jerod Haase. He mostly wanted to share his thoughts on the changes to the college game. Those changes, in some ways, have made Vaughn's time in the NBA more relevant because college basketball has turned professional. 'The worlds are merging,' Vaughn said. What's different, though, with college basketball is the connection fans feel to the players who wear the uniform or the coaches who roam the sideline. That's somewhat changing in this transfer era, and Kansas has felt that these last few years. Vaughn's return should rekindle those feelings. He is forever the face of the 1990s Jayhawks. You still see No. 11 jerseys from that era. Kansas fans talk about the 1997 Arizona loss — Vaughn's final college game — like a devastating life event. That conclusion never felt appropriate. Maybe it was always in the cards for Vaughn to get a second act. 'We've come full circle, where I always wanted to be depended on as a player — and same way as a coach,' Vaughn said. 'My energy, juice, I want you to be able to depend on that on a daily basis. And I'm going to climb into this same space, where I don't want to let my university down. I don't want to let this fan base down. It's special. It means something to me.' Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

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