For Team World, Class of 2025 star AJ Dybantsa Jr. led the way with 21 points and 6 rebounds, France’s Nolan Traore scored 18 and Baylor commit VJ Edgecombe went for 17. Bailey opened the Nike Hoop Summit with a pull up jumper from the top of the key to spark the U.S. on a 9-2 run. The World Team stormed back in response as they went up 10-9 but Flagg halted their push after hitting a mid-range jumper over his defender while falling to his left. Flagg ran into foul trouble in the first half nabbing three early fouls. “You have to be better then your excuses,” Flagg said. “I just went out with that mindset and just stayed positive.”Duke commit Cooper Flagg showed out at the Nike Hoop summit tonight:
— B/R Hoops (@brhoops) April 14, 2024
◾️ 19 PTS
◾️ 8-11 FG
◾️ 2 AST
◾️ 11 REBS pic.twitter.com/90ReVGFUxZ
Boogie Fland came into the game midway through the first quarter and instantly connected with Jayden Quaintance on a transition alley-oop slam to go up five (17-12). Dybantsa Jr. and Edgecombe kept the Americans honest as they led Team World to a 24-23 lead after quarter number one. The two teams proved to be equal competitors as they traded baskets over the second quarter. Fland kept the U.S. on pace in this frame as he scored seven of his nine points the second that included a floater, a tough finger roll finish off the glass and a step back three-pointer. The United States did just enough to be up two points (42-40) heading into the break. “We dominated the glass and that was one of the things we really pressed upon ourselves to make sure we were good at,” White said. The United States out rebounded Team World 58-35, including 17 offensive rebounds compared to their seven. Flagg (11 rebounds), Newell (10), Harper (seven) and Bailey (six rebounds) all contributed to their successful night on the glass. Offense slowed down in the opening minutes of the second half as the shots weren’t hitting from either squad. Dybantsa (21 points) threw down an alley-oop with the pass coming from Nolan Traore to give World Team their last lead of the game (50-48) with 6:28 to go in the third.In a tough loss to Team USA, AJ Dybantsa showed why he is one of the best players in the country regardless of class🔥
— B/R Hoops (@brhoops) April 14, 2024
◾️ 21 PTS (game-high)
◾️ 7-14 FG
◾️ 7 REB
◾️ 3 AST
◾️ 2 STL pic.twitter.com/9zgTXeToBF
The efforts of Harper, Morez Johnson Jr., and Flagg helped swing the momentum back in the United States favor as they led by eight (68-60) going into the final frame. “Any setting I’m in, that we’re in, and that the rest of my teammates are in, I think we’re going to compete at a high level, and I think that’s what really set us apart from them,” Harper said. “We just really competed and wanted it more.” The United States separated themselves from their counterparts in the fourth and grew their lead up to 15 (84-69) after Ian Jackson connected with Bailey for an easy triple. The highflying U.S. threw down several forceful dunks to close the door on this one as they outscored World Team 30-15 in the fourth quarter. “We have a really special group of guys,” Flagg said. “We had a lot of guys that sacrificed themselves and just played a role tonight.” “We had to find the 12 guys that we felt like could win one game,” White said. “And that’s the way we treated it and we felt like we picked the right 12. If you look at the score, I think we picked the right 12.” USA Basketball improves to 18-7 all-time at the Nike Hoop Summit, winning for the fourth consecutive year. (Release/Photo via USA Basketball) Follow Adam Zagoria on Twitter Follow ZAGSBLOGHoops on Instagram And Like ZAGS on FacebookThe fellas put on a show ✊
— USABJNT (@usabjnt) April 14, 2024
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🇺🇸 @nikehoopsummit pic.twitter.com/z5Ec8AGY96