Pan American Games features 3×3 basketball for first time, and here’s what you need to know

LIMA, Peru — A condensed form of hoops takes the next step in its Olympic-level development Saturday with the debut of 3×3 basketball at the 2019 Pan American Games.

The sport was first played in international competition at the 2010 Youth Olympic Games in Singapore and went on to make its Asian Games debut in 2018. It will become an Olympic sport next year in Tokyo.

Kareem Maddox, a Princeton product who participated in the 2011 NCAA tournament, led the U.S. to last month’s FIBA 3×3 World Cup gold. Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images

The U.S. men and women have each won the FIBA 3×3 World Cup since it was first played in 2012, with the men capturing gold in last month’s tournament in the Netherlands, and the women in the year of the tournament’s debut. Currently the U.S. women’s team ranks No. 21 and the men No. 8. The Serbian men and Russian women sit atop their respective federation rankings, with Russia also No. 1 in the combined rankings.

The American teams play five total games on the event’s first day (watch the Pan American Games stream on ESPN App, ESPNU and ESPN Deportes). The men face Venezuela (5 p.m. ET) and Brazil (9 p.m.), while the women take on Argentina (4:30 p.m.), Uruguay (7 p.m.) and Brazil (10 p.m.).

1 Related

Princeton product Kareem Maddox leads the men after averaging 3.4 points and 7 rebounds for the World Cup team that finished with a 7-0 mark. He ranks 37th in FIBA’s individual 3×3 world rankings. On the women’s side, Oregon senior Sabrina Ionescu, a Final Four participant last spring, is a seasoned national and 3×3 player who was named tournament MVP at this year’s Red Bull 3×3 Nationals in Las Vegas.

It might seem like an old-school game of pickup, but there are some nuances to 3×3 hoops. Here’s what you need to know:

In keeping with current replay trends, 3×3 basketball allows for officials to review issues with scorekeeping or clocks, whether a shot is released on time at the end of regulation, or any game situation in the final 30 seconds of regulation or during the entire overtime period. Team challenges will be allowed only during Olympic competition.

Credit: Source link